10 THE COLUHBIAN, HOLIDAY EDITION. MAN'S NEW FACULTIES. Hi' TWT A FAST STEAMSHIP. From liiirope to New Yol k In Leit Tlinn Six !. Engineering science and skill In mfir. lne architecture has at last brought Europe within less than Six days' sail from New York City. The new steam ship Kaiser Wllhelm der Growe made her maiden trip from Southampton to New York recently In five days, twenty-two hours and fourty-flve minutes. The best previous record was mndo from the same port to New York by the American steamer St. Paul. In six days and thirty-one mfnutes. The first day's run of the Kaiser was 631 knots. The runs of the successive days were: 486, 512, 554, 564, an dto Sandy Hook 180 knots. On the volage 30 horse power was developed with an average daily consumption of coal of 500 tons. Ths steam pressure to the square inch was 186 pounds, while her screws made an average of 77 revolutions to tne minute. It is expected that when th machinery becomes a little worn and In perfect working condition that sho will beat her own remarkable time by a full half day, bringing It down to live days and ten hours. The new steamship now being built ior the cunard line, it Is stated, will ex ceed the measurement of the KaUier by sixty or seventy feet and with a higher rated horse power. The tre mendous power required to drive these enormous steamships can be more readily realized when It Is stated that the water power at Lowell Is only rated at 10,000 horse power. The speed made by the Kaiser on the day of Its fastest record was at the average rate of about 27 miles an hour. As the average speed of the fastest through train on our railways is only about 52 miles nn hour It will be seen that the Kaiser did some pretty quick sailing, and that even to keep up with her is going ta take some pretty sharp and skillful work on the part of marine engineers who figure on the Job. Boston Jour nal of Commerce. Hypnotism, "It Is very much to be regretted that In our country appropriate laws re garding the practice of hypnotism have as yet not been enacted. Everybody and anybody is at liberty to exercise his 'magnetic power' over his friends and acquaintances, and the public is as yet so little familiar with the dan gers incurred by the willing subject that volunteers can always be found In the little social circle, who are ready 'to give hypnotism a trial.' "The person who is nbout to be hyp notized should understand thoroughly that he or she Is thereby placed under the absolute power of the operator, who can do with the subject whatever he pleases, when the hypnotic ;leep has once been induced. He may cause hie subject to commit crimes upon waking, of whatever kind; he may himself commit a criminal act upon the hyp notized without fear of detection. In Trance numerous cases of outrage have thus been reported. In which suspicion was thrown upon Innocent people by appropriate suggestion on the part of the operator. Murder, theft, forbery, etc., have all been committed indirect ly. "But aside from such dangers it should be understood that frequent hypnotlzation undoubtedly demoralizes the individual and renders the subject unfit for the duties of every-day life. "To what extent hypnotic sleep may in the future replace the anaesthetics which are now in use It is difficult to say, as it is not yet possible to call forth such a degree of Insensibility to pain in every person to permit of sur gical operations. In good subjects, Oxowever, even a major operation can be performed without , causing an pain. "Public exhibitions of hypnotism, or 'Mesmerism' so-called, should he strictly Interdicted as serving no useful purpose and only doing harm." In France, only physicians are per mitted to practice hypnotism, and this is rightly eo. As we have before said, professors of hrpotism are advertising for pupils to learn the art. Scoundrels will soon learn It, and all the newspapers of North America from Mexico to the North Pole should caution their read ers against it. G. T. Angell In Our Dumb Animals. Don't Kmr Klomlllm Cold. H. M. Dalton and P. H. Levin, both' attorneys from St. Louis, passed through St. Paul, leaving on the North ern Pacific coast train for what is vaguely known as the Klondike. They stopped off at St. Paul for a visit with Edward J. Durragh, and while in this city were his guests. "We are not a part of the wild, hap hazard rush to the Klondike," said Mr. Daltou to a reporter for the Globe, dis cussing their plans and prospects, "but we believe there are great possibilities for young men in the new country, and we intend to find out if we are right. "From what we have read, the great difficulty Beems to be that the passes are blocked by heavy travel, hosts of people trying to get over the roads that are et aid heavy wi h laim ana ea8ny cut up. The advice usually given is to wait