.Is Salisbury Trot V t , ; p.;-B!.t.3Hin$jieKT THCK8D Y BY 1 J,-STEWART, ktor anl Proprietor- S ALiSCUHY, N C. PRICE OF SUBSCRIPTION: On -. Year $1.50 Six Motrbs... 1.00 Yi.to" Month. ......... . 5j F" Advertising Kates by contract, retisonuHl". Entered at t ti? Po? O.lbe at Silisbury &9 tcon 1-c.Hss matter. The railroad mileage of California U only about half that of Kansas or Iowa. Chauncey M. Depew says that there are not 500,000 persons in this country who do not indorse Mr. Gladstone's plans for Ireland. The prevalence of suicide is frightful, exclaims the Washington Star. Psycho , legists should put their heads together to offer seme practical suggestion toward its prevention. The trade has recently been established in Vienna of serving charged storage battery cells to private houses on much the same plaa that the milk is brought in the morning and the empty can taken away. "Very likely," suggests the Bos ton Transcript, "we shall soon be legis lating to protect ourselves against thf adulteration of electricity." It appears from Mr. Poland's book or, "Fur-bearing Animals" that during last year nearly six millions of skins were imported into England. Of Australian oppossuta there were 2,215,0011; then the skunk, 631,000; and the raccoon, i 519,100. Ot fur seals tbere were 123,- ! 700; bear, I2,70J; beaver, 11, GUI'; chinchilla, 7700, and otter, 7300. Maritime and business circles of New York are maturing a scheme to develop South African trade by establishing at Cape Town a permanent exhibition of articles manufactured in the United States, special attention being given to the departments of machinery, mining, quarrying and agricultural implements. . There is a great commercial opening for American enterprise in this particular field, thinks the Detroit' Free Press, and the attempt to Capture it should not be abandoned. The quarantine in Turkey, so it is stated, during cholera times, la3ts ten days; Austria, seven days; Italy, five days; France, five days from Southern ports and none from Northern ports, while England is virtually without quar antine. In the United States, as every body knows, the quarantine period can be extended twenty days. This state ment is given as it comes from a phy sician who has devoted much time to the Investigation Sf sanitary and hygienic matters. The British Medical Association , which id the most powerful organization pt physicians in the United Kingdom, an which in a great measure controls the practice of medicine in Queen Victoria's dominions, has just wiped out a blot from its escutcheon, announces the New York Tribune, by Obliterating from its regulations the oce which has hitherto excluded women from membership. Close upon 200 women are now on the medical register in Great Britain, and their admission to the Medical Associa tion removes one of the principal obstacles-which they have hitherto had to contend with in their work. During the last twelve months, says Electrical Industries, the number of roads has iucreved from 3S5 to 469. ni ... . i no increase in capital stock has been from $153?0S;7.7J to 2 J5,S7),0G0. It should not be inferred from this that these eighty-four roads represent this amount of money, fcr, included in this sum, there is not only the capital stoex of these ew roads, but also au increase in the capital stock of roa is already established, nhicb, in xivxiy instances, has been con siderable. T.i3 increase 'from 39J.5S miles to 5143 miles represents not only the sgregite mileage of the new roads, but also the extension of the old ones. The abrogate capital stock to date is $203,870,000, but this does ndt include the premiums on stocks or the bonds and other securities, which a conservative estimate would put at $45,000,000, bringing the capital invested to an ag gregate of 203,370,000. in c ranee iraues-uniouism was nrst recognized and legalized by the Govern ment in 1SS4. In the seven years which hare since elapsed the number of trade societies has reached the surprising total of 1234. This rapid growth is doubt leas due, remarks the Chicago Herald, in dc small measure to the fact that every trade society in France is a benefit so ciety, and makes an allowance to each member in case of sickness. It is com puted that the number of trade-unionist enrolled in these 1234 societies number something like 4,000,000, or about half the laboring classes proper. The latest step in the recognition of trades-union. Ism in France is the establishment in every important industrial center of an labor bureau. This is a building in some cases especially erected for the pur pose which is placed at the disposal of the district trade societies by the munic ipality, which not only grants the use of the hall free of rent and provides ail needful appliances, but makes an annual rant to coYer workinxr expenses. -, t m ? ; L You can telegraph from almost every spot of the globe now with the excep tion of the islands of the Pacific. The San Francisco