u - ...... i Tkk-ftis vft AdvertisingKateH. The larveand rei'aole circulation of the sua Ktnitn kosimiIi It to the favoraMa contideraiieu of nlxnitfri bwe favors' will h. inserted at tfce foih.wlr.g; low met : 1 Inch, 1 times I1.SC 1 Inch, 1 mon;h. S.M 1 tech, 6 ntoDlb.. . 1 Inch lyear.... .................... .tw 2 Inches, 6 ni'-rnhd e.w ' x Inches, I year ......................... Into 1 inches, S uionLfci ... ... .to inches. 1 year ......... X.00 Vi column, 6 months.... .......... 10i) column. 6 muni hs :w. C column, 1 year V00 t I coluaia, 9 months............. 40 00 " 1 oalumn, I year 76.00 Business items, hrst insertion, lftc. jer Its subsequent Insertions. i. per Itae Administrator's and .Executor's Notices. f2 H Auditor's Notices S.50 Stray an.! similar Notices 2 00 -kelut oris or rocerdinr ot ary corjra tin er society and cotumoni'-ativns deiKtud 19 call attention to any matter of limited r indl Tidual Interest ngi be paid fur as advertis mems. B.-k and Job rTiitm of all kinds neatly and eieotKu-iy cxec.ted at the lowest Tlcs. Aad don tyoa n.rget u. , pabltabod Weekly t rtSBl K, CAMBRIA CO., PKSSA., j Circulation, - - - - 1,200 )mbiirrlpliii Rates. jirsn1 i vra-. ah in advance fl.60 Jo i nl,t t',lJ wlthlD 3 months. 1.75 j., ii nut i''d within 0 month. 2 oO jo ti not paid wttbln the year.. a-25 ,.1'pr- 40 .om residing outside or the county ",. Ildinonal per year will be chanced to , nofU- .......... .n event win tne aoove terms re de "' nd those who don t eonsalt toelr JAS. c. HASSON. Editor and Proprietor. 1 ;ttJTT,ik-eil on the same looting as those who "HI IS A rBKEHlH WHOM TBI TRUTH MAKES FBKB ASD ALL ABB ELATES BESIDE. 81. CO and postage per year In advance; r tn j fai-t be distinctly understood froc PiTfiT J -ur paper tefore yon stop It, If stop j VOLUME XX VI IT. S . n F 1 11 1 M-miapKifB I1 1 J IIIUDI 1NH I EBENSBURG, PA., FRIDAYS DECEMBER 21, 1S94. NUMBER 50. Tl..- i oft loll J si., k r. pill -h :i lliislui wv i 1 1 1: l-ri 1 1 X ni.e ill: l iiinisi lllts. -nits, llils. . from 14 to l-,!:i.-k -nil' lit. Mr;. 1 in. I Milts. -nits. als. :it-. i t' I . IV. .in 4 to 1", Pants, from 4 Will Now to 14, - We l-'ine 1 r, -s -li:.- llress SI l'ini- 1 ii. : n - 1 -"ine 1 rt ll.M-S, '111 Hi, I ivw wants ta learn, but the v reads That W Honesty Ansa. . WWING TOBACCO ovst ttat made, and :. tl?ea Jt eaves tTrim " ever Deiore. r'UJ lmitntiri-na Tnoinr. t the genuine. If your (?? aak himto M It for you. pRKERaBEOS.. Ioufcrffle.Kj- F in in in lllti. i r... ' f u,vriv Mumc for Forty twrv Music of the- F -'v:i-it and most Dooular L tm . i. ,f" v",-,1 ani Instrumental.- t v e"st '1"?nt manner, ta- ftUf ;c-' Portraits. fKif a c. 7 pa"'" Dancer. -' &EUGMAH ctrmma. 11 iiTsr "Km i no TtfW, 0 St IAc Methods, Live Men and ut im ' n ntrixb'ction of the Economy Clot I ring and I )rv i.xxls 1 louse iiii . I ry JihmIs, PHMin :ui. lii.t--. :ui.l ;'iit" l"ni iiiliiti-r JimhIs. By tlu- rlinarv un til. mIs tin- r-Uiil in lli- iiianufiu-tun-r. Im.iIi mu-i liavt- tli. ir profits ami l.y tli time tho pxxls n-a-h tin- wcan-r tlu-y rtxt --" si-" the material an. I laUir ar n-allv worth. The l-'eoiiomv ( 'I. t,iiti.r : .1 Ilrv IIimhIs House hmmmns lii r Utween maker aii.l ii.iimiicr. .r..His- to (lisjnse with this system of .louMe j.jotlts an.l to ah ve aetual eost. This means '.'lothiii '. I li v i ; mhIs. l'M.ts it we mils eut priii-s exeeelin.rly low- in or.ler to win voiir : we must keep them. NOTICE .1 FEW at? 4.50, worth 7.001 at S.OO, worth sl(.(Nl at 10.00, worth 13. oo! at 1J.50, worth .."0 at 5 cents a pair, at P2.0O, worth 15.00 at 14.00, worth L'0.(H at 5,(H), worth K.0O at 7.0O, worth 10.00 at 0.0O, worth 12.00 at IO.imi, wor.h 14.00 . 1.5o, .1,75, L'.IMI, sj.-2.25 .5t, c;.(K an.l :.50. 25c :i5c. ir.il 50c. Si. Offer Yon Great Barpins in Shoes 25 to 5:l.oo ,S0 to 1.50 1.25 to 2 75 .20 to 1.50 t-jv 'A -have also a fine line of li. lies' Coats from $4.00 up to .15.00. the finest iittinpr frarnients in the country, and they are 3.1 per cent. cheaer in priie ;!..iti in :i 1 1 v otli.r store in Camhria county. A full line of (iloves, 5iic and npwanls. Also a full line of l!ahy Coats andCaps We will now give mu a few prices on 01:XrLS' XTJTtlVISIIIIVG GOODS, I ;n. I n.i. vvi ar fr in ."5c up to $1.