I1IL inun vf.sx... VclvcrtiKinfT lintos. Tns UrvckDd rel'.t.l. circulation ol the t:w- I T iir Mit FaaBaaa (vjiruer.4l it to Ih. lavoraMe run. liter. tu n of iitfeniKn a ho., uun will 1-e fl i ufr A inaerted at the following low ma : 1 lorn, s nn. .....V l.o llDrh.S month. ...... !(. 1 1 d-h , 6 moulbi . ............. S.ku linen i year... I wi 1 tnehea. S montha.... ...... ....... .. 6.IM X inrnee. I year lfl.0 S Inches. 6 montbf ........ 8.00 a Inches. 1 year n.uu 1 eolnmn.e moulha ....... ... ....... 10.06 V column. moolbl au.tw keolumo. 1 tw B.VO0 leotamo, 6 monUil. ................ ... so.tio 1 Mlnmn, I jur..,. Tk.uu Hoalneai Item, Brut Insertion, Kic. per llD. snbaequent Insertion., be.. per Hn. Aunnniatrator'a and Executor's Notices.. f3 SO Auditor' NoUom Z.M) trav ami similar Notices V 0U .y-kesolatiocs or proceeding: ot any eorpt ra tion or society and eumnunlratioria delinid to call attention to any matter of limited or indl idnal Intereft mnct be paid lor at advertl'uienia. Book and Job Printing of all klndi neatly and exedlooiiy executed at the lowest prices. Aad don'tyon target it. (4 on jt n iTl'lls. (.nine. V ru J car.. - -4 ,t:o couniy ct'Mrue.l to rum he le- Q.-U1L ttlf'r if I DOI e .a tr. e who stood trots tit Mil Wl ild t or. IS t 1 JAS. C. HASSON, Editor and Proprietor. "BE IS A FREEMAN WHOM THE TRUTH MAKES FREE AND ALL ABB SLAVES BESIDE. ' 81. CO and postage per year In advance. stop It VOLUME XXVII. EBENSBURG, PA., FRIDAY. JANUARY (J, 1893. NUMBER 1. t)-n vt. t -i -on. III 'a'ilhri' MM f: 1 It- ! I jitl" I 111 If I II 1 'III 9 til I I II 111 V 111 I I I III A W CAMBRIA lie ;igosi sole .l."o. . SUITS. 11 ami t ire f :'l 1 ' a!; .V. V.'f w.; it t. Vad i r. i.. " BUILT t - . . r is B -ngo'l. cumf-Vf Jc-aut:jul, Good tnese - ;-'.'eaixj much, l.ut to see "The Rochester" '1 '.essithe truth more forcibly. All metal. ii AND r i SJILD-HEAI A FT EKS K TEOKT.ilH.K -ly Cll ANXK-i )U. O'llikrnl wya. rtrantth. th. HdotKuot .. r jreJurr con- ;) an ' rut ' TIIK ' l.m r an. I the -i i. ttid it .a v.lUJtijU. t.mo , mit ail owi'i til." . Ind., any.: " I tmrn in r i-n . t.MiKi VH. Iji . jd m. m r cittinvra It tfi v Ala . (wm: " I with l.ein .rfwl. mn. I L I , IN a. ' . i : :.p: . A. i fc r I nnnnl r-'A line. TLMWav. um. Lrlf f and Chiidren COUNTY ! S, ALTOONA. PA.f for your Clothing, the least ion ami best prootls for . . .sSii.m. .es.511. . . . R.UI. . . . 2..m. . ...to.. ..to.. ...to.. . ir.m. . . S.I HI. . . 5.110. mil ChiMren's OVERCOATS at equally low FIRST CHOICE of these Greatest f ':. khifr. Il.iltrr ami Furnisher. It IS Eleventh Ue.. .UT00.VI PA- vv'AMT A WAGON?" via I Ii.:'i crriilv: Ii"ht. iil'uliy 1iii':slioil a iinii.li.'rriic;J t n In .in .r by nu'ii .f lif. nr Tiiicv; rr-inpt sliipinnt 'iir kru.w j i m. Write us. 0sts y u busiivss bv an.l bv. S'iU f. r cur rr e-.ty r.-iklc-r nf fiis paper, liint; n'.nu!iaiiit n, N. Y. ell FOR BUShNESS. elieving"." be s'nple; when it is not simple it is 1 seamless, and made in three pieces onlf.fes : ! vAvjr X7and unbreakable. Like Aladdin's :,is lmleed a "wonderful lamp," for its mar - v.? ht is purer and brighter than cas lisrht. --r u electric liht and more cheerful than either. ' r. .-thisatHmp Thr Rochester. If the limp dealer has n't the e-ennlne K - :u taatlthcr rtvle you want. truti to u fur our new illustmtcti catnlc-Mjue. 1 ill a ul von a lamp safrlv bv express your choice ot over tt.OUO ; a. ili ora tt Latgat Lamp Store i the it utld. I llB vrtli LAMP CO., 44 Park Place, New York. City. F, "The Rochester." The "Lh "S LD in lr IRlhH I HAY- FEVER i .';', j'. .4 a i!'iid, xnvjT or 'p-irtler. Applied into Vie iwittnl it U '.'.j,,,!. Jt.chitnms the head, alum mmimmntum. heal 50c (' i 'T i )L1 h'l lmnnil i'T Kent " mail ml rereift of priff.. ELY ETHEBS. 56 Warren Strcat NEV YORK. 1300 BUSHELS OF POTATOES 0. W. r.KAMiti.E, Fair Leo, Knt Co, Mil., fu h : 'ith!l0 iMiiiml': of Pnwrll'a Creeit Itwe Krrtlllxrr (or INttatora, Oil Ij ncrax of mini, he ntlMil l.:HH liDKhels KiiiiMith, crHMi Kfxi-d iHiliitoos. When ciiitnti!y o' k'lrlili.i r nntl quality ol 1. 'iml Ih -iisIi1it iI, this in Inivoxt crop of MitntoH evi-r ruiKiHl In the worhl. Why not ra.K'? hi!? rrops of potatouKl 'i nin tell yoi- cm to lo It, nnl how to i:" i'i'I l-t--'. Hot mul Itilclit. Kei.r' ; tvoen. rtumpa for (look: of l& HKea, W. S. Powell fc Co.. Chctiica! Fertilizer Manufacturers, liiiltimore. MJ. Pollelea written at nort nelee In trie OLD RELIABLE ''ETNA" .mI wirier Flrut '! I'enpanlra. T. W. DICK, ur.KT FOR TIIF. OLD HARTFORD nRBINMANGBGOinr. lOJUIESDEl) Bl'SlNESM 1704. Khenannra;..laiy l. 1883. Mountain House STtP, SHNIiiu PARLOR! CENTRE STREET, EBEHSBURO. riMllS 11 known ami limit eMahllaherl Sharing; I I'arlor la now lorate n t'entra atreet, oi ti.Kli tn. livery lo ol I CM arm. In via It l.atli .r. where the IminirM will e rnixli-il nn In the lntiirr. SHAVIM). HAIR t UTIIN AMI MIAMI'' MIIMI ili.ne in the i.ratmt and moat nrtl.tie mninii-r. ('lean Towrla a aperlalty. a .ljicioa waHeit on at their residence. JA.Mt3H.lMNT. Frojirietor fT W. DICK. JLe ATTOKNKY-AT-I.AW, W Kbhhuk. I'buk'A' -special attention to Riven elalma fr Hen lon lionnly, etc. M THE SANDY HOOK. LOOKOUT. A