Chronicle is per suaded that American corn meal onlj needs to be tried by the poor of Europe to supplant wheat or rye flour. The American Faimer states that en terprising men are making money in New England by buying up for a song aban doned farms and converting them into sheep rancnes. Most of the German papers of recent date contain articles upon Columous. All agree that the destiny of the entire American continent is unavoidably bound up with and can only be accomplished through the progress and leadership -lof the United States. Chilean advices say vandalism, influ enza, highway robbery, railway disaster?, have now suicide as a powerful allay, in their work of destruction in Chile. Scarcely a day passes that ca?C3 of self murder are not reported either at the capital or Valparaiso, while reports are constantly "reaching the city from the interior of similar occurrences. The British consular agent in North Borneo says that on the West Coast several people have been seriously hurt by trying to fly out of cocoanut trees, and in some districts the paddy plant ivicr season has been allowed to pass with out planting the crop. Tiiat is due to a curious superstition about a forthcoming general jubilee when everything may be left to take care of itself, when paddy will spring up of its own accord and people get wings and Jly through the air. European Nations have talked loud about Uganda, Africa, and the planting in its fertile territory or iheir several flagstafls. Now returns from Uganda one who ha3 spied out the land, and who says that iu isn't much for milk, and he failed to observe any honey. However, observes the San Francisco Examiner, flascaffs planted in its soil would take root as quickly as anything else would, and the Nations, for want of anything better to squabble over, are f till vociferous. Queen Marguerite, of Italy, recently arrived in a town where great prepara tions had been made to do her honor, and, being oilered some lunc 1, declined it ani said t.iat all she needed was a felass of water. The water being brought, she drank it and was about to take her handkerchief from her pocket in order to wipe her lips when the mayor, misinter preting her action, bowed repectfully and said: "Your Majesty need not trou ble 3 ourself. I can assure you that ;the lunch is all paid for." One of the most interesting exhi bitions in connection with the recent Orientalist Congress in London is a col lection of tools used by workmen in building the pyramids of Egypt. They were gathered and are exhibited by the. illustrious Egyptologist, Mr. Flinders Petrie. These utensils indicate that ancient workmen had an astonishin? ac quaintance with many tools which we have been accustomed to consider essen tially modern. Among the exhibit are solid and tubular corundum-tipped drills and straight and circular saws and chisels described as "not a bit in. ferior to those now used." The experience of Aubrey Stanhope, the New York Herald's cholera-inoculated correspondent, has demonstrated to the satisfaction of its contemporary, the Tribune, that the plague can be suc cessfully resisted. The correspondent went to Hamburg and voluntarily sub jected himself to the most severe tests. He drank Elbe water, slept in beds on which cholera patients had died, lived in the infected quarters of the city and took every possible risk of contagion. After this remarkable experience he has returned to Pans in perfect health, ap parently having been so strongly armed against the disease as to expose himself to it with impunity. A mission of this kind has required a very high degree of courage and self-sacrifice. "The Her ald" has made maay things plain about cholera which were imperfectly known. The bravery of Policeman Griff enha gen, who stopped the runaway firehorses on Union -Square, New York City, dur ing the Columbian military parade, has' been properly recognized by the Police Board, who have granted him an honor able mention and a medal, "One of out contemporaries,? says the New York Press, "in commenting on this fact, re. marks that heroism is not common in these days. Nothing could be f urthur from the truth. Every week the news contains accounts of men who have tasked their lives in order to save their fellow menu Never before in our his tory have more . brave deeds been done than within the past year. Engineers are performing them all the time. Fire men, life savers, policemen, are constant ly showing that they have in them the elements of heroism; and not infre quently cases arise m which the ordinary citizen, who does not pursue any calling especially attended with danger, shows that he, too, has been all the time a po tential hero. There is no wisdom in running down our own times. The are good times and brave times, and we ousht to recognize the fact." - THE COMING OF WINTER. ' There's a cloud on tha brow of the mount am, A mistiness hangs on the vale; A film dulls the flash of the fountain, Aeres a sob in the