br,:i s Freeman . . u u u & .. pr,x( a Advert isin Jtates. The larreand t labia rlrrnlatloo ef the Caw. ia limn cmmenai It to the lavoraMe consideration of advertiser wboee larors will b Inserted at the follow leg low rate : 1 lDf-h, 1 time . ... ....... II .50 1 Inch, 8 month. .................. ......... :L0 1 Inch, 6 month........................".., a as Inch 1 year... .lt 3 Inebe. 6 month.... ............. 6 e S Inrbe, 1 year In CO Inche, 6 month g e loebe. I ye&r . 1.00 4 column, 6 month.... .............. ...... 10 ce i column. 6 month.... su.oa W column, year ........I......... S3.M . column. 0 month........ ao'oa 1 column, 1 year "--""1111""" T.0O Bndnee Item, flirt tnertton, 10c. pel lobwqueot Insertion, 6c. per Hae J--, Adminltrator' and iLjtccator Notice, ft aa Auditor' Notice ................... 2-50 Stray and almllar Notice ." i im a-Rcsolnt ton or proceeding ol any eor.ra- tton or society and commnni-atlon deimrd to call attention to any matter ol limited or in.ll Tidoal intercut mart I paid lora advertisment. KiK'k and Job Printing of all kind neatly and exedioasiy executed at the lowet prices. A ad don tyoa forget It. ;1 jaMES H. hau-m M.a(V rAi i Li-iil.lH.n. b,rrlpH- - ...., .n a.lvRnCf ..1.50 within 3 months. 1.75 f.i-i.l within t month. 2. no J, i .nd within the year., a-aa to .i,im outside of tbe county "f'0 W.rr vear will be chained to . ...hi ma above terin be. de- ' i ihi'-e who Jon i eoneult tneir B- in advance most not ex .. ic l-io ' ..K ......... JAS. C. HASSON. Editor and Proprietor. "BK IS A FREEMAN "WHOM THE TROTH MAKES FREE AND ALL ABE SLAVES EEC IDE." 81.50 and postage per year In advance. ""jt'he .li-ti'ictly understood Iroc he -Mine iuouuk e iuuw wuo -ifll!''- . . . . VOLUME XXVIII. -" r:ii:iw,iiS i1ootDrwim EBENSBURG, PA., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, IS94. NUMBER 43. ram Li Ki n n n 1 m ; DRY GOODS, T . i :l till ill i' line ol" ll.lics' Co:lt auil'ria co ntv. We :ir I'ti iii ."". )i i to -1 .I'll for (lie In st. :il i-:i- v:m.I a any other Hat in the :l leadv to show our ".'noils. DREXEL'S V."tiON OF OD LI'ER OIL uLV PURE HYPOPHOSPHITES OF LIME AND SODA. SdWT!0l. BUOMCHITIS, COUGHS, t:.;S. ASTHMA. SCROFULA. 1 : SEASES. NERVOUS DISEASES, SEASES OF CHILDREN, c cough, anaemia. :tlEAk DEBILITY, ETC CTC : cure by Its riTitrltivc a trw- cmiiision, nt C. :;:ikly:i.ss.uiil.ilc!. .:i".n on blood, tissue ;cj ic: prove mc nt fruin Oil is cp:c!a!ly ! :! '.r rntarzrmcnts, - .-.' :nnHi. frv-r dvs r:s. 1 of flrh, dis- U i. a rtf, t cure. L:ver 0:1 i th- very ' . 'T-i-:, lTnrhitis - thf.;t. hoars - -s ot rhtsi ami all : oscastil couditious --r bntt. Sold by to any address on re- j R:ET0SS, ttann & Brown Drug Co, BALTIMORE, MD. U. S. A $40 OO PER P0R JWJHG VQHKERS ! hu jiart'f the country; 'i w. furnish. V"ii im A 1 t 'it. You ran pT,Q .k."ri!ih .-nir r !..- r. jtijr. -1 i,u rifii ntrik. in !( .!. Jf will ':' V.i-h;.--. Ai y our ' r- in A ittfiht v fr.w "Wfl Wi!l ourwot kT. ; ' '. ii.ak. a h ilar. w - k f. il- inak m.iro ' i-iad in tlirt- ilays ii". ni.l fur irte Lsook H- HALLCTT & CO liturjuaji. , Box 880, PORTLAND, MAINE. Musk lor Fortf ; iiiT ..f i-jo pact's -....-I uic ol the - : -.t .mi m.t p.rutar - ! .r.i instrum.fntl. -! ! -jnt mojoDtr, in- - - ' !' rtraits. . vo i.i Dancer. ' ' - omit Pianist. J-ntEHjy' 0P.KMuSICALECHOCO.S I r, CAN LiiI;i N'SSES WANTED. Mil 111 iil 1 1 I I ; l 1 1 1 1 1 i n i ii i -SPECIAL CLOTHING, BOOTS, SHOES,' AND GENTS' .Nuiliinir tlrosior, nothing more stylish than a lilack Suit this r,iv:i-t -A .vifks in Cheviot, (.'lay, Worsted, Trecot ami Corkscrew. Our efforts in selecting our fall tht- !ii.'-r''s' .ilue, the best made, the finest fitting Clothing for the money. Give us a call and see . iict have Itoon m. 'irked to the tree-wool standard and we are ready to defend our claim to sell the best goods for the .j tii 'n y. Consider this an invitation to come and examine our goods. The prices speak for themselves. JS'OTICE .1 FEW OF OUR FRICFS. .. . .... :it S S.IHI, w.iltll KI.fMI -,i;t-. ----- at 1U.IN), win-Ill l:;.IH) ,. Mils .... :it li'.(H), w..rtli 15.IHI ... :. - ; - - - - :il N.IH1, w.ntli '(. (H , i. .... at .'i.imi. woiih S.ihi . , - - - - - nt 7.IMI. worth UUHl , .... ;lt U Ml. worth rj.l") ----- at lo.im, worili H.lHi ... . i:. .in 1 t.. - - 1. .". 1. ". sl.7.". ix. .i.2r s'.ri. ihi an.l i. K: . - I'.inl. IV.. in -1 In H, - - - L'-V., :'.-"m-. ami -VV. We Will Now Ofiijr You Great Bargains in Slo's. i ,: , i ... - -ii.... .... . ." to .?::.( hi ' ----- .Sll to l.."ill ! ... In. hoi-. ----- l.-J-'ito 2.7." 1 . , - 1 f. -Ihh-s, - .10 to : 1 l o! 1 1 u ill r. ? I . i (ij to sI-'lIM). tin- tinest w mim- on a few prices on Fine ( h er Shiri' ci unit rv fi r l!."ll. MY DRY GOODS AND CLOTHING Next Door to Bank, CARROLLTOWN, PA. CARTERS ilTTLE IVER P.LLS, ?IcV IlMwlache and rolioro all tbo tronbl9 fcrf T.t to a l ilious stato of tho Byatrn?, BUch ad I'izzjnesr, "ausca, Lrowsiiat. Iistrvsj after eating. 