( 0 fc r the Inst. Fine Ivt" Shirts, Jersey or Cloth, from 40c. up to 1 .25. the best. Fine Hats from 50e. to 1.50 tir the -i 'iir 1 ".ii 1 lat isas xh1 as any other Hat in the country for 2.50. We also have a tine line of Trunks the Cheapest and l!ost you ever saw. Come one 4il ;:;. We are always ready to show our roods. Economy Clothing and Dry Goods House, Next Door to Bank, CARROLLTOWN, PA. CARTERS Kittle PILLS. Sick Bnularhe and relieve all tbo troubles iscf ect to l'i!lom eta to of the system, suoh aa Ihzzinesa, Kauaea. Drowsineas. listrens after eating, l ain in tne Ei.lu, &c While thf-irmosft remazkabto auccess has been shown in curing 4 Headache, yet Carter's Little Liver Mis arsj SKiually valuable In Constipation, curing and pre venting thlsannoyiDecomplunt.wbilo they also . correct all disorders of thoBtomachtimn la to tha liver and regulate the bowels. voa if they only cured Act-ethey wonld bo almost pricclona to those wha I eu.'erfrotnt!iisdu.trcfisin(;ccmx.laint; bntfortu- Sataly thelrpoodnwdrs notend hero. and thoss Who once try them will find these little pills vain. 6ble In so many ways that they will not bo wit. ling to do without them. Bat after ailaick bea4 Is Oie bene of bo ms-ny Uve3 that here fit where) TTBniakeonrgnatboaat. Our pills cure it while) cthcra do not. Carter's tittle IJver Pills are very small ami very easy to take. One or two pills laakoa dose. They are t-trictly vegetable and do not gripe or yam", but by thfir gentle action please all whu esotbe-m. In Tialsat 25ccnts ; flveior $1. Haiti bj druista everywhere, or eent by mail. ."5ARTES MEDICINE CO., New York. V A! 1. FILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRIGS W. S3 L. Douglas .ak, tfl M . tt tu r REST. Snub IS THE BCST. NOSOUCAKINO. 5. CORDOVAN. A-Z 5- F1NECALF &KWARCI 3.4? P0LICE.3 Soles. 2.L7-2 BOYSSCHOOLSHflEi OC ri rvi .-."av-- a-..-i trID r a.T At nIMP nnoctCTON. MASS. V.a ess S)e wtoey by prcB.in ! " " e sVe'rhei"rt msnufactnrer, of 7ueIb eVi Tin the world, and euaraatee phr?cend(hl wearing oiiaiitics. the value given than wherTh" r raVeP Take no .nbtitute. If yoac 5eriroVuPpriyVou.wecan. Sold by J. D. LUCAS ifc CO. )ulyl3 6tn. Mountain House SUB SK&YIHG PARLGRi ; CENTRE STREET, EBENSELTRG. ' . . .a' V 'I'HIS well-known and loriK estabtlahed Shavrna; A farlur is now located n Ontre street. posits the livery stable of O'Hara, liayls . lath er, where the business will t-e carried on 1b Hit l.ture. SHAVINO. HAlK CUTTINU A1 SHA.MI'IM)l.N(i done In the beatest and ami at artistic manner. Clean Towels a specialty. ssLale waited on Ht their residences. j JAMES H. (I ANT. - !roiritor $2?-: 'jT TOWN Lively Times in Prospect. a, ip v m at Carrolltowii. nit-ans : Sweeping Reduction in the sale allow the j.ul.lie to huy .lirtH t from tin- maker at a ve y small an.l SIhms LVi ir ii-nt". lower than the usual rates. We" n-eo.'- eoiiliU - nee anl voin- patronage. We must lo v r OF OUR PRICES. TVt io Oin Prices on Try A full line of Henriettas in all colors, ... Fine P.l ick Henrietta, -Fine P.lack llenriet a, - Fine lUack Henrietta, .... Fine Cashtiieres, in all colors, -Fine Cashmeres, in all colors, ... Fine AH-Wool Cloth, in all colors, ... Fine (iin:haiii, ..... Fine l'.leachel Muslin, - Fine Cnlleacliel Muslin, .... Fine rleachel ami l'nh!eachel Cotton Flannel, Fine l'.hie Calico, - A full line of I'.lankets, ..... A full line of Horse P.lankets. How Do You Like These Prices Fine Floor Oil Cloth, 1 yarl wiile, Fine Floor lil Cloth, 1 ' yards wiile, Fine Fkor Oil Cloth, 2 van Is wiile, Fine Table Oil Cloth, assorted, THE MARKETS. Pittsbcho. Dec. 18. WHEAT No. 1 red. 57a5sc; No. red. M OTc CORN No. 8 yellow ear. new. 47Ha8J; miitnl ear. new. 46,447c; No. 2 yellow aiieiied. new S.(,iyo. OATS-No. 1 white. 28J.18?; No. 2 do.. 87H d'Uc; extra. No. 3 white. iM&o6c: mixed. :i (Sc. HAY-Chotce timothy. 81i.Oflai3.50; No 1. timothy. $1 1.00&11.:S; No. timothy. 15 10USD; mixed clover and timothy, Slo.Ouaiu.d": pAckm. t7.Ui4j,T..VI: No 1 feeding urarie. g.tA)o.9.i1; w ft if .in bay. 814.OiG.15im. ; riUiTEK Elifin creamery. SM-To; Ohio , fancy creamery, 21 S-'3j; fancy country roll, . 17 2, 16c; low grades and cooking, Oiloc. CHEESE Ohio finest new. llal'V; New i York new. HH13c; limberirer, fail make. Wc: Wisconsin awiss, 13il3o; Ohio cwias, HHaiSc. Eliijsj strictly fresh Pennsylvania and Ohio cases. 2Ji&lc; storatce. 1710;; bcuthern and estern. -i ii.afo. POULTRY Large live chickens. 40i50j per pair; live chickens, small. 3o&40o; spring chiCKens. 4'' Oc; ducics, 50 j,.;5c per pair, as to size; dressed poultry, 9jl0c per pound; turkeys, llilicpcr pound: due, ilj,12o; spring ch ckeua, loatlc; live turkeys, 8V3.Ko per pound; live geeie. 7jc7t$l.UO ier pair. East libbhtt Pa.. Dec 18. CATTLE Receipts more liberal this weak and with fewer buyers on hand; the market i- opening alow, with pri es HI to IS cents lower on all gra le except prime weights, l'rime, ta.u0.6.a: good, S4. IOJ.4.5H; gouO. butchers. f 3 114 15; rough fat. $1.65 6t3.1"; fair light steers. -i.ao 43.43; liglit storkers, iif3.15; good fat cows and heifers, fli 4l l-'5; bulla, stags and boiogna cows. JK uOiiJ. 0; fresh cows and t-pnugora. J3 -to": good feeders. .3.25,33.65. HOGS Receipts liberal and with a fair de mand; the maricet is flow with p ices a shade lower from the clo.-e of last week; the quality of t-tock very poor today. Pbila.lelph as. S4.tH4 1.6-'.; best heavy Yo k era and good mixed. $1.45 41. 5 eomm n to fair YorKers. 