u u bii Freeman Advertising ltate. The Ursreand reliable etrealatloa at the Ci til Iiiimis nbbcbi It to the laronMe eonslderation of adrertKer whose laror will be taserted at the lollowiof low rate: 1 loco. times.................. ..... ..a 1 fnea,s months............................ i fro 1 loch, a snontbsx... ........ .............. . 10 1 Inch . 1 year.............................. ., t iDcbee. months.... ............ a.M "C Inches, I year 10 tii I Inches. month. ........... .............. 8." S Inches. I year ........... 1.00 i eoloma, 6 months......................... io-) column. 6 months...... ...... ...... w.uo J column. I year . S.V0O 1 column, months.. ...... ...... ...... 40 oo 1 column, 1 year................ ....I....... Tk.oo Business Items, Orst insertion, loc. per line subsequent Insertions, tc. per Hoe Administrator's and Executor's Notice, W M Andltor's Notices Z-o Stray and similar Notices x m sr-Kesoluttons or proceesinr ol sot eorj -oration or society and communications dett-nrd to call attention to any matter ol limited or mdl dual Interest most be paid lor as adTrttteats. Hook and Job f noting of all kinds neatly and zealously executed at the lowest price. A ad don'tyou lot-get it. F . -. a I s a. i. 11 J fir.-ulation. 1,200 ,n l-erlpi Ion Kalf. ,'b-Ii inailvani'e fl.SO i! ii..t j aiil within 3 months. 1.75 j ii ii.-t . i.l wttlno month. 2 i0 ! nut paid within ibe vear.. ,- n' rf?iilinK outside of tna county t;;n s il I er J' will be charged to e. . treat will the shove terms be da x ar.-i these who don i Consult tnelr ,;,,( j ivinif in advance must not e-'i-v: i' 'tie "a'ue "ootln-r is those who r.t-'t i e distinctly understood from rutT". JAS. C. HASSON, Editor and Proprietor. "HE IS A FREEMAN WHOM THE TRUTH MAKES FREE AND ALL ABK 8LAVK8 BESIDE." 81. SO and postage per year In advance. urt" ,- ,-,.ar i n; er relore you stop it. If stop oThK VOLUME XXIX. r.e t-'i sralawftics do EBENSBURG, PA., FRIDAY, MARCH I, IS95. NUMBER 9. . w(-r life I? Too snort. i 1 1 1 I V III VIII III! :M fill n. V(- -1 -! nii. . I l . IV. .(! I' - I the IkI. - 1 ::ls. :its. i '. i " I ! it's. I'n S!u . I I' ! KAY-FEVER AND OLD-HEAD r ii wants to learn, but the rcacs mat Honesty j :cmn,na IUUAUUU &t 0fes1ittat 13 made, and -4 ar?es and 8ave3 'SfLtTccliLsecure8 mora iVnm ; onthan ever before. b-TJr stations. TnRiRt.nn Jer Vt Q your u aax him to JrailR 4 EROS., lonlrima. Kj- ' A1'-i.lsK. HKOE ' 1'im.in, rciir.n- im knrft. Un 1 I m-.i . f GOOD-BYE-- I -TO sire selling oflT all our Winter Stock at LESS THAN COST. The reason for this Startling Reduction is that we must have -room. Spring will soon he here and rather than carry anything over we will sell at a sacri fice. A Genuine Hargain for everybody. NOTICE .1 FEW ? ."..."n; former price, $ .".0(l 7.IHI; former price, 10. (HI S.I HI; former price. l'J.OO M.INI; former price. 14. (Hi llt.lHI; funncr pii c, 1 ",.( M l j.-ji.. ..v. :;,ih :m.i ::.ri " IN; former price, SAKt ('.ml; former price, T.ihi; former price, V'.I1; f rin'i' I'liiv, 1 .( I l.VlNi We Will Now Offer Yon Great Bargains in Sloes. 1 -jr, t. :'..(m .so t l.f.o 1 .'." to -J.T.") .JO to l.r.O r - A FEW LADIES' COATS TO CLOSE OUT AT $3.50, $4.00, $5.00, $6.00 AND $7.00 ; S6 CO. $7.00, $8.00 AND $12.00. UKNTS' lUItTSISIIIIVG- (JOODS, . . in In in "-"e. ii. to 1 .1 O fi r the 1 st. Fine : vei Miirt s. .lei ey i- a. ihm! a-, aii other 1 hit in t lie eoiuil i y fi ir J. 5o. We al.-o 1 to hov our uoods. Economy Clothing and Dry Goods House, Next Door to Bank, CARROLLTOWN, PA. tm r . nil I 9 I 1 1 J If ft q (r..v',v(i. It chart the he'id albtyn inflammation, heal 3UG ELY BROTHERS. 56 Warren Street NEW YORK. OUb HALL'S HAiR The gTeat po)ularity of this preparation, after its test of many years, should be an assurance, tvrn to the mot skoptit-al, thiit It is reallv meritorious. Those who have used Hall's Hair Uexewek know that It does all that is claimed. It causes new prowth of nalr on bald heads provided the hair follicles are not dead, which is seldom the case: restores) natural color to gray or faded hair; pre serves the scalp healthful and clear of dandrutT; prevents the hair falling off or changing color; keeps It soft, pliant, lus trous, and cause It to grow long and thick. Hall's Hair Renkwer produces It effects by the healthful Influence of lt vegetable lwrredients, which invigorate and rejuvenate. It Is not a dye, and U a delightful article for toilet use. Con taining no alcohol, it does not evap orate quicklv and drr up the natural oil. leaving the "hair harsh and brittle, as da Other preparations. Buckingham's De FOR TBI WHISKERS Colors them brown or black, as desired, and is the best dve, because it is harmless; produces a permanent natural color; and. being a single preparation, is more con venient of application than any other. , PRBFARBD IT B. P. HALL & CO, Nashusk, K. H. Bold bj J1 Dealers la Medici, FOR ARTISTIC JOB PRINTING TRY THE FREEMAN. ?aveats. and Trarie-Marks obtained, anil all ent business conducted for Moderate FI. Our Office is Opposite U. S. Patent Office, and wer.HHcerure patent in less time than those remote from Wanhimrton. ... . Send model, draw ius; or photo., with descrip tion. We advice, if patentable or not, free of clmr-'e Our fee not due till patent is serared. A "Pamphlet. "How to Obtain Patents." with names of actual clients in yourState, county, o" town, sent free. Address, C.A.SNOW&CO, Opposite Patent Ofics. Wsshiagteai. 0- C-. en PROFITS OF OUIl PRICES. IVt iro Oui Iii?e on AH-W.hjI lli nri. tta, tiii-st, ... 1 jn-:it-r iiiiirhains, - Fine Caliui-n-s, in all odors, ... Fine l'u.-linier's, in all -olors, ... Fine All