sigh of the gale. All the brightness the Autumn king brought them,' Is dimmed by the salness of Autumn, The pensive forebodings of Autumn! The golden rod bloometh in splendor. The sumach's red banners float free. And the rich purple mealow wesds render The woodlands most wondrous to see, With the glories the season has wrought them. Rich dyes for the mantle of Autumn, The glamor and glory of Autumn. A wail that is piteously thrilling And sad as a lover's last words, Is heard in the tremulous trilling Farewell of the lingering birds. Sad lays that chili win is have taught them, To chant at the coming of Autumn, The plant and the pathos of Autumn I The harvest fields shriveled and sober, The unfruitful fallows all brown. Have yielded to solemn October Their je arels to weave in her crown. With a grasp of a miser she caught them, To weave in the diadem ot Autumn, The costly crown'jewals of AHtutnn! in the distant abyss of dark heaven From the pitiless glittering eyes Of the stars cheerless glances are given Earthward from the cold dreary skies. Not the guardian spirit we thought them. But the slavish magicians of Autumn, Of the magic and mystery of Autumn! And faded the nopes that I cherished Since summer's full pulse beats are stilled. With the dream of the summer they per ished And its promises all unfulfilled I Ah ! vainly in sorrow I sought them 'Mid the wreck and ruin of Autumn, The dark desolatioa of Autumn 1 Oh God, how I clung to my treasures, With devotion deep, passionate, wild; From a heart that is wilful and measures Its desires from an unreasoning child. But I know now how dearly 1 bousht them, Like the life-purchased pleasures of Autumn, The death-doomed enjoyments of Au tumn. M. M. Folsom, in Atlanta Journal. THE STRANGLE R. BY CHARLES B. LEWIS. HREE jears after the Sepov rebellion had been put down in India, and with the country under such military and legal discipline as it had never known before, Fwas at Hy derabad, a large town 500 miles east of Bombay, in tho province of Dekkan. It was there that a band of professional thu.s, numbering thirtv-two men, was captured and exe cuted in 1360. The vigorous search after and prompt punishment of crimi nals was having a due effect, and not a case of poisoning or strangling had been known about Hyderabad for sev eral months. In fact these wo classes of murderers were supposed to have be come extinct in that province. One morning a ryot, or farmer, was found dead on the public square, and it was speedily discovered that he had been choked to death. The imorints nrnvpd it to be the work of a strangler. The thug used a cord, while the strangler used his fingers. His marks could "not be mistaken. He brought hi3 thumbs together on the "Adam's apple," while the ends of the fingers got their pur chase just below the victim's ears. Sometimes the fingers clutched his ears cr hair. The "mark" waslways plain to be seen on the neck. Now and then a victim was attacked from behind. In such cases the strangler's thumbs were brought together on the back of the neck, and his fingers were locked to gether over the "apple." Several suspects were arrested, but nothing came of it. About twenty days after the first case a woman was found dead wituin three blocks of the public square, and she had also fallen a victim to the strangler. .Not only had she been choked to death, but her neck was broken. The police were again aroused, and bodies of cavalry scoured the country and brought in dozens of suspicious characters, but as in the other case noth ing could be proved, and all had to be released. At ihe investigation almost every suspect made the same replv as follows: J "Nc, sahib, I am ashamed to admit that 1 am not guilty of this crime. We are no longer men, but slaves. I no longer have courage, but am a coward ana dare not lift my hand." Ten days later the ttraagler counted his third victim, and this time it was a European. Only at rare intervals before the mutiny had a European fallen a vic tim to the professionals of any class. It seemed to be an understood thing with all not tb meddle with them in any man ner. The victim in this case was a clerk in the civil service department attached to the Tax Collector's office, I believe. He had been ill for a week or two, and was occupying a room in a bungalow in the beart of tbe town. Ten or a dozen clerk kept "bachelors' hall" together, and there were half a dozen native ser vants to take care of the place. , This clerk, whose name was Adams, had a native man ior a nurse, but was almost convalescent. One night at 10 o'clock he sent his nurse with a note to a bun galow half mile distant. The nurse was absent about three-quarters of an hour, and upon his return he found Adams dead. There was the mark on his throat, and there was no question about his having been the victim of a professional, and probably of the same fiend who had strangled the other two. The police and the military now quite lost their