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;Bvhohate their head
■the metropolis. The
Bs point about these fig-
Bthey are composed of an
larfco number of small
janibers* Journal.
Che Ruling Ptission.
larr, ” said the manager,
kively must quit letting
Idwell so much on your
Mi! Why?” asked the
MPerhaps you aie not
Bbut in the third a, t.
Bdd h cr:< -:. 'Ye
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BBBMB .>■’»• mt ill the l.llto’J ;:s
solemn rind r arm ~t c 1 :-s.
are, for the most j. irt.
jifeyidr Bkimily. S,:.h- ■.; r.teht
.
Bribe
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JBied
]■’;; -hidyurr
■■■ke of getting th'-mselvrs inlo
Bppiifl fh<; lini'-al V'.,; -h my maim
• flniimbcrs the price f> ree,
MBk policemen, er
■carriers, or <■]<”■;<> in s-
*£*%- Bt<d’ the m;:m. :m.I to.
school is private. T> e
Bl understands v.la n !,•• enters
B ■ < <M‘ hcr lia -; •: c. r;; ■■,e ■ to
fact that tho puy.il has
Ween proficient in his school does
I not imply that the pupil will pass
the examination required by tho
civil service rules of the municipali
ty. It does not presuppose a pull.
But it makes the pupil better quali
fied for service and less timid when
he runs up against the civil service
interrogatories. He knows a little
I more than ho might have otherwise
I known. Ho knows that the name of
I a man or a town must begin with a
capital letter when he writes out
| that name. He knows the location
jot’ the principal cities of the coun
: try. He knows whether Omaha is
| a city or a state. He knows whether
' Chapultepec belongs to the war with
Mexico or tho civil war.
If he is an applicant for a place in
the fire department or as park po
! licetr-an, ho must know how to read
print and manuscript. He must be
; able to write and show a specimen
1 of his writing by copying from raan
. uscript. He must write down from
LjjeiDory tho substance of matter
Ho must ba
n c.
■k, ;
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*T:^B' i ' . . '
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Sr ' loll! to V:-li 3
d.-; . . r it. ar.d th, n ;
return and mai, ■ a re-
wants to be a p> lit em; n lie
go over tho samd ground, in
to which ho must know,
! after he has been instructed, what
1 a policeman must do under certain
i circumstances. And if ho is looking
? for a pla«e in the postoffice or a
clerical place in the city hall, he
must understand how to manipulate
common fractions as w’ell as some
i other things.
. “It is a hard world, my masters,”
I occurs to him often, if he has ever
read Shakespeare, for tho applicant
often finds that in his endeavor to
solve the problem of earning his
daily bread the elementary problems
us his school days vanish and are
forgotten. Many an honest, hard
working fellow comes to the school
in Cooper Union from the shop to
dud that he has forgotten what he
learned when ho was a boy. This
preparatory school helps him to look
tho examining board in tho face,
and ho is not afraid that some of his
answers will be used by tho humor-
i ists of tho press.
What if ho fails in his test exami
nation? One of these pupils, a young
married man whef is a hand in a
foundry, answered this question
propounded by The Sun:
“Then the instruction I have re
ceived here makes me a more con
tented man. I have picked up in
. formation which is valuable and
! which every man ought to have, no
matter what his business may be.”
i —New York Sun.
On the Bishop.
A good cricket story is told of the
late bishop of Rochester. He was
batting in a local cricket match
when the bowler sent a ball very
i wide of the wicket.
“Keep tie ball in the parish!”
cried the irascible bishop.
The next ball knocked his lord
ship's middle stump The yckel
; shouted: J >
“1 botrewhere aboot
-
WEALTHY ENGLISH ACTORS.
Many Hare Made the Bulk of Their For
tunes In America.
The richest living English actor is I
Mr. Bancroft, and the beginning of ;
his fortune, which is said to be near
ly §1,500,000. was made at a little
theater in Tottenham Court road
in its day as the Queen’s.
Mr. Bancroft received §30.000 per
annum from Eeerbohm Tree in the
form of rent for the Haymarket
theater, which ho purchased some 15
years ago.
Sir Henry Irving gives away thou
sands of dollars every year to less
fortunate brothers and sisters on ,
the stage. Unfortunate actors have
not a better or more willing friend,
Wilson Barrett perhaps excepted, i
1 than tho ‘‘Knight of the stage.” !
