Had Never Seen a Horse, THE DEMINGi GRAPHIC BACK TO HIS OWN CHURCH. NEW MEXICO. Uncle Sam will Inaugurate the Pana ma canal with a f lO.tmu.POO dig. The revolution In Bolivia Is spread ing. A lam dog Joined It yesterday. Tlii American loo trust lost money last year. Probably It had too much watered stock. At this distance we can gee a Pick wickian flavor about that proclama tion of the ciar. There has been a break In the whisky trust, but not long enough to let the stuff out for nothing. A New York jury has fixed the value of a man's leg at $17,000. Would you sell one of your legs for that? Some way should be found to pre vent Mount Peleo and old Crazy inake from breaking out at the game time. When you have known a hundred women, you know Just about as much about the sex as when you knew only one. The Mad Mullah's mother Is sought. Now if they could catch his mother-in-law, perhaps he'd quiet down and live in peace. The furnareman has appeared in the Hurdlck case, but the milkman and the plumber have thus far succeeded in keeping out When we remember what a fuss men make about their 50 panamá hats marked down to $1.98, we can have charity for the women. Ex-Mayor Ames of Minneapolis says the newspapers are to blame for his present troubles. This Is quite a 'ompllment to the press. Compared with what the Buffalo de tectives do not know about the Bur dick murder the facts thus far brought out are exceedingly meager. "If your baby has the grippe don't kins it," says Dr. Cyrus Edson. "If your stenographer has the grippe," he adds "send her home till she gets well." The Rothschilds started in business with a small art store. They knew practically nothing about painting, but soon had all of the old masters coming their way. A trolley syndicate has been Incor porated in New Jersey with a capital of $50.000,000. Hut a little bit of a thing like that doesn't spill much water nowadays. Japanese labor lias been trlej In Colorado and Utah and Is pronounced to be a failure. The Japanese cos tume fllls so easily with snow that '.he laborer becomes logy. Prof. Monaghan might have added to his assertion that poor cooks make drunkards the further fact that they incite to profanity, assault and bat tery, defalcation and suicide. Tho man out West who wants a di vorce on the ground that his wife hypnotised him Into the marriage, will not get It. That ground would allow every husband to get a divorce. Secretary Shaw isn't worrying half so much about the prospective pay ment of that $00,000 .ooo Panama canal account as you may be about the prospective payment of a $30 tailor's bill. Lances are to be discarded by the British army. All the lancers and dragoons will bo armed with carbines and swords hereafter. Is this another move forward toward universal peace That Tennessee legislator who wants to make kissing a misdemeanor must have passed a lonesome youth, a '-eary middle life and now on the . ;ge of old ago has no love for (. Idren. Mr. Tokell, the English bruiser who as recently Jolted into the land of dreams by tho American, Mr. Forbes, has so far ."wow-red as to h able to state that the pimple of this blaaled country "lack elawss." We are Informed that the Sultan of Muscat has bren ruined by the ex pense Incurred In organizing his cus toms service on the advice of the British. American and French con suls. Too many cooks. A Boston dry goods firm advertises "Beautiful things in spring shirt waists." We have them down here, too, but we do not advertise them. They speak for themselves, both as display and solid matter. DEMINO, THE MUCH-FEARED CENTIPEDE. Sight of One Full Grown Gives Shock to the Nerves. The sight of a full-grown centipede Is said by travelers lu tropical lands to be enough to affect the strongest nerves. Ten to eleven Inches Is the average length, although larger ones have been seen. Lafcadio Hearn, In "Two Years In the French West In dies," says that the. vitality of the centipede Is amazing. He kept one In a bottle, without food or water, for thirteen weeks, at the end of which time It remained as active and dan gerous as ever, Tbe hen attacks the centipede wUh delight, and often swallows him head first, without tak ing tlfe trouble to kill him. The cat hunts him, but !s careful never to put her head near him. She has a trick of w hirling him round and round upon the floor so quickly as to stupe fy him; then, when she sees a good chance, she strikes him dead with her claws. If you kill a centipede you are sure to receive money soon and even If you dream of killing one It Is good luck at least so local tra dition says. THE ACME OF UNBELIEF. "Close" Man's Reputation Must Have Been Well Established. One day last week three members if the Stock Exchange, one of whom Is generally reputed to be rather "close," were on their way to luncheon when they were met by three sisters of charity soliciting alms. Each one contributed something, but one of the sisters Inadvertently solicited from the close one for the second time. Natur ally enough he protested politely that he had done his duty. "I believe him," said the first