Telogrraphio Watch for Arrivals from Abroad. How Your Friend Know When You Are Ciimina; Home from Foreign I'arta An Olil-Tlme Servitor. A man who has watchotl with a prroat of inUrtst the cominjr of immi grants from Camp Low, the stretch of s.iiul U) the west end of Santlv Hook, is William le la Motte, the marine ol server for the Western Union Tele graph Company down there. The Imild inir in wliieh le la Motte works is fiftj feet liifTh and is of woxl. Iron eahles or K"y rip-s prevent the wind from hlowinjr it over when it blows hard avross the saudy nitxtrs. All the pilots who lrinj vessels into New York know De la Motte. They s(ieak of hint as the count. It is supposed that he ln-longed to some noble family abroad, but he himself will never confirm thisVupposi tion. He has been an observer for the Western Union company for nearly a quarter of a centnrj-, says the New York News, lie was formerly in the employ of the Knj-'lish povernment. lie lias ln-en stationed at Sandy Hook for a di .eti years or so. This is the most important sipnal or si-litin;; olliee on the American coast. All vessels bound for New York from abroad have to pass Sandy Hook to put into the bay. None of them pets with in a mile of the lookout station lie fore it has leen identified and its arrival telepraphed to this city. Everything that enters the bay is reported. The bip o.-ean prey hounds are spottel somelhinp like half a tlozen miles out to sea. As soon as the name of the steamer i''. learned it is Hashed over the telepraph wires to New York. Those who have made an oeean voyape or have friends who have may recall that either they r their frieutls have paid the Western Union Telepraph Company one dollar to have the steamer on which they were returninp home reported as soon as siphtcd. Few of them have ever stopjH-d i tliitik how that information is ol tained, however. If they h:il made irHuiry they would have been t ld that ihe marine at Sandy lliHk hail spie l t lie vessel headinp for the entrance to cur harlmr. Durinp the daytime thit tdiserver is Count le la Motte. From seven in the niominp till seven at nipht the count sits in the little room in the very top of the tail tower down on the extreme point of the Ibxik alone with his telepraph instrument and his bip telescope. Around him. vi far as the c e can see, is the ocean. The count is constantly pazinp out itjxm this endless expanse throuph his bip telesi'ojK'. It is a lK)vcrfisl instrtin-.eiit and will spy a vessel the moineut it shows its r.pars nlxwe the horizon. Hy the time it pets its smokestack in sipht the count has made out its name. He d h's not distinguish the name from any lctt.-rs that mipht 1h painted on the vessel's Imiw. He makes the name out from the ship's pencral appearance. This is the count's specialty, and he is an adept at it. From morninp until nipht the count keeps his eye, the ripht one, plued to the bip, lonp telescope. He sweeps the horizon slowly with the plass. Not a sj)ot on that portion of the ocean of which he commands a view escapes his observation. As soon as he makes out the name of a vessel approaehinp he quits his cyepkiss lonp enouph to tele praph the fact to the ship news otlice down at the battery and the man in charpe of the marine department of the Western Union Telepraph Company. The latter then sends out his messape unnotincinp the siphlinp ff the stamer i. IT Sandy Hook. The health officer at quarantine is also notified. At seven o'clock De la Motte is re lieved by the nipht overseer, who also keeps up a similar performance all nipht. No matter how dark or how thick the nipht is, this man is on the lookout for incoming vessels. He dis tinguishes them by individual sipnal lamps which they carry. bnp before these signals art; visible to the naked eye the nipht overseer discovers them with his powerful plass. I )e la Motte lives in a neat little cot tape near the tower. It is rarely that he leaves the sandy shores of the Hook. His food is sent down to him from the city, anil his visitors are ix-cas'unal newspaper men from this city. He is in constant touch with the world throuph the telepraph, yet as far away from it as on a desert island. rtyrlna; HurRlara. Iturglars broke one nipht into the workshop of a dyer in Koslin, and had got topether a pretty large sized pack age of valuable dye-stuffs when the dyer, awakened by the noise, apjeared on the scene, armed with a double shooter. As he entered the door he espied two men skurrying off to the otlier end of the dye-house. At the summons "Stand, or I fire!" they both jumped into a Tat which they thoupht empty, but which was filled with some color liquiiL Standinp in the bine bath, they both cried for mercy. The dyer, however, took aim. and they duclccd under, but soon came up again and earnestly entreated pardon. But the relentless dyer gave them the bene fit of a few extra dips, ami then turned them out into the street without giving notice to the police. The atory got wind in Koslin, and everybody knows the indigo-dyed scoundrels. They are likely to remain men of mark for some time to come. Vermischtes. A Styllb. Cnrpae. "She was the most stylish corpse," we heard a