Were it not for this fact, Sir Henry j
would probably bo very rich. His
productions, even costing, as they
frequently do, as much as §KJO,OOO
to stage, have scarcely over proved j
financial failures, while his tours in >
this country, where ho is most pop- j
ular, have brought him enormous j
sums of clear profit. His first two
tours in America cleared for him
above §450,000, and his last trip is
said to have increased his banking
account to the tune of §300,000.
The Kendala have also made large
fortunes here, where they have al
ways met with greater success than
at home. By two trips taken in
1889 and 1890 they cleared 8000,000, ;
which they have increased very con- '
siderabl'y by doing the provinces in
England.
J. L. Toole, in spito of his popu
larity in London, has nover made
any very big sums out of his metro
politan productions. In Australia
and in the provinces ho is more ap
preciated than in London, and he
has had great financial prosperity.
, His Australian tour, made some
■ six years ago, put some §BO,OOO into j
his pocket, and his fortune is now
said to exceed §400,000.
George Conquest, whose right
name is Oliver, inherited from his
father §350,000, which he is said to
have doubled during the many years
he has run the Surrey theater with
such conspicuous success. His year
ly pantomimes, although costing
enormous sums to produce, have aL,
ways added largely to his wealth.
Mrs. Sarah Lane is probably the
richest woman in the profession.
Her productions at the Britannia
theater, Hoxton, have over met with
successes only equaled by her own
enormous popularity at this seat of
blood and thunder drama. Her the
ater, which is nightly filled from
floor to roof by most enthusiastic
audiences, only holds §SOO, but in
52 years she has, by careful man
agement and judicious catering, suc
ceeded in accumulating a fortune of
more than §900,000.
Charles Wyndham has made a
I considerable fortune since he first
took tho Criterion theater, 11 years
V ago. His productions have always
Jjeen very successful and his wealth
is estimated at §500,000.
Beerbohm Tree is another actor
who has boon enormously success
ful, but the exact amount of his for
tune is not known. It is, however,
acknowledged to be very largo.
W. S. Penley has made a fortune
out of “Charley’s Aunt. ” Indeed, if
are to bo believed, the amount
of tho fortune exceeds §l,ooo,ooo,and
this is quite possible, considering
tho years this play has been running,
not only in London, but all over the
world. Edward Terry, whose suc
cesses in Australia have been much
greater than his successes in Eng
land, is the lucky possessor of some
§200,000, a considerable portion of
which was made out of “Sweet Lav
ender.” Charles Warner is some
what of a go as you please gentle
man and contents himself with a
fortune of approximately §150,000,
while Mrs. Langtry is said to be
worth about §1,000,000. —Hartford
Times.
Cleopatra’s I'umrny.
Where does Cleopatra’s body rest? 1
Scarcely a layman who would not
answer, “Why, in Egypt!”
After her cajoleries, her wiles, her
life of intense if not very exalted
loves, Cleopatra was laid in one of
the loveliest tombs that has ever
been fashioned by the hand of man.
But what a change 2,000 years has
brought about!
Today an ugly mummy, with an
emblematic bunch of decayed wheat
and a coarse comb tied to its head—
a mere roll of tightly swathed dust
—lies crum'Ted i;a a hideous glass
case at tho '3r. ‘;l;h muses m. It is
Cleopatra, the •? T!/ je great queen, a
Venus in cbariiu beauty aad love.—
St. Paul’s.
,T a6t Trr. ,r ,.
Germany'!) a-'est lon,d distance
Prain is the C.-i’ kd-St. Petersburg,
which runs 1181 miles ov< r German
territory in 2‘Bj. hears, a mean
speed, including itops of ’9.1 miles
ap hour. Oe tt.e return jo: rney bet
ter time is made, the rate iieing 40.6
miles, or, in actual running time,
excluding stops, 43Ja' miles. The
train between Berlin and Hamburr
however, makes l~6 z Ss miles in 3
hours 36 minutes, the mean speed
being 49.1 miles an hour.
OUR UNEXPLORED GLOBE.
The?? Arc T-x-cnty Million Square Milet
of tlie Earth Yet to Be IZxplored.
