PET DRINKS OF GREAT MEN, A List of Celebrities With the Drinks They i Liked Best. Peter the Great took Brandy With Pepper as init, interesting to mote the smallest de- tallnct eee persone. History has to some extent Kept track of the homely brslrenes ines, and among oer Sings ¢ the favorite tipples of well: mien have been noted. omer of the ae -know! ees of any pti ek gia padi good for his nerves. comforts, and bis drinking capacity in said be considerable ; indeed his enemies have not scrupled to di between him and the grea berg. As might be expected from taunch patriot, German wines and beers are Jargely honored with his patron- age, and ‘his admirers in Fatherland ke at tun of Heidel- such a ehasactre tf Siferont countries and ‘lifer [8 ; and the drinks they most afooted. on eles black coffee and ‘en —Bri aug. Doran says a ahd Fe iter his return, utterly broken, in 1827, only constant glasses of “brown brandy, very hot and very strong,” enabled him to get through his scenes. ‘Addison—the best claret. Ghatles Lamb—Genuine London porte Pitt and Klden=Port, of which the Lord Chancellor could Tink hess bot randy, plentifally seagoned with Poa e,—The wine of Johannisberg. 8 them—of port wine afterwards. pyre Hock and sodarrater and gin and Pe Beets k the Great—T« Rubens—Marsala, Spain. Rabeldis Old Chablis. arshal de Saxe—Champagne, He de. clared ree France owed her greatness to her vineyards. Humboldt—Sau Nene Charles the Fifth—Alicante. ais XVI. He had such faith in its medicinal Sees that he > gave orders to the ke Darwin—one glass of Burgundy daily. Matthew Arnold- ret. He was ac- customed to drink ate in the middle of the day, and at water, Ainiee Victoria is very choice about her The royal wine cellar is aitaated wines are and Bur- etre eae ill-fated Louis Phi Ki T Windsor Gestle qho had been Waiting a neck oie for forgiven . First Gentleman in Europe ps fee him, ‘ AWwhy- k white’ wine ?” wl living a retainer who was at the o Stairs,” mata at the fogal funicy and forgive him, f Queen of Denmark are par- Scotch nectar. Am ’s presents ‘ea and coffee are lately: was mpagne, but | 1 r of and Bordeaux and Engl: ever, eas great ake ae ot sloshing hung under slight helt ca the y a har ws of his tered with Ponormous ‘okay, ths, ine ar munay (oe of ‘aetee pape light claret ae athorwise you will remedy for mut There is on: to thei majesties of dale mttaer wedging. ast Lochnagar thereby saved'the alty.' was not by any means Bismatok’s first little indulgenoe that day. He had already been to a beer- garden and had absorbed the contents of an gd smiths jug while waiting for bi does not pee ial her he made: it ie 4s "bel arith or not. ‘Marshal vi help, all away to the hotel the usual “ cure” late, an ie very best Rgropailias tebe eat | cupped said to have a special atettion oe Seana wines ince of Wales prefers Bass’s aley but he i ia ‘afin clags-class connoisseur in a pe - | morning after that leaves eat high prices for, goo bough ie 1808 Ghateae Yquem at fae, eon or dinner he hae engaged in speaking he uses ag a voc ricant a prepa ‘ation made of sherry and the ost frugal 1 in the matter a bij f which is lost in wine, a preference which was also shared by the late Mr. wate! 2 ord Randolph Cliurebill-Brandy and | the ie. _Batfour—Port. Count Tolstoi—T Diagie erwn fg that wine: clopn hia staining from it. The doctor answered : it ; I can’t ett eg you, sit, not to leave it: oe give us no more The French find in coffee a most efficacious hi raw invidious comparisons | j German | ire n Moltke used to make annual |; she ‘ted in themselves, but in The ‘Marais of Salisbury is very ab- we od | thing of the past. of eating and deat although he is by no | § arith cog. Henry Levieg Teterated oF) Smet Maas GF wi temporary. tor hi fs seammnarary, serge of thee HANDLING A HERD OF CATTLE. Skill and Pesaran " Reantred si Avert le om the Trai The task © ne iene and. hi nt irection of thelr ere turned i adily forward eight or te wi at early twilight they were