mem ber in the ear of the second, "but I did not see It." "Well," said tho second, "I saw him do It, but I don't believe It." New York Times. An Early Skirt Dancer. Kate Vaughan, who died recently In Johannesburg. Is aneged by the Eng lish to have been the originator of the skirt dance. She was an all round actress and had been on the stage from early childhood, the parts of Little Nell and Little Era'ly.ln "David Copperfleid," being among her pre liminary triumphs. She first attempt ed her dancing In the "tempestuous petticoat" so long ago that few living exponents of the art will care to con test the claim that she was first. It Is said that the manager of the Lon don theater In which Miss Vaughn first gave the dance cheerfully paid a weekly bill of $40 for the renewal of her skirts. A Puzzling Calculation. We all like to puzzle our brain over things which give certain and strange results, but which we cannot explain. Here's a puzzle that puzzles every body: Take the number of your liv ing brothers, double the amount, add to It three, multiply the result by five, add to it the number of living sis ters, multiply the result by ten, add to It the number of deaths of broth ers and sisters, subtract l.'iO from the result. The right-hand figure will bo the number of deaths, the middle flgur.e the number of living Bisters and the left the number of living brothers. Canton Saturday Roller. Brains Cost Money. This Is the opinion of a large retail merchant on wage-earners. When an Irate customer complained that tho store was full of Insolent chumps who did not understand the first principles of waiting on a patron he said: "If my clerks had brains enough to amount to anything they would not be working here at $7 or $8 per week." "Why don't you hire clerks with brains?" asked the customer. "Be cause brains cost more money than I can afford to pay," was the reply. "In our business we pay large salaries to slave drivers and nothing to the slaves." Ill Omen at a Wedding. A curious story is told by a person wha was present at the marriage of tho much-talked of Princess of Saxony, who was divorced the other day. By some Inexplicable error the box sup poted to contain her wedding boquet. sent by a celebrated flower artist in Vienna, was found when opened to contain Instead a largo cross of white flcwers, destined for the funeral of a well-known Austrian general Just dead. The mistake was not discovered until within half an hour of the wedding, and the consternation of the supersti tious Austrian court may be Imagined. To Encourage Tree Planting. There are many historic trees in the country, and It Is believed by the De partment of Agriculture that Interest in tree planting can be stlmiilmnit h J distributing a limited number of these i c uuuur piuper airection. The seedlings, when grown, will be sent to schools In various parts of the coun try, and there will accompany each tree a concise statement setting forth the historic events connected with trie tree Itself, and the gruwlug of the seodlina. Youth Had Gone Rounds of the Others and Wss Satisfied. Young Stanley McMlnneman of Rumtord Falls, the son of Mr. and Mrs. George McMlnneman, Is sup posed to be an attendant at Father La Flamme's church. For the past few weeks, owing to necessity, he has been sent to church alone The other day he startled bis mother by announcing, as he but toned his collar under his chin: "Well, I guess I'll go back where I belong today." "What do you mean?" his mother asked In surprise. "Why," the little chap answered calmly, "I've been going round to see what church I liked best. But the 1'nlversallBts and the Baptists are no good. The Methodtst church's on the bum they have't got any altar, nor altar boys, and I'm Just going back to where I belong!" His mother took pains to assure her self that he did. Lcwiston Journal. TRAINING THE HUMAN EYE. Wonderful Possibilities of That Organ Arc Little Known. Unless we are color-blind we all can see the seven colors In the rain bow. That Is ordinary eyesight, which may by careful training be wonderfully developed. The tapestry workers of Fiance, for instance, by continued practice, learn to distin guish different shades of tbe same color In a truly marvelous way. Some of these men and women, by actual experiment, can perceive 1,500 differ ent shades of a single color, and com bine them in wonderful harmonies. Their eyes are ordinary human eyes, like those of other people; but they have trained their Right until it be comes almost unbelievably perfect. Their work is priceless, because they ha-e raised an ordinary possession Into an extraordinary endowment. Unusual. A captain of an English regiment stationed at Natal, while paying off his new recruits a Transvaal half crown, which bears the Image and super scription of Paul Kruger. The fellow soon returned with the coin, and throwing It on the tablo, declared it was a bad one. The officer took the coin without looking at It and rang It on the table. "It sounds all right, Atkins; what's the matter with it?" he asked. "Well, sir," replied Atkins, "If you