Wo are apt to think that we mod
erns have very little to do in the
way of exploring the-globe and that ;
the recent explorations in Africa
have quite put the finishing touch
to geographical knowledge, so that
ho who wishes to set foot on virgin
soil must sigh, like Alexander, for
I another world. These who entertain
\ such opinions may calm themselves
with tho thought that no less a por
tion of the earth's surface than 20,-
' 000,COO square miles is yet a fit sub
; ject for investigation, and on a large
part of this the foot of civilized man
has not yet trod. We translate from
i the Paris “Cosmos” an article that
brings this fact out very clearly. It
runs as follows:
“At the London geographical con
gress Mr. Logan Lobley gave a very
interesting study of the present state
■of exploration of the globe. It ap
pears that modern geographers have
! an immense amount of labor before
them to make us acquainted with
all parts of the earth. This conclu
sion will astonish some people, for
there is a general impression that
almost all regions of tho earth are
Well explored.
“Mr. Lobley reminds us that in
the first place, toward the middle of
the sixteenth century, all seas had
been traversed by navigators, and
that if the maps of the continents
were not yet very exact, at least
their relative positions and their
i general configuration were known.
Australia itself appears on a French
map of 1542 under the name of
Great Java. In ihe course of the CO
i years included in the last decade of
the fifteenth century and tho first
half of the sixteenth a pleiad of nav
igators had advanced geographic
knowledge in a degree that has never
been reached in any other period so
short. Sebastian d’Elano had made
his first voyage around the world;
Vasco da Gama had doubled tho
Cape of Good Hope; Christopher Co
lumbus had added the two Americas
to the map; the voyages of Cabot and
of Magellan bad completed this won
derful list of new discoveries.
“Today, outside of the polar re
» gions, wo must confess that all tho
seas have been explored, but this is
far from being the case with tho
land. An immense extent is entirely
unknown to us. Another, still more
considerable, has been only imper
fectly explored; travelers have trav
ersed it, commerce has exploited
some of its products, but good maps
of it do not exist. Finally, only the
least part is well known; geodesy
has covered it with a network of
triangles, and tho maps of it are com
plete, even from a topographical
standpoint.
“After the atetio and antarctic
regions, which have remained inac
cessible up to tho present time, Af
i rica is the part of the world that is
least known to us, notwithstanding
tho admirable explorations made in
this century, which are daily clear
ing up the map. Tho earliest explor
ers, however, could not dream of
serious efforts, and many years will
pass before the country w’ill bo thor-.i
oughly explored.
“After Africa, Australia offers the
vastest field to tho investigation of
explorers. We must remember that
1 even its seacoast was not fully ex-1
plored till 1813. Since that time, at
the price of great suffering, it hag
been crossed from south to north, I
J but no traveler has yet traversed it
from east to west.
“In the two Americas, except the i
: extreme northern and southern
parts, the continent is known. Never- ■
theless, the whole central region of
South America, though in great part:
explored for commercial purposes:
(for mines, woods, caoutchouc, etc.),
is not exactly mapped.
“To sum up, the yet unexplored
< plarts of the globe cover an area of;
about 50,000,000 square
(about 20,000,000 square miles), ap-'
i prokimately divided thus:
Square miles.
“Africa 6,500,001
Australia 2,000,00(
America 2,000,001 ’
Asia 200, (XX !
Islands 400, U 0(
Arctic regions 8,600,00(
Antarctic regions 5,300,00(
Total 20,000,00 C
“Opportunity will not be wanting
here for a long time to the explor
ers who wish to undertake their
part of the immense task that must
be achieved by humanity before it
knows its own world.”—Literary
Digest.
Doesn’t Always Work.
Father—When a young man has
his heart in what he’s doing, he’s
bound to succeed.
Son—You’re wrong, governor. I
had my whole heart in it when I
proposed to Miss Bruiy, and I did't
come within 1,000,000 miles of suc
cess.—Detroit Free Press.
Whenever a large fire breaks out in
Constantinople, it is the duty an
official of tee palace to put on a yel
low cloak and go to the sultan’s
chambers, where he enters unan
nounced and stands silent until the
sultan rises, mounts his horse and
goes in person to the scene of de
struction.
A BOUT AT QUARTERSTAFF.
A Stout Sv- Iheherd More Than Held Hii
Own With KoLlii Hood.
Caroline Brown cctributes a story
a'bcut “George O Green and Robin
Hoed” to St. Nicholas. Hero is an
account c.f the meeting between
these two characters:
“How art thou called, Master Pig
Minder?”
“George O'Green.”
“Why that?’,’
“Ho, ho, bo!” reared the churl.
“So w’ise, and don’t know that
withal! Why, I live on tho green
and mind tho pigs!” And he wiped
tears of laughter from his eyes on
the sleeve of his fustian jerkin.
“I doubt me, ” said Robin,“if thou
canst play with the quarterstaff.’-’
i “Aye, but I can!” said Gecrgc
quickly.
