Cn nibriii s Freeman A dvertiHinc X5 1 tew. Tli larva and rel'anle rlrculatloa of the ' la moltahjexl Wrrkljr al HIKHI Hti,! AMIIKI t CO., HK.XJIA., kv ants h..iiasu. BU4 I'rbimav eunmana It to the lnvorat'le consideration of aitvertieera eboM la run will la Inserted at taa following low rate : 1 loc, a 'IBM.... . i.au 1 loch, a BoDibs..... ................. ...... !!. 1 laeh, months S.av 1 I orb i year a uu S fnehea a months.. w S Inches, I year eJ S laches. mimlhl - B.W S tnebea. I year S.uo i ' ooloma, monthi lv.afc oolamn. moaltu... w Weolamn I year MM column, months - uo 1 oolamn. 1 year 7 ft I Business Itamc, Brat insertion, lOe. par Una subsequent laserttona, he. per Imi Administrator's and Executor's Notice. .W M Auditor's Notions 1.50 iir and alallar Notice SVO aar Kaeolatioas or proceed Inn: ol any eorpcm ttoa or eociety aad eommualeatlon deaiKEud to rail etten'toe to any matter of limited or lodl ideal la oat matt be paid for a adtrrrtismeaie. Book Job r-nntin of all kinds neatly aad ciedloaaiy aiacated at the lowest price. Aad don'tyoa kjricet It. tttt,.t;iiitee.l t'lreulatlen. - I.2UU Iknnacrlpt Ion Kalea. imf .'"I'V I rear, cash id advance ! 60 ,,, '.to II al paid wlihin 3 uionilm. I 75 do II not paid wuhla uiontha. Sou do ll nut paid ntthiu the jear.. 3 2d m- lo ikmdi realdma: outside of the county ,,. ,,uu additional per year will b chanted to ae-lo no event will me above termi be de erteJ iruin and lhe """ do" consult loelr on mlewu'fj layln ' advance not ...ni tu be ulaeed the name loutloir M tboae wno X.V. Let ton fact d"l7 understood trots thie time forward. ae-Pay fir your paper helore you atop It, iritop ,. .u null one lut Ktlim do otherwise. j..n i e a scaiawajc lite i too abort. JAS. C. HASSON. Editor and Proprietor. 'HE 18 A FREEMAN WHOM THE TRUTH MAKES FREE AKD A IX ABE SLATES BESIDE. 81.50 and postage per year In advance. VOLUME XX VII. EBENSBURG. PA., FRIDAY. JANUARY 27, 1893. NUMBER 4 if- 'fflft IT'IMMT Men, Boys and Children OF CAMBRIA COUNTY ! (Jo to CANSMAN'S, ALTOONA, PA., for your Clothing, where you have the largest selee' ion ami best goods for the least money. M EN'S SUITS .: W.IKI fs.W) to l.-.m. liiiYS- si' ITS -.'..in xt.- rum to s.im. rllll.DUKN S si ITS v i.r -j.i to r.i m. Men's, Hoys ami Children's OVERCOATS at equally low jries. t'ome at once and get FIRST CHOICE of these Greatest Kiirirains. id. a- j nsr Uwl t'ldthirr. Hitter arJ Furnislifr, M . K. lKi if, Kalrmnan. 3 "WANT A WAGON?:" We hive va ;ons. riiiri'ios, sunevs. ijraJ!': as liilit, Stri.ii.:, JuriM.'. st. !'; .Ii, i Iviulilullv linisluii us nioJi'mi. cA iiuiiui.i."ture in "i'i iJiu'tf. built n li.n. .r hy nii-r. if lil'j extii-iii.-. lioiit'sty is tuir policy; prompt .sliipiiu!it ur pivi.i'i. u.mt to know iu. Wi ite us. O.vts y. u nolliini;. A1:iy KmJ to iMisiness lv anJ by. SenJ lor t .ur cat.i!i ut. It is tree to every router of t'lis paper. Uiiig liamioii W.ii . n Co.. Uinylumtoii, N. Y. " BUILT FOR BUSINESS" Seeing is Believing;." And a good lamp must be simple; when it is not simple it is not good. Simf?t, JieautifuL Good these words mean much, but to see " The Rochester " will impress the truth more forcibly. All metal, tough and seamless, and made in three pieces only, it is absolutely safe and unbreakable. Like Aladdin's of old, it is indeed a ''wonderful lamp," for its mar velous light is purer and brighter than gas light, softer than electric light and Look f.rthisstamp Tub Roc muster. If the lamp dealer has n't the genuine Rochester, and the style, you waul, send to us fur our new illustrate.! citalt:ue, and e will send you a lump salcly bv express your choice ot over 2.UOO varieties I rota the Largetf Lamp Store IH the World. ltoCHKvrKlt L.A5IP CO., 4 Park Place, New York City. "The THEe 0 W 1 aawTam f "b aaa e " I HAY- FEVER 1 1 Cold head h''j' Creiwn Halm in iut a liquid, snujT or pirdtT. A pplied into Vie notriU it is quickly alimn-Ud. It draw the hfail, allay inflammation, heal IT II S the tmrt. Fthl hi tlruirixtM or neat by mail tm receipt of price. Y f QUO ELY BROTHERS. 56 Warren Street NEW YORK. DUG BROVJH'S IM BITTERS fAbtlB IR01 with riRK T Hi FT IBM! TOM(S, qalrkvly ntt coraplrtfly il.KASKS aad lltKUKS XII K U1MJ1. qalrkent tkm artioa of taa Llvar aad kl-lnrj-u t'lrarn tha rolxtoa, maka the avla axMith. Itdoraaol lajar taa teta, raaar lieadarht. or pro.iur t-oo-UDaUoa-ALLOTUCli I KOI XMM4 INKS b. tnijrfactaoa and DrucaMtJ anrrhar recummenJ it Ia J. H RrooLFt. of Marion. M-.. nnyn: "I IwuainiMnd Hmwh'" Iron Hit U-n h ahii.ie tmo tor iarcbiittf the hi, ami rwrnoTiim tail daMvtl(0 aytupUama. It txt hurt tt ith " Ia. K. M Iri.Fri-u Rwymrl.tn. In.l., uyi: I lava m riA,ml Hmwu'i Irxn Hittorn in ciums t Auj-iuia mmi bUanti d . a- ulicn a tmiif wtui BowM, aud tt- ttaa tforiirM imtiniftctorj,' ala V?M BrmMa.WSt Mary Kt .. NW i M-nn. Ijt... ttruwn'i lroo Bitt'i rlif-vti nw in a i m ttt bluruti pottHtotrur. ami I bsaruljr ouuunwud it loaM niiria a tti'-ni punri-r Mg. W. Vr . MtM ahn. Tutwnmhim. Ala . bivi: I hn tmn triMittUtai Innn cbiiiwHi with Im.Hire Jntoud aud ruitwia on my (a- t Uttlw .t bnrWD1 Irtao BitUini Iftctd a ajrla-cl curvi. I AUAut ipuh tu bmtiijr tf liiia valuabto UMMiiciua. Oaaotua hMtbonTrtdn Mark and rr--r--d rd ltnaa wrtir. Take ihrr. MaW otily hy .HtMi 1.4.. HALTIMOkUllll. lHEiibtt Webster Successor of the linabfldfid. WEBSTER'S INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY A GRAND INVESTMENT Tnr tl.a au.llj, llio S'btM.I or the I.ibrarr. Th. work 1. f rviil.tl .erulel ovr ten rear., mora I lino a hunutcil editorial la l.t.iera lt:!fi tes. employed, anil oi a MKi.lM vipendaU betoro the Urat cop waa pi luted. SOLD BY ALL BOOKSCllERS. A f'iii.l,let ..f i.