say It's all right It's all right, but it's the first time I've seen the Queen with whiskers on." Guards Secrets of Letter. An American has luvented an en velope which records of Itself any attempt to tamper with its contents. The flap is Imbued with some chemical composition which when operated upon by a dampening process or any other means of penetrating to Its in closure, records the transaction by causing the words "Attempt to open" to appear. It is thought that the In quisitive will think twice before pur suing their researches in face of such an Invention. Argument Against Early Marriages. "Do not," said the little man at the club, "do not marry too young." "And what do you call too young?" Inquired the young man to whom the advice was so solemnly tendered. "I married my wife," replied the lit tle man, "when she was but 17. She was a petite thing, and hadn't got her growth. And now," the little man paused to sigh, "now she's two feet taller than I am!" And he sighed again. Cleveland Plain Dealer. Judge Shlras In Luck. Judge Shlras, who has Just retired as a Justice of the supreme court, gains $2,500 a year by the passage of the bill Increasing the salaries of tbe members of that tribunal. He wished to retire Borne months ago, but the death of Justice Gray delayed the ac ceptance of his resignation. Mean time the Increase of salary became effective and he will receive $12,500 a year during the remainder of bis life. Election Thinned Committees. There are sixty-three committees In the house of representatives at Wash ington, and only one of them was en tirely exempt from the effects of last fall's election. That Is the commit tee on expenditures In the treasury de partment, of which "Rob" Cousins of Iowa is chairman. Every other com mittee lost from one to five members through defeat In convention or at tbe polls. Grateful for Prosperity, While liord Charles Beresford wss In New York be told of one of bis ten ants who conducted a small under taker's establishment In Waterford. One day he met her and asked bow the business was getting along. "Grand, me lord!" she exclaimed, "I now have the luckiest little hearse you ever taw. Glory be to goodness --It was never a day Idle since I cot IL" Wanderíag Alaskan Indian Astonished at Beasts of Burden in Prospectors' Camp Dog Teams' the Only Traffic Carriers Known to Him, "It is hard to believe that there are perrons living In the western hemi sphere who never saw a horse," said Quartermaster John F. Rice at the Norm an die, "but such Is the rase. I well recollect when with the Aber cromble expedition in 1899 we found ourselves one September night several J nunared miles from nowhere. Just as the sun was sinking over the Alaskan range the camp was startled by the report of a rifle. "We sprang to our feet, prepared for any emergency, when our native guide discovered across the narrow valley an Indian who had Just brought down a caribou. By the use of signs and sig nals he was Induced to come Into camp. After we bed tanked hlra up with strong tea and loaded him to the guards with pork and beans his tongue limbered up and. through one of the guides, he informed us that he was a Matanuskl. by the way, the fiercest tribe in Alaska, and that he was hunt ing caribou. At the time we discov ered him he was 150 miles from tho encampment of his tribe, which shows that the fellow had his nerve with him, He had never seen a horse and our pack animals excited his curiosity and wonder. He declared that no member of his tribe had ever seen a horse, all transportation In his coun Where Cow Bells Are Made, Colh'nsville, a Little Town in Connecticut, Produces Supply for Nearly Entire Country Many Sets Made to Ring tn Musical Chime. Cowbells that melodiously chime on the western plains, sheep bells that dingle on tho big American sheep ranches, bells for grazing horses and mules and all kinds or bells for the farm and ranch are nearly all made In one factory, which stands on a hill side street In the little town of Col Unsville, Conn. The factory turns out from 10.000 to 15,000 bells every year, and they are shipped to ail parts of the country through the wholesale hard ware houses. To several great cattle ranches of the West were sent recent ly a lot of the bells tuned In sets of an octave each, so that the bell bear ers among the shifting herds answered each other In musical chime. Ranch men say that bells echoing In tunes across the plains deter wolves from attacking the herds. The metal for the bells Is received at tbe factory In large flat sheets of thin iron, direct from the rolling mills, and is passed under a steam-driven cutter, which turns out the properly shaped pieces like patterns for a dou-ble-bloded ax. Then a ring for a clap per is fastened Into the center of each Some Old Cures for Rabies, Powdered Crayfish and Laying Hens Prescribed by Physi dans Old-time Doctor Had Various Methods of Dealing With This Dread Disease. Dr. Stephen Bradwell In the earliest known English book on first aid to the Injured, called by him "Helps for Sud den Accidents" (1(533), endeavors to