“Show thy prowess, then!” said
Robin, with a quick thrust at him
with his write oak staff.
“Bido here and mind the pigs till
I go to yon thicket and get me a
staff. ’ ’
Robin consented and gazed after 1
the brawny man as be walked with
long, slow strides to the oak thicket
on the hither side of the brook.
There he cart fully selected a tough
green sapling, almost 2 inches thick,
and then wrenched it off near the
ground with a twist of bis powerful
hands.
“This bodes mo no good in tho j
coming tilt, ” thought Robin. But,
though ho never withdroW for any
cause, rarely had ho suffered defeat.
George turned him about, and,
coining up to Robin, said:
lend me that knife o’ i
thine? ’Tis o’er too frayed for a
good staff,” ho said, locking at. the
fringe of splinters where he hud
snapped off the stem.
He trimmed the staff carefully,
then handed Lack to Robin his knife.
But chancing to look around, he saw
the pigs scampering off to a distant
corner of the common,
“Thou’st not minded tho pigs!
Now Goody Hoskins will rate me
Well!” cried George with heat, yet
timidly withal.
“But Sandy didn’t give mo warn
ing!” pleaded Robin.
“Good old Sandy! Faithful shote!
Ho knows thee not. He’ll talk only
to ine. ” And George’s ill nature left
him at this proof of tho faithfulness
of his favorite.
He set off at full speed after the
pigs, Robin at his heels. When they
bad got tho swine back to their own
feeding ground, they lay themselves
down on the short thymy turf to
rest. The chase had been a right
merry one, and both were short of
wind; fofpiho pigs had scampered
and dodged sprightfnlly in away
that made tho men more weary than
a five mile sprint.
George dozed off on the instant,
and Robin panted loud. In ten min
utes Robin prodded George with his
staff and said:
“Sluggard, art ready?”
George yawned prodigiously,
showing strong teeth, white as a
i young dog's, rimming his jaws.
I Then ho rose and ran his fingers
I through his shock of rod hair,
! stretched mightily and said briefly:
I “I be. Lay on. ”
“Well, then,” cried Robin, “stand
' forth now and defend thyself. I'll
warrant thou wilt bo no longer
sleepy when I shall have done with
thee. ”
At once the sound of the clashing
of staves filled the air. As both
wore so deft in handling the staff,
j all blows were skillfully parried. At
! the end of an hour Robin’s arm be
gan to weary, but George’s brawny
arm was unfailing. In warding off
’ a powerful blow Robin’s arm swerv
ed, and George’s staff came down on
his crown with a sharp rap, the first
! hit made by either. For near two
s hours longer the clashing of staves
kept up, when Robin's teot slipped
on ami J fWr ue rolled
into the brook.
Ruskin on Love.
This is the rather rude n.-mner in
! which Ruskin describes moctern love
' making and marriage as he observes
them in London: “In a miserable
confusion cf candlelight, moonlight
and limelight and anything but day
light; in indecently attractive and
insanely expensive dresses; in
snatched moments, in bidden cor
ners, in accidental impulses and dis
mal ignorances, young people smirk !
and ogle and whisper and whimper |
s and sneak and stumble and flutter j
and fumble and blunder into wbat i
they call Icve; expect to get what
ever they like the moment they fan
cy it and are continually in danger
of losing all the honor of life for a
folly and all the joy cf it by an ac- 1
cident.” But, then, Ruskin was I
prejudiced. - Ean Francisco Argo
naut.
In the Swim.
“By Jovo, but I'm lame! It seems
as if my back would break in two.” j
What's the matter? Have you
been taking too much violent exer
“Gq-iess so. I was at a reception
last nipht and never had such a
time gating into a dining room in
niy Leader.
■ W - -w—WJ ~
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CIPafHECtS? Dr - Ti.orn, in communuW
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K:.- g<tox. N. Y.
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up ionic it is without a rival, and absolutely ■
beyond comparison with any other similar -1
remedy ever offered to the public. It is aII
panacea for all ills resulting from impure U
blood, or an impoverished condition of the 9
i human system. A single bottle will demon- T]
i strate its paramount virtues. 11
1 for free book of Wonderful
i Price, si.oo per large bottle; $;;.oo f a
i bottles.
For sale by druggists: if not send 1|
, and medicine will be sent freight prepafltoa 21
receipt of price. Address Jrf!* fl
| BLWDt BALM Atkintam. '