haited for anoth- rkness came on rerting fro sol they call usaaliy a then Te in keen td ber om ain iD the Sitting oa: their why ied oii sealing ov vboys passed the night nel duty, relieving’ one nother at ‘at urs. hen skies were clear and the air brac- ason oO atherings at tim f lighting, Kling stick,a wolt’s growl things ‘a moment every horn- Rao oe) it mati iy He rseF that Ra kept abreast of the lead- of the Meee the effort ws st, then more and cowboy, with his: wh: hat, his long leather cattle ag Hhis lariat, and his clanking spa seus Mite and Cholera. has stimulated investigation con- influence of a polluted water spreading such an ta point about ates, and at th wage of both Altona and Ss “ead 8 that weetehed waa ae tapaidered an year, and Orleans on Satur man wi o bade njoyed, Baird's educe- the devil | tional oportuniti Mand had the power | a which his immense wealth might have given | t him, could have been remembered as some: of tragedy even in its outgo poor ee notcrious, be shar, eigners 8001 theca fiom belog caugit 0 if Roten. by bisa poling Berkig Sea ick, Saightly peateoted, dl n in the midst of a show: neepliach apparel Tt was Balzac’s's sole stimulant. _ His the Fool “Dicth 4 ok life ranted taatene tae | ae E er died a the fool dieth” at New better than the dupe of prize fighters | "The poor faresofalife lanked the nobility | ie mitted ere only ed that the maacteritt i my e water ess from axe = after o e cowboys in re- het in front of the ravine—all dead Ge -dyings PONG ond could Vell whet onriand pies ee d | to the happy hunting gro out or Pecnvtred from their | would not ‘The exp boring sites during the cholera epidemic of | Bret inflict a deat the population of { against the exasperated trooper w! for consumption than y | braveman, forty-three deaths trom tlislera in that town, and the} and filtrat sion, God will yy filtration through | bones when the last trumpet shall soun: AL edaiagt: PATE. He Escaped the Torture and ™: Died with jim. on es t midnight the teouts came in with in- dian village aE aig y, and two Honre Tater the officers passed about. from ent to tent and aroused the sleeping men. and saddled, and the barking of dogs, and once the cry- eke child was wafted to our ears across We shall charge right into the village. n't fire upon an! e squaws unless hay take ok in the fig sah Keep together and mere ugle calls Rontae een sates the lines, and for us to make out the wigwams, en bugle sounded the * charge,” Pict auey we as, The Indians had somehow been warn- 2a, anid Wore laying in ambush in the dry ravine in. fro tho soammp. We wore coker Aidan routed ; dians killed an ank God, oe a hihi he has sei es nob ae, this, ie all of us know it ‘A prisoner in the hands of the Apaches ! ‘That means death. Ten thousand dollars in fnd kill; they die happy if they can and Corporal | He a ed to finish him. Has the Apache forgotten hy impatient for tl to begin, would inflict it with his own hand if per- mitted. iso Hope for ‘Corporal Jinn, will bo carried on the rolls sup} to be dead.” fires fora year to come tant mountains so grand. The Indians are ae iL The corporal is a will last for “how sad pe them a feast. e let go his arms, and he is stand- eerie at whet eee will tell us the rest of the ‘ory. They G Apaches him in the desi - | of the fort, and itis there to-day among tl graves.of the to laier de ad : "Col No other fiat con ee date—no epitay lies the dust of he supply so consumers. While sai o' heal — lives of defen: consumption. ted sources can be ob! teseani Way, d as ra) opral owe os helor m iaoothh slay.” is very greatly iapenvel; and that a water treated is deprived nearly all the germs that would So oeee he you to of or exposed tocontamination should not be ven to consumers ifa supply from unpo Sk ivene: vor~ Teac «providenial open; and Tw give me an illustrati Brigitt Boy" Please ma far, Tean.” “ey |. What hates ina paras Palast ¥ “ «Whe yer mee aos off, th’ holes ban: hurt.” —[ Alban: Worodo th forward a few