1'aiaiu tuo Si I &c Whilo thrirniobft xeiiiiaxkiUjle success haa bevti shown in cnrirag , JToa&che. yt Cert-r'R Littlo livrr TfXlft am equally valuaiIoia Constiition. curmp:BiiilprO X' L.tiiig thiaacnf-yincopl1111 hilo t.ty aiss crrrrt all mi. rs of thecoma-.htimii!atetha J: vt-r and rtgulnte tho boweid. lv-a iX Uicy ouly cured ra m rarj Ac'betbpT'W'.Til-l toalTnoetprivlrstntioaBwh uf:T frumtUifxiitrt-ssingcomi.laint; butfortn r.atoly thcirpxMiiif.flili'-t 3 liotoud hrra.iwiU t!ios vhocitcetry tlicm will timl thcae littl pillavalo ebio In o iiiany xrayn that they will not bo lU -g to do without 1 iiL-xn. But alter allsick bead Is the bnne of po man? lirea that here fa ven;aVe our pre! boast. Our riillscuroitwhila C'tiiors do not. tirt.r's Li tile IJrcr Tills aro vry pma'.l an4 Terr caiy to fciko. Ot.o or two fill matoa dosa. Tin y "o strictly vc-iietable aii l do not gnpo or piir". t:itl T tb. ir peiitloat tiim please all who risotiieai. lo vialitat 25crnts: live for fl. Sold l.y dru-iata every Lbio, or m ut by mail. 3AKTER MECICINE CO.. New York. .MALL FILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE W.L. Douclas S3SHOENosTQMuEEAKfNTi tOKUUVMX , FBFNCrl A. ENAMELLED CALF. $4.35-0 FlNECAIf &i&NGAnCl $ 3.50 P0LICE.3 SOLES. 4,so.2-W0RKINGHENs EXTRA FINE. " 2.l 7 BOYSSCHCOLSHCEi LADIES ...nil 4 I 7 seno roa CATALOGUE WU DOUGLAS, BROCKTON, MASS. ey by pnnkini W. I Voo can nT"'"n re tlic laiRw u""'"v' ,; " advertised siioei "i 'fcV-m anl and v uarautee Tricc oa i than yoor a"y""" t,t1v von. we can. Dy kieaicx - J. D. LUCAS & CO. )UlJI-S Siu. Mountain House STAB SH&YIHG PARLORI CENTRE STREET. EBENSBURG. I'HIS well known and lone established Shavmit X Karlor i now located -n Ontre treet. i (nUe tbe livery table ol O'Hara. Ihivl a- l.uth er. where the l.iisme? will I e carried on In Ihe lutiirr. SIUVIM:. 11A1K I TIUMI Al SHAMI'iiOINO dune in the beatel and ni.isl artiftie manner, i'lean Towel a specialty. sa,Ijaoiaa waited on at their retdenre. JAMES H. II ANT. I'roirietor 0 rJ nnl.fll I liM.I'" wearing S-'"'"- fnr ,h.vnlue civrn - - We nave intra where at lower pi " s:tute. If V.- Til r av.tr. . i SALE- FURNISHING GOODS CIM1IM1Y! season. We hare a tremendious IVtir Our Prices on I'.lrK-k Ih-nriHta, - CMIc., l'.lark llt'iirit't a. - - - - - 7.V., "Hack Ili-iuiitta. .... Jl.im, (':ihnicr's, in all colors, - - - .W, i':biluui'r's. in all rolors, ... AM-Wool Cloth, in all colors, ... :t.V., iiiitrhaiii. - fx- Fim Tint rlc:icii Muslin, Kim- I'lihlcaclu'il Muslin, l'in r.ltu-hi'il an.l 1,'nlilcachol Cotton Flannel, Fin' Uliic I'alico, .... A full line of ntankets, ... How Do You Like These Prices Fine Floor )il Cloth, 1 van I wile, Fine FHr l iil Cloth, H van Is wiile. Fine Floor Oil Cloth. '2 yanls wide, Fine Table ( il Cloth, assorted. littin.' irnients in the country, and thev are . .lei-sey or Cloth, from -Id'. ii. to 1 .'.", the lest. Fine We also have a tine line of Trunks the Cheapest and TIPS FOR THE QUEEN. Tliey Are f'nlloil l -riiilt.. Hut Sbr Clta Tlifiii tli.nt Ilit Shiiw. Oiiei-ii Vii-toria (.'rts inure tin;, than my otln r funet in:iry in Creat I'.ritain. wliat iimre. -vlie inily. n trvt in:r tin-in. I f eoiirv they are not alli-l tips. They are called i-riiiis-tes. hut it is all the same. An cx-.'it-taehe. writing in the New Yi-rk Tril i:ie. s;iys that aiming the must ciirioiu. f them is her riirlit to every whale r -1 !!i"f,"e n capture.! on the coast of the uniti-.l kin'iloni ami lronrlit to lainl. ilo'Siof thes j'riiiisiti-s ilate hack lo t he .la vs of the Norman killers and it : ppears t hat in the case of the whale the monsters were divided between the '.ovcrcifrn and his consort, tho tieeli takino; the head in order that herward role mirht lie replenished with the whalclxttic needed for the stilfeninff of li.-r royal rarmcnts. Another of the queen's backsheesh is a certain iniinler of manitici'lit I'asl'.inere shawls, which are dispatched to her every year from the kinrdoin of Cashmere. They vary in value, as a rule, from three hundred to twelve hundred dollars apiece and the queen is accustomed to present one of them as a wedding present to every younj; rirl of the ari-t.-H-racy or in whose fu ture she is in any way interested. Kvcry tailor holding a patent of "Pur veyor to her Majesty." if he conforms to ancient tradition and usarc. should present her with a silver needle each year. Another class of royal purveyors is called upon to present annually to her a talilc cloth, while from other sources she is entitled to an annual contribu tion of such varied tips as white doves, white hares.t urryconibs.lirt toiijrs, scar let hosiery. ni.rhtcaps.kiiivcs.laiicesand rosslMiws. Moreover, at the corona ion the lord of the manor of Addin . -ii must present to the sovereign a .ii.