1.254-35; pigs, 14.15 4.35; roughx. f3.dUia4.25. tSHEEl - bupp y is ho ivy today; demand only fair and market slow a a decline of IS cents; other markets dull also. Ex ra, HUUA3.2 good. $.'25a-'.65; fair. $I6i!&l i: common. 5"C9l.: yearlings, tl Hit l.i best lambs. l3.l:ii4.UO;' o mmon to fair lambs. 2.00 3. IS; vralCilv-s. 95.5UJa.5U; heavy and thin calves, $2.uua3.Uq CisriNNATi. Dec. 18. HOGS Market easier and lower at 4.iMi 4.60. receipts. 4,3 HJ head; shipments, l.ttoo bead. CATTLE Market steady at tS 25714.65; r aelpta, 1,1 O.I.e-id; shipnient-t. 6XKJ head. SHEEP Market strong at 1.25a 1.50: re Be pts, 1. 4'Si head; snlpments. 60U head. Lauibs steady at t2.75 &3. 7a. Nbw York. Duo. 18. WHEAT Spot market easy. No. 2 red. store and elevator. afloat. nXiac; f. o. b.. bHic afloat; No. I northern, oac; No. 1 hard, ' W - de ivered. lOK.N-bpol market easy. No. 2. S3c new; 56c for ol I; old No. S while. 5-; delii-erel; steamer mixed. 49c bid; No 3. 4e!4a48Hic. OA 'IS Spot market dull. No. 2. .-.4a40: : No. 2 del vered. a35c; No. 8, 3:-IH,c; No. 2 . whiw. 34Vio; No. S white. Hc; track white western. Mo.4-'o CATTLE European cables quote American tve s at 10aila per pound dressed weight; efri erator beef. 7itM- Exiorts today. 673 beevca. (W6 sheep and 1.810 quarters of b ef. bHEEP AND LAMB Mar. eta active and firm. 81ie-p. p or to pr.me. 92.6ua3.&; lamb , ordinary to fair $1 " t4 .VI. HOUS Market Arm at (4 7 15. 10. T Form a Trass. Chicago, Dec. 19. Manufacturers of "bedsprings. mattresses and bedding, met in secret session at the Sherman honse to form a national association, which will regal ate the output of poods and control prices. Delegates were present repre senting the trade in all sections of the country. A 17. 8. Coos. I V.ry 111. El Paso, Tex., Dec. 19. Theodore Huston, United States consul at Jaurez, Mexico, is very ill and is not expected to live. ' He was a resident of Malcolm, Ills., when he was appointed conttul by I'renidoiit Cleveland. lU-altT luvs liis him silmiist as to l.r.ik ilown more t:ian make (ioods. 45c. 00c, worth 00c. 75c., worth $1.10 $1.00, worth 1.25 22.Sc, worth 4tc ::oc, worth 50c :55c, worth 00c 5c., worth Sc. .Sc., worth 10c. Oc, worth Hi: 7c, wortli 10c. m, worth 8c. 75c. to $4 a pair. on Potters' Oil Cloth? 25e. r yanl. 3h er yard. f)5i;. kt yarl. 20c jier yard. A GOOD LESSON. Respect for the Court Taught aa Appli cant for Citizenship. Judge J-Vrris is a man who lelieves in maintaining the dignity of the courts. While he does not use his po sition to be captious about it, yet he never fails to impress on a person who displays a lack of respect for the court and through it the law, that the court , must lie respected and itsdignity main- " tained. , An instance how a man can be taught that respect for the courts means re .spect for the law was giv-jen by J ndge Ferns. The person referred to was art applicant for citizenship. He went to court dressed as if he had left a cow .stable, whxre he had Wen cleaning the stalls, liis clothes were dirty and his boots' were covered with tilth. When the judge had looked him over he asked if he realized he was in a court of justice and was an applicant for one of the greatest privileges that could lie grantetl him. " The man hardly an swered. The judge called his atten tion to the condition of his clothes and boots, and told hiin to go home and get ou the lest clothes he had. just as if he was to Ih.' married, and, if he passed the examination when he returned he would Ik; given papers of citizenship. The man returned in a few days, well dressed, and showe.d by his manner that the lesson had not lieen hist on him. He had :t holcsome respect for the court, and was, no doubt, impressed with the majesty of the law. English as She la Spoke. A correspondent in Battersea who has made a collection of the gems of oratory used by some of the vestrymen in his neighborhood, writes: "Most parishes can boast of supplying some fine specimens of 'English as she is spoke' by vestrymen, but in this re spect Datterseacan 'take the cake. In a recent'discussion on sanitary matters a vestryman talked about tubular dis eases and 'tripod fever, and he wanted 'a crematoria' in every parish. An other member would not accept a statement upon the 'h ipse t dixter' of the chairman. At this same vestry a member declared the chairman ought to be 'like Potiphar's wife, above sus picion. When it was proposed to give a deserving official 'an honorarium' a member wanted to know whether it would not be an inducement to the of ficial to waste his tiie. 