(..e im. n J tires. IMu'lratl.Hia, luCUt.iilllMl-.lf-ti'., ..nt flet. I.y tiie pllllllshera. Caution is n-.-1.-1 ta ) un l .-lne a du-tionv ry, w phot-'trrapli'-r tri.nnii .f a .'. iiipuralivelv .rttil -. d.li.m Of tv..ut. r are lin marketed .u.K-r v.ai.iiBaarni4.fU4ul m i-r prtacuialloo. GET THE BEST, Imarnational, alucli bears thn Imprint .f C. cV C. rVI ERRIAM . CO.. PUBLISHERS. PPirir.-p-i r.. .'. .. U. S. A. - 1) ON A l.l E. MJFTON, A I'l'OKN KY-AT LAW, Uiai-ion, r-BBiA taT 4 tt.ia lilia Kuuca, Ueaur atreat. m mm s im: j izr , 1 1 IS Eleunth Ave.. ALTODVl PA- 1 o-" ; , p more cheerful than either. Rochester." TU C 1,300 BUSHELS OF POTATOES O. W. Bkamki.e, Kalr Lea, Kut Crv, M d., .s:i h : With 0O jM.nrul or Powrll'i Oreen It(I Kertlllaer taw PoUton, oo ueres .r mud, lie mied l,.i0 busliuls Kinootli, giMH., hized potatoes. When ii:titlty o- ri-rtiliz.r and quality ol land is i'oiiM, !,-,,,!, this Is largest crop t.f potalm-s ever raised in the World. Why not ra.s-j I. in erops of HitHtoea? We .-tiii tell or. ,v to do It, and how to pi event H-j., Itot nit. I KltKlt. fs-1' l 'tin. .tamps for t loo It of rS paxes, W. S. Powell 5c Co., Chemical Pertilizer Manufacturers lialtimorc. Mi. l-tSl. Pulioiaa written at abort noice la the OLD RELIABLE ' TETNA" vna olhr 'irat t'lua t'uiupnn lea. rr. W. DICK, i'T t'OK TIIE OLD HARTFORD PIKB INSURASsGBOOllT. KIMMKNCKU Bl'SlNKSS 1794. r:remr.iir..loiy l,18H'i. Moimlaiii House STAR SHJ.YIIIG PARLORI CENTRE STREET, EBENSEURG. 'I'HIS well known and Ionic eatatitlahrd Sliarinx I. I'arloria now loeatrit en t'entre utreel. oii pofiie tha livery rlahle ol O'llara. Il k. I.ulh er where the l iimnei.ii will I e earned on In the lulure. SIIAVIM:. IIAIK I I'IIIMI AMI SHAMI'IMilNtl dona In tha brateiit and niuat arlMtw manner. I'len Towela a eially. S.liulea waited on at their remdeneea. JAMW11.I1ANT. Troprietor X. ATl'DKNKY-AT-I.AW, KaaanauKo. I'khb'a' we-'Speclal atUnllon to glran claim for Pa atoa Bouaty, etc '- r FOUND IX A l;KA3L The Strange Story of the Discov ery of an Arizona Oold Mlna. In Ilia Sleep s Kanaaa Farmer Loeatee m LiMt Itrolher aad m Kirh Claim aad Haa the Vlaloa Materlallae. n" of the most peculiar freaks of Iisycljolojrioal phenomena ever liroupht t liffht has just eulminateil near I'he nix. Arizona. In 1S."9 two brothers. A. It. anil Luther Ellett. lived in Nemaha county, Kansas. Luther chose the part of the wanderer and Went west, pre sumably to Colorado, and nothing more was heard of him except vajue reports that he had been killed ly Indians. The war came and A. R Ellett served four years in the union army, coiii'intf out in 1MJ5 completely broken in health. He returned to Kansas and settled down on his farm near Sabetha, where he remained until recently. He ac cepted rumor as truth und, not petting any letters from the brother, regarded him as dead. In ISsO he was altiicted by the breaking out of an old wound and waseontiued to his room for many w.-eks. During that time he dreamed that his brother was alive and in Pres ent t. A. T. It seemed that they were together in the mountains, and in pass ing down a canyon they discovered a fabulously rich gold mine a few miles from an old abandoned shaft once owned by Luther. The dream made little impression on him, but the next ni'ht it was" repeated, and even the trees and the outlines of the mountains were perfectly impressed on his mind. He not heed the possibility of the mine Wing there, for the smell of hay had never been out of his nostrils, and he did not know quartz from lava, but he thought it worth while to make some inquiry atout his brother, which he did. A li tter directed to the postmaster at Present t brought the Information that hi brother wa-s an old resilient, but was then out in the mines. A correspond ence ltegan between the two brothers, ,iu.l during its course the part of the dream ' relating to the mine was di vulged. ICeiiig in that vicinity one day Luther Ellett looked for the mine but found nothing. The matter passed along until a month ago, says the San Francisco Chronicle, when the Kansas brother concluded to visit his relative in Arizona, ami at the same time to l.x.k at the country, lie still hail un inclina tion to look for the mine, but was ashamed to own it. His brother met him in Present t, and after staying a few days there they went to the mountains and visitiil the old abandoned mine. When they approached it the Kansas man reeoguized the country as the one he had seen in his dreams, and told even how the shaft was situated with regard to the mountains ami canyons with such accuracy that his brother was filled with astonishment, but he was an old prospector and a liclicf in dreams was not one of his superstitions. When they arrived at the spot Mr. Ellett said it seemed to him that he had often liecti there before, and after look ing over the ground they Utnk a pick and walked westward toward the point indicated by the dream. In crossing the canyon the prost-tor stumbled on a very rich ledge and exultantly ex cU':mcd that they had found the mine. The brother answered that it might lie rich, but the one they were in search of was richer. Climbing up the other side of the gulch, they came to the spot where the dreams had located the IimIc, but there was nothing in sight but half-decomposed granite. Tin; perfect resemblance of