heads. During the following week there were about 700 arrests" some of them being . made 200 miles away. Nothing like detective work was attempted, and as a consequence every suspect had to be discharged for want of anyvidence against him. The authori ties seemed to go on the idea that if a sufficient numoer of people were ar rested the guilty party would somehow betray himself. Strong eforts were made in three jor four cases to convict on shady test;moLy, but a!ter a few weeks every person wno had been arrested was set at liberty. Being new to the country, and having taken a great interest in the work of exterminating the "professionals," I asked for information on every hand. ' M One day, in conversing with, a Major Burke on the subject, he explained: "In my time I hare inspected the hands of at lea3t a score of stranglers. Their strength lies mostly in the wrist and fingers. Before graduating as pro fessionals they practice on dummies, and resort to certain gymnastic? to strengthen the parts I have named. This man now among us is certainly a profes sional. If arrested you will find his thumb flattened on the balL If I were a detective I should go about looking at thumbs. In most instances the victim leaves scratches or cuts on the haods of the assassin, which would further help to identify him in case of suspicion." From that time on I instinctively glanced at the hands of every native with whom I came in contact, but without the slightest hope of making any discov ery of value. Five weeks after the mur der of the clerk the strangler was heard from again. This time his victim was a sergeant of infantry, and he met his death on the highway between the town and the camp, ft was about 9 o'clock in the evening when he started for camp, and it was known that he was consid erably under the influence of liquor. He was almost' a giant in size and strength, and it was reasonable to conclude that he had made something of a struggle,' even though half drank and taken 'un awares. Indeed, when the surgeon came to look him over blood was found in his finger nails to prove that he had lacerated the hands of his murderer. This was a point to go on, but was not even consid ered by the authorities. They followed the course previously pursued and made several hundred arrests. On the thTf"day atter the sergeant's death I had a bit of chain work to do on a piece of land two miles east of the town, and my helper was a native who had served in the department for a year. He was a middle aged man, very slender, and his weight was not above 120 pounds. He had drifted into the town at tne close of the war, and it was said of him that he came from the north and had been faithful to the English during the strug gle. When not acting as a helper in the field he had the care of some horses be longing to the department. The only name that he was known was Peter. When I sent him word that I wanted him he returned a reply that he was ill, but half an hour later he put in his appear ance and explained that he was- feeling better. We had reached the field and had fairly begun when my attention was attracted to his hands. The backs of both were scratched and lacerated, though the wounds were half healed. "It was the monkey at the stables who did it, saaib,"-he explained, as he held up his hands, for inspection. "I was teasing him and he got revenge. I will sell him if 1 can find a buyer." I knew he had a monkey at the stables, and his explanation wa3 perfectly satis factory. The matter was forgotten in a moment, and it would never have oc curred to me aain Out for waat fol lowed. It wa3 a scorching hot day, and after an hour's work we sought the shade to rest. A3 I was lighting my pipe for a smoke Peter observed that he was very thirsty and would visit a spring he knew of about a quarter of a mile away. Tne field on watch we were working had once been cleared, but was now pretty well grown over with busaes and small trees. He disappeared at my back, and I gave him no further thought or many minutes. I had out my book and was making some field notes when all of a w sudden it struck me that Peter had a pe culiar look as he explained how he had received the wspunds on his hand3. I remembered that his face hardened and that there was a cruel glitter in his eyes. Things of this sort never strike one at the moment, but are vivid when recalled. When I remembered his looks I won dered that he had not killed the monkey for attacking him, and I reflected taat the man must have a hot temper when aroused.. I do not suppose I devbted over five minutes to this train of thought. As time passed by I forgot my surroundings wnile busy with the pencil. Peter had been gone " about thirty minutes, as I afterward figured up, whea I was suddenly clutched by the throat. I wa3 leaning back against a tree hardly larger than a man's arm, and wa3 reclining to the left. My eyes caught no glimpse of anything, nor had my ears detected the slightest sound to