wom:n remark the other day in speaking of a leader of fashion lately deceased and, prompted by cu riosity, we inquired what went to make up a "stylLsh corpse," "Oh!" replied the gusher, with no hesitation, "she wore a black velvet gown with point lace trimmings, and her eyebrows penciled and checks and lips rouged, lesides having her hair done in the most delightful fashion possible. Positively, to le such a lieatitiful corpse was worth dying for." To our prosaic mind the solemnity of death seemed to have been robbed of all its grandeur and force by the arti ficial trappings and adornments of the complexion specialist; yet in this age of fads the time is not far off when just such caprices may be expected, for if fashion seta the pace there will be, be sides other modish follies, fads in funerals that will probably be even more ridiculous than the others. Phila delphia Times. GAMBLING CLUBS IN BELGIUM. In Reliance of Law High Tlay I Carried Ou to an 1' u limited Kxtent. In ISTt .the Belgian authorities definitely and officially closed the offi cially licensed public gambling estab lishment at Spa and Ostend, following, in this respect, the example of the Ger man government, which hail a few months previously abolished the public tables at 15aden Baden, Wiesbaden, Hamburg and Aix-la-Chapelle. Before long, however, a numU-r of clubs, falsely described as "private," sprang up at t)stend. Spa, BIaukedlergee, Na mur, Dinant and other places, where gambling was carried on just the same as before, with this difference, how ever, that whereas the public gambling tables had been subjected to the most stringent government inspection, the private cluls were not. These clubs, according to a correspondent of the New York Tribune, are open to any Ixnly and every body. Thus, for in stance, at Ostend there are at least a dozen in the town tiesides the one which i s located at the Casino. The clulw in town have nothing sly or secret alx.ut them. One is in the marketplace with an open door and a big brass plate at the side of it informing all that a so cial reunion is held every nipht within. Anybody who likes can enter. A sec retary or clerk at the door makes a pretense of inscribing whatever name one may choose to give him on a regis ter, and the visitor liecomes forthwith a memlier of the club for the space of twelve months without any kind of in troduction, fee or formality being re quired. Another club of the same kind has ln-en inscribed on the front of the house which it occupies in large gilt words: "The Cerele tJudule." At the latter the game is invariably ecarte. The players sit at the middle of a long table facing each other. At one end of the table is seated one of the oilicialsof the club, who keeps the lxvk with the list of names of mcmlwrs desiring to play. Directly a game is over he calls the names from the list, and the lieaten player who wishes to retire is replaced by another; or, in the case of Wnque ouverte, the losing pla3-cr is instantly changed at the end of each game. By the side of the two players, between them and the official alxive mentioned, sit two others of the club officials whose duty it is to enter all Ix-ts, to receive and pay the money in notes, gold and five-franc pieces, to shuffle the cards, to hold the pack not in use and generally to see fair play. Large c-owds usually stand Ix-hind each player's chair bet ting on the play. UNITED STATES VOLCANOES. Alaska anil the Aleutian Inland the Vol eanie lieajion of the H'urlil. lrof. George Davidson, of the coast and geodetic survey, who was one of the pioneer explorers of Alaska, takes a deep interest in the recent reports of volcanic disturlKinces in the far north. When seen by a San Francisco Chron icle man he said: "There is really nothing remarkable alxuit the volcanic disturbances in Alaska, although the event is of inter est. The whole coast of Alaska out to the east of the Aleutian islands is the volcanic and glacial region of the world. It is quite to le expected al m st every week that some of the nu merous volcanoes along that rugged coast will break forth, till the air with cinders, ashes and smoke and cover the glaciers with nasty black sand and sxt. Chignik baj, from which this last erup-" tion was seen, is in latitude 50 degrees 1J minutes U0 seconds north and longi tude 153 degrees 24 minutes 'J5 seconds west of Greenwich, on the southeast coast of the peninsula of Alaska, oppo site the Scmidi islands and about miles from the end of the peninsula. The observer could not have seen Black peak as reported, for it is only 24 miles west-northwest from his psition. He saw Mount l'avlof, on the west side of I'avlof bay, distant alxut 14S miles south, 42 degrees west from Chignik bay. The man who was at Wesnes senski island, lying off: I'avlof bay, saw I'avlof volcano, distant from him 29 miles north, OS degrees west. "I'avlof is one of the fifty volcanoes of the peninsula of Alaska and the Aleutian islands, of which twenty-five are in a state of activity, shown by smoking. Just west of I'avlof, about 111 miles lies a cluster of peaks call etl Aphileen pinnacles, which are all marked by craters. I'avlof is in lati tude 53 