the land marks hail so excited their Lojh' that they were disappointed and stood for some time talking the matter over. While so standing the one with the pick legan picking on the shelving nck and a great piece of it fell down, exposing a blind ledge of white quartz resplendent with free gold. They worked into the mass, tind it to le ulxnit thirty inches in width and widen ing as it went down at an angle of forty-five degrees. The prospector stayed there, afraid to leave the mine for fear of claim-jumpers, but his brother brought a sack of the samples to Phu'uix and the assays go two thou sand six hundred dollars in nineteen dollars to the ounce gold. Samples have also Wen sent to the mint at San Francisco for testing. When Mr. Ellett was seen by a rejmrter he did not seem disposed to talk about the mine, saying that they wished to keep its ex istence quiet, and had done so for two weeks, but tinding that mining men from that section had already told it he narrated the story as given aliove. Mr. Ellett is a responsible farmer in his home state and In-fore SepteuilnT had never seen an ounce of gold ore. so he counts himself as one of the crea tures on whom fortune has smiled. The story of the dream was published in lss'.l by several scientific journals in the east as illustrating the fact that former knowledge and information hail nothing to do with the substance of dreams. PEOPLE OF ROYAL BIRTH. Pkince Hismaim k has seen statues raised in his honor, which is a recogni tion few men live to see. Thk marquis of Iorne sympathizes with strikes that are reasonable, and tias often In-en known to contribute his mite to a socialistic fund. Lkoi'oi.i, the king of the Ilelgians, is one of the most inveterate gamblers in Europe, and what he doesn't know ala mt a hand at cards is hardly worth mentioning. Fou several years to come the emper or of Ucrmany will reside at Potsdam iN.th winter and summer. The reason f..r this change is said to le the emper or's intention to have extensive altera tions made in the ryoal castle in lferlin. A LITTLE HUMOR. "What I value most is my peace of mind." "That's strange, ton. You've such a small piece. Harper's llazar. EitAfK "I make it a point to give the devil hi due. Itagley " Yes? Would you mind handing him that five you owe lIle.' X. Y. Herald. 'II ave you a parrot that can swear? 'Yes," replied the bird dealer. "Well, I'll take it; 1 want to bang it up lieside the thermometer." Washington Star. He "Have you heard?" She "W hat?" He "Miss Spinster is going to In; married." She "(, yes, I've heard that ever since I can remember." lick-Mc-l'p. "Vi'mat was the matter with you?" LONDON HOUSES. Their Dlvlalona loto Torrid. Frigid aad Temperate Zonea. A far more serious drawback to the average London house, considered as a home, is to be found in the limits to comfort in its interior, says the Specta tor. It has its torrid, its frigid, and its temperate zones; and until some adjust ment of its atmospheric conditions is secured, though it will still be inhab ited, it will never be, in the best sense, habitable. The chill of a London dining-room is a thing never to be forgotten, though it is not tieyond remedy. It is commonly said that country houses are tio cold to le endurable in winter. Itut we doubt if there is anything in the design of most country houses so ingeniously con trived to baffle the struggle against cold as the London ground floor. The narrow passage leading directly from the door of the dining-room to the door cf the street is the cause of its main pe culiarity. The larger the fire and the greater the consequent discomfort to those who sjt with their backs exposed to its rays, the colder is the draught which plays upon the backs of the guests on the opposite side. Nor can this le a matter for surprise, so long as the whole supply of fresh air rushes in "cold drawn" from the street, in exact proportion to the exhaustion caused by the fire in the room. The remedy is to warm the fresh air on it-t way. Fresh air need not 1h cold air; and where the length of the Inevitable passage admits of double doors and a stove, "dinner chills" might be avoided, and even the ground floor London houses 1h habitable. Want of space, owing to the high price of land, is the main cause of fail ure; and the result is seen in a two-fold migration, curiously like the dual mi gration of birds. We either ascend to seek a warmer climate In the upper re gions of flats, just as the birds go up the mountains to seek a cooler temperature; or we leave town altogether in order to build more coiumiMliously in the sub url or the country. The double growth of London, not only outward, but up ward, is largely due to the discomfort of the London dining-room. NIGHT IN A GUIANA FOREST. C'birpa, Sereama and Howls Combine to Make It Terrifying. The bats are settling themselves in the hollow trees or under dense masses of creepers, making mouse-like chirp ings as they hang themselves up in their places. Here and there a lumler ing moth looking out for a safe retreat until evening is fluttering lazily along lc fore retiring to rest. The owl and goat-siifker shrink before the light and also hurry otT to their hiding places, making room for the brilliant families of day birds which are calling and chirping from the tree tops. The weinl voice of the howling monkey now horrifies the stramrer, filling him with wonder and res-ailing stories of ban shees and ghosts retiring at cock-crow. Then a tlx-k of parrots or macaws is heard screaming far