sa, Bellefonte, Pa., Aug. 28, 1896. BOBBY AND HIS SLED. At eventide my little boy on Grandma's rocker climbs, And begs for that old story he has heard so many times; He always wants to hear it, just before he goes to bed, This story that his grandma tells of Bobby and his sled. “Well, Bobby was a little boy I knew long years ago, He used to bring his sled to school whenever there was snow ; And gallant little Bobby, with a heart that swelled with pride, Would ask the little girls at school to go out for a ride. The giriz all rode on Bobby's sled, he gaily trudged along, They cheered his way with many a jest, with laughter and with song ; And tho’ the cold would numb his hands, and make his nose quitered, He took them all, both large and small, a-riding on his sled. “One morning Bobby came to school, an apple in his hand, He told the girls to stand in line, obeyed was his command ; He threw the apple far away, then turning 'round, he said: ‘Whoever brings that apple back can always ride my sled.’ A rush, a scamper, all the girls ran pell-mell for the prize, And then a pile of pinafores was all that met his eyes ; 2 But soon a chubby little girl, with cheeks like roses red, Demurely brought the apple back, and blushing, hung her head. She rode that day on Bobby's sled, and every day of course ; *Twas hard to tell which liked it best the driver or the horse ; But certainly they kept it up all through the win- ter long, Till springtime smiled upon the earth and all the SNOW was gone. “The years rolled on, the girls all grew in beauty and in grace, And Bobby's nineteenth year had put a mustache on his face, Discarded was the little sled, a team of greys and sleigh Fulfilled the promise he had made that little girl in play. One day they to the parson’s drove, and there be- fore them all, She promised she would take and cherish Bobby sled and all ; And now my story’s finished,” says Grandma with a sigh, “Your Grandpa’ there was Bobby, and the little girl was 1.” : “Twas Grandma rode on Bobby's sled,” the children laugh with glee, And run away, and jump in bed, as happy as canbe; ° : And soon they ali to dreamland go, and every curly head Is filled with dreams of little girls, of Bobby and his sled.—J. 8. Fearis. “BIBY.” ““Yus, Miss,” said the mother, bad to-day. I took’er to the ‘spen the Walk yesterday. The doctor ’e it’s indigestion of the lungs.” ‘I think you must mean congestion, said Miss Carvossa, mildly. ‘Ain’ it the same thing ?”’ ‘It doesn’t much matter what you call it, so long as you understand, and make other people doso. But I think conges- tion was the word.” ‘Youn knows best, miss,’’ said the moth- er. ‘“‘Tain’t no scholar : my ’usband’s a lovely scholar, ’e is.” She was a little lean woman with a pinched face and a flat chest. Her eyes were pale and so was her scanty hair, un- brushed and held by one lengthy hair pin. She was a little lame. ‘‘Is this one your youngest?’ ‘“Yus, that’s Biby—we call ’er Biby, though she’s 6.” She bent over the child mechanically, and stood up.” “I’ve ad seving,”’ she said, in a tone of dispassionate calm, ‘‘and I’ve buried five, I’ave. The doctor says the boy’s goin’. I'd like to a kep’.Biby.”’ She spoke with hesitation, as one who makes known an exorbitant and unjustifi- able desire. Her mouth twitched silently. ‘It seems ’ard to bury all,’ she said. Then, reflecting that Miss Carvosso was a distriet visitor, and had coal and soup tick- ets in her little handbag—*‘‘0’ course, it’s all for the best, the Lord’s will.” “‘Biby’’ struck into the conversation at this point. ‘‘The boy’’ was sitting by an inadequate fire, and had raised the heavy, over-brilliant eyes of the consumptive, as is mother mentioned his probably speedy it was—*‘Biby."’—1I Hooper in thé Human- disease. He was unmoved — apparently uninterested. ‘‘Biby’’ moved a restless head, covered with tangled red curls, and spoke : “I wants a drink of milk—gimme me a drink o’ milk.” Then, as the mother stood watching with dull eyes, she wailed and whispered : “I wants a drink o’ milk, I do.” The lame woman fumbled nervously with her hands. ‘‘Don’t you cry, ducky,’’ she murmured. ‘‘Mother’ll give Biby a drop o’ tea.” ‘Milk is much bet—’’ began Miss Car- vosso, and stopped. She was young and new at her work, but she had a tender heart and the quick wit that is born of sympathy. She grew crimson, as one guilty of unutterable crime, and spoke in a still small voice. “Mrs. Thorpe—have you—er—is there any milk ?”’ —- The woman began to pant a little in an odd, spasmodic fashion. ‘‘No, miss. There ain’t nothing but a little tea. My young man ‘e’s out o’ work.”’ ‘What is your husband ?”’ ‘“'E does what ’e can, miss, and ’e brings ’is money most all ‘ome, ’e do. ’E’s a good ’usband,” with pride. ‘’E’ll knock me about a bit now and again of a Saturday night, as a man will, y’ know, miss, but ’e’s a good ’usband, ’e is.”’ Miss Carvosso looked dubious, and drew out her purse. “Will you get her some milk,’’ she said, ‘‘and I will order some to be sent every day from the dairy.” She stooped and touched the red curls softly before she left the house. _“‘Biby’’ recovered — her recovery was either due to the milk or was the effect of her mother’s unreasonable desire to keep one child out of the seven that had blessed her union with the man who only exercis- ed the marital right of battery on Satur- days. ‘‘Biby”’ recovered, and was quite well when ‘“‘the hoy’s’’ funeral went down the malodorous purlieus of Paradise street. Re ER She went away into the country for a fort- night in June. Her mother sat at home and stitched collars from 6 in the morning to 12 at night, for the magnificent wake of 3d a dozen. . “It is a shame,” said Miss Carvosso. ‘Women ought to combine.” “Y’see, miss,”’ said the mother of Biby, “tis very well to talk till you sees the children ’ungry, and then you tikes wot you can git. You'd do it yourself, miss, if you'd got Biby to feed.” ‘‘Possibly—but the system is wrong.’ ‘I dessay, miss,’’ said the collar stitcher. “A sight o’ things is. But the men, they’ve got the system, and the wimmen, they’ve got to turn to and feed the bibys.”’ Then with a burst of epigram : ‘There ain’t not no system’ll feed an empty belly, miss. An’ my man, ’e’s got no regular tride—’e’s hoffen out of work. If I wasa combinin’ Biby’d starve. If the work’s to bead, I can make 14s working from 6 to 12, and find yer own cotton.” You can’t go on working the machine, Mrs. Thorpe,’’ said Miss Carvosso. ‘‘You cannot do it.”’ For ‘Biby”’ was likely to be ousted from her position as ‘‘little Benjamin.’ “I did with Biby, miss, right up to when I was took bad, and I was at the machine three days after.”” It is monstrous !’’ cried the new district visitor. It was possible all that—and more. But the firm for which the collar stitcher work- ed was not to blame. Collars could not be sold cheaply and ‘‘hands’ paid highly. Cheap collars were demanded—and sup- plied, flesh and blood being even cheaper than collars. ‘‘Biby’’ returned from the country, and remained the youngest of the family, for the mother bore a dead child, and went down to the gates of death herself. She rose to work too soon and had to go into the hospital with inflgmmation of the lungs and rheumatism. She came out at the beginning of the winter, and Miss Carvosso, who was going abroad, gave her a beautiful outfit of warm clothing. The doctor had stated that the patient must wear flannel. She was grateful, and went home to her husband and ‘‘Biby.” Work was very bad that winter, and the inhabitants of Paradise street pawned most of their worldly posses- sions. A hard frost set in, and ‘‘Biby’’ contracted a chill which developed into bronchitis. : The mother applied for help to the vicar, and obtained it, but the charitable fund was limited, and sickness was rife ; when ‘ that help was gone she pawned her last chair (she would not take the blanket from the sick child, ) and bought coal and milk. She took ‘‘Biby’’ to the parish doctor. who examined her curiously. “Ought to be a strong child,’ he said curtly. ‘‘Healthy—well made—but she won’t pull through this without warmth and nourishment. Medicine's no use.”’ The mother went home and sat watching the child ; her face expressed very, little, but her heart was filled with the desire to ‘‘keep ‘Biby’ 7. After a while she hit upon a notable de- vice for keeping her, and put it into ex- ecution. Miss Carvosso returned home two days later, and visited her district. She met the parish doctor issuing from the Thorpes’ house. ‘Oh, the poor things !’’ she cried, stop- ping, ‘‘are they ill again ?”’ ““There’s not a ha’porth o’ health in the whole district,”’ said the doctor, bluntly. ‘But, by Jove, this is a case of suicide.”’ “Suicide !”’ 2 ‘‘Oh—not as it’s usually understood. The baby there was ill—and the mother stripped off everything she’d got but her Adress and boots and pawned it.”? * ‘Is she ill ?”’ “Ill ! She’s dying, poor wretch !’’ Miss Carvosso entered the house. Her lips were white and her eyes were full of tears. A big, slatternly woman, around whom floated a spirituous aroma, was nursing the convalescent ‘‘Biby.’” The dying woman lay on the bed, breathing in short, spasmodic gasps. The man was not there. “Step in, miss,’”’ said the ministering presence. ‘‘She’s a-goin’, pore dear. One of the coorates ’as bin ’ere a prayin’ lovely, but she couldn’t ‘ear ’im.”” Miss Carvosso knelt down by the bed. “My dear,”’ she said tenderly. ‘My poor dear—do you know me ?"’ The eyes opened and stared at her. ‘‘Y? see, miss,”’ said the hoarse, dying voice, choked by an ominous rattle—‘‘I know you gev ’em me, and I hadn’t ought —but—I wanted—to keep—‘Biby’ .”’ There came an hour when sister Kath- arine, formerly Miss Carvosso, walked through the midnight streets from a sick bed. Her way lay along Piccadilly through the midst of that horrible taffic which is there carried on night after night. Among the throng a young girl just emerging from childhood, attracted her attention. She had halted to parley with a man at the cor- ner of a street : the flare of 2 gas lamp fell on her face, and Sister Katharine saw that itarian. Li Hung’s Visit. His Reception at Governor's Island by President Cleveland. Li Hung Chang, the richest man in the world, and the power behind the Chinese throne, who is now making a trip ardund the world, will arrive with his suite in New York to-day, and he will be received tomorrow at Governor’s Island by Presi- dent Cleveland. There will be a naval re- view and a great showing of pomp. On Sunday Li will visit the tomb of General Grant and in the evening will dine with John Russell Young. On Monday, 31st inst., the party will be taken to West Point, where a military re- view will be held. Tuesday, September 1, the Chamber of Commerce of New York will give a reception and dinner in honor of the great man and on Wednesday he will visit the city of Brooklyn. John Russell Young will entertain Li as his guest in Philadelphia on Thursday, September 3. He will arrive there in the morning and spend several hours in as pleasant a manner as can be arranged. leave for Washington, where he will spend two days, and from there he will go to Nia- gara Falls, afterwards traveling by the Cana- dian Pacific railroad to Vancouver, where he will embark for China. It islikely that President Cleveland may endeavor to in- duce Li to travel to the Pacific slope on one of the American transcontinental railroads and visit Chicago, St. Louis, Omaha and Minneapolis. ——The funeral of a workingman in Ja- pan costs 83 cents unless the family wishes to have it especially fine, when it will cost as much as a $1.25. The price of a coffin is 20 cents, and the rate of cremation is from 40 to 75 tents. Refreshments fig- ure up from 11 to 25 cents. On the evening of Thursday Li will : Who Has that Money. A Probable Answer Found to this Important Question. We desire to know if you have found out Who Has That Money ? Last month we stated, from official rec- ords, that the farmers of the United States, owing to a shrinkage in prices, re- ceived $500,000,000 less for their grain, to- bacco and cotton crops last year than in 1892. This is a very large sum to lose in one year, but it does not represent the shrinkage in the price of their live stock, fruits, potatoes and other: vegetables, but- ter and cheese, poultry and eggs, which amounted to nearly as much more. There- fore, having had no satisfactory answer to our former inquiry, we again ask, Who Has That Money ? Since 1873 the value of farms in the State of New York shrank one-half, entailing a loss to the farmers of many hundreds of millions of dollars. In the other Middle States, in New England and the central West a similar shrinkage, if not so great, has taken place. We want to know. also Who Has That Money ? Will no one give a correct answer to this question ? The leading organ of the Lon- don money getters of our town recently at- tempted to do this and informed the public that nobody has it, that while the farmers have lost, no one has taken it, no one now owns it. How’s that ? We supposed there was at all times just about the same vol- ume of money in the world ; now that money was earned by the farmer and be- longs to him, yet he has it not ; therefore, where is it? Who has that money ? It is a principal of physics that nature abhors a vacuum : yet all that money is gone and nobody knows where. This is very strange ! 0, yes, Western competition has reduced the prices of farm products in the East and brought down farm values! Then that money must be in the hands of our West- ern brethren. They must be very rich in- deed. But are they ? We requested the worthy candidates to look around among their neighbors and see if it could be found there. They all said not. It is not lodged among the citizens of the mountain states nor can it be found in the shot bags of the prairie farmers ; the whole Mississippi valley is bare of cash and the cotton planters of the South deny hav- ing seen it. Our folks number a full mil- lion and a half but Rot one in all that num- ber is able to identify the holders of that missing wealth. We have applied to mer- chants, manufacturers, professional men, mechanics and hired men all in vain. Not one can tell WHO HAS THAT MONEY ? Now the farmer wouldn’t mind the loss so much if he was sure that he would not be required to contribute a like portion of the fruits of his enterprise and toil the pre- sent year to the same unknown party or parties ; but they really do not feel able to lose any more. Therefore it is important to know, without further delay, and it is our business to find out for them Who