degrees 27 minutes north, longi tude 101 degrees 47 minutes west, and it has two craters. In 1704 and 17 sr., according to Russian authorities, I'avlof was active, in l:? it was smoking and it was lsV7 I saw it smoking myself. I'avlof is visible from all of the Shuma pin islands of which Mega-s is the largest. The view is particularly gotxl from Sand llarlxr, tin Megas island. I shall not le surprised to learn of more eruptions in that locality at any time, for, as I said K-fore, it is the volcanic region of the whole worhL" A Weel that I lata Flab-. Commander Alfred Carpenter, writing from Suakiii. Bed sea country, contrib ii res the following remarkable instance of a plant preying upon one of the ver tcbrata. The instance noted was ob served by him when surveying the I'ar aet l islands in the south China sea: "As I neured a jxxd cut off by the tide from the sea. I noticed among other subma rine plants a very ordinary-looking llesh-colorcd weed. Bending to inspect it closer, I noticed numbers of small fish lying helpless in its fronds appar ently with little or no life in them. Putting my hand down to pick one of them up I found my fingers caught by suckers on the weed, the fronds of which had closed tightly upon them. The fish had ln'cn caught in every conceivable way by the head, the tail, sides, etc and w ine of them had leen held until the skin was completely macerated. Those of the fish that were still living had evidently 1een caught at different times they appearing in all stages of exhaustion. I regret tn-ing unable to name either the plant or the lish, but that the lx.tanie cannibal really preyed upon the finny denizens of the deep there isn't the least doubt." tie Ilail. 1 don't see how you ever let such a mistake as 'the editor lies like a pirate' for 'the editor tiegs leave to explain get into print," said the advertising clerk. "You must have lost your head entirely." "Yes" mournfully assented the proof reader, writing out a little "Situa tion Wanted" advertisement and hand ing it over the counter. "I have." Chicago Tribune. ' NEGRO SCNGS DYING OUT. Education Among- the Colored Race Re aolta la Neclert of Mlnat relay. The younger negroes, born in free dom, have a loathing for everything that pertains to slavery. They regard the old slaves with contempt, and be cause the younger ones can read and write they set the older ones down as being too ignorant to be considered, forgetting that they were once efficient workers and averaged superior in mor als and manners to their descendants One of the results of this is the dying out of the rich, melodious negro songs not the songs of the "negro minstrel" type, which were totally unlike the real article. This the Boston Transcript re gards as a very great pity, as these songs were wild and charming beyond comparison. In slavery times the negroes were en couraged to sing. The wheat was reaped to the singing of the reapers and the best singer generally headed the row. The ores who could pick the ban jo or scrape the fiddle were peculiarly privileged. Here is a strange piece of folk lore: For many year-., even long liefore the war, the fiddle playing and banjo playing had been dying out among the negroes, owing to a super stition that "de devil is a fiddler." The very old people have noticed this. The master of the mansion says: "In my father's time, ami when I was a lxy, there were very few regular .musicians and at parties unless it was a grand affair, a lady played the piano, accom panied by a gentleman on the violin, and monstrous jigs and reels they play etl, too. But when it got too much like work almost anytxxly's carriage driver could le sent for out of the kitchen who could fiddle enough to dance the Virginia reel by. But when I grew up negro fiddlers were scarce among the plantation hands except the professionals who were free negroes. They have ln-en growing scarcer owing to this superstition aim tit old Pluto "Among the city negroes the piano is the favorite instrument, as it is so much easier to a -quire a certain proficiency on it than on the violin. In the coun try, though, it is generally thought un becoming, at least for a 'church mem ber,' to play the violin, if not actually an audacious communication with Sa tan himself. But it involves neither deadly sin nor any spiritual risk what ever to play the accordion or the 'lap organ. as they call it. The cor"jon, consequently, is a very popular instru ment." ACCIDENTS BY KAIL. A Iju-f;e I'ereentace Traeed to Xegll Kenee, and Mistake. Iy Fmployea. An ofiicial publication has just leen issued by the Ixiard of .trade of England giving a list of the ur.m!er of accidents to the S4.".