overhead, their glorious plumage flashing in the morn ing rays in metallic tints of golden yellow, green and crimson. The din would Ik almost unliearable were the birds near at hand, but Longman's Mau'azine saj-s that, as they rarely fly or perch low, their voices are mellowed by distance. Congregating on the Ixmghs of the highest trees far beyond the reach of the Indian's gun or blow pipe they take their morning meal of fruits and nuts, chattering away like a lot of rooks in a clump of old elms. Here and there a toucan making his presence known by yelping like a puppy. Looking up, you see the rich colors of his breast and wonder why his leak is so large and apparently un gainly. From the reeesses of the forest conies the ting of the companero, sharp and clear as a bell struck at mixlerately long intervals. Other birds utter their characteristic notes, most of these le ing quaint and "curious rather than musical. The birds of the tropics are brilliant in their plumage, but are almost wanting in melody, there Wing nothing at all' resembling the chorus which makes the English woods so de lightful on a summer's morning. LESSER OF TWO EVILS. Why t'blneae I'lratea Welrome the Intro, duetlou of the iiulllotlne. It is said that the guillotine has re cently Wen introduced by the French into their colony of Tonquin. The French, as all the world is aware, have had. and still have, plenty of wirk to do in the way of exterminating piracy in tliat vast and as yet unremunerative Missession. And the methtKl by which they endeavor to exterminate the pirate (when they catch him, which, as a rule, they do not) is that of decapitation. That ceremony, according to the Lon don t;ioW, has hitherto been performed in the primitive and rather barbarous native way. The culprit. Wing placed in a convenient position, used to light a cigarette and wait for the executioner to take a shot at his neck with a big sword. Sometimes the headsman aimed straight and sometimes he did not, and a finding hail long existed among the gentlemen of the piratical profession that an execution thus executed was distinctly an unpleasant process for the patient. Consequently the introduction of the "wood of justice" has by no means prtduced the effect which the French authorities desired and ex pected. Instead of Wing impressed with the horror of this mode of execu tion, the natives of Tonquin are said to W highly delighted with it. In fact, Ihi'V regard the guillitine as a most in genious article tie Paris, and they have already witnessed one execution with every demonstration of enthusiasm. Dying, they say, is made so delightful ly c:e v 13' this admirable invention of the superior European intelligence. The result i i that considerable satis faction is expressed in piratical circles, and it is confidently anticipated that piracy w ill shortly increase very con siderably, as noliody in Tonquin would mind Wing abbreviated instantaneous ly by the guillotine. Death, in short, has List most of its terror because the process of dying has been rendered so simple. Hebrew lleeomlng a I-lvinjr Laarufa. Hebrew, it is said, is again becoming a living language in Palestine. The thousands of the chosen people who are going there from dilTerent countries, be ing unable to communicate with each ot jer in their ordinary language, resort to the knowledge which they have of Hebrew in their religious services for a means of communication. . ITALIANS AT HOME. A Land That Is Overflowing with Poor People. anmewae k.aa term t low ta TtaU Country Oeeaaionad lay a I-aek ar Employment ta Italy TLara;a Saaua of Money Sent Back. The great masses of the people barely make out to live. They are poorly fed, scantily clothed and badly housed In dian meal Italian chestnuts and rice, with a little inferior fruit, constitute the staple diet of the majority of the Italian peasantry. In thousands of homes in this Heaven-favored land, meat and wheat bread are unknown. It is said that the great majority of the poor people eat meat but three or four times a year at the most. Christmas and Easter are hailed as meat days rather than as holy days. For those who have eyes for anything but the beauties of art and the glories of nature, there are no sadder sights than can be seen in the streets of any Italian city. Multitudes of human be ings, with pale faces, hungry eyes and dejected looks, throng all the highways of travel, and though begging is for bidden by law it is almost universally practiced Old women and little chil dren, the lame, the halt ami the blind, and even able-bodied men, besiege the stranger at almost every step. It is generally admitted that there is no remunerative employment in Italy, and, as a consequence, there is annual ly a large emigration to this country, ISrazil and the Argentine Republic. The emigrants are poor, sometimes ignor ant, and often vicious. There are two classes of emigrants from Italy, the permanent and the temporary. The temporary arc those who leave in the early spring and go north in search of labor, and late in the year return to their native land. Statistics show that about one hundred thousand laborers migrate in this way every year. It is estimated that those Italians who have sought homes in America send back to their poor relatives no less than twenty million dollars every year. Italy is losing emigration about two hun dred thousand of its population annual ly, but the natural increase of this pro lific race more than makes good the loss. While in France deaths are