'If he attends to his duty he won't have much time to play the honorarium.'" London Telegra ph. Cataract Victims. Four of the most eminent men in Europe are at the present time suffer ing from partial blindness. In all cases the nature of the ailment is the same, namely, cataract, and all the illustrious patients are hopefully seek ing relief in the resources of medical science. Mr. Gladstone has had sev eral operations performed upon one of his eyes, the result of which, it is be lieved, will be almost fully to restore his vision, while the other eye is still sound enough to enable him to read and write. Sir William Harcourt's eyes are both much obscured, and must soon have relief or be altogether dark ened. He will prese ntly place himself in a surgeon's hands. M. Jules Simon is in a like plight, but hopes to have the opaque veil entirely removed. And Sio;. Crispi, in whose case the ailment has not proceeded quite so far as in the others, has already sought the services of a skilled oculist. A QUESTION IN ETIQUETTE BY RICHARD HAMILTON POTTS. Rows of aristocratic-looking houses to the right of me, a park to the left of me; a lunch-party four long blocks ahead of me, my home, in the far dis tance, behind me; a cloudy sky, from which descends a fine, but steady sprinkle, above me I wish I could add, and an umbrella a damp, and rapidly growing sloppy pavement be-" neath me; no possible car or omnibus, no cab-stand. Oil, for a plebeian street, with its multitude of conven iences! Hut my mind refuses to grasp the bliss therein conveyed. It flies, instead, to the feathers on my hat, the velvet on my gown. I had left my home rather hurriedly, and, deceived by a hypocritical little ray of sunshine, had lieen lured forth to find myself in this plight. Of course I could mount the steps ot one of the irreproachable houses that line ray path; but there I should be tied, and the rain would only increase, and I should late for the luncheon. No, it is impossible. I quicken my steps. I have pro ceeded to the crossing; the drizzle is maturing into well-defined drops that come faster and faster. Despair has me in his fell grasp. I see my pet cos tume a bedraggled and ruined wreck. I retlect on the state of my finances, which precludes the possibility of up rising above cashmere nay, even serge again this winter. I give my skirts a vigorous hitch that would lead one to forget my ankles and retlect on my knees, and make a for. ard luuge more remarkable for its desperate en ergy than its grace. "Er pardon me," says a manly voice, a trifle hesitatingly, at my el bow. I start violently and my skirts seek their proper level. A large umbrella is sheltering me; the rain no longer patters among the feathers that crown my head. "Allow me to share my umbrella with you. I see that you are without one," adds the mairly voice. "Ob, thank you," 1 say, as I recover .somewhat, and gather, from the own er's general appearance, that he is a gentleman and, in all probability, means his protection in kindness and not as a means to getting up a flirta tion. Perhaps I ought to refuse his aid, politely and graciously, of course, with the simple remark that I have not far to go and so shall not require his assistance. Maybe I should draw my self up, in the approved insulted maidenhood style, and say: "sjir! I thank you, but I can get aloi.g very well by myself." If he looked a trifle less respectful and gentlemanly I think I would sac rifice Mme. lioland's latest, and as yet unpaid for, effort in my behalf; but I am sure he is not going to say any thing the most prudish could ob ject to. At any rate my situation, un til now, has been really pathetic; 6o I shall try olteying my own instinct, and if I have cause to resrret it I shall know better in future, and the experi ence will not hurt me. We have traversed a block in silence. He walks by my sale, perfectly grave and quiet, and only seems to glance in my directiou to see that I am well protected. I am thankful that I took his offer the way it was meant, and did not give him reason to regret his generous impulse. On we pace, and there enters my mind the quotation: , "Thou art so neur and yet so far." Tiut, seriously, he certainly is verj nice not to try to get up a conversa tion which would only make me thor oughly stiff and uncomfortable. I can just hear an ordinary man beginning: "It's a damp day;"' or, "l'retty wet. isn't it?" or "Have you far to go, miss?" or addressing some equally commonplace sentence to me. It seems strange, though, to walk - along so close to anyone and not utter a word. I wonder if 1 ought to speak; but no, he appreciates my position. What could I say, an3-way? I will thank him when we separate, and that is all I can do. I may not be gracious enough, considering his po liteness, but how can one be gracious to a stranger? Oh, for a surreptitious peep at a book on etiquette! Instead, I take a quick look at him. He is very frank looking, and he has straightforward, steady, brown eyes, as I discovered in my first startled glance at him. Altogether, it would have been impossible to have snublied him. Perhaps I um a little shaky in my conviction, and 1 am trying to justify myself, but Here I stumble (thanks to my van ity in wearing French heels, which diil make me a trille