(MKi,(Hh passengers carried by railways in that country during The lives lost from causes lieyond the control of the travelers numlier 5. the lowest figure in any year on record. The classified list of accidents shows that engines or cars meeting with obstruc tions or derailments from defects in the permanent way are slowly diminishing. In 1SS1 there were 24 such cases iu 1M) there were 5, and in 1S01 6. The greatest numlx-r of accidents amount ing to 25. come under the head of colli sions within fixed signals at stations or sidings- With regard to derailments two of the accidents were due to the points of the switches not Wing altered after the passage of previous trains, one was caused by the failure of the cast iron girder, tne was due to carelessness on the part of the engineer of a relief train, and one was due to unknown causes. Inadequate braking power was re sponsible for 12 accidents and fogs and storms for the same numln-r also. In eight instances fault is found with a de fective system of train dispatching, want of telegraph communication, or lack of a block system. Iurely mechanical causes, apart from human error, scarcely appear ut all, an J it would thus seem, says the Engi neer of London, in commenting on these returns, to tie within human power to work railways without any accident whatever. While few railway officials will proliably subscribe to this conclusion, the figures produced by the board of trade certainly show that abroad, as well as in the United States too many accidents can le traced to negligence, want of care, or mistakes on the part of officers or servants THE STORY OF THE REVOLVER. Though the Weapon Was In the Sea the f'rluie Went Not Cnavenged of Men. I was walking along the dock that afternoon, when I ran into a tramp who was fumbling over a heap of rub bish in an ash barrel. He fished out an old revolver; barely had his hand touched the weapon than he threw the pistol to the ground. Turning to me, he said: "1 would like to take that iron with me." "Well, there it is" "No, not for worlds" "You are crazy. 'I am not. How do I know what may have been done with that re volver? Might it not have been used in some killing scrape? You know, it's a superstition among thieves and mur derers to throw iway their shooting irons. It is considered bad luck to hold 'era." 'Why so?" "Oil, there's no telling. Now this re volver," he said, '"might have taken a man's life for all I know. There are rust stains on the handle. See for your self." I looked closely. There were dull stains there. These might possibly have been caused by human blood. But onl v the microscope could determine that definitely now. "Maybe the man who fell before this rrun was robbed for his money; maybe he had a home and family; maybe it was some atrocious midnight surprise. As the tramp said this he looked in tentlv at the engine of death in a re flective fashion. Then, with a sudden movement, he threw it far out in the tide, I thought no more of the incident. Four months later my business took me to a small town in Connecticut. "You are just in time," said a friend; "there's to lie lots of 6xrt here to-day.' "I low so?" I asked, inquisitively. "Well, we're to have a hanging bee. We're going to make a man swing for a bloody crime. Here is his picture in the paper." I looked and started with surprise. It was the face of my tramp friend. THE MODERN OPTIC. Effects of Civilization Upon Human Eye. the Great Dangers to Man's Kyealffht Itrooght About by Living la Large Towne ln ereaaed ltenianda I pon the Vlaual rower. . The last one hundred years have in creased the need and capacity for work upon small objects near at hand. One of the questions occurring to the mind is do these different and increased tie mantis bring increased facility and ca pacity to the human eye? Eyes are now used in ways never imagined by our re mote ancestors possibly never dreamed of in the oriental countries Whatever there may have loen in the way of sculpture among the Greeks demanding artistic and accurate vision, there was no typesetting, no electric telegraphy, no stenography and no typewriter. The eye of the patriarch Job was consti tuted at birth and went through life to old age very much such an optical in strument as that of the English squire who devotes himself to an outdoor life in the eighteenth or nineteeth century; but Job hal no printed lxxks to lie guile the tedium and pain of his scat in the sand and ashes. The examination of the mummies in the Egyptian mauso leum shows that there has lx-cn no change in the anatomical conformation of the human ear in four thousand years and there is no evidence that there h:is lx-en any in that of the hu man eye: but the difficulty of preserv ing the eye for examination centuries after it has ceased to see prevents us from proving this. A writer in the Crs mopolitan thinks it is safe to say that it has not changed in any essential of anatomical form during the time of the human race upon the earth. But the demands upon it and its occupations are much mort; exacting and very dif ferent from those that obtained among the classic Greeks and Romans or the patriarchal Arabians The tendency of the people of our civ ilization to live in large towns in the baxl air and with the alsenee of light incidental to such life, may have brought the human eye into many more dangers than those that come to it in a rural occupation. Yet accidents to the human eye in rural life are not at all rare. It may lie that civilization gen erally attains the loftiest plane in large cities where intellectual activity is most intense. With this come increas ing demands upon the visual power, and often under improper