in ex cess of births, in Italy the increase of population is rapid in spite of the ever increasing exodus. What can W done to relieve the suffering masses is a problem of the greatest gravity. Fortunately, the climate does much to diminish the hardships of poverty. The short, funny winters, the long, pleasant summers, enable the multi tudes to live on comparatively little. Except in cooking their scanty meal, the poor Italians seldom have a fire, even in the Severest tl f'afhPrT'An Ameri can family will consume more wood and coal in one week than the average Italian family uses in a whole winter. The cost of fuel is so great that a fire is considered an expensive luxury. Hut there are days, anil even weeks, during the winter, in all parts of Italy, when the weather is quite cold, and at such times the suffering is something fearful. When people have neither food nor fire ou a cold day, their condition is truly lamentable. l.ut it must W said to the praise of the Italians that, notwithstanding all their burdens of taxation, of poverty, and of sickness, they are still cheerful and a patient race They are soWr by habit, they are idle from necessity, if if not from choice. While this is true, it is also true that the comforts, pleas ures and enjoyments of life are far greater in this country than they are in Italy. BEAUTY IN THE LIP. Some Savaajre I'rlde Themeelvee on Six, t libera on lteformlty. Among the Itabines. who dwell to th north of the Columbia river, a large un der lip is regarded as a type of Wauty. A small incision Is made in the lip dur ing infancy and a fragment of bone inserted This is replaced from time to time by larger and larger fragments. each operation Wing attended with severe pain, and, according to the Itrooklyn Eagle, at length pieces of wood measuring not less than three inches in length and one and a half inches in width, are inserted, causing the lip to protrude to a frightful extent. A similar custom exists among the Paraguay Indians, and the labnets worn by the IJotocudos are inserted in a slit made in the lower lip. The Hoto- cudo has leen u.iticed to take a knife and cut a piece of meat on it and tumble the meat into his month. Among the Hydahs (Queen Charlotte islands) it is considered a mark of the lowest breed ing to W without this labial ornament of the lower lip. When a young woman and an old one quarrel the elderly dame will reproach the younger one with her youth, inexperience and gen eral ignorance, pointing, were further proof necessary, to the Inferior size of her lip. T his lip ot beauty is not, now ever, peculiar to these aborigines, but is common among some of the African tribes. The IJerrys, for instance, who inhabit Sanbriat, a tributary of the Nile, insert in the lower lip a piece of crystal an inch in length- The llougo women in a similar way extend the lower lip horizontally till It projects far Wyond the upper. The mutilation of both lips is observed among the women of Kadje in Segseg, between Lake Tsad and the lleuwe. The Welland Canal. The total revenue for the year was RS50.SM, an increase of f,292 over P1H). There was refunded on grain in lS'M toll to the amount of rll.KK, and in to tVJ,sX4. The latter figures, says the Cleveland Leader, represent tons of grain which passed down the Welland canal and were transshipped at Canadian ports to Montreal, and upon which a rebate of 18 cents a ton, was made. The total quantity of grain which passed down the Welland canal to Montreal was S95,.rOw tons as against 'i-iS,51 in the previous year. The quan tity on which full tolls were paid shipped from one United States port to another United States port iJbows a de crease from 245,9: to 'JO2,710. The in ference Wing, judging from the figures already given, that a large amount of traffic has Wen diverted to the St Law rence route. The bill passed by the United States congress authorizing the levying of tolls upon Canadian vessels passing through the Sault canal is caus? ing a great deal of discission among the owners of Canadian floating prop- ej1' "LL education and learning. A rLendlae; Eaerllah Educator folate Oat the Otfrerence Hetwean Them. "People have a peculiar notion of what constitutes an education, said Prof. John Cochran, one of Oreat Brit ain's leading educators, who is making a tour of the United States, to a Olobe Deniocrat man. "I have seen many an educated man who couldn't tell an ad verb from a proverb, a green root from an ellipsis. And I have seen men who had taken all the 'varsity degrees so profoundly ignorant that a Digger In dian might pity them. Too many men forget that a school, whether it W the log cabin affair of the American wilder ness, with its three Us and a bundle of birch roils, or the proudest continental university, but furnishes him with tiols with which to dig for knowledge on his. own behalf but puts him in the way of securing an education. A man d. es not learn tireek, Latin, French or (lerman for the sake of knowing those lan guages, but to secure the key to the casket in which is l.cked the wisdom of Socrates, the eloquence of Cicero, the reflections of Montesquieu and the phil osophy of Kant. If the key is neverap plied, if the treasure is not appropri ated, k nowledgeof these languagi-s is as worthless, so far as learning is con cerned, as the gun of Mark Twain's Arab protector, which was never load ed. A gentleman was recently ln-moan-ing to me that he was uneducated; I questioned him, and found that he bail read and digested everything in the