Has That Money ? : We have not confined our search to this continent alone, but have looked for tid- ings of that money in other lands. Seek- ing for information in the columns of the London Times, the great organ of the Lon- don money getters, we came across an edi- torial that may throw some light on the mystery of lost money. In plain type and unabushed phrase we read what follows : “It seems impossible to get bimetallists to under- stand that there is quite a large number of us for WHOM a GENERAL RISE in prices has NO CHARMS WHATEVER. We like them LOW, nnd the LOWER THE BETTER. If they all went down ot HALF their PRESENT FIGURES, we should rejoice, because we have NOTHING TQ SELL. and a great many things TO BUY. For those who have things to sell WE DO NOT FEEL ANY GREAy CONCERN.” Nothing would please the American far- mer better than a rise in prices, for he has things to sell. Lower the better may suit London, but it does not suit us. But we are asked to wait until those people for whom the Times speaks get ready for bi- metallism or a general rise in prices ; but since they ‘‘do not feel any concern’”’ for our welfare, we fear that we shall have to wait a long time. England’s imports of things she buys were $700,000,000 greater last year than her exports of things she sells, so she is going to work her British gold standard and compound interest game as long as she can. You may like it ; we do not. A cablegram from London to a New York newspaper on July 1st, stated that ‘‘the banks are full, choked with idle money. There is now on deposit in the hank of England alone more than $250,000,000 more money than was lying there nine ‘months ago.’ Will the above extracts serve to throw Jight on the all important and burning question : WHO HAS THAT MONEY. —Philadelphia Farm Journal. Salvation Cavalry. A Squadron Soon to Leave Baltimore for the South. Before the month of August has passed there will leave Baltimore a company of women who will travel on horseback through the Southern States, having for their object the saving of souls. They are Salvation Army lassies, says the Baltimore Herald, and their corps will be the first cavalry brigade of the arms in this part of the country. It will be under the command of Staff Captain Blanche B. Cox, who is in charge of the local forces at pres- ent. This will be the second expidition of the kind that Captain Cox has headed. Last autumn she took out a brigade in the West, which swept over Colorado, gather- ing sinners at every cross-roads. She may be seen any evening leading. the meetings at the army’s headquarters, in the old First M. E. Church, Charles and Fayette streets. She is a slight, graceful, pretty woman, with big, serious eyes and crisp, bronze- colored hair. She originated the idea of the cavalry and bicycle brigade, and is en- thusiastic when she talks of the work that she hopes to accomplish in the south. The brigade will consist of a number of women mounted on horses and an ambu- lance wagon, accompanied by several wom- en on wheels. They will wear the regular army dress, which is adaptable for riding or wheeling. The ambulance wagon will carry tents and supplies. One man will accompany the brigade to do the rough work. Meetings will be held by the roadside along the route, and in the principal vil- lages a longer stay will be made. ——Our distinguished visitor, Lord Charles Russell, lord chief justice of Eng- land, who is now visiting in New York, is said to draw a salary of $220,000, though in point of fact it is probably less. It could be a great deal less and still fur- nish a siriking contrast to the underpay of some of our own judges.—New York Ad- vertiser. Our esteemed contemporary neglects to take account of what ‘‘some of our judges’ get on the side from corporations and trusts whose servants they are. It has been no- ted that ‘‘some of our judges’’ become mil- lionaires on salaries ranging from $4,000 to $10,000 per year. < N——— Queer Facts About Li Hung Chang. made mail, He is 74 years old. He owns his own railroad. He is the richest man in the world. His inquisitiveness is his strongest characteristic. For lunch he eats two chickens preserved in vinegar. His valet sleeps at his door every night. He has had more than one stroke of apoplexy. He is a great lover of the national beverage —tea. His food is prepared by his own servants in the Chinese fashion. Lord Li the Envoy’s son is his right- hand man of business. When Li gradu- ated, he stood at the head of a class of 15, 000. He does not drink intoxicants, hut always serves champagne to his guests. He believes in plenty of vegetables’ and thinks foreigners eat too much meat. His dinner consists of sixteen courses, not counting tea and cakes in the end. He has more than a thousand personal servants in his various places. He is of pare Chinese extraction, having no mixture of Manchu blood. His