•ermed to be a highly musical people, yet only the soloist Interested them. The chorus and the orchestra, even the climax of a masterpiece by Gounod or Wagner, left them indifferent. They liked the chansonette, which they learned quick ly and were fond of repeating. They liked melody, but harmony was out -A touch v.iih their musical sense. In the theatre they paid considerable attention to the dialogues, but they seemed incapable of any sustained effort of the Imagination to follow the Intricacies of the play except in the part bordering on the centre of the plot. They liked comedy, and they were often seen at She Tt.eatre Cluny for the same piece. They , ' ij. not enjoy the Odeon, yet they were never known to hiss ever. when others did. Their only sign if disap proval was silence. One day they vere so pleased with Coquelin Junior that they rose shouting "Lao! Lao'" and talked of the inevi table subscription to nd him a little present, but were prevented by friends. THE POETICAL, TOURNAMENT. In the hou?e they arranged theatrical enter tainments among themselves, but their favcrite pastime was the poetical tournament. For this an examiner, a copying clerk and The candidates for the petition were chosen. Next the object «a< agreed upon. It was either fantasti cal or historical. The metre was heptasyllabic, of two verses running parallel on two subjects, or containing two words put in a :ixed place in each verse. The examiner opened a page in a book, the copying clerk named a certain line, the subject was taken from that line :ind the competition began. A bell was suspended by a thread, which half an hour later was cut by a candle burning down to it_ The fall of the bell ended the competition. Those who had s- nt more than one proof were fined a trifle. The successful competitor became examining resi dent for the next term. This pastime developed their wits to a surprising degree. While Euro peans came to the salon with their witty sur prises already prepared, the Chinamen's wit sallied forth, ever quick, natural, unconscious. On the other hand, their minds closed against real poetry. Apart from the clever cutting of their diamondlike wordings, their verses had no gr> j at merit. They were rather unconnected, lifeless an J unsentimental, without freshness, fori-e or fire. Repetition was sought, while orig inality was neglected; memory was kept con stantly busy, but originality remained asleep. Although punning on almost everything everywhere, they carefully avoided politics. Only ill-bred people discuss politics in China. Their politics is in the hands of experts who are the b«»st men in the empire. To discuss their doings is ■ sin as serious as that of dis cussing the rule of their own parents in the fam ily or the method of their teacher in the school. Even when the ruler is evidently bad, revolt ali ne. not discussion, can remove the evil, and revolt, to be successful, must burst at once, with nu previous warning. - I "f L: Hung t'har.s many laid • £ trap? f>>r them t'i find just wh it ■ him, arid his journey. J■ . ■ ... Hung <'hariK." When Paris was ■ the It tried hard to cli it nion on the ■ : SEW I'SL FOR LIQriD ill:. Consular report from Frankfort, Germany. <'arl Linci-. who is giving special attention to machines for producing liquid air, describes in the journal of the Association of German En g:rieers; a furnace designed by Mr. Hempel fur an ingenious application of this substance. The • furnace is intended to burn low class fuels, such lignite and peat. The combustion is intensi v^tii d by turning the gaseous mixture obtained * by evaporating liquid air on the fire. Nitrogen is first set free, afi~r which there remains a t--ii> containing at least 50 per cent of oxygen. The price of this gaseous mixture is said not to exceed *1 cents fur 1,000 cubic feet. J\hl i\ rqr latch DIET. From The Seattle Post-Intelligencer. S. Wcitzmann, a Haines merchant, who is h-re. has sold a irr> at amount of merchandise to the Indians for ih.-ii potlatch. Kodowatt is the gr< atcet buyer. "1 have already soil and delivered -7r» boxes of pilot broad, 'or hardtack, to the Indians for tho potlatch. Pilot bread is one of their great e:-t delicacies They dip it in lard, soak it in the 611 of the candlefish and eat it with the utmost d< ;i^M. I have seen a buck and his squaw sit down beside a box of crackers and eat until all were gone. "In the coming potlatch the Indians will also eat a great deal of sugar, canned peaches, canned grapes, cakes and candies. 