- h of jxit tajre" composed of "almond :ilk. brawn of cajxins. snjrar, spii-cs, liiekens piirjxiiled and chopped." At the same ceremony the lord of the manor of ilaydon is obliged by virture . f his tenure from the crown to pre sent the monarch with a towel, the lord of the manor of Workshop jriviny the sovereifrn a "ri;rht-handed jrlove." These arc onlj- a few of the various backsheesh to which Queen Victoria is entitled by tradition and usaye. How the IK-c See. We are so used to regard inp the world around us from the standpoint of our own siht that it is hard to re alize that to other creatures, far out numlK'riii": us and. perhaps, quite as important in the economy of nature, it must look quite dilferent. The honey We, for example, is supplied with a pair of compound eyes with hundreds of facets, each capable of sijrht by itself, and several occelli or little, simple eyes more closely allied to our own. How these eyes are used, what are their separate functions, what sort of imapes they can present to their owners, all remain questions as intcrestiiifr and well-nirh unsolved as they were Ik-fore the days of our powerful microscopes. Notwithstanding- the fact that hundreds of en tomologists have l'en and are inter ested in this subject, we yet are only at the stajre where we can aflirm that the honey lee sees a very different tiowcr from the one in which we ol serve her in search for sweets, al though of what that difference is and how it is produced we can form but little idea. stock in Cutaways Single stock have been to give how we have succeeded. I tmy Ci oo sj. worth w rth worth worth worth wort 1 1 worth worth worth worth worth 90c. 11.10 1 .'" -JIK-. 50.'. Ii0c. S'. KK-. Sc. l(k'. Sc. pair. S,-., 7c, H'., 75c. to 4 a on Potters' Oil Cloth? '4h j kt yard. !l.rH', ht yard. 5."h(. jkt yard, 'Jih: t yard. jn-r tvnt. cheacr in price Hats from .r1'. l'x-st you ever to 1.50 Cr the saw. Come one HOUSE, THE ORIGIN OF THINGS. TllK design of the American tlar wa. probably lmrrowed from the family arms of lien. Washington, which con sisted of three stars in the upper por tion anil three bars across the es cutcheon. Watches originated at Nuremberg as early as H7T. They were at first called NuremlHTfT epfrs. which they re sembled Ixith in shaH" and size. They were often fitted into the tops of walk ings ticks. Tin: first Knjrlish look on stenogra phy, so far a.s known, was written by Dr. Timothy ISrifrht in l.'iSs. Its earlier invention is attributed to the bat in poet Knnius, to Seneca, Cicero and sev eral others. lil'NH are said to have been used by the Chinese I h? fore the Wgrinninfr of the Christian era. The oldest dated piece of Kuropean artillery Wars an inscription declaring that the gnn was cast in Ma kink insurance was practiced in Home 1. C. -fj. It was very general in Kurope Wfore the discovery of Amer ica, ami it is altogether probable that the ships of Columbus were insured for their full value. Coats of arms were first employed in England during the reipn of Richard I., and Wcaine hereditary in families in the following century. They orig inated from the painted banners car ried by knights and nobles. MEMENTOES OF A PAST RACE. I'AnrcAit, the Indian chief, gave his name to the Iventuck3' town. Match Chunk, I'a., is an Indian name, meaning W-ar mountain. I'oi'oiikkki'sik, X. Y., has an Indian name meaning a pleasant harbor. An Indian word meaning younp grandmother gave a name to Kokomo, Ind. Cohassrt, Mass., was so called from an Indian term signifying place of pines. Milwaukee was the Indian name of a Wisconsin river. It means rich coun try. Pembina, the Dakota city, is said to have an Indian name meaning red Wrry. CiiifoPEE. Mass.. was called from an Indian word signifying the birch bark place. CocniTi'ATE, Mass., was named from an Indian word meaning the place of the falls. Keokuk, an Indian chief, furnished the name of an Iowa town. The word means sly fox. The Ivaws or Kansas Indians gave a name to Kansas City, Mo. It was adopted in l;iy. Whittling on Shipboard. Whistling and let us honor this sweet tradition is very much against the proprieties of sea life, writes l.ieut. .1. I). Jerrold Kelley, in an article on "Superstitions of the Sea," in Century. You may, in a calm, if not a landsman, wih with sKthing whistle San Antonio or St. Nicholas, and a lagging wind may lie spurred in consequence by these pa tron saints of the mariner; but once the ship is going, never, wise and wary passenger, whistle if you fear keel hauling, for like the padrone in the lo.hlcn Iegend you maj- find Only a little while apo. I was whistling to SL Antonio For a cup-lull