English language worth knowing. Shakespeare anil the liible, Milton and Adam Smith. Itrowning ami HerWrt Spencer were as familiar to him as the face of his wife. He was a mining en gineer, and knew more almut geology than half the professors of that science. He was a prosperous merchant, conver sant with the laws of trade; a banker, who hail made a practical study of finance; a politician, who hail studied men and measures so accurately that he Wcame the recognized leader of a great party. Itut he hail never attended school had never stood up and par roted a lesson to a professor, anil there fore believed himself ignorant, I said to him: 'My dear sir, you are one of the lest educated men I ever met. I wish that you would open a school for teach ers and impart to our public educators a portion of your knowledge. They would be then Wtter able to earn their salaries." THREE KINDS OF RUBIES. Tha Oriental la Moat Valuable and la of Arterial Hlood Color. There are three kinds of rubies the oriental ruby, the spinel ruby and tlie balas ruby. The first is the only true one, according to the Jewelers' Ueview. The latter differ considerably in com parison from the lirsL The true Ls composed almost exclusively of alum ina. In the latter are only scven-tetitlis of alumina, the remainder Wing chiefly magnesia. The color, moreover, is due partially to the oxide of chromium, a substance of which the genuine ruby has not a trace. In commerce thehalas ruby has much inferior value to the spinel. This is generally of a vivid poppv-red color: the balas is of a violet rose, although Pegu has furnished white and white violet spinels, and Suder mania even bluish gray ones. It can W seen at once, therefore, bow extremely erroneous would W a classification of gems by color or general appearance alone. The primitive form of the spinel ruby is like that of the diamond, eight sided, which distinguishes it at once from the oriental stone. The color of the genuine ruby is that of arterial blood, or pigeon's 11mmI. as it is called. It is extremely hard and after the sap phire is the hardest of the corundums, which renders it difficult to understand why the earth so randy gives it up. Its tint is as Wautiful by artificial light as by day, and its powers of refraction so great that ancient Wlief credited it with power of emitting light. The an cients even supposed that it would shine through clothing with undiminished power. The largest ruby known is one men tioned by Chardin as having W.-n en graved with the name of Sheik Sephy. Another noble ruby is in possession of the shah of Persia. Its weight is put at one hundred and seventy-five karats. A third, Wlonging to the king of Usapar, was cut into a hemispherical form, and in was 1 .ought for thir teen thousand eight hundred and sixty six dollars. A ruby possessed by Ous tavus Adolphus. and presented to the czarina at the time of his journey to St. Petersburg, was the size of a small hen's egg. Story About the I'anar. A pretty fable about a pansy is cur rent among French and Oerman chil dren. The flower has five petals and five sepals. In raostpansies, especially of the earlier and less highly developed varieties, two of the petals are plain in color and three are gay. The two plain petals have a single sepal each, and the third which is the largest of all, has two sepals. The fable is that the pansy represents a family, consisting of hus tiand. wife and four daughters, two of the latter Wing stepchildren of the wife. The plain petals are the step children, -with only one chair; the two small gay petals are the daughters with a chair each, and the large gay petal is the wife with two chairs. To find the father one must strip away the petals until the stamens and pistils are bare. They have a fanciful resemblar.ee to an old man with a flannel wrap about his neck, his shoulders . upraised and his feet in a bathtub. The story is probably of French origin, because the French call the pansy the stepmother. A NEW VERSION, Smat.l fry Scalln;a4, ; STHAK holders Droller. Tick their art Etcher, Oo to blazos IMrenjon. Muct be stopped The organ. Can't be blowed Shoe horns. OrvTS us points The compass. A TU beak fast roll The sausage. The best policy A paid-up one. Have the right of weight Coal buyer. Useless unless they are cracked Eggs. Ax annual event The fall of the year. A hubby call "Ten minuses for din ner." CiiEATt'RF.8 of imagination Jove and Juno. Always goes it alone The confirmed bachelor. Mail and Express, IMITATION GEMS. How " Many Kinds of Precious Stones Are Counterfeited. Koek Cryatal Itaya an Important Part la the Manufacture of Artificial Jew- -eta One Iteaalt of I'roft-reae In f hemlatry. "The finest imitation diamonds are made out of rock crystal," said a Wash ington dealer in precious stones to a Star man recently. "The basis of the most successful counterfeit? of all kinds of gems is a pure, very dense and highly transparent sort of glass, which is termed 'paste' in the trade. For false diamonds this glass is simply cut and polished in facets, while for imitating other stones, such as rubies, emeralds, sapphires, etc., metallic oxides are mixed With it "li manufacturing glass for such pur poses the pneesses employed have to W conducted with the utmost nicety. For making even the best mirrors, the necessary silica is obtained from ordi nary white quartz, while common win dow pain's are produced from sea sand to a large extent; but, in this case, nx-k crystal is substituted, composing almut fifty per