put me on my guard. Tne first seniation was exactly like that of failing. I reinemoer a roaring in my ears and fireworks dancing before my eyes, and I was perfectly conscious that my thioat was in the clutch of human fingers. W hat saved me was the tree and the position in which I sat. I did not realize that I struggled to break the clutch, but I did put fort i a mighty ellort. My right shoulder and arm were a lever against the strangler's right wrist, and as I heaved I broke his ciutch and leaped to my feet. It was Peter, as you have siupected. He had only gone a few rods away and then turned and crept bactc on me like a serpent. His rout was through bushes and vines, but when I ca ne to go over it I could not find that he badf broken a twig. My springing up thfew him down, but he was on his feet like a cat, and with a cry like that df an enraged beast he sprang for my thfoat again. His eyes were fairly blazing, his face distorted with passion, and I realized in an instant that it was his life or mine. Under the ne v law no native was al lowed to carry a deadly weapon. Il one was found provided with knife or pistol he was sent to prison. On the other hand, all Europeans went aimed. I had a re volver buckled around me, and if Peter had not been so sure of strangling me he could have secured the weapon as he crept up behind me. He sprang upon me litce a wildcat, seeking my throat at every clutch, acd we grabbled and roiled over and over on the ground. He made a dash for my throat with his right band as we rolled about and I caught the ends of his first two fingers in my teeth and bit to the bone. Tnat one bite gave me the victory. Still gripping his 'fingers, I struggled to my knees, reached for ray revolver, and I had the muzzle agiiast his body when the thought flashed acrosr my mind that he was the professional strangler wanted by the police. Up to that instant I bad no too ught as to why he attacked me. Waen I dropped his fingers and covered him with the revol ver he made no further resistance. The native of India, like the Arab, believes in fate. - "Sahib, yoa have won, he said, as I stood over him. "It was to be and so it is. Do as yoa will with me. , "Peter, way should you seek my life!'' I asked, even yet half hoping there might be some mistake about it. "Why did I strangle the others, sahib, A voice commanded me and I obeyed." "Good heavens! bat yoa are not the murderer of the farmer, the clerk, and the soldier you who have been con sidered so faithful to the English 1" "Even so, sahib. It was to be, and it is. Take me to the police and I will ad mit everything and die like a man." I drove him befofe me until we en countered a troop of cavalry which had been scouring the country for subjects, and was then returning to town with no less than twenty-six prisoners. Had Peter denied his admission to me nothing could have been proved, and he only would have been punished for as sault. But he felt that fate had deliv ered him into the hands of his enemies, and he was willing to help convict him self. He gave the particulars of each murder with such detail that no doubt could exist. It was the sergeant who had lacerated his hands. He was keep ing shady while he waited for them to heal. He would not have accompanied me that day but for the fear that he might be suspected, though as a matter of fact he would have been among the very last to fall under the ban. "I had no thought of strangling you when we started out," be said to me after his trial. "It was only after you had noticed my hands. While you ap peared indifferent, I was alraid that you suspected. I could have snatched away your pistol and shot y oa dead, or I could have beaten you to death with a club, but my creed would not permit it. 1 must either strangle you or let you live on. Had I been successful I should have made my way north as fast as pos sible." He did not hesitate to tell the police that he was a professional strangler, and it was with considerable pride that he exhibited his flattened thumbs and illus trated the manner in which the deadly ciutch was made. He had been a pro fessional for upward of twenty years. He spent one whole day making out a list of dates, localities and victims, and the number of murders was appalling. The figures ran up to forty-two or forty three, and there were seven Europeans among them. He begged no one's for giveness nad no apologies to offer. He told me very plainly that he was sorry he had not succeeded with me, as he believed he could have safely escaped and lived to gather in ten or twelve more victims. He had "marsed down" six different Europeans in the town, arid but for the interference of fate would have strangled them at intervals of about four weeks. Peter went to the gallows with the utmost indifference. He did not even betray the anxiety of a man walking about the street. He was, I believe, the la3t professional strangler executed in 'that province, althougu his class flour