conditions. But if the nineteenth century civiliza tion of great towns has brought great dangers to the sight, it has also achieved great triumphs in the matter of examining the eye, so that we may etennine and increase its power for work and find out and cure its diseases. It is perfectly possible, by means of the instruments of the nineteenth century, to exactly learn the optical condition of an eye, to decide just what glasses if any. are needed for its perfect working; and it is also possible to hxk in upon it, and by the appearance of it tissues and its bhxid vessels to decide -. js to the ex istence of serious disease, when there are few other symptoms that point to it. when there may lie none besides to tie found in the body that positively prove it. There are two clases of disease, one constitutional and the other local, which illustrate this latter statement; the C3 C mirror opthaliiusscope is the instru ment by which such things are settled. Bright's disease, a name carrying dread to many a household, is tr.e constitu tional disease I referred to. In not a few cases the diagnosis of it is made by the examination of the retina with the eye mirror. The expert will make no mis take if the eye gives evidence of it, for its signs are positive, in minute bleed ings from the blixxl vessels and peculiar fan-eolored spots on the retina. The surgeon i treat is to nni tiietn, oecuuse they arc evidence of an advanced stage of the malady which prematurely de stroys so many lives. Bright's disease is in fact,a tit-generation of many of the tissues of the Ixxly, the walls of the arteries lx-ing among them. In no part of the body ean this degeneration Ik" so readily detected as in the retina of the eye. A Congressional Coana The four-year-old and seven-year-old sons of a western congressman were playing with a set of numeral blocks ami their mother was watching their innocent sport. "Oh, mamma!" exclaimed the younger one, "I can count; listen;" and he rattled off: "One, two, three, four, five, six. seven, eight, nine, ten, jack, queen, king." The mother was inexpressibly shocked, but before she had time to say anything the older boy put in: "Why, Harry," he 6aid, "that's wrong." "Very wrong; very wrong," sighed the mother. "Cert," went on the older boy. "This is the right way," and as the mother waited for the correction by her older child he dashed into this: "Duece, tray, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, jack, queen, king, ace." That night the mother had a confer ence with the congressman. Detroit Free Press. Ireland's M Ilk-White Lake. 1 1 err Thoroddsen announces that he has found "a very long lake," stretch ing from the margin of the mighty glacier which forms the western side of the Vatna-JokulL, in Iceland. It is milk-white, from the glacier water of which it is composed, ami has been named the Langisjor. The scenery around it is described as very beautiful, though the discoverer adds that "veg etation is quite absent." On the other side of the chain which terminates the lake in the south there is an extensive plateau, on which was seen the glitter of a large watercourse, proliably the Skapta, and far to the south some great lava stream, dating, probably, from the 1783 eruption. Tnrklah 1'roverba. Don't take a wife during the holiday season and don't buy a horse in bad weather. Two knives cannot find rxr in one sheath nor two loves in one heart. When you are buying a horse don't consult a pedestrian, and when vou are courting a woman don't ask advice of a bachelor. Wounds caused by a sword can lie healed, but wounds caused by a tongue cannot. FALLIBILITY OF JUDGES. The Men or the Iteoch Are Only Ordinary Mortal. After All. Let me say here that I hold judges and especially the supreme court of the country, in much respect, but I am too familiar with the history of judicial proeeedinps to regard them with any superstitious reverence, sa3-s Charles Sumner, quoted in an exchange. Judges are but men and in all ages have shown a full share of frailty. Alas! alas! the worst crimes of history have been committed under their sanc tion. The blood of martyrs and of patriots crying from the ground, sum mons them to judgment. It was a judicial tribunal which con demned Socrates to drink the fatal hemlx-k and which pushed the Saviour barefoot over the pavements of Jerusa lem, K-nding Ix-neath His cross It was a judicial tribunal which, against the testimony and entreaties of her father, surrendered the fair Virginia as a slave; which arrested the teachings of the great apostle to the Gentiles and sent hiniin binds from Jerusalem to Rome; which, in the name of the old religion, adjudged the saints and fathers of the Christian church to death, in all its most dreadful forms and which after ward, in the name of the new religion, enforced the tortures of the inquisition, amid the shrieks and agonies of its vic tims while it compelled Gallileo to de clare in solemn denial of the great truth that he had disclosed that the earth did not move around the son. It was a judicial tribunal which, in France, during the reign of her mon archs lent itself to be the instrument of every tyranny, as during the brief reign of terror it did not hesitate to stand forth the unpitying accessory of the unpit3"ng guillotine. Aye, sir, it was a judicial tribunal in England, surrounded by all the forms of lai, which sanctioned every despotic caprice of Henry VIII., from the unjust dicorce of his queen to the beheading of Sir Thomas Moore; which lighted the fires of persecution, that glowed at Ox ford and Smithfield, over the cinders of Latimer, Ridley and John Rodgers; which after elabjratc argument upheld the fatal tyranny of ship money against the patriotic resistance of Hampden; which, in defiance of justice and hu manit3", sent .""