cent, of the ingredients of the paste. To this must W added twenty two per cent, of carKinate of soda and due proportions of calcined Wrax, salt peter and re.l lead. All of these things are reduced to the finest powder, mixed. fu:.ed together by heat in a crucible and cooIimI slowly. The density, transparency an Wauty of the plate dejcnd upon the care taken in these pnccsses. Thus made, it is all ready to W cut up into diamonds and pri-pansl for market. It may W. however, that the manufac turer desires to produce counterfeit gems of other sorts. If so, he has the means readily at hand. Supposing that he wants rubies, he fuses with paste a .mall quantity of peroxide of manganese nd a trac-c of Cass i us purple, which will give the proper color. For cmer tlds, he employs in like manner oxide f in n and for sapphires oxide of co balL "Topaz is easily formed in the cruei lilc by mixing with one thousand parts of paste forty parts of glass of anti mony and one part of Cassius purple. l-.r manufacturing other kinds of gems there are methods equally simple. f course, none of the.se imitation precious stones lias the chemical constitution, hardness, specific rravity or optical pr p erties of real ones. Accordingly their falseness is readily perceived by an ex pert. Inasmuch as the elements of w hich various gems are composed are well known, synthetic chemistry lias attempted to reproduce them by putting the ingredients together and effecting crystalliz ilion in tlu" Lib rat-rv. In this way large masses of what might lie termisl true ruby and sapphire are turned out artificially, such gem-like material having some uscfuliK-ss for in dustrial purposes, although lacking the brilliancy of nature's products. For my own part, I am confident that sooner or later some, if not all, of t ne stones deemed precious will W re produced by artifice. The chemists w ho have hitherto confined their attention to taking things apart are Wjrinning to h-arn how t put them together. All the gems are -ery simple in inpj.i tion and the problem is merely to uia'.e their elements crystallize properly. In all such knowledge science has m ide but little progress as yet. We i'o not even know for what reason o:ie sul st a nee is tranpai . nt while an ther is opaque; though presumably there is some relation Wtween the arrangement of the molecules in the tr:insparent ldy and the length of the light waves, which, in the ease f the transparent body, permits the latter" to pass through."' THE CHAMPION MEAN MAN. lie Waa Too Mean to Live Bat lie Man. ac;ed to Survive, "The meanest man I know of lives in Kansas." said Di. Asa Doolittlc. a mctnWr of a traveling fraternity at the Lindell, remarks the St. louis (loW Democrat. "He is a farmer worth a cool one hundred thoosand dollars. Hi.-, wife was taken suddenly ill, and he came to town to consult me a)out her case. I told him that I could not pro scriW intelligently without seeing the patient, but he declined to incur the expense of a visit. 1 charged him one dollar for the prescription, and he spent half an hour trying to Wat me '. jwh to ninety cents, lie made me write the pri"seription in English, then b :ught the drugs and compmindcl it himse'f t save the apothecary's fee. One of the ingredients was cap icutn. He thought he had some at ho:ne. but was mistaken, anil had to come lm 'c to town, a distance of four miles, after it. "IJy the time he had suececdi-d in :.av ing almut twenty cents and wasting two dollars' worth of time, hi-i wife was dead and the medicine a de:id 1 ss on his bauds. That so wore u Uiia that he fell ill. ll took the raclicine prepared for his wife, but Uiatonly aggravated his malady. When he final ly recovered he sued me for ten thou sand dollars and was Waten and hail to pay costs. He then went W-fore the grand jury and tried to have me indicted for malpractice." II) pnotie Marvela. Paris continues to marvel at hypnotic mysteries. In the course of his experi ments at the Charity hospital. Dr. Luys the other day effected so complete an "exteriorization" of the human lody as to transfer a woman's sensibility into a tulbl, of water. The tumbler was then taken out of the subject's sight. When she started as If in pain if the water was touched, and swooned if it was drank. The water is said to have retained its sensibility for a considera ble time. A wonderful discovery made by Col. Iloche was also confirmed, the sensibility of a hypnotized subject be ing transferred to a photographic nega tive of the same person, a pin-scratch across the hand of the platecausing the subject to shriek with pain and to In come marked in a few moments with a similar scratch on the hand A Ktraaaje Cuatom. A curious marriage custotu is reovrded by Dr. Post as existing in southern India among some of the more primi tive non-Aryan trilics. This consists of w etldiug a girl to a plant, a tree, an ani mal, or even to an inanimate object, the potion Wing that any ill luck which . may follow an actual marriage may be averted by a union of this kind A DRINK OF TURPENTINE. The Mtetake What-h Made a l-awyer Oat of a Store Clerk. "It is remarkable what little inci dents w ill change the course of a man's life." said the veteran lawer. Jiscph A. Itonham, the other day, while in a reminiscent moid, to a Philadelphia Call reporter, "Now, if it had not lecii for a little mistake I should probably have lieen a country storekeeper in stead of a lawyer." . "How was that?" inquired the listen er. "Well, when I was a young fellow," said the lawyer, "my father placed me with Andrew Irovost. an old French merchant, at French town. N. J., to learn the business. Provost kept a lit tle of everything in the store, which was in charge of John Jones, who now keeps a store of his own somewhere in Jersey. I hadn't been there long when one day an add farmer came in w ith a half-gallon jug after gin. Jones Sent me down the cellar with the old fan.ier to draw it. As I was not familiar ta ith the numerous barrels in the cellar and didn't know much almut gin, I conclud ed to let the farmer try a drink from the different barrels until he struck the right one. This pleased him. He took the tumbler and turned the spigot of the first barrel. 