of wind to till our sail. And instead of a breeze be bus sent a gale. FOR UNCLE SAM. Obtained Cavalry Serle Very Cheaply. The government has Wen picking up horses for the cavalry and artillery service vary cheap in Washington and Oregon this summer. The average price paid was seventy-five dollars for each animal, which is uncommonly low when the style of animal required for the army is considered. A government purchasing agent says: "We inspected recently at The Dalles, Pendleton. Walla Walla, Ellensburgh and North Yakima, and at each place found about one hundred awaiting examination. I selected such as met the requirements, which are that they must W bays and grays, fifteen hands hl,'h and upward, and from four to eight years old. These were passed upon by the gov ernment oflicials, and, if found satis factory, were accepted. They were purchased at a very low price, as the sellers had but little money, and were anxious to dispose of their stock. The animals Wught are of fine class, and especially suited for cavalry purposes. The lowness of the cost of horses this year may W attributed to the small demand, which is insignificant when compared with the supply. Never W fore during the fifteen yearn or so that I have Wen inspecting horses for the government have I seen times so dull in the stock regions, or the stock deal ers so anxious to sell their animals at a small price. The small demand Is, of course, due to the supplanting of horse cars by electric and cable railways, the shutting down of logging camps and lumWr industries on luget sound, and the general dullnessof trade. In Port land cars which would require thirty five hundred horses are operated bye-able and electricity. Then the freight cars operated ou these steel railways have shut out trucks and delivery wagons on which a large nuinWr of horses were used." SONGS OF THE BATTLEFIELD. What Peculiar Amoelatlona Produce Thiw Powerful Auxiliaries. Association, which has so large a share in the ojerations of the human mind, often contributes much to the effect of music, says Laura A. Smith in Lippincott's. Some airs possessing no intrinsic merit owe their influence on the destinies of nations almost entirely to this principle. The making of a national song is one of the things to W attributed to happy accideut; it can not Ik; accomplished by taking thought or by any amount of burning of the midnight oil. Monarchs have no power to command it, and often the greatest poets and musicians are most in capable of producing a truly national hymn. No. the great popular lyrics of the world have Wen the result of acci dent and the vent-hole of fiery feeling long confined. What but accident caused the song of "My Maryland" to prove the chant to which thousands of the soldiers of the confederacy kept time during lsilH;.V And could any thing W more fitly credited to chance than the extraordinary popularity of the "Mallrough"s sVn va-t-en guerre." which was due to the fact of a provin cial nurse having lulled to rest the lit tle dauphin, the son of Louis XVI., with this air? Had he not written his one undying lyric, the "Marseillaise," probably Kouget de Lisle had never Wen heard of. And who speak of Max Schucckcnburger when they talk of "Die Wacht am Ilhein?" Verily, the making of a war song is a deed of arms, not a mere effort of the pen. OUR LEGS TO VANISH. In the t'oorae of Another One Thouaaad Iran Men May Ceaae Walking. Dr. Emil Young, professor of physi ology at the University of tleneva, is in great distress concerning the future of our legs. He suggests, in an essay in the Semaine Litteraire, says the Westminister tiazette.that in the course of one thousand years the human race may have lost the necessity of the use of legs, and retain those niemW-rs of the body solely a.s ornamental survivals. Men refuse more ami more to walk, though walking Is the wholesomest of physical exercises. Steam, electricity, the rope railways, tricycles, and bicycles have changed the whole asjH'ct of Swiss touring, as he says, in his own generation. "Everylwjdy seems anxious to get everywhere any way except by the use of his legs." In another generation, he supposes, our traveling balloons will bang outside our windows, or our eleetrical coaches stand outside our doors. They will W produced so cheaply that every man will have his own chariot. Hence our legs will lircome superfluous, then they will W crippled, and shrunk to hideously small dimensions, until at last they will finally disappear. Our arms, on the contrary, will correspond ingly strengthen and lengthen. "While our legs remain," says Dr. Young, "let us march all we can." NAMED AFTER THE PRESIDENTS Philadelphia Maintain Her Record for 1'ifct riot it. ill In Her Nomenclature. Of the twenty-three presidents of the United