-dncy and Russell to the block; which i?ersistently enforced the laws of conformity that our Iuritan fathers persistently refused to obey, and which afterward, with Jeffries on the bench, crimsoned the pages of Eng lish history with massacre and murder, even with the blood of innocent women. Aye, sir, it was a judicial tribunal in our country, surrounded by all the forms of law, which hung witches at Salem, which affirmed the constitution ality of the stamp act, while it admon ished jurors ami the people to oliey, and which now in our day has lent its sanction to the unutterable atrocity of the fugitive slave law. SAHARA THE VAST. The Oreater l'art of It Almost F.ntlrely Itectitute of Any Kind of Life. The Sahara begins on the shores of the Atlantic ocean, between the Ca naries and Cape Verd. and traverses the whole of north Africa, Arabia and Persia, as far as central Asia. The Mediterranean portion of it may 1x2 said roughly to extend between the fifteenth and thirtieth degree of north latitude. This was properly supposed to have lieen a vast inland sea, but the New York Iedger says this theory was sup ported by geographical facts wrongly interpreted. It has been abundantly proved by the researches of travelers and geologists that such a sea was neither the cause nor the origin of the Libyan desert. Rainlesst and sterile regions of this nature are not peculiar to north Africa, but occur in two licltr. which go round the world in cither hemisphere, at aliout similar distances north and south of the equator. These correspond in locality to the great in land drainage areas from which no water can lie discharged into the ocean and which occupy about one-fifth of the total land surface of the globe. The African Sahara is "by no means a uni form plain, but forms several distinct basins containing a considerable extent of what may almost le called mountain land. The Hoggar mountains, in the center of the Sahara, are seven thou sand feet high, and are covered during three months with snow. The ph3'sical character of the region is very varied. In some places such asTiout and other oases in or liordering on Morocco, there are well-watered valleys with fine scenery and almost European vege tation, where the fruits of the north flourish side by side with the palmtree. In others there are rivers like the Uied Guir, an affluent of the Niger, which the French soldiers who saw it in 1870, com pared to the Iire. Again, as in the lied tif the Tried Rir, there is a subter ranean river which gives a sufficient supply of water to make a chain of rich and well-peopled oases equal in fertility to some of the finest portions of Algeria. The greater part of Sahara, however, is hard and undulating, cut up by dry water courses and almost en tirely without animal or vegetable life, A Soelalile Colonel. When Gen." Charles II. Van Wyck, of Nebraska, was running for congress many years ago, in the Fifteenth New York district, says the Chicago Herald, there was a certain Irishman who stead fastly ref used to give the old soldier any encouragement. The colonel was great ly surprL'Atl, therefore, when Pat in formed him, m election day, that he had concluded to support him. "Glad to hear it, glad to hear it," said the col onel; "I rattier thought you were against me, Patrick." "Well, sir " said Patrick, "I wuz; and when j-c stud by me pig-pen and talked that day for two hours or worse, ye didn't budge me a hair's trr dth, sir; but after 3-011 wuz gone away I got to thinking how 3-e reached yer hand over the fence and scratched the pig on the back till he laid down wid the pleasure of it, and I made up me mind that when a rale col onel was as sociable as that I wasn't the man to vote agin him." A lleautlful lie Her. A curious and licautiful superstition prevails among the Armenians ttiat, when anyone is seriously ill, the sick room is tilled with angels who are sent to watch over the patient. For thii reason the room is Wautifully drapt-d and furnished with flowers sweets, dried fruits and cakes and each visitor on entering, strikes a chord on a music al instrument which hangs at the head of the sick-bed. PERSONAL GATHERINGS. Rev. Dr. Hoffmax, who owns the noffman house. New York, is the richest clerg3-man in the world. CniEF Inspkctor Stkere, of the New York police department, retires on a 12,500 pension after thirty-five years of service, during which he never had a charge preferred against him. Ix the family of Philip C. Drumel, of Philadelphia, five generations are repre sented. Mr. Drumel is