ished else .vnere and were picked up one by one for many years after. New York Sun. The Nation llify of fehns. Painting to represent gun-porcs is not much in vogue nowadays except among French and Scotch ships and craft hail ing but of London, aboard which latter vessels sailors are supposed to live better than on most Eaglisn ships. The Scotch men and Londoners may be easily dis tinguished from the Frenchmen, Johnny Crapeau's long flagpoles on his masts towering many feet above the rigging, wnt'e the smp3 of Ureat Britain nave their trucks sec just aoove the hounds of the skysail or royal rigging, which gives them a squatty appearance. In the distance some Nova Scotian ships may be taken for Americans, but not at near approach. They are much more poorly kept and equipped and their sparring is less graceful. Scandinavian vessels may always be known by the presence of a windmill purnp abaft the mainmast. This windmill is a compulsory adjunct of Swedish and Norwegian snips. Scandinavians were much given, some years ago, to the purchase of the cast-off craft of other countries. Through this practice a very large proportion of their ships were old, worn out and leaky. Hence tthe wis Jom of the powers that were ordained that wind uills should ornament their ships to facilitate tue labor of keeping afloat. A marked peculiarity of Spaniards is their fondness for white paint, and also for nettings such as are seen on old fasiiioned wai ship3 under the bowsprit, for stowing stay sails in. and around the tops and quarter-deck. Hollanders, too, like nettings, but are not so conspicuously devoted to them as their Spanish brethren. Germans and Hollanders often have little round port holes and small doors in their deck houses instead of the large, rectangular, airy windows and spacious door .v ays which they might as well have. However, these good folk are not supposed to be over fond ol fresh air, nor yet of water, fresh or salt. New if oris Post. C duaiba ilaps. The Columbus exhibition at Madrid, Spun, has on s.gat two very ancient and cunou3 m i s loaned oy the Vatican li brary. One drawn in tue lifetime of Alexander V. saows the cnart of the world a3 it was be; level to exist at tne commencement of the sixteenth century. A line, the drawing of wnica is tra ditionally ascribed to Alexander him self, detines tne limits of the Spanish possessions in America and separates them from those oi Portugal. The second mapless ancient than tne first has a greater historic U value, as the precise date is not left to conjecture. An in scription in Spanish announces that it is the handiworicof tbecosmogripher of the king ot S:an, wno prepared it by command of the king at Seville, in the year 152 J, and under it is the rather naive announcement, not that it is a map of the world, but a map of so much of the world as had been discovered up to that date. Tnese documents are the more interesting as their authenticity and pedigree are above all douat. They come from tbe fa nous museum originally founded by Cardinal Borgia when he was President of the Propaganda. No European institution is so rich in ethno graphic treasures, which have poured into it from all parts of the Christian world in answer to eloquent and pressing appeals. New Orleans Picayune. Subierra :eaa Channels. On the place of W. B. Keele, Way cross, Ga., there are two wells and the water in them seems to be boiling all the time. Upon investigation the fact was disclosed that the bubbling is caused from air issuing from (Issues in the earth below the surface of the water. Where the air comes from is a mystery,, as the disturbed condition of the water wai never noticed until a lew days a o. Atlanta Constitution. WOUDS OF ITISDOJI. Make the home attractive. Necessity is its own justification. Nature is the mother of tragedians. Crumbs saved are pleasures purchased. It pays to investigate and experi ment. The mind that is unfed is also un stored. i Where there is no hopt there can be no endeavor. . Fate rever exhausts its resources noi life its surprises. Solitude cherishes great virtue, and destroys little ones. The more perfect the jewel the more deplorable the flaw. One's greatest cruelty is usually'prac ticed upon one's self. Happiness is like caloric in it dispo sition to seek a conductor. Truly, this world can go on without us, if we would Lmt think so. It is a rare philosopher who never de parts from his own philosophy. If nature abhors a vacuum s"i? is equally intolerant of a surplus. There is always room for a mm of force, and he makes room for maQy. Pride is essential to a noble character, and the love of praise is one of the civil izing elements. Our estimate of a character always de pends much on the manner in waich tnat character affects our own interests and passions. True popularity takes deep rout spreads itself wide ; but the falst away like blossoms; for nothing t . false can be lasting, j In good company you need nr '. who is the master of