until spring, and then before the passes are again deep with mud to go through on the frozen ground. Now, if the trip la to be made when things are frozen we do not eee why it is neces sary to ult for spring. It would seem to be as easy to get through on the first freeze as on the last onjj, and that, in brief, is our plan." "You must understand, however," broke in Mr. Lewis, "that all of this is conditional. We ara not absolutely set on trying our luck to the Klondike placers, or any of the adjacent streams. The possibilities of Alaska are not con fined to the Klondike. There Is, for in stance, the Copper river, which comes down to the coast, and which is said to be very promising for prospectors, and there are dozens of fields, not nec essarily gold, which hold out great in ducements. More than that, general merchandising will be a field of great profit for many, and if the Alaska de velopment makes good the wonderful ! promises of to-day It is possible that the great fortunes will be made by those who never try their fortunes in the mines. We are not committed to any plan, and have enough capital that will be available to enable us to try that field of activity that promises the - most. St. Paul Globe. - j I n Third Krn of 'cimrloiiiM Develop. Ihr In Human lining? fic'.f nee has discovered that new men tal faculties are developing In highly civilized humanity. The observer has described them ns a third and new form of consciousness. The other two farms are simply consciousness and i.e'.i'-ccnsolousncfs. l:i tlio ecnt.on of psychology, at the vacant meeting of the British Medical Asisoc.fitlon. a; Moninat. Dr. K. Bucke. v! London, Ont., presented some novel views in u paper bearing the above title. He said: "So-called telfra'hy and clairvoy ance seem to be spec.mens of nascent fnultles. I place lujhe same class th phenomena of what la often named uptrltualiem. "The labors of the Soc'ety for Psy chical Research have made It to mo rlaln that thes? phenomena, m notably li the case of W, Sielnton Moses, re ally exist. And I think that a study of tho above mentioned case, together with that of Mrs. P.per and that of Mary J. Fancher, of Brooklyn, would compel any unprejudiced person to make the Mime admission. But to me thewe are not eases in which outside hpents arc acting on or through a hum. rn I xlng but arc coses In wh.ch a given human being has faculties which are r.ot commonly posse.istd. Whfther any given faculty, such as o' e or tho. c now nl'.urted to. all fcrow, l.-eiome common, and finally universal in the race, or wither and disappear, will depend upon the general laws of natural selection, and upon whether tlie possession of the nascent faculty is advantageous or not to the individ ual and to the race. But of infinitely more importance than telcpahy and so called spiritualism (no matter what ex planation we give of these, or what Uielr future is destined to be) is the final fact to be here touched upln. Tlii3 is that eupcrlmpcwed upon self coi'.HcIousness. as ir that faculty upon (simple contiL'iousness, a third and high er form of consciousness ie at preseat making I'a rppcarance In our race. "This h'.r.her form of consciousness when it nppeare, occurs, as it must at the full maturity of the individual, at nbout the age of thirty-five, but almost always bctwren the ages of thirty and fjrty. There have been occasional cases of it lor 2,000 years and It Is" becoming more and more common. In fact, in ail respects, as far as observed, it obeys the laws to whioh every naa 'ccnt faculty is subject. "Many more or less perfect example of this new fnculty exists In the world to-day, and it has been my privllage to inow personally find to h:ive had ths o;p iiUmily of eluding several men and v.ot.-.cn who have poss essed it. In tho itmnan rf n fpw mnro mlltonntlima there should be born from the present 1 human race a h'gliir type of man pos- l acFSlng this higher consciousness. "The ne w race, as it may well be called, would occupy, as toward us, a jrosltlnn such as that occupied Uy us toward the simple conscious alalus ho mo. The advent of this higher, better, and happier race would amply Justify the long agony of its birth through the countless ages of our past. And it is the first article of my belief, some of the grounds of which I have endeavor ed, to lay before you. that a race is In course of evolution." A MIGHTY NIMROD. l our llun.tir.l llenm th llrcord of n Tnr heel Ilunler, Captain V. H. Basnlght, of Konnoko Island, who Is on a visit to Kallegh. Fays the Observer, is the celebrated bear hunter of Daro County. He has helped to kill over four hundred in his time. , . "The season for hunting bears W near at hand," said the captain. ' and it will bo a good seasou. 