ninety-four 3'ears old and was a drummer Iniy un der Napoleon, being present at the burning of Miiscow. II. B. McCi.F.i.LAifD. who has lieen teaching school in Encinal countt", Tex., for ?40 a month, has lieen notified that he has fallen heir to the title and e-2.ooo.OtKl estate of his uncle. Lord William Moore, of England. Mrs. Martha A. I loo as, Mrs Mary A. Fassett and Mrs Sarah A. Fassett, triplets, were present at a celebration at Waltham, Mass., the other da3'. Thej- are sixty-nine years old, and sa3' they worked when girls in a cotton mill in which Gen. Banks was a Ixibbin lx3". DO YOU KNOW THESE? Aixa C Trf.at, aged ninety-four, a resident of Denver, is liclieved to lie the oldi-st mason in the world, having lieen a member of the order for seventy-three years It is said that Mme. Patti and other women of high standing on the stage preserve mist carefully the luxits they wore at their debut, which they con sider lucky to have aliout on the first nights of engagements forever after. Ex-CniF.F GhRoxiMO, who, with other subjugated Apache Indians is living near Mobile, Ala., has lieen made a gardener at the military station where he is a captive, and is also a justice of the peace for the trilie. tloiiv B. Ci.kavks, the new governor of Maine, came out of the war a lieu tenant and at once secured work as an ordinary hand in a sash facto-, but after a two-3ears' trial of the job he thought it wasn't a promising one, so he struck out in other lines BOOK NOTES. Riper IIaggard's story "Montezu ma's Daughter" will first appear serially- Senator SorntEs' daughter is only fifteen, but she has written a volume of poetry and dedicated it to her father. A niooRAi-UY of the late Daniel Dougherty is in course of preparation, the material having been given by Mrs. Dougherty into the hands of a well known biographer. CtixsiriERAiiiJ? interest has been awakened among the literary circles of lk-rlin by the sale of an edition de luxe of the complete works of Frederick the Great for 2,tMK) marks. . Archdeacon Dexisok, who is two years older than Mr. Gladstone, has sent to the press a sequel to his "Notes of My Life," published in 1879, in which he will give a summary of the later period of his eventful career. PICKED UP IN EUROPE. The Germans at last take kindly to American hx-cakes The largest barometer yet made has been put in working order at the St, Jacques tower in Paris It is forty-one feet five inches high. TrxnER-HEARTEn residents ot Helen burgh, Scotland, mercifully killed a centenarian last month a donkey said to be one hundred and two years old. The popularity of Norway as a sum mer resort is indicated by the fact that during the months of May, June and July 5.1B2 travelers touched at liergen. A BAXI of women-robbers has ln-en discovered in Paymago, Spain. They met once a month in a cave on the out skirts of the town, to plan burglaries, and here they had a full stock of bur glars' tools and about fifteen thousand francs' worth of plunder. They usual ly worked in men's attire. INTERESTING TO ALL. Several Chinamen have proved them selves successful farmers in Montana. Life is shorter in the valleys and lowlands than among the hills and mountains Over seventeen thousand styles of silk goods are known to dealers. Oxyx of a superior quality and in abundant quantity has been discovered in Bridgewater, Va. Tin? fishhooks of the bronze age liave precisely the same heads as the most popular patterns of to-day. EionT nationalities arc said to be rep resented in a choir of sixteen little girls at St. James' mission. New York city. A thimiile is really etymologieally considered only a "thumb Ix-ll," the original thimble having been worn on the thumb. A SOLDIER'S CORNER. The oldest British soldier is Sir Tatrick Grant, aged eighty-eight years. GrJi caps were first used in 1822 in the British army. The armies of the civilized nations of the world numtx-r S.GOO.OOO. Ik-sides the loss of their time and labor, they ctast at least tl,0o0 a year for each sol dier, and that amounts to f :t,roo,000,000. Hkxry Packa'rii, of Rockland, Sul livan count3. N. Y., a veteran of the war of 112, in which he served as a drummer 1x13-, has just received from the General Society of the War of 112 a bronze medaL Mr. Packard is lame to this day from a wound received in a skirmish. A Maixk veteran who marchd in the prtx-cssion at Washington has fort3" eight scars, an empty sleeve aud an artificial eye to prove that he was in the late unpleasantness. His name is J. F. Chase, a memlx-rof the old Fifth, battery of the l"ine Tree state. Water at the Fair. A false statement is going the rounds of the press to the effect that visitors will not lx." able to get any drinking water at the world's fair without pil ing for it- There will Ih? an abundance tif excellent water free to all who want it- Those who wish to drink mineral spring water, piped to the exposition ground from Waukesha, Wis., a hun dred miles distant, will have to pa3' one cent a glass for it. The free water will be that of Lake Michigan, brought by tunnel from a point four miles from shore, and much lx-tter than the in habitants of most large cities are sup plied with. 'V! nr