unsteady), and should fall were it not for his quick assistance. "Thanks," I murmur, - with my cheeks burning. My eyes meet his, and a pause ensues; but then a pause has been ensuing ever since we met or that is came together. "I hope I am not taking you out of j-our way," I add, with a happy inspir ation. "Not at all," he rejoins, earnestly. "I trust yon will allow me to see you to your destination." "You are very kind. I am going to nine hundred and twenty-seven on this street, so we are nearly there." In another moment we have reached the door, and I look up at him grate fully, and say: "I thank you very, very much." "Pray do not mention it," he an swers, as he raises his hat; and bowing with a charming smile he turns and runs lightly doA-n the steps. Lunch is nearly over, and I have been unusually silent and distrait. Even the announcement of a new en gagement has failed to arouse me to more than momentary interest. Did I do right to accept half that umbrella? or should I have declined it courteously, but conclusively? Of course, no man could pass by a girl who was in such a fix as I without some slight compunction, particular ly if it were so evidently in his power to assist her. 75ut, having made the proposition, would he not have felt more respect for me had it been po litely refused? Or would he have thought me a prude, and regretted his chivalry? "Er yes, thank you, very chival rous." All the girls laugh, and I realize, with a start, that I have answered Lulu's simple request, if I would not have more ice cream, somewhat ab sent-mindedly, to put it mildly. "You must be in love, Nathalie," laughs Lulu, and, like a simpering school miss, I blush, which makes me "so angry that a further accession of color waves up to my forehead, and the conviction is strong within me that I resemble nothing more than a full blown peony. "Reflect on my appetite, and don't say I'm in love," I answer. "Talking of being in love, you should see our handsome neighlior," said Lulu. "He is a young physician, but well known. Perhaps you have heard of him Dr. Ilernard Ilurke." "Why, he is the doctor we are going to have if any of us are ill!" I exclaim. "Is he really nice looking?" "Indeed, he is. I have been trying to develop some interesting disease ever since I first saw him," she replies. "And, by the waj" she continues, "he generally passes here just about this time. Come to the window and watch for him. Nathalie, and I will wager you'll manage to get up some ailment within the week. The stakes to be soda water." I jump up as she speaks, and make a rush for the window, closely followed by the rest of the girls. As I get half way across the room my high heels again fail me; my ankle turns, and I measure my length on the floor. The girls laugh, after the manner of girls. A tumble is to me generally a source of infinite mirth, and I cannot blame them for their merriment. I try to rise, but a sharp twinge of pain in my foot causes me to sink back with a groan. No doubt I turn pale, for the girls become sober and cluster around me anxiously. Every moment is agony, but when I am perfectly still it is not so bad. What is to be done? We con sult anxiously. "I shall send for Dr. Iturke," declares Lulu, seriously. There is a burst of laughter, and even I smile. "You owe me a debt of gratitude for this," I murmur, rather weakly, to Lulu. I am beginning to feel faint and sick, and after I am helped to the sofa I lie back with my eyes closed, while Sue Dal ton fans me, and May Dostwick runs for some salts. "Here's the doctor," whispers Sue, at last in my ear. "Under other circum stances I could pity you more," she adds. I open my eyes languidly and look up. Shades of my rainy morning's walk! It is my knight of the umbrella! "And shall I be able to walk with out a crutch this week?" I ask, anxiously. It is a month since that never-to-be-forgotten luncheon at Lulu liradley's and my foot is still in statu quo, as it were, although I can tret around the house and am in the parlor, now, with Dr. lSernard Durke. It is the first time 1 have seen him alone, and we have never mentioned our rather unconven tional walk. "I am quite sure you will be out by Saturday. Perhaps you will still need a slight support a cane or" his e3'es twinkle "an umbrella." We both laugh. "Did you expect me to refuse your help that day? Tell me what you thought of me. But if you think I was brazen, do please gloss it over as much as you can." "If I had thought it at all out of the way for you to accept my offer I never should have ventured to make it, lor in that case I should have had no right," he replies; and I wonder that I never thought of that before. "I should have been both disgusted and disappointed if you had declined my slight service," he continues. "I will tell you just how it was. I walked behind you for about a half-block, de bating in my own mind what I