palace in his capital city Tien- Tsin contains hundreds of rooms. His fa- vorite dish is roast duck with kidney beans, after which he eats fresh pork with jam. He has 10,000 miles of telegraph, connect- ing his offices with various parts of the em- pire. He is the greatest Li that ever lived, but his family name is properly pronoun- ced Lee. The last Lady Li, like most Chinese wives, was the treasurer and book-keeper of her husband’s household. Li has hoth an English and a Chinese physician with him. The former administers electric baths to the face. Though an old man, Li is full of vitality, with the fresh mental and phys- ical vigor of a man of 50. When General Grant visited China during the tour of the world he was elaborately entertained hy Li. Liowns steamships, mines and other properties and has recently been establish- ing cotton factories in China. SOMETHING OF HIS POWER. The bullet fired by the Japanese fanatic at Li is still in his face and was recently photographed by the X rays. He has in his suite Chinamen who speak every language and everything printed about him is translated for his use. As Viceroy of China, Li has more than 35,000,000 people under him, and over these he has the power of life and death. He stands six feet one inch in his stockings and the boots which he wears have soles of wood about an inch | thick. The famous yellow jacket is of the finest satin, and is embroidered on the breast and back with double dragons ina circle. Li uses a Chinese water pipe with a long stem and a silver howl as big as your fist into which the smoke passes through scented water. He is the first Ambassador whom China has sent to Europe, all other representatives of the Empire have been Ministers. His present suite numbers forty persons. When he negotiated the treaty of Peace with Japan his suite numbered 135. On his travels Li is accompanied by his coffin, which is an elaborate and beautiful piece of work and cost $5,000. It was made ten years ago from a single mahogany trunk. a Li carries an autograph letter from the Emperor of China to President Cleveland, which he is obliged to deliver personally. It was Mr. Chang who negotiated the terms of peace with Japan, in the course of which he was shot in the face by a Japa- nese fanatic. When not on dress parade Li wears a skull cap of black silk, with a crown shaped like a hemisphere. This has a big solitaire diamond in the front. Li is a celebrated writer and is the author of some good poetry, while he practices writ- ing Chinese as an amusement daily. Li was surprised to find the girls at pub- lic schools in Europe studying books ; he said they ought to be at needle work and that hooks were only for men. Lord Li, his son, was commissioned by him to hand over the great Island of Formosa to Japan after his father had concluded the treaty of peace. Li’s last wife had over five hun- dred fur robes, and her wardrobe required the constant service of a lady in waiting, five assistants and twentv slave maidens. It was by Li’s authority that thirty Chinese boys were sent for education in 1872 to the United States and that the Tung-Wan- Kwan College was established at Pekin. AN OLD PUBLIC FUNCTIONARY. For half a century Li has been in the public service, but this is the first time he has ever visited the nations of the West, and the second time he has been outside his native land. His official hat is said to look like an inverted cuspidor, the brim being turned up all around, and the peacock’s feather is fastened by a button to the top of the hat, and sticks far ont be- hind. Li’s mother died only a few years ago, and in accordance with Chinese cus- tom he resigned all his offices to mourn at her grave. After three months he was re- instated by a special imperial decree. Li, accompanied by a servant who carries his pipe, lights it for him, and then, with great formality, hands it to the envoy, who takes three puffs and hands it back to be refilled. Li’s “boy” isan ex-commander of the Chinese navy, who, when he lost his ship | in the Japanese war, was condemned to death, but reprieved and taken as a servant by the great Oriental. The ostensible ob- ject of Li’s trip was to represent the coro- nation of the Czar, but incidentally he is believed to have studied the possibility of floating a great Chinese loan abroad. The two most remarkable decorations on earth —the Yellow Jacket and the Three-Eyed Peacock’s Feather—are held by Li, who was temporarily deprived of them when the Chinese troops were whipped by the Japanese. Li is the only private citizen alive who maintains his own standing army. His soldiers are the best in China, and but for them he believes he would have lost his head when the Pekin Court was looking for a scapegoat in the Japanese war. He has been received with the highest honors by the crowned heads of Europe. The German Emperor and Queen Victoria have