shuffle out of the serious discussion of mad dog bite by pooh-poohing It. His method Is familiar even now. "Although," says he, "In this our country of England I have neither seen nor heard of any such terrible dan gers happening to people by a mad dog's biting as in other regions, yet I have seen dogs mad." Cure, according to him. Is easy and frequent. Ills own method of pro cedure partly follows Celsus. "Labor to draw the contagion out of the wound by cupping glasses." He also advocates the use of the cautery and of sublimate, but departs from the common sense of antiquity when he suggests an "application of pullets or pigeons that lay eggs," scar ifications, leeches and drawing medi cines. From the days of Galen to those of Rhazes and onward powdered cray fish wan recommended as an antidote. wvwvwwwvwwv. Islands Built by Oysters. Dr. Grave of the United States fish commission haa recently been study ing the Islands found In Newport river and Beaufort harbor In North Carolina. The islands, which are in various stages of growth, are shown to be built up of generations upon generations of oysters, and appear to grow in very much the same way as the coral islands of the Pacific. The original reefs grow across tbe river, because the swift current keeps the edges clean, and thus makes a favor able surface for the attachment of the young spat. In course of timo, by action of wind, waves and vegetable growth on tbe accumulating genera- try being conducted by dog teams hitched to sleds In winter, and by pack dogs In summer. What amused him most was to see the animals cat grass, and every time they would grab a mouthful of forage he would almost go Into convulsions, he thought It so funny. Iu air ethnological sense the Matanuskls resemble the Apache In dians of our plains. They subsist on the flesh of the caribou and brown bear, the counterpart of the Rocky Mountain grizzly, and quite as fero cious, and are greatly feared by the other tribes In Alaska because of their fierce disposition and warlike nature. Our guides, who were shore Indians, seemed to be afraid of the newcomer, and .he treated them with haughty con tempt. Whenever he would shoot a fierce glance at them they would quail like whipped curs, and slink away from his sight. "We found the shore Indians quite a Jolly lot of fellows. Compared with the Matanuskls they were quite so ciable and Inclined to be obliging to white people. When cam pod on the Yukon quite recently I heard a small band of them singing the familiar song, 'There'll Be a Hot Time in the Old Town To night' and that other ten der ditty, 'Goo-Goo Eyes.' "Washing ton Star. piece and It Is spanned with a llttlo Iron strap for a handle. Finally the piece Is bent down Into the familiar bell shape, and Its sides riveted together on the anvil. The bell Is In shape then, but It still lacks tone and color. These are gained by a coating of brass and a bath in a fiery furnace. In neBts of four or five each the bells, ranging In size from the little three-Inch sheep bells to the seven-Inch cow bells, are placed with a mixture of charcoal and brass filings between them, In plumbago crucibles, whose lids are held In place by a plas tering of wet clay. Then these are Immersed In the fire until ready for the final touch. Within the crucibles the brass spends Itself In a thin coating over the Imprisoned bells and the bell obtains Its clear note. All that need be done afterward Is to burnish the bells, which Is done by throwing them, with a few leather scraps. Into a big re volving cylinder, in which they polish themselves. Tho bell tongues are made In foundries and come with wire at tached ready to bend on. The crayfish were to be gathered when the sun was In a certain house and were to be cooked alive. There are five general remedies for the bite of a mad dog in Thomas Sen dall's "Manuscript" (KÍ59). Two rec ommend strong ale as a chief Ingred ient in the medicines to be adminis tered. One mixture Includes ale. garlic, sage, treacle and two ounces of scraped pewter, and Is to be adminis tered thrice dally "by nine spoonfuls" at a time. Another consists of pow dered claws of crayfish and a suffl clency of treacle, milk, pine roots and the like, aud is to be given to man or dog for the dog was then also treat ed. Madness In dogs, the same author opines, "proceedeth from black chol erlck Juices wherewith a dogge more than other beasts aboundolh," but of the actual fear of water he can give no better account than that drlnklijg may produce convulsions In the bitten and may so come to be regarded with horror, Lancet. tloilS Of Oysters, tile reef i-.mfilL becomes established us an Islán i says tho Minneapolis Junior Journal! No More Tie Counting, "Do you favor a theater under the patronago of tbe government?" "I do." replied Stormlngton Barnes. "I should like to see government own. ershlp of the theaters and govern ment ownership of the railways, and then hope for cooperation between these two great branches of our na tion system." Many a man reserves the kind words nl wife is entitled to for her tomb-stone.