1 have sold "J.7*> boxes of food plies to George Shortridge, another memb/.r f the Yeomen of the Guard will hence forth be worn only on Sundays and State occa sions. Instead of th<> quaint Tudor uniform of scar let and gold, with ruff and buckles complete, to which the public have been accustomed for so long, a utilitarian age now dresses the custo dians in blue serge, the coat being ornamented with a red collar, red stripes, and a bandolier of b!ue and red. A royal crown with the letters ■ V. K." and fl'--ur de Us are emblazoned on the The new hat is also a sorry substitute for the soft wide head covering that added such a dis tinrtive feature to the old costume, the disap pearajice of which in favor oX a cheaper rival v. ... cause regret to many. NEW-YORK TRIBUNE ILLUSTRATED SUPPLEMENT: GEORGE YON T.. MEYER. Who will probablj General Draper as An - to Itah GEORGE \ns LEININGEX METER, rHING ABOUT THE MAX WHO MAY BE TIIK NEXT AMBASSADOR TO ITALY. :i Leining< i whose nai • • Italian Embassy, is not . . ■ ■■:.- served in the Massachusetts House of Repr< ■ ntatives than two-thirds of the men with him called him "Mr. Yon Meyer." rs and proofreaders make the same mis take, and the error h:is been a s.'ur<-- of an noyance to tr.e man Mr. Meyer's paternal grandfather came to the United m Germany toward thf st century. Mr. Meyer was born on Bea con Hill, Boston, on Jun.- 24. 1858. His father was a native of New-York and his mother was Miss Grace Helen Parker, a nativi and a granddaughter of the late Bishop S He received his early education in the Boston b, and was graduated from Harvard in the class of TH 11 took ai part in ath ' - and ls am< n r :" the '79 rowing crew, i>n l< la mercan ise ati.i has ! n engaged in a>-tiv.- busi r sii • ■ r of the firm of Linder & Meyer, which was organized by his father :n IMI. Secretary H I week that the ap -. j Rome had not been formally of KISSAM HALL. The building which William X V'anderbilt has given to Vanderbilt University in memory of his mother. fered to Mr. Meyer, but there is a widespread opinion in Washing-ton that be will be named. AN OLD TIME ENGLISH ELECTION. From The Westminster Gazette. The only contest which occurred at Gatton within historic memory was curious enough. Sir Mark Wood, who had been one of Its mem bers for several years, had as his colleague in the Parliament of 1812 Sir William Congreve, the inventor of the famous "Congreve rocket." The latter resigned in 1816, and the baronet wished his own son to fill the vacancy. There were only three voters in the constituency — Sir Mark, his son, and his butler, named Jennings; but as the son was away and the butler had quarrelled with his master, an opportunity was afforded for a singular revenge. Jennings re fused to second Sir Mark's nomination of his son, and proposed himself; and a deadlock was averted only by Sir Mark coming' to terms with th« refractory butler, whose nomination be sec onded in order to induce him to act as s to his son. Matters being thus put formally in train. Sir Mark arranged with Jennings that the former's vote should be alone given, and the ate of the poll at Gatton'a only known I stood thus: Wood (Tory), 1; J.-nnings (Whig), 0. THE SAME KIND HERE. From The Philadelphia Record. "Have you ever noticed that nearly all p get fat?" asked a man who keeps his eyes open. "This would seem to disprovi that walking in the open air is - „f re ducing superfluous weight. I have known new men to start on th- ir beats weighing no more than U.I pounds. En six months they would tip the scales at l-".n, and in a yeai the l!'Ht mark. It must be the slow sauntering in the open air that does it. for I have noticed that while policemen grow fat, th-- housi geants, who art- ontiru-d to the stations, are In variably thin. Those who patrol the E sain the maximum weight in about three years The muscles then harden, and. rie of th'- best runners and rs I know is a policeman who weighs nearly three hundred pounds. 77/ K ART OF FELLING TREES. From The Seattle Post-Intelligencer. The felling >>f trees is in itself the work of an artist, and among the best paid men In a logging camp arc- thus- .- rm this work. The tree Is first notched on the side it is intended to fall. Th;s is done with an ax--. Then, on th.