entertained him. In France, Eng- land, Germany and Russia he and his suite have been guests of the nation. The Rus- sian government is alleged to have a diplo- matist-de! - “shadowing’’ Li, a Prince Ootomski, wuo is expected to find out what offers for railway extensions, loans, etc., may be made by the Envoy in oppo- ition to the proposed Russian deal. His a name is Li. He is a self- ——There are over 80,000 miles of coun try roads in Pennsylvania, not including turnpikes or roads under corporate control. These highways cost the farmers of the state (nominally) in 1895 $3,808,574, or $48.73 a mile. Pennsylvania ought to Le admirably served in this particular at that rate, but if road” aking is managed as it usually is in country regions, it is not well to take these large figures too seriously. A road tax is commonly worked out in most parts of the country, East, West, North and South, so that while the tax counts large, the work it results in counts in al- most all instances remarkably small—won- derfully short hours and very little done in | them. Ee The Moki Indians’ Smake-Dance. At a signal from the leader, Kopeli, they entered the plaza in single file, on a rapid walk, and after circling the plaza, ranged themselves in a slightly curved line hefore the tent of cottonwood houghs in which the snakes were placed, and on each side of which the fifteen Antelope priests stood in line singing a wild and gutteral chant. A wilder hum arose, a portentous. gut- teral, snarling sound, which passed soon to a strong, manly, marching chant, full of sudden, deep-falling, stern cadences. Then Kopeli, the Snake-chief, and the one second to him joined arms and danced slowly down before the kisi. They stopped and when they rose Kopeli held in his mouth a snake. His companion placed his left arm over the Snake-chief’s shoulders, and together they turned, cireling to the left. The snake hung quietly from the Snake-priest’s mouth. It was held at about nine inches from the head. him walked the third man, the snake-gath- erer. They passed with a quick, strong step, one might almost say with a lope, in time to the singing. Immediately behind came another group the snake-carrier holding an entire snake in his mouth, the head protruding about an inch. These two were followed hy a third man, the snake-gatherer ; and soon the entire line of thirty-three Snake-priests had broken into eleven groups and were circling the plaza, one man in eagh group carrying from one to three snakes in his mouth. The singing continued, stern and swift like a strong stream, and although at times the dancers lost step to the music, in general they may be said to have retained throughout all the rush of movement a tol- erable accuracy of rythm. A group of women stood near and threw sacred meal upon them as they passed. They kept far from contact, I observed. The excitement of the spectators increased. faces. One man passed with an enormous hull snake in his mouth. Its tail hung down to his knee. waid. The reasons for this were obvious. The little snakes were the most vicious, and struck repeatedly at the eyes and cheeks of the priests. One man went by with two large rattle- snakes in his mouth. Another held a rat- tlesnake and two larger bull snakes he- tween his lips ; and a third priest, to si- lence all question of his superiority, crowd- ed into his mouth four snakes! The gath- | erer who followed him held in the fingers of his left hand six or eight snakes, strung | In fact, they all hand- | like pieces of rope. led the snakes precisely as if they were skeins of yarn, with the single exception of | the moment when they snatched them from the ground. Once or twice there was a brief struggle between the snake-gatherers and the fallen snake. In every case which I observed the snake-gatherer brushed the snake with the feathers of his snake-whip until he un- coiled and straightened out to run. After the gatherer picked him up he was as help- less as if dead, As the dance went on, the excitement grew. The clink of metal fringes and the patter of rattles filled the ear. The snakes dashed inte the crowd. shouts and screams | and laughter rose, but the wary snake- dancer in every case caught the snake be- fore it passed out of reach. In one or two instances when a rattlesnake ran toward | the women with their basket plagues of meal, they broke into wild screams and ran. Evidently they feared the rattle- snakes quite at much as any of the white women. At last, so deep was my interest to see, I lost all sense of hearing. They all moved like figures in a dream. During all this time, whatever the out- cries among the spectators, ‘whatever the screams or laughter among the women with the meal, the Snake-priests, intent and grave, showed no trace whatever of ex- citement. It is absurd to speak: of hypno- tism or frenzy of any kind. They were not in the slightest degree moved either to fear or laughter, or even to the point of he- ing hastened or retarded by the presence of the white man. They had a religious duty to perform, and they were carrying it for- ward, intent, masterful, solemn and per- fectly silent. Incredible, thrilling, savage and dangerous as it appeared to us, to them it was a world-old religious ceremo- nial.