States John Adams has the largest numWr of namesakes, twenty three, in the Philadelphia directory. James Kuchanan ranks next, twenty one men of nearly as many vocations W-aring the name of the only Penn sylvania president. There are fifteen Andrew Jack sons and fourteen Andrew Johnsons. The name of the father of his country is borne by eight day laWrers, one caterer, two waiters, one janitor, and one real estate dealer, or thirteen men in all, says the Record. The grandfather of Iteujamin Har rison has three namesakes, while one laWrer and one upholsterer have the name of Tippecanoe's grandson. There are four James Monroes and the same numWr called John IJuincy Adams. One histler, one puddler, and a weaver are known as James Madison, and a bartender, a clerk, and a super intendent answer to the name of Zachary Taylor. There is but one Thomas Jefferson, whose occupation is not given, and the only John Tyler is a weaver. A brakeinan and a minister of the t.ospol are Franklin Pierces, but there is nobody with the name of Pres idents Van Huren, I'olk, Fillmore, Lincoln, llrant, Hayes, Garfield, Arthur, or Cleveland, except aa a handle to the surname. lining and t.oing. Collector (mad) "When are going to pay this bill?" Debtor "Never. What's the use? Aa long as you are coming after it, why should I W going to pay it?" Detroit Free Prea. HORSES Animal for TOOK HALF IN RATS. How China' llocir Km proa M It I rated the tVoree f the Petttilenee. A ree-n t numWr of the North China Herald, juj. received in this city, tells this story of the Empress I o wager of China: "A rather good story is told among the Chinese about the empress dowa ger and . the plague. The empress Keeps constantly burning, day and night, in her palace, eighteen lamps, which represent the eighteen prov inces of China. Not long ago one of the lamps, although it received precisely the same attention as all the others, was burning very badly, and the em press sent for the chief imperial as tronomer to learn the reason. The chief astronomer having carefully con sidered the matter and consulted the archives, told the empress that the lamp which was burning so badly rep resented the province of Canton, which was alxiut to W afflicted with a serious epidemic, in which the god of pesti lence had determined to take off eight tenths of the people. "The empress was very much con cerned at Wing told this, and asked the chief astronomer how such a dreadful doom might W averted from eight tenths of her people in the province. The chief astronomer said that the god might iH-rhajvs Ikj moved by prayer anil offerings, and everything was done to placate him bj- the empress dowager's orders. After this the chief astrono mer was asked what success had Wen achieved, and, after much considera tion and consultation, he replied that the god of pestilence had consented to compromise but this was absolutely the Wst he could do for four-tenths human Wings and four-tenths rats. Thus the frightful mortality of rats and human Wings at Canton this spring is explained." HAVE THEIR OWN METHODS. The Caaaowarlea Puniue a, Plan of Their Own for Catching llah. The methods employed by the casso wary in catching fish differ materially from those of the common fish-hawk. The fish-hawk employs very much the same methods as the birds of prey, while the cassowary fishes according to a method of its own and uses a good deal of strategy. A numWr of years ago I was standing near the bank of a river when I saw a cassowary come down to the water's edge and stand for some minutes. apparently watching the water carefully. It then stepped into the river where it was about two feet deep, and. squatting down, spread its wings out, submerged them, the feath ers Wing spread and ruffled. The bird remained perfectly motionless and kept its eye closed, as if in sleep. It remained in this position at least half an hour, when it suddenly closed its wings, and. straightening its feathers, stepied out on the bank. Here it shook itself several times, whereupon a num Wr of small fishes fell out of its wings from amid its feathers, which the bird immediately picked up and swallowed. The fishes had evidently mistaken the feathers for a kind of weed that grows aloiiir the river bank and which resem bles the feathers of the cassowary. The smaller fishes often seek a hiding place in these weeds to avoid the larger ones that prey upon them. TIME AT THE NORTH POLE. The Man Who Clint Keaehea That Point Will Meet with Surprise. If ever the north pole is reached the adventurous spirits who get there will find that they have actually out stripped Father Time altogether; in fact, he will have given up the rate en tirely, for at the northern and south ern extremities of the earth's axis there is no fixed time at all, says the