1 Judge from the berry crop. It Is cut off back in the wvods. and there Is plenty on the water. The bears will come out to get the gumberrlea. and then we will kill them and have tine sport: We ship the meat to Baltimore, after eating ail we want, selling it at twelve and a half cents a pound; we sell the bearskin for twenty dollars, and bear oil sells well. HjW do you kill the beaisY" 1 askej. "1 have a big double-barrel muzzlo loadlng gun. I use that on accoui.', of hooting big lead. You cannot se such lead as I want out of a breech loader." "What Is the biggest bear you flyer killed?" I next asked the captalu. "I cannot tell you exactly. The ar Rest I ever killed I could not weigh. 1 have killed bears weighing five bin dred pounds. They average perhaps something over one hundred pounds." j "Are they hard to kill?" I asked. "I have killed some that fell dea at first shot. But 1 a bear gets fully taad before he is killed, you can hardly kill him by shooting him all to pieces. 1 have been in some close places. I had n bear once grasp me around the shoulders, and if my brother had not shot and killed him, the bear would have killed me. I have never been hurt except a little squeezing and no man ought to mind a proper amount ol hugging." said the captain. "Do you love the bear meat as food?" You ought to have seen the good captain's mouth water and his eyes brighten, as visions of broiled bear meat came Into his mind. "Eat bear meat?" he said. "Why, It is the beBt meat In the world. I can eat two or three messes of bear, and feel strong enough to Jump ten feel iigh." Captain Basnlght has charge of Bur ma's Island, which Is owned by John 13. Reyburn, of Philadelphia, who comes down for hunting and fishing about twice a year. This Island con tains forty-two hundred and fifty acres, is fourteen miles around, and is located at the mouth of Alligator Hiver. "On the island," said the captain, "we have five hundred head of cattle, hogs and sheep, fine poultry, and an abundance of wild game. Including deer, swan, geese and ducks, and many varieties cf smaller birds. We feed the wild fowl, and at times I have as many as seven hundred wild geese tint come regularly to the camp to get their feed." Tlie Making of Flairs. ' The bunting used In the production of flags for the United States navy la all made in Lowell. Mass. It has to come up to certain requirements In re gard to color and strength. It has to be made entirely of wool of the best quality, showing no Imperfections. It must weigh 5Vi pounds avoirdupois per piece of 40 yards, 19 inches wide. The yarn must be evenly spun, the warp aud filling to contain not less than 34 threads to the inch, and the warp must be two-ply and the tilling one-ply, pioperly twisted. The fabric must have a tensile strength of 65 pounds to the warp and 45 pounds to the fill ing, In test pieces two Inches wide. The colors must be aa "fast" as they can make them, and must not be ser iously affected by being soaked contin uously for twenty-four hours in fresh water and then thoroughly washed in water, using a good grade of laundry eoap. Grtat quantities cf the flags pro duced, says the Dry Goods Economist, are made at the Brooklyn navy yard. Theao flags Include not only the "star spangled banner," but those of all other countries, the latter being used by our men-of-war !u saluting. These ll'ass are all made in the most careful manner, every stripe and device being lr.efifui-Ed with geometrical accuracy and tho eewing being not only very strong, but very neat. The stars on tie American flag are put on so care fully and evenly that when the flag la held up to tho light the stars, which are made of muslin and put on both sides, appear to be a part of the fabric. Vh'j staui are cut with chisels out ol bleached mudin laid thirty thicknesses toge'.her on a large open block. The largest flag made is 36 feet long 19 feet Wide. The flags aro finished off by men who, In sewing, use the sailor's palm, which consists of a leather strap with a hole through which the thumb passes and In which is set Just below tho thumb a disk of steel like the top cf a thimble. Worth Coimldorlii.T. fering to tho recent terrible dis aster to a night express train on the New York Central road, a Connecticut 2ent.en.cn. who travels a good deal, makes a suggestion that Is worth con sidering He calls attention to the tact ;l.al in the event of a passenger coach, tt.e doors aro likely to be closed by the j.ur.ni'.ng of the tads of the car3, the viiTullators in the roof are usually ti,o email to crawl through, and about ti.o only thing that can be done is to smaeli out the windows. But the glass i", i liu-U implements for smashing it iiH i.ot often at hand, and when brok en, fragments left on the sashes will cut Mite knives. His suggestion is to lava one cr two large trap doors In the car icof, always unfastened, and of -! e li t. construction, so that