should do. We were both going the same way, and I saw there was no shelter you could seek excepting a doorway, which involved tedious waiting, and would have been an impossibility if you had an engagemen t. To pass you seemed impossible, and to walk liehind you, too selfish to be thought of far a mo ment. " 'If 6he takes my offer the way I mean it,' I thought, 'I shall respect her and admire her good sense. If she treats it as an impertinence it cannot hurt me, and it will not prove that my impulse ought to have been suppressed. Judging by the independent poise of her head I think she possesses judg ment, and will lie grateful to me. "I must acknowledge I felt some trepidation as I approached you, and I voted you. in schoolboy vernacular, a regular trump," when, after a search ing look from a pair of beautiful eyes, you smiled so sweetly and allowed me to hold my umbrella over you." I glanced at the doctor. "Was it not strange that we should have met again that very day?" I be gin, hastily. "I think it was fate," interrupts Dr. Burke, audaciously. And then he goes on and says bo much that I quite lose track of it alL But we agree wonderfully; and I have a great respect for fate. Demorest's Magazine. FLOCKING TO FRENCH CITIES. French Farms Left Largely In the Hands of Children and Old Men. The complaint of overcrowded cities and decaying rural population is heard in France, and one very probable ex planation of the diminishing numlvrs and virility of the French peasantry is given by Jules Simon. He thinks, says the New York , Post, the compulsory military service has a gtnxl deal to do with it. Peasants have to leave their farms for three years, and go unwill ingly enough, it may be. But they find themselves better clothed and fed than they were in their lives, and though compelled to submit to strict discipline and hard work, enjoy a life far less fatiguing and dull than that they have been accustomed to. When their time is up. it is not strange that thousands of them refuse to go back to the plow. They drift into the towns to find work in factories, with absolute lilierty after working hours, and to ob tain that contact with their kind for futile gossip and that sense of playing a part in the affairs of the great world which make up so large a part of the attraction of cities for the poor. The result is, says M. Simon, that agricul ture in France is largely in the hands of children and the aged and the few young and middle-aged men who have lieen too philosophical or too torpid to lie lured away by the fascinations of city life. "SNAP Tht WHIH" fN AFRICA. Tests of re HeTore Which the Itrmvest Ml;!. I Ounil. Among the Hadendowa. a Sudanese J trile wlrnse name was painfully fa miliar to us a few years aj-o. voting men who aspire to renown challenge one another to a dreadful contest. After ceremonies cartel wl.ie'i may Ik declined without inf:iny. however, unless t lie youth refusing have f..-,;.'l:t once already and trhiniphe i public notice is given and at the time ap pointed all the population of the vil lage assemble. The charipio:is are stripped to the waist, and they carry a whip of hippopotamus hide four feet long, one inch square at the bae. with edges newly trimmed, as sharp almost as a knife. At li signal they exchange blows methodically ;uid keep it tip un til one owns defeat, or. very mm h more frequently, stumhhs :ind falls exhausted, but still il.-iianl. II'.xxl streams at the first eut. as thoui'ii the whip had been a sword almost, hut they often hold out for half an hour. Dr. (itinther says he has seen sc::rs reaching to the very bone. The prize of these contests i-. a title. ".'. kim-i-l-Benat" Protector of the Mai len which the victor bears until defeated or married. We can believe that the young men think it worth liirlitiii.r for. audit would Ik- interesting to know what advantages the title g:ve ex actly, how the maidens regard '.heir protector, whether l.e has a:iy oi'.lcial position toward them, and so forth. A custom like this ha- spread, of course, among neighboring t..vn under various forms. Th;;t .f the Abyssinian braves is .1. vrilu- i by Mansfield Parkyns in the London Standard. The girls th.-mselve- p-lay an active part there. V hen y ting pe ple are gathered for a:;iu-ment ;::'lcr a church festival, for inst.-ino oie of them will Wgin pceliier a sTra v of green millet, which is fu:l of pith. Mcr lover's ldi h xl runs void probably, but he must smile or own himself a e ;iveii. When she has eut the pith into bit-, an inch long he stretches out hi.- bare arm. The example ?