London ;ioW. At any moment it can W noon or midnight, breakfast time or supper time, work time or play time, whichever one likes. Clocks will W a fraud ami delusion, for at the tole all degrees of longitude converge into one. and therefore all times. The pos sibilities of such a position are endless. Not ouly. too, will the clocks W out, but the calendar as well. It can W. at will, either yesterday or to-day. or to morrow. We have heard a lot of fool ish people ask w hat the use ami pleas ure can W of getting to the north pole, but a little reflection will show us ad vantages can W gained there which cannot W found in any other part of the gloW'. There, at any rate, instead of licing like the jh m r inhabitants of lower latitudes, the slaves of time, we can turn the tables and W its masters. MEMORIAL SERVICE. Sixteen Hungry lloj Filled with Veal Pie In IMckeua Pleshop. An exchange tells the following story of the pieshop in London Wfore which Charles Dickens used to stand when, as a child, he drudged in a blacking factory. Every day, on the way to and from his work, he paused to de vour the viands with his eyes, and sometimes he pressed his tongue to the window-pane, as if by so doing he got a taste of the good things which were "so near and yet so far." An American railroad man who ad mires Dickens hunted up his pieshop when in London in order to gratify his curiosity and his sentiment. It proved to W a mere Wx of a place in a poor quarter of the citv. but the original business was still carried on there. As the traveler peered into the shadowy interior, a voice was heard at his el Ihjw: "Please, sir, will j-ou buy me a weal pie?" The ow ner of the voice was a small, disheveled person, with whom a pie of veal, or anything else of a "hearty" nature, would have agreed right well. "How 'many boys do you think this shop will hold?" asked the American. "I dunno. About fifteen or sixteen, I should think." "Well, go and get fifteen Wys, and bring them back here." The boy studied the man's face for a moment, as if to make sure that he was in the enjoyment of his senses, and then with a yell hurried into a side street. Hardly a minute elapsed W fore he returned at the head of a pro cession of sixteen gamins, of assorted sizes, unanimous in appetite and hope. This ragged battalion assembled close Whind its Wnefactor and fol lowed him into the shop, where he an nounced that he was going to give all the boys all the pie they wanted. They wanted -a great deal, as it proved; their capacity for "weal pie was something marvelous. Rut their W-nefactor was as good as his word, and sixteen happy and satisfied Wys left the shop singing his praise. ENGLISH LIFE. Aa It la Viewed llr an Educated 'atlve of the Orient. ISehvamji Malabari. of India, who visited England in ls'.K). considered the English climate as the most remark able of all the things that came under his notice. He thiuksa race that could conquer such a climate ami carve the comforts of life out of it, deserves do minion over all the elements of nature. He says, in "The Indian Eye On Eng lish Life," that it makes one laugh to hear the English talk of their "fine day." One may speak of a fine five minutes, a fine half hour or hour nothing be yond that, so far as I could see. The climate of a country reflects it self pretty clearly in the temjter, habits and general surroundings of the peo ple. It is mainly the climate, and the peculiar mode of life which the people have to live in oWdicnce to climatic in fluences, that make them so keen about everything. The quantity and the manner of their eating puzzled and sometimes frightened me. Men and women eat freely at shops, in the streets, train, "bus, or railway carriage. There is an absence of d.licacy and deliWration aWut the matter, at which the grave oriental may well lift his eyebrows. In no respect, perhaps, does the av erage Englishman show himself so slow of imagination and wanting in taste as with respect to his daily food. He eats what his fathers ate Wfore him. The cook knows nothing of proportion in seasoning his f.xxl; knows little of variety, and has a rough, slov enly touch. The English are heavy eaters, as a rule. I have never had a regular dinner with friends while in England, W-ing unaccustomed both to their hours and their dishes. Rut I have had to put in an appearance at lunch or breakfast, to catch a friend aWut to leave town. On one such n:casion I saw a com pany of piK-ts. philosophers and fanat ics at table, presided over by a young lady, the daughter of the house. I sat there, wiping my forehead they did the eating, I the perspiring as I saw slices of Wef disappearing, with vege tables, mustard, etc. I was pressed to join, but pretended to make a horrified pr (test. The host then asked me slyly what I