they may tuA'.y bo pushed open. Whether the cur falls ou Its side or Is plunged into tho water, as In the New York Central disaster, l'htv,e doors in a car roof vcn'.d offer easy and quick tneanas ol Getting out. . ., , Coffee Tot. A really good cup of coffee will go far toward determining the character of a repast, and in connection with fair bread and butter will be as satisfactory as an elaborate meal with malodorous, b id flavored slop, so commonly encoun tered. Coffee, with many, forms the life or keynote of the meal, and its pioper making has been the earnest en. ceavor of thousands. There is an ex quisitely delicate aroma in coffee which is so fugitive in its character aa to es cape in the process of boiling in the common pot. It is to save this aroma and to realize the best general results that the present invention has been de signed and patented. The Improved coffee pot comprises a cylindrical vessel, having a closed bot tom and a detachable cover, a conical water vessel being located In the bot tom thereof. Pipes lead vertically from this water receptacle, and have steam Jet holes located contiguous to their upper closed ends. A perforated horizontal shelf is fixed to the plpea and a coffee receptacle Is arranged in tho upper end of the ve-sel and provid ed with a flexible perforated bottom supported by the shelf: the discharge spout opens into the main vessel close down to the base, so that no aroma can escape in the steam during the boiling process. The coffee grounds are retained in the steaming recepta cle and the liquid comes out absolutely; clear of grounds or sediment. This de vice should sell in any household. It la not at all expensive to manufacture. How to Kxiiinlne n Watch. To one who has never studied the mechanism of a watch its mainspring or the balance wheel is a mere piece of metal. He may have looked at the face of the watch, and while he ad mires the motions of Us hands and the time it keeps he may have wondered in idle amazement as to the character of tho machinery which Is concealed within. Take it to pieces and show him each part separately he will rec ognize neither design nor adaptation nor relation between them; but put them together, set them to work, point out the offices of each spring, wheet and cos, explain their movements, and then show him the result. Now he per. celves that it Is all one design that, notwithstanding the number of parts, their diverse forms and various offices, and the agents concerned, the whole piece is of one thought, the expression of one Idea. He now rightly concludes th-it when the mulnsprlng was fash ioned and tempered its relation to all the other parts must have been consid ered; that the cogs on this wheel are cut and regulated adapted to the ratchets on that, etc., and his final conclusion will be that such a piece of mechanism could not have beon pro duced by chance; for the adaptation of the past is such as to show it to be according to design and obedient to tho will of one intelligence. Harper's Hound Table. Shviiii. nro Interested. Bacchylldcs's poenis, the papyruscon talning which was acquired by the British Museum last year, are about to be publluhed. Nearly twice as many lines have been recovered than was nuppoBed at first, the total being about 1,000. There are twenty poems or pieces of poems in all, six being com plete, and of nine more substantial fragments being preserved. Fourteen are in honor of victories In the Olym pian games, the rest being paeans, dithyrambs, or hymns, classes of verse of which there were hitherto no com plete specimens. Boston Traveler. Has certainly the Largest ami Most Coiiplete Stock of CAIiY ' iM) T0Y ever seen in Bloomsburg. ALL ZLTZETW GOODS, 7 and is selling them way below all other dealers in the County. He makes nearly all his own candy, out of pure Sugar. No adulteration. Sunday Schools and Parties Supplied at the Lowest Wholesale Prices. Oranges and Nuts a Specialty. ICE CREAM, SUMMER AND WINTER. BEAUTIFUL CHINAWARE. largest and Finest ' irine- off Haviland, Carlsbad,' and Dec orated Chinawarte in town, Consisting of Dinner Sets, Tea Sets, Salad Dishes, etc., etc. Yow Attsntion is E:p:cially Called to Oar Almost Endless Variety of 10c. Goods. ALL THE LATEST IN CUT GLASS. L. E.WHARY, Grand Garnet Double Heaters. MaSn St., below Market. We are showing the largest variety in It comprises all the novelties in China Dinner Sets, and single pieces of all descriptions. Queensware in Tea, Dinner and Chamber Sets, Umbrellas, Handkerchiefs, Dolls, Handkerchief and Glove Boxes, Comb Tray and Brush Sets, Bon Bon Trays, Books, Toys, Blocks, Christmas Tree Trimmings, &c, too numerous to mention. CANDIES. NUTS. LEMONS, AMIES, ETC. We are headquarters for first-class at lowest cash prices. Bloomsburg Store Company, Limited, Corner Main and Centre Streets.