hundred yar the | h: “Military reports have told you how iv = scream. d conducted tothe head | hado. vw, Lhave explained what maker nt some of tch from Pittsburg, Pa., says:— des; mt ey had discovered an In-j Four masked robbers went to the residence Was The piers were after this money and after . Kerr and the child they be- two wounded | an ry and a posse heat ton tin eaters them has been discovered. The baby’s ish has beeu pinched and jagged to make i i THE NEW REGIMENT, Arrival of Ne. Ring A ‘Ownat Halifay—The cord. ee rai Fnac ys teoopanlp Jlunga, Capt, Mann, arrived to: oecurred on the pass when they arrived. ‘The troops landed an marehed to the Wellington barracks, fe ed re | war of 1812-13 the regiment, was continual. ericans and added Capetown, Gibraltar, Mali, Alesana Egypt; back to Malta ‘ortsmouth, ‘The apes isa splendid asian well saltsa fore trooper, dan excellent cea boat. Sh A Good Idea, induce .the fessional peated of Natural Sepals and there is entry 8 ublic char- his spare worl ‘A PRIEST Fleet Dy KILLED. iow ato Matives | Maltrentea a Miss- neat in Market ding to Coraan ae "Father ML. Tare CAInAI. pisalonnry, ors terribly a boy. As so wd recognized him there were Sahu ot (Rill the foreign: ex,” “Stone him” The natives: threw E The | at ti dispersed leaving the missionary’ an jolate graveyard to the Ae companions half dead upon the gr round. PEDEN C =e Perplexity and Woubt: Tas “< Til be hanged if I know wheth- er “ sae to address ar t strange lady as ‘ Madame.’ Why wkat difference will it Jason—' Well you see if I call her ‘ Ma- dame’ she'll thin that she must be marrio "she'll shink Veeapotted her a8 eno 0 couldn’t: get ie How She Annoyed the Oler! Miss Cl sen Is x made such a Hae _ der to-day day, Bt cs ae AAs regards the soizare by Russia of Beit: i in Behri he commission ap- ota the Russian n Foren at the action of the ess of the entries in Mi Office enys | stere and ut the a senienan fehind authorities yon bow ae head ee ie * justified by the Tecepuneriien and evas- chu the logs of those | spond. the co Le a good sponge at must have been very 0 the young elerk.” Sane E aoa be saiéoying — oe, ARMIES IN CLOUDLAND. How France and Ttaly Might Struggle for the Alps. ‘The Alps have been the scene of B good | in oe inces that they In the event of war Italy could place in the it ths seven strong brigades, with f four of or 13 ies of ah s batterie of mountain or tillery, or 30,000 m hey are so distributed wranghea mt the frontier on the fronte jet by at least the nibal with the ‘esar with the Helvetii, eee and Piedmontese, Na- Zermans, the French, the Aus» ph recent years. pected war breal Shas to the First ing corps, head staf, the e Thi Bea Bologna, the thin Agnes the Bighth in ©) bier -| Ninth in -| Blevent irene and Italy hate each other almost i Here, | ou g the heaven kissing hill, with Rus sin tugging at Germany's coat tails o east. Both France and Italy, on whom th stress of Alpine warfare would fall most heavily, have made great preparations for ’s northwestern frontier stretches a or; with an sesrogete frontige line of 130 mie Aiter the of Villafranca and the ces- with the exception only ww in French Dossoneich, or, at lesity within Soh: trtillery cf thelr namerons frontier fortif- ms may be grouped in the fol- loging neo fe upper portion of Sav river region of the Ise e river region of the Durance. Maritime ild -| Aiguebelle in ighting men, 0: 8 now serving with iti Lap 090 men southeastern In the fourteenth an fifteenth rdering the Italian frontier are stationed repectely three Regional In- n battalions of the Al- two rg dit and one Regi ment, and five Rigas | battal mountain arillery, with six ane e consist be lee com vor with thei special equipme = te Although the pe ot surp) a th pene “a aly. On the nit sat morning of n the advancing troops would be situate : lowe ‘The Fourteenth in the Isere Valle: rar Tene ‘and Turin, itn Maucseonee Valle ley, over |. | Mont Cenis and into lad oa Riparia Val- Corps “rom Grenoble, in the Romanche Valley, over Mont Genevre S | andtinto the Chisone Valley toward Cesana, | i the Fren¢ untainous region of about twenty iilometres in width lies be- its at Smportant fortifications are being e road from Susi to. a through the Ubay, ted a to Turin, told a ae panei lo va ‘arin. from Embrun bret Mont Genevre lorps. 