thought of the food and their m.xie of eating. I replied, instinctively: "It is horrible." The reply set the gentlemen roaring, and my hostess blushing. Rut I could not help saying what I felt. How can a little stomach hold such an enor mous lunch? The waste of vitality in their climate, and under their condi tions of life, must W enormous; and it has, of course, to W replaced. BURIAL OR CREMATION? W hat the Noted Frenati Author. Have to Say Concerning Them. S.ime of the noted French authors have leen giving a Paris editor their preferences in regard to burial or cre mation. The Roston Herald summar izes theirexpressions: Alphonve Daudet says, as to W-ing buried or cremated, that either would te exceedingly dis agreeable to him. and when one re memWrs that Daudet is a great suffer er from an incurable disease his an swer is a triumph of hope. Henri de Rornicr frankly curses the editor for spoiling his dinner by such a query, anil Armand Sylvester is very French and poetic, for his says: "To Uinnie a puff of smoke in the sky or a blade of grass over a grave, that is the choice given to us. Well. I prefer the ground, from which flowers spring for lovers." Sarcey. the grea t critic, replies: "Theo retically, cremation appears to me the favorable method of disposing of the rubbish, the Ixxly. but I am not in tolerant or exclusive in anything." "Rurnedt burned:" writes Sardou. "It will afford me great pleasure to W burned. Warmly yours." Another au thor says: "You ask me which I pre fer, to W burned or buried? After ma ture reflection. I regret to say that I desire neither the one nor the other." Emile Zola signs his name to the most sensible "preference" of the lot. He writes: "My personal choice in the matter I have not yet considered, and I believe it is lest to leave the thing to the decision of the loving ones we leave W'hind us. They alone can have pain or pleasure in it." ETIQUETTE FOR GIRLS. Always rise for an older person. I.N entering a room the gentleman al ways follows the young lady. TllK young lady always scats herself first W-fore any gentleman will do so. I.N making intnxluctions the young man is always presented to the girl, never the other way round. It is a lady's place to recognize a gentleman first, as it depends on her whether the acquaintance continues or not. Never introduce any young man to your girl friends without first asking their permission, atul then say: "Miss D., I want to present (or iutroduce) Mr. A. to you." It is sufficient to acknowledge an in troduction by a simple lxw, unless there is some special reason for more cordial forms. Handshaking is not gxxl form in an introduction in a ball room. HINTS TO HOUSEKEEPERS. To rkmovk odors from a sick room, it is a gxxi plan to sprinkle coarse ground coffee on a shovelful of burning coals, and thrust it into all the corners of the room. IIakd putty may W easily softened by passing a red-hot flat piece of iron over it. so that it can then W removed with the fingers or the edge of a knife, without any difficulty. Cake needs to rise to its full height W'fore browning, especially sponge cake. The lightness of this cake de pends, first on thorough W-ating, sec ond on baking just right. TRY. In the water for purple and blue cal icoes, soda added. I'ukifyino jars from grease, by soak ing in strong stxla water. Fok washing ceilings blackened by a kerosene lamp, stxla water. In the rinsing water for pink or green calicies, vinegar added. Washing an oilcloth with a flannel and warm water, wiping dry. and rub bing a little skim milk over. I'ihhI Housekeeping. NAPOLEON FOND OF HOMER. He Thought the Poet Waa tbe Encyclo pedia of lit Time. The emperor, says Figaro, admired Homer in every way, and thus ex pressed himself on the subject: "The Iliad, as much a.s Irenesis and the Rible. is the sign and token of its time. Homer in his work is px.d. ora tor, legislator, geographer and theo logian; he is the encyclopedist of his time. Homer is inimitable. Father Hardouin had the temerity to impugn this sacred monument of antiquity and to attribute it to a monk of tin tenth century, an impertinent imle cility. Never have I le-n struck with his Wautics as now (lsl'.l. and the sen sations which he arousi-d in me confirm the justice of the approbation accorded to him by the whole world. What strikes me especially in reading the pages of his work is the grossness of the customs as compared with the ele vation of the thought of the ejxx.-h. We see heroes killing their own lcef. pre paring it with their own hands, and yet pronouncing discourses of rare elo quence ami worthy of a high civiliza tion. In the Odyssey I greatly disap prove of the combat of Isus against Ulysses on the threshold of his own palace, lxth disguised as W-ggars. I consider this episode wretched, coarse. unlecoming and unworty of a king. And then, after having eliminated everything that I find objectionable. 