-et, every girl who resjx'Cts herself and has a lover fol lows it. The young men forma circle, with their arms extended. Blithely then, and with many a jest, doubtless, the maidens arrange their bits f pith upright in some fanciful design on the bare flesh and then set them alight. They are nearly an inch thick, and they burn very slowly, but the hapless youth must stand and smile as well as he can till the blood and juices of the seared flesh extinguish them. It is. in fact, a peculiarly horrible form of tat tooing. DOWN THE ANDES. A Rough r-id Kxeitiiii: ir-deon Hie Traiw an.liue Kailivay. A correspondent sends an interest ing description of a crossing of the Cordillera de b-s Andes, in the present state of the Traiisamiiuc railway. The letter says: "By seven a. m. we were at the first inn tn the Chili side. We there char tered a four-horse carriage to .'.rive us to the end station (on this side! of the railway, which feat was accomplished in two hours" time. I call it a feat Ih. cause the road is all along the river cut into the mountain side, and often there is hardly room for four horses abreast to pass, ami when I lM-ked out of the window into the roaring river Ik-Iow I often wished I had Wen on wy mule. We did the distance Wtwecn the two end stations in a'..iit half the time usually employed, only being on horseback for seven hours and two hours in the carriage. At the station we were told that there would W no train to Is Andes till three p. m. next day. but we might telegraph for the contractor's engine to take us down, which we did. We had only to pay thirty dollars for it and saved a whole day by doing so. "At aliout ten a. m. the engine ar rived, and a very flimsy thing it looked. We were put on a small 1-emii at the back of the boiler. the driver and stoker standing in front. We were stion spinning along, through tunnels. Dvcr bridges and round cur-.es on a track of alxmt two feet six inches gauge at a rate of thirty miles an hour, and it was all that wc could do to h..! on to the jolting and rattling little machine. I don't lielieve I ever p;iss 1 a worse half hour, expecting eveiy moment to see the engine leave the track and to le dashed into the river Iw-lmv. Stones on the line, which made us all jump off our seats, animals running across the rails, sudden desperate curves round the corners of the rocky cliff nothing seemed to daunt onr driver, and the noise was so great that it was impossible to ask him to slacken down. After we had gone half way, however, he lost a kettle nvcrlo:..rl audi si pped to pick it up. and then I remonstrated with him and told him to slacken speed, as I did not care to risk my life for the sake of getting to Los Andes a few minutes sooner. lie said there was no danger, but drove more slowly, and we got into Los Andes an hour ami two minutes after monntin;- this imVrnal machine, and rigiit glad I was when we drew up alongside the platform with our bodies and luggage safe and sound." Supreme. Courtesy. A Bengalese magistrate, having lieen infonned of the whereabouts of a mad dog, armed himself and went to the place where the rabid animal lay by a house door. He learned upon inquiry that two women were in the house and sent word to them that he was alxmt to shoot the dog, ami. therefore, they should not be alarmed by the report, and that as he might not inflict a fatal wound at the first fire. and. in fact, might miss, they should remain within until notified. Such a supreme cour tesy is in marked contrast with that of western civilization. Ku,u:lity of Sex. It is natural for a woman to resent the imputation that the feminine mind is not so strong as the masculine, and this spirit of independence was early mani fested in a schoolgirl living in a Massa chusetts town. She had, too often, perhaps lieen made to .vcknowlcdge the superiority of her brothers. One day her mother remarked up-n the ap parently utter lack of intelligence in a lu-n. "You can't teach a hen any thing." she said. "They have ruined more of the garden than a drove of cattle would. You can teach a cat, dog, or pig something, but a hen never!" "llm:" exclaimed the child, indignantly. "I think they know just as much as the riKsters! DANGER TO THE WOULD. China a Monaco to the Civilization Of All T .an rig. Japan Within Hc-r Kishts In Her F-ffort) to Maintain a Hold I pon t om F.sc-lufiv Nationality of the Chinese. Sir Edwin Arnold is a warm partisan of the Japs, but h- had the privilege of witnessing the grand army mancc c-rs of some two or three years since, and no one will deny to him a knowledge of the interior economy of the country. Sir Edwin Arnold, says the London lh:ily Crapkic. will not countenance the belief of Mr. furr-n that the Jap anese government is desperately occu pied wit h domest ie jx.litics. "1 am surprised that so intelligent a:t observer should not have known how iittle the Japanese houses of parlia ment count six-ially or politieally against the policy of those ministers whom the emperor appoints and whom he removes at his sole pleasure. V hen the deputies make thenis Ives imjvissi ble they are simply sent home: when they refuse supplies public fund-, are taken" quietly on account: and when they bring things to a deadlock the emjH-ror and his advisers carry on the business of the country, after dissolv ing parliament, which, amid all thes--vagaries the lively working of new and generous w ine remains steadfast ly loyal and ardently patriotic." That the two countries had equal rights in Circa, and that when one in creaseil its, force the other was l-ound to do the same, was the writ. r"s con tention fn short, that Japan has d..ne uthI is doing precisely what England would have d.