3 thes Seventeenth ea Trem Sisteron, jarcelonnette ie Col de!” archon ind the Stura Val- ley, toward Cuneo ani GThe’ Fitveenth aad Sixteenth Corps | a1 trom Nice, across ‘ol di Tenda, toward Cuneo and Turin. routes the marchin, On these” columns teenth et Kalin aray: CuI he Nesconset) complete in its prearranged positions in the plain ot evraiaa avdin army, whether i r endeavored to combine e | to the interior to guard the eres Paris. south, matching Chambery and Albert ills x oe road leads from ao through rehe to the Tho principal blow must be dealt destcoy the oppon' hf ree Hundred a A datightft austch entitled * Romance undted a yea,” 8 hat atau: ae expenses amount to when Iam careful read lo at the end (dof each quarter. e : almost all chivtioas are fee on era con be of the greatest import re tween the Col de l’Arche ee ihe “Col ai eo: the Alpine frontier is only mainstay of the French advanced line of enue? Finally, in the third line of the French hone, with its right it} my glove ries, re not difficult to, Bons St. Bernard, ean the ont, val fe in | reign ¥ | fashion, we are gla . WATER asa pla OF PAIN. ene i iS Declared emeter. © Chiorofer: covery in "chs dani codeibotis ee 0d deal talked about in medical dcr ienna, which, if t bears the ae- could be concentrated | vere sixth day of | it, tion, after a declaration of war, (it e Lombardy. “Pehind the Alpine troops are stationed the | Re cocaine injections under the skin b athe beh discovery , el . Schleisch, deteruiines the fact illed water, will produce exactly the same local anwesthetic effects as © degree of inenaibility-a w iy harmless polation of cocaine would prove certainly efficac ——__-_—_— le Eas of Fashion. roference to the servile in Eighteenth Corps from | every case man angry, mortal uy Piece his cynical flings at fashion seclously, and im and does appropria tong Re ciara ug’ r instance. " From the artistic a -utilitarian oi indefensible. and stormy weather of winter and spring, and in summer it is little less than It is constructed in defiance of al ya ping” hat habit ought to find yates f fa loes. We any criticism of the ‘aie oe much less sae oie te i a cpg” hats F Buey oo large proportion tour best and ace nielle citizens. Even tl ” hat whil igidngs bicyel 188 does, adort ing the bread out of the mouth of numerous But none of these considerations of hat stores, m the coming But’ weak as man’ ix with respect .to lad to be able to say that oming one of the it is one of the most ‘appropriate, adornments of gentlemen, not merely mal or festive occasions, pst ond visi honrs. In itself the wearing of a flow. small thing. Bot iba ed influence in the direc tastes. And if there were no other consid- eration it is a “good thing for men,_ most o once had exceedingly deleterious ef- | ti S | winter scenet ei A ecea tan tae 31 Sidelstag in A the bo, mnt cable ile End Moat. ‘vor pects pa ere a second pair of shoes inthe world, and that What blight 1s upon my fate, or my fed, that of my $3 ‘spend more upon romance then % Aes faiment, more upon pootry than upon \ 4 the French with the an Alsiue Jager Corps, Recruit. from the ranks of the Bersaglieri eegi- ments, the corps 8 pe constantly on bon’ the Apia region and thoneig They are quartered 'rench and peer frontiers, and fn. war times weuld be ee Sots in; exclusively “Better are. dumplings tha t, or plucke’ not eyen Lazarus joys that Dives Not a Millionaire. iG doesn’t as ee muel e snp “tte oot: pees b 0) ve ie ‘thus to be ibeought i into contact with ofnature, with its manifold suggestions jt ch hereon with the without any radical changes’ ress may ey and ‘will be, very much improved, make