- r-\> -r.se .' ■ >rk to cut in. until with a the giant timber wavers and tot- ters from its perpendicular position, and with a loud crash falls to mother earth. It Is a most Inspiring sight, and one that after years spent in the woods will not fail to attract attention. The good feller will always find a place on which his timb* r can come down without breaking. In this he selects an aerial path not crowded by other trees. Once the tree strikes the ground it is deserted by the feller and becomes the prey of a corps of sawyers, barkers, snipers and other classes of labor. It is first harked and stripped of. its branches, and afterward sawed up into lengths to which the tree is most suited. Then the yard engine begins its work. But this is the modus operand! in an up to date camp, in the interior, where no line of load has yet reached; there are numerous other ramps different in character. No shrill whistle of engine or puffing or steam is h»:ird. < en ami horses perform the work of tin locomotives. The method in felling and preparing the trees is the same. Transportation, however, is over skid ways on roads to the water. A VANDERBILT MEMORIAL. HANDSOME BUILDING GIVEN To TUB UNIVERSITY AT NASHVILLE, Kissam Hail, the gift of William K. Vander bile as a memorial to his mother, Maria Louisa Kissam Vanderbilt, will be formally presented to Vanderbilt University, Nashville. Term., on Oct ber _:;. The building stands >n a prominent site with in the campus, sot far from University Hall. In matt-rial and architectural style it is lik-- the other buildings, but it is superior to them all in beauty. It is built in the form of a hollow Bquare, after plans by Richard H. Hunt. The basement is of cut stone. Above it rise three full stories of repressed brick, white pencilled, with Bedford stone trimmings. The fourth floor is built with a dormer window effect In the middle front wall Is a memorial tablet of Tennessee marble, bearing the name of the donor's mother in gilt letters. Th<> first flour contains a reception room to the right of the left hand entrance. This room is 14 by 2.S feet. A small hospital is located on this floor. Five walls divide the building into four compartments. There are a few single rooms, 14 by 14 feet in size, but most of the building is arrangr-d in suites. A space 14 by 28 feet, with f'>ur windows, is cut up into a central study and two single bedrooms with three closets. Handsome fireplaces, perfect ventilation, electric light, steam heat, double floors with a "deadening" substance i- finished in hard pine, plate glass windows and a commanding view of the hil!s that sur round Nashville are among the features of th" memorial building, which was erected at a cost Of over 5130,000. BEER AND CANDI HY THE YARD PECULIAR WAYS IN WHICH DEALERS ADVERTISE THEIR WARES 'Beer by the yard" is the subject -if an article recently published in an English newspaper. The place where this strange method of selling ii'iuids is in vogue is given as Boxley an 4 vicinity. "The liquor." says the story te i - trough! in a glass vessel three feet high, with a verj narrow stem, terminating at the bottom !n ■ globular bowL To drink it. however, without spilling a drop is no easy task, and at many places the stranger who ''.in io so is permitted to have his draught fr f payment. At first the accomplishment of the feat appears simple enough, and the beer flows gently from the nar row stem; but n> sooner is the wssel tilted suffi ciently to allow of the air entering the b-'V; than the liquor is driven thence with such vio lence that the luckless drinker receives about half a pint in his face or down his clothes. To the natives, however, the feat, from constant practice, is by no means difficult " The sale "f be»>r by the yard has not yet been introduced In this country, but "candy by the yard" is becoming popular. At several watering places stands were main tained last season for the sale of "old-fashion-d steam candy by the yard." At some of the places the sweet mixture was sold "off the hook" direct from the hands of the candy puller, but in nmst instants, the candy was in long strips about t\v'. wide, ai:J from these strips a yard or half a yard would be cut off. At >ne mountain resort the candy man did what he >rt busin '-.<, and sent yards of mdj product in especiallj ma'!-- boxes to all parts of tUfi country, and it was !ars>-ly through his enterprise that 'candy by the yard" •■ known. 1 VEGETARIAN From The Chicago News "That man." remarked the great detective, "la undoubtedly a vegetarian of the most pro* nounced type." "How do you make that ou'?" queried hie friend. "Oh, that's dead easy." replied the great de tective. "He has carroty hair, reddish cheeks, a turnup nose, and a ease look." 3