the feast, man who sits in the lowest plac who is always industrious in lit.' sveryoue, is certainly the man. and Mis is ask The n 'id Su ciles oi holders. The Journal of the American Statis tical Association gives some curious facts concerning the number of suicidesin Me ranks and more especially among the officers of all the great European po.vers. The Austrian ar.ny takes the leal in this matter From 1875 to 1S87 a yearly average of 122 suicides is recorded for every 100,000 effective troops. In 1339 the number was 148. Deatn by suicide represents a fifth part of the whole mortality of the Austrian arrsy. No dis ease is more- deadly. The Germans re port about half tne number; the Italian army about one-third; the French army about one-fourth; the Eoglish army in the home seivice about one-sixth; the rate in the Russian army is nearly the same, while in the Spanish army it is least of all. There are some curicus facts about these suicides. In the European ' armies, especially in Austria, it is the young soldiers who kill themselves during the first month of their service. Suicides are the most frequent among the cavalry' and infantry, and in the latter among the soldiers who are accused and awaiting trial. The most frequent method is shooting, though hanging and drowning are fre quent methods The infantry use fire arms and usually aim at their heads. The mounted soldiers hang themselves by their horse bridles. The Algerian soldiers almost always shoot themselves through the body, perhaps because the Arabs think is is infamous to mutilate the head. In Austria, a third of the suicides are attributed to a distaste for military duty ; in France, lore trouble is a very frequent cause; the fear of punishment Is everywhere a great Incentive. The maximum of suicides is reached in the hottest weather, and the minimum is reached in the coldest weather. The late Mr. Buckle affirmed as a law of civilization that there is a periodic regularity in the suicide mania, and this testimony of the suicides in the European armies goes far to confirm it. An Authority Oa Tar les. Tom Haskili, a laborer residing on Tehama street, near Fourth, knows a great deal more about turtles now than he did when ho started for a stroll alon Market street the other afternoon. A large turtle lying on the sidewalk attracted his attention and he stopped to admire the ungainly replile. A couple of gentlemen alsa stopped to look, and one of them remarked that turtles were 3aid to live longer than anything else under the sun. "About how old would you take this one to bel" said one of the men to Has kili. 'When I was catching them fellows around New York we never took the old anes to market because they were too ,tough. You tell how old a horse is by his teeth, and of course vou do the same thing with a turtle," said Haskili, as he stooped down ani tried to pry open the reptile's mouth with a pocket Knife. At last he succeeded in opening the strong beiklike moulh and then he placed the toe of his heavy broian in side to keep it open. Tne turtle did not i : i- j At ...... . . I uiiuu ueins; ueu aout, out it did object to having its mouth u?ed that way, and it shut its jaws like a two-spring bear trap. Haskili yelled :,"Take the beast off. He's eating the foot ol me." Some one got a piece of iron and forced open the big beak. The injured mai was taken to a drug store, wnere a surgeon found every toe on the right foot badly bruised. Tne foot was dressed and H,askill went home, San Francisco Examiner. A ramus Old Grizzly. In the Gray's Harbor Country of Wasnington there has been a fam-ms grizzly lor ten years or more. His habi tat is in the Big Creek neighborhood, a few miles soutn of Mnteano. The settlers all pronounce it a grzz!y, and one of immense size. No one has yet bad tbe courage to aitem t to kill it, but all get out of the way as soon as possiolc. It is said to be as large as a good-iized ox, and E. L. Wade, wno maisurel its footprints, found them to oe fourteen inches long. It is tne only grizzly beat ever heard of in that section of the State, San Francisco Examiner. There Are itinera sia Greenland. Greenland is a high, raju;itaia.ni re gioa, mmr to a height of 10,03d feet above tie sea, inclusive of the ice ani snow wnica caver it. It coataia otl and severil otaer valuable mineral?, and its gigantic grante sauid;rs projicc out of the ice waerever it is ex isi ti the rays of the long suramr of nearly si months. New Orleans Picayune. COLUMBUS. He made bis single, throbbing thougafc Amidst the age's withering scorn Do more than ever Heroes wrount For, oat of it a world was born. Target of slander, mark for jeer?, -- H held his long, strong-purposed plan; 1 His vision pierced all coming years, Thoozh named a fool and charlatan. Homer has sung the dauntless deeds That shook the toppling walls of Troy; . Dante of darkened traglo creeds, ; Of hopeless pain and fadeless joy. ' ) And Alexander, titan-bold, Drew the whole world