-ne under the same cir cumstances. "In the present struggle Japan unquestiona l.ly stands the cham pion f progress, of justice, and of in t rnati. !i:.l development, so that the partisanship shown in certain quar ters against her has in it an clement f stupidity which cannot, therefore In easily excused." Mors interesting than this, though, is Sir Edwin Arnold's re minder of one of the forces "which, more pot ntly tends to hold China to gether in her intense and exclusive i.a tionali'y." namely, the extreme anx iety of the Celestial to le buried at home. "But if some high ecclesias tical authority, or the Vermillion Pen cil itself, should decree as they well might, that Confucius should lie sat isficd if a pinch of Chinese dust were thrown into the foreign grav -then the floodgates would le open to a gen eral Chinese immigration intoall lands. 'ne jx reeives how heavy the obliga tion is. and at the same time how bind ing, when again and again, at San Francisco nn-i other ports of embarka tion. Chinese passengers are stopp. d carrying in a carpet-bag or a hat-lx.iv the l.i!cs of their relatives. But win n any such general emigration of t hiiia men iccurs as that which I am f re casting, it will le a social and industri al deluge. The markets of the world will Ix.- literally swamped with the most industrious, persevcrinc. fearless and frugal six-clmcns of mankind who w;ill everywhere underbid lalior and monopolize trade. a. they have done in Singapore. Pcnang and many other spots. The danger to civilization that China represents consists in this rather than in her unwieldy strength and slothful resources, the incl'icacy of w hich for aetual service Japan has al ready exposed by the brilliant com mencement of the present campaign. "For these and other reasons it is to the interest of the civilized world that China should nt Ix-come more homo geneous or any larger than she is at present, and alxive all that she should not intrigue with the seeond colossal standing menace to human progress, the Russian empire, against the free dom of the Pacific. That (ierniaii jour nal had the true instinct in scientific politics which lately w rote that, in the war just declared, the sympathies and gixxl wishes of civilization were due en tirely to the side of Japan." AMERICAN PLACE NAMES. Thk Blaekstone river, of Rlnxle Is land, was named in lienor of William Blaekstone, an Episcopal minister and early settler. Bi.At kwki.is Island was named from James Black well, its former owner. The Indians called it Minnchanmx-k, the "island place." The Colorado river took its name from the color of its waters, the Span ish word meaning red. It is muddy only at high water. Point Comfout was named by the first colonists in 1C07. The name was liestow-ed on account of the good chan nel and safe anchorage. Cape Lookoi't is said to have Tx-en thus named by sea captains, who, when they saw it. l-cgan to look out for Cape Hatteras and its storms. The Big Sandy, in Kentucky, took its English name from its sandbars. Tiie Indians called it the Chalteroi, meaning "the sandy river." Cait. Canaveral, in Florida, was named by the Spaniards from theabun dance of flowers in the vicinity. The name means "Land of the Rose Tree." Ciovf.uxok's Island, in New York harlxir, was so called in hopor of tiie redoubtable dov. Wouter Van Twilh-r, immortalized by Washington Irving. WITH THE ELECTRICIANS. Thk Pittsburgh (Pa.) :hamVr of commerce w ill. it is said, insist tint Pittsburgh street cars be equipped with safet- fenders. The organizers of the new telephone exchange in Clyde. N. , report that they are meeting with the lxst of suc cess in presenting the claims of their system to the business men of Clyde. The lighthouse board, through Capt. W. S. Schley, is testing a sub-marine telephone in New Y'ork bay, connect ing the Scotland lightship with the shore. It is the invention of Irof. L. Blake, of the Kansas university. There will be a general awakening of the storage battery manufacturers, growing out of the refusal by the court to grant an injunction asked on the Brush patents on the chloride battery, says the Electrical Review. It is reported that the Pennsylvania Traction company is considering a propositim from a syndicate of Boston bankers to build and equip an eh-ctric line from Harrisburg. Pa., to Philadel phia. 103 miles, for fs.ooo.ooo, puaran-l teed apecd to be M miles an Lour.