thent more beautiful as well as ng couple in car: He—“‘Is she Is. topsy-wopsy happy We Oh 20 bapoy E She— What would topsy-wopsy do if Poe ae 2y-W sey the world 2” Gruf voice of a man in the car SKATING ON ARTIFICIAL ICE. Bee: Enjoying Themselves all Winter. eir pleasure very he Pacisian i the person he best be jnas keenly live to the attractions of winter brethren, and en com- iron pes havi phe balding supplied with steam Sunratting ‘he cosmioninoal ammonia," which is Tel inco ii reservoirs tors, where it 8 machines, w condensers, and. ame supply of ammonia, serves over and ‘Tha lowering of the tem: ae, produse ooling an uncongealable liquid ot cale a hloride) whic! a pump, is ‘aheed nto he vei Hooe of thera Fadl trary, when the upper stratum, or even the entire ar, has to be renewed neoded. ‘The surface is renewed eve! the entire period of Songs in order t ive a perfectly even surface. taken to frequently change the ditection of the current. In this way a uniform 1 temperature in this ent secured. |The | hl it by electric light, and the tomrparaties) Eeoarchadly regulated and usually maintained at between eg a eee ‘The Press of Pars. nt and one of the smongintellgent peo lemon forthem- the Po, and it might. be. diffieslt for the | selv Daten ae ae jolated from the Alpine | would and to, in part, was the silence, crepe i ll [This is nov a0 strange. Papers nave Beak New, ork by Tweed, 1 facts we one ae in the Economiste Fri by week, for years, from the publish- “ enterprise” Taraliied | an pane motive. eal famein "key about women’seubservienoy to | ye the ‘conspiracy o} i Cavaignac termed it, becomes less unac- ave | countable, Ww The Lover of Freedom. ‘That free Republic, the United Sta Amorice i conelt nding the treaty ith treaty which will deny to the ection derive . section derives its | *" syond | | me Makes a Move im the Right Direction. ‘The Ontario Government deserves uniformity Mere sporadic” Snibo ond eeu, Reco ete. remit ied if tl ‘oo | Municipality that: ita efforts handicapped and in which less econom: During the last few extensions of rail vements in munici tty residences and farm balding Myiok. seem to have direc from thi e roads, forming & their farma improvements in roads result in bringing more closely together the imabers.of she the social intercourse of farmers “This is on aetna a teste alleged to be reasiag for farm life jarge extent, e comparative Beant course. There are ‘ach houscholds who ace compelled to bara saeluded in their home after nightfall beca in points ai | farmers clanteith ramets Sesnuhins time of wagons an Pope it: Sing: the apiculate veins munity into closer touch with urban life. Mogern Shipbuilding. a Great Eastern was cot in sl wh i ape was completed thirty- four yoars ago, bi i de oved a failure ise she was nat ‘ral eicued, and, more b ave a power ray, have more than were ou at mal too high ont of ell and rolled But the hi ofthe atl regucements of tr neither for Possil uty to provic Phe peas 8 ra ‘The recent advances in the art of fs ip- botlding. have not been accompanied hy ab Enel ae nd has always offered and still offers to.the victims of ty: rans. he treaty, if ratified, will practically | 4 pomerfal ia the sia. se of asylum to political stewiecr ss ae aarded ‘by clauses that appear 2. mean Stich and. in reality mean nothing. At- cepted from the list of Pane Tenis; the erelit ofthe ta with te Uzas:t0 Meee the se who which Russian tyranny has se for the good of their country. Te Raat Friend Old Friend“ Don’t you Gee fiat Nel- lie Sespnimson is fading a Ii Pother F of teally Pods have y Meret Ue Se such fashion, 1 east ten years yar oe tsand pedulge eetey, * with the defense ae eling them we ay wee Tso some a | tempts on the life of the = Or OF pembers of the Czar’s household are specially = Lint w but if te will | 94 mnage ean steamers havé been pan- Every new een successful, and the mar- man cre¢ Stil. ore Hitketposibility ofeach amechan: cal achieve Shale mitted, it will be a Pa ni poly