'Struck it fir-.ttime, said he, as he straightened up and drank. Then he threw himself down on the cellar floor and yelled like a fiend. He hail struck the turpentine liarrel. They took him over to the die tor'h to have him pumped out, while I, thinking the farmer was a ilea I man sure, ran up to the Provost mansion and hid in my room. I lay low all night till four o'clock in the morning, when I skipiMil out and drove to the turnpike, where I knew the stage was coming along at that early hour. I got to Philadelphia by easy stages and soon afterward found out that the farmer who drank the turpentine wns still alive. I entered Theodore Cuyler's of fice and studied law. If it had Iiot Wen for that turpentine I might have Wen a Jerseyman yet." WOMEN ON DUTCH RAILWAYS. Long- iloure and mall I'ay for Dolue; Compmratlvely I.lg-ht Work. The liritish consul at The Hague says that, as regards the employment of women and children on railways, it is stated that the latter are mostly made use of at the several railway works, their parents W-ing glad of the one or two florins they are able to earn for comparatively light work. They are occasionally put to similar work on the permanent way. Wing paid at the rate of 75 or so cents. The women arc chiefly employed in cleaning the car riages, working on an average eight hours a day on the state railway, with light work on alternate Sundays, and getting 11 florins 2.i cents wages lcr fortnight; on the Holland railway ten hours a day without Sunday work, with a daily wage of 1 florin :iu cents, or else watching the lines, turn almut with their husbands, the "wegwach ters" or cantonniers On the state railway their work averages twelve hours (the men taking the night duty) and they are paid at the rate of "jr cents a day. Wing lodged besides; the husbands earning 90 cents a day. On the Holland railway the average hours of work are about the same, the woman receiving pay at the rate t.f 55 cents a day, 1 florin 65 cents a week Wing, however, deducted for the lodging al lowed them. For women with families the work is considered trying, especially when they are kept on duty as long as sixtii-n hours, as is the case at certain points, when? the traffic huppens to W very heavy. As regards the general condi tions under which the persons in the employ of the great Dutch railway companies carry on their work, the tes timony of the numerous witnesses ex amined by the commission, with a few exceptions, went to show that they are well satisfied both as to the wages they n-ceive and as to the treatment awarded them. One witness was of the opinion that the wages of railway servants com pa nil favorably with those of most factory bauds. ELECTRICAL FLASHES. Small electric lamps are Wing tried by the London police in place of the old-fashioned oil bull's eye. The ex periment, have proved very sat isfactory thus far. Telephotography is at present in teresting Parisian experimenters and causes the Figaro to predict that "snou may W seen in Paris the image of a man smoking in St- Petersburg." Ari'LlCATIoxs for space in the electric ity building at the world's fair aggre gate Bss.ooo square feet, while only ls". (Hl feet are available. Foreign nations have already Wen assigned Cs.ooo feet, and several of them are urgently ask ing for more. An English railroad has just contract ed for 10,000 incandescent electric lamps to W placed in their carp. The lamps are in a box placed over each passenger, and by dropping a penny in the slot the light will burn for half an hour over the passenger's shoulder. It then goes out automatically. A Gnat Knake Story. In Marianne North's "Recollections f a Happy Life" is a description of a tame snake. Its mistress would some times twist the creature in the great plait of hair she wore around her head, and once threatened to go down, thus decorated, to a diuner party of rather aristocratic people. One of the snake's twn eccentricities serves to distinguish it among all other reptiles of a similar nature which have served as pct. It was as fond of glittering things as its mistress, and when she took off her many rings and placed them on differ ent parts of the table it would go almut collecting them and stringing them on its body. It would then tie itself in a knot, so that the rings could not W taken off until it was pleased to uutie Itself again. The lee Afe. An exhibit of the ice age is W-ing prepared in Ohio for the world's fair by lnf. I. F. Wright. He will colh-ct bowlders from different parts of the state, and with them fragmeuts front the original ledges in Canada from w hich the Ohio lmwlders were brought by the ice, and specimens of Scotch stones exhibit a large glacial map of Ohio, an outline map showing the course the lmwlders have lieen brought, placard detailing the priucipal glacial facts. tC