—From Harper's Weekly. - Fatigue. ‘‘He never loses a moment,’’ used to be | thought an unqualified compliment. Now | we are not quite so sure that it says much for the wisdom of him to whom itis ap- | From many different directions | plied. comes the testimony that too much activity is loss instead of gain, since over fatigue poisons the physical system. An analysis has been made of the poison engendered by fatigue, and it has been found to be similar to the ancient vegeta- ble poison, curarl, into which the In-| dians used to dip their arrows ; and a niost deadly poison it was. tigue is of the same chemical nature, and is as truly deadly as if it is cremated more rapidly than the blood can carry it off. There is no known antidote for this poison, and its dangers beset alike the pleasure- seeker and the worker An Italian physician recently examined | twenty-four bicycle riders after they had ridden thirty-two miles in two hours and a | quarter. It was found that nearly every instance the nervous system was so far af- fected hy fatigue that the hearing of the | cyclists was defective. After a rest of two hours most of them could hear as well as ever. Another practical test was made upon | fifty grammar school children who were to take part in a written examination of two hours and a half. Before entering upon the strain which such an examination must necessarily be, each child was in- structed to lift as much as he could with the dynamometer. This was done to test the muscular strength of each pupil hefore the examination. After the work in the school room was ended, the children were again told to lift as much as possible in the same way. It was found that with one or two exceptions they could not lift as much hy several | pounds as they Ifgd lifted before the exami- nation. It is now a demonstrated fact that pro- longed mental strain will” diminish the pulse, produce fullness and heaviness of the head and bring about palpitation of the heart. ————————— Smoking Forbidden. Tobacco smoking has been tahooed for the priests in his diocese by the bishop of Kurch in Russia as ‘‘a disgustingly bad | habit, which is unhefitting for those who | serve the altar and a great temptatiom to the laity.” —-Vincent Ray, a Chippewa Indian, | who died the other day in Superior, Wis., left an ‘estate ofS75,000. Behind ! I pushed close | to the circle of dancing priests to study their Each snake-carrier danced | with his eyes closed «nd his chin thrust for- | The poison of fa- FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. Miss Lydia Bradley, of Peoria, Ill., who has already given that city a hospital, a | Home for Aged Women, a church and a | park of 145 acres, has declared her inten- tion of immediately erecting a Polytechnic Institute, which, with its endowments and appurtenances, will revresent a cost of $1,000,000. Poppy and geranium red are the newest colors, and black hats trimmed with white or black velvet and gauze poppies are the latest Parisian importations. Notwith- standing this fact roses are by no means unpopudar, nor are they likely to be, ex- cept.‘for a short space. Fickle as Dame Fashion is, she always returns to her old loves. t The lip-biting habit will mar the pret- tiest face ever turned out of Nature's work- | shop. All the cold cream, lip salves, and | glycerine lotions introduced upon the toilet | table will not remedy the parched, cracked | appearance due to a continual lip-gnawing i process. Not until the habit is entirely broken off is there any hope of a change. Girls frequently drift into this ugly prac- tice through a foolish vanity that prompts them to ‘wear their dimples’’ all the time others bite their lips from nervousness, and sometimes if a girl has pale, colorless lips she will try to vivify them by an oec- | casional pressure with her teeth. After a time, however, she nibbles away uncon- sciously, and hy-and-bye her mouth loses its pretty curves, becomes rough and puffy looking, and all the charm of her face is gone. A perfect skin one sees very seldom these days, yet every year there is an improve- ment. To have a pretty complexion— which is never very white but a soft, bloomy pink—a true clear olive we all ad- mire so much in daughters of the South. The liver and kidneys are the safety valves | of the system ; if either are not doing their i work regularly and perfectly go immediatly to your physician and have the matter at- tended to, excepting you also know the wonderful benefits of Cascara Sugrada for the liver, and