1 feel what still affects me, I put myself in his place. I am seized with the fear of Wing Waten by a common fellow. It is not given to every prince, to every general, to have the shoulders of his guards or of his grenadiers, to convert himself into a street porter at will. "The gxxl Homer remedies all this by making his heroes so many collosi; but this is not the ease with us. What chance would we have if we still liv-d in the happy days in which physical strength was the real scepter? It would come to this, that Noverras. my valet, who waits upon us. would W king over us all. We must agree, then, that civ ilizat ion diHs everything for the mind, and favors it exclusively at the expense of the body." ANNOUNCING A KING'S DEATH. How tbe New Waa Spread That Victoria W'aa ueen. Some quaint and delightful glimpse of '"Old Windsor" are given by Iady Elvey in her "Life and Reminiscences of ;. ,T. Elvev, Knt." He re. for in stance, is an announcement of the death of King William, which probably i a unique delivery by one of the men to whose lot it has fallen "to tell sad stories of the death of kings:" Roach, the W-lfry keeper. says the Westminster liazctte. seems to have received a broad hint that the king was r.ear his end. and waited aWut until he received the news that all was over, when with haste he repaired to the deanery, arousing the inmates by ringing the Wll at the cloister en trance with all his might and main. It was uscl ess f . r the butler to ask him, "What do you w ant here at this time of night?" His business -was with the dean and no one else. This distin guished person, aroused from his slum Wrs and clad, not in his surplice, hut in another garment which should W "always white." called from the topf the stairs: "What is the matter. Roach?" "Rilly lie dead, lie I to ring the W ll?" "What Rilly?" "The king, to W sure." "Oh. yes. Roach: you may toll the Wll." Thus was the news spread that the king was dead, and that the young lTincess Victoria was queen. STAIRS IN SAMOA. ow a Little Inlander Carried Water to a Second-Story linoni. In Samoa, where he makes his home. RoWrt Louis Stevenson has done much in the way of instructing the natives in European nicthxls of work. He tells an amusing story in this connec tion. A new house boy had Wen en gaged, and on his arrival was los-t in awe and admiration of the magnifi cence of the mansion. He was given a large bucket of wa ter and told to take it to the lied room up alxwe. He looked up an.l. point ing, asked if it was there. On Wing answered in the affirmative, he seized the bucket in his teeth, and Wfore anyone could remonstrate he had rushed up one of the rost9 of the veranda. The whole family ran up the staircase, and when they showed him that that was the usual metlnxl of get ting to these rxms. he wasoverjxiw ered with delight, and for two or three daj-s could do absolutely nothing but race up and downstairs, chuckling and crowing in an ecstasy of joy. And when detachments of his friends came to visit him they were always taken to see the stairs the first thing. SCIENCE IN COREA. It Ki plain Phenomena tn a Way Peculiar ly Ita Own. Education in Corca is of the Chinese order the committal of whole lxxks to memory. On all other subjects than knowledge of Chinese, says the Roston Transcript, ignorance is the fashion when it is not a reality. Philosophical speculation is stated to W' common, but Corean notions of natural science are indeed very chaotic, if the following story may W accepted: "A well-known merchant of t bemulpo was asked by one of his native employes a man of some education whether or not he had ever seen a sparrow which had died a natural death. The ihtm.ii questioned did not rcmemWr that he had. He was then asked how t he for eign servants accounted for such a phenomenon, for such it was. consid ering the vast numWr of sparrows in the world and the huge families they raise every year. The answer to this query W-ing unsatisfactory, the Corean gave his explanation, which was a popular one. He said that dying sparrows Wtixik themselves to the sea shore, dived into the mud anil lx-caiue. clams 'How else", he triumphantly added, 'could you account for the num Wr of clams along the coast?" . . . Unmanned Hi Opponent. Dramatic effects are hazardous agen cies to use. as it is not impossible to spoil them by an anti-cliruax as a memW-r of the English parliament found when, at the close of a fiery ad juration to the government to declare war, he cried out: "Unsheath the sword!" and, drawing a dagger, threw it on the flxr. "Ah!" cKilly said an opponent; '"there is the knife, but w here is the fork?" A shout of laugh ter was the result.