beneath his throne These deeds are as a story told To that which made a new world known.' Tbe winds that blew that small, frail fleet ' Seemed but sworn couriers of death . But he who would not own defeat ' Was moved by Faith's unfaltering breath.' No storm or terror held him back; 1 No doubt could dim his hope to wine. The mystery ol his lengthened track He braved and mutiny within. His work leads the long scroll of man's Fame-ambered deeds, or song-wreathed feat. No future fact, no fair romance, Its equal wonder can repeat. And so on tower and carven stone Highest of all decreed to fame History's stern penman graves aione The world-em oracing Genoan's name. Joel Benton, in Frank. Leslie's. PITH AND POINT. Food for thought Fishes. A spoiled child The adult. Down-stares Furtive glances. Bound to please In tree calf. The cucumber fights best when it's down. Life. By Christopher The discoverer of America. Puck. A man is called a confirmed liar whea nothing that he says is continued. Every dog has its day; but it is not every dog tnat knows when he is having it. Puck. The stage villain is always at a disad-j vantage, as he is invariably caught in the act. Arkansas Traveler. The buncoman is not fastidious, ne lives on the simplest things he can find.' Eiraira Gazette. ' Patient "Doctor, how is society as you have found it?" Dr. Highbiil "Bilious very bilious." Life. The fair sex is capable of almost any., thing wnen driven to it. Example: Nancy Hanks. Jamestown News. Orator "And now, my friends, ona word more." Reporter (to boy) "Bring me a lot more paper, quick 1' Bulletin. She played lor him until he said it really made him tour: An i now he wonders way it is bhe speaks to him no more. Life. A Mere Question of Sex: "Well, Willie, did you master your lesson to dayP "No'm; I missed it." Phila-' deiphia Record. Children could be brought up with much greater care if it were the duty of every mother to punish her neighbor's children. Eimira Gazette. She "Miss Fussanleather Is passion ately lond of dogs." He" Then I under-, stood her leelins when she called mo a puppy I" Yonkers Statesman. Though experience has been a school Teat's taught you much; somehow" While you uave learned you were a fool. You're utile wiser now. . Truth. "I'm getting tired of this injustice," said the trigger to the barrel. "Youare the one wno gets loaded, and then I get pulled on account of it." Indianapolis Journal. Billings "You shouldn't say 'Will-' iam's politics are." Kay William's politics is.' " Jones "Not much., Will-' iam has beveral kinds of politics to suit the tastes oi clients." Cnicago News. "Snallow "Why, just read that sign 'Dental Parlors.' Isn'tit absurd to call a dental room a pailorl' Deepe "It is probaoly the painter's mistake. Ho meant drawing room." Boston Courier. Delicate, fair, ueyond believing Is cbe aamty weo ot the opiaer's weaving, y. et nothing can prompt tue ny a minute io prauje iut beauty and yet ue'i in ill Judge. Father "That cat made an awful noise in the back garden last night." Arnold "Yes, father; I think that since he ate the canary he thinics he can sing." New York Observer. Irate Father "The idea of promis ing your fiance a diamond necklace! "Wnere do you expect to get the money for it?" His Son "That doesn't worry me; I oniy promised it." Jewelers Weekly. " Every bicylist ought to remember that if ue persists in bending away over the handie-bar when he rides he will ruin his ske.eton, so that it won't be worth even five dollars alter he is dead. domer villa Journa. Invalid Wife "John, dear, I do hopo if you should ever marry again you will find , a better wife than I have been." JduL Tuere, there, my love, don't worry; t:.ere will be no trouble about that." Indianapolis Journal. They tol l me when 1 married bar ari.ent.iove would fade away, Bu, a I cuy uer gowns, I nod iy wJerows uearer every day. Cloa Kev.w. They had been discussing tbe pro nunciation of "oleomargarine, and finally agreed to leave it to tbe waiter, but be hedged. Sure," said be, "I have to pronounce it butter or lose mj job. Indianapolis Journal. dome up to my bouse to-morrow nlgnt," said Henpecque, "I'm going to celebrate ray colden wedding." "Golden wed linn! Why. man, you've only been married three years. "I know it, but it see.ns like fifty, so everything is ail right. Buffalo Express. Delia "Can't yoa go down shopping witn me this afternoon? I want tn get my husband a birthday gift. -Esther "Yes; what ere you going to get himf Delia "Well, I have beea thinking about it for some -time, and, I think I need table linen and rugs more than any-" tin o g. Chicago I nter-Occar. Mr. Jones "Husband, the children; have bt-ea invite 1 to parties at different! places on tne 11th, the 13th, the 15tbf aud the 18th. suull I write accept ances?" Mr. Jones "Tes; and you'd! better write to Dr. Snooks while you're about it, asking h'xnx to call on he 12th,' the ll;b, the lC;h, and the l'Jth." 1 Pharmaceutical Era. .... j V t