plenty of lemonade with a tiny pinch of soda for the kidneys, which often do more effective work in a few days than pellets and pills galore. After your internal machinery is going on quite as it should you are ready to wage a desperate and victorious war on those ills to which your poor face is heir. If you have those unsightly blemishes called pimples, remember there are two causes for them, to wit : blood insuffi- ciently nourished, or you may be indulg- ing in too rich a menu. The former needs a tonic, while the latter trouble demands a heroic cutting down of your diet—confine yourself to plain, nourishing food, avoid rich gravies, condiments, soups, pastry and edibles that tax thé digestive apparatus too severely. Ordinary pimples are caused frequently by sheer poverty of the tissues and uncleanliness. A dab of soap on a rag, a hasty scrub and a quick wipe with a rough towel is a poor makeshift for clean- ing the face, but I have not space for ‘“Donts.”” I shall tell you what to do. Take a fine cream (not cold cream or vase- line. I beseech you, since they are stu- 1 pendous hair-growers), but a specially pre- | pared cream of lovely ingredients purely vegetable, rub a little of it into ever pore | of the face and neck, let it remain a mo- ment, then take a soft linen rag and re- move. Now behold the state of that linen. It . 18 positive proof of the efficacy of fine oils to search out the impurities on the surface. { Repeat the operation until no more dirt I comes off. Then take another soft rage, with a pure soap and water as hot as can | be endured, and wash thoroughly every | inch of surface. Now wait afew moments. { Then give a thorough rinsing with water { as cold as can be borne not to shock. In | this water a few drops of benzoin should | always he poured, to act as a tonic. Re- { member, never immediately use very cold | water after the hot—wait a few seconds. : Then close the pores quickly. Apropos of i soap—one of the most important things ex- | tant to beauty-seekers is the quality of the | soap they use upon their bodies. Volumes ! might be written of the terrible blemishes { caused by cheap (?) soaps. The greatest | of all dermatologists, Erasmus Wilson, says in one of his works, ‘‘None but der- matologists have anything like an adequate idea of the enormous harm done by the impure soaps vended everywhere.’’ i The writer has| been in communication { with many skin ‘specialists who all agree i with the above, one physician going so far | as to affirm that soap fit to use cannot be made under a quarter of a dollar per small cake. This may be a little ‘‘faddish,” still one must really be as wise as a ser- pent in looking for a soap, that it has not a vestige of animal fat therein. My own way of testing soap was given me hy a famous chemist. Scrape a little of your soap in a saucer, wet it with salt water, put it in the hot sun, and if in four hours there is no rank odor (such as a meaty smell) you may use it if you like—for it is then pure. Soap is a daily necessity, and | it is far better economy to pay high prices | for it than have doctor’s bills of ten times the amount for skin diseases which a vile soap will surely insidiously breed. After the skin 1s clear rub into it as much ‘‘skin food’ as it will absorb. This | is generally a preparation of lanoline, so called because it really isa food for the starving caticle, which is almost dead literally for something to nourish it. Use the lanoline every night and cleanse as above next morning. Believe me there is | every reason to hope your pimples will flee before the goddess of reason. If they do not, be quite certain that there is grave danger and lose no time in seeing a quali- fied dermatologist, who has added much experience to more than a few years. A dermatologist is not a mere tinker of the complexion, but one who knows the tech- nique of his business to the utmost detail. Now, my summer girl, you who will spend vour weeks by the sea, you should actual- ly be ashamed to come home with a blem- ish—of the face—excepting a little sun- burn, which is only a temporary matter, or even freckles, which nowadays can be | taken away, but I mean a pasty, ugly ! rough skin that makes you a most un- lovely sight. Learn how to breathe. Every morning of your life open your bed room window wide, and take twenty deep inhalations with closed mouth, hold the salty ozone, in the air passages as long as you can, then slowly exhale with mouth open. - This sends the | blood leaping in a revivified way through | the proper channels and is wonderfully beautifying for face and figure. Repeat the same every night faithfully. If you | are a manly girl I am very sorry ; still, you'll get tired of it in a year or so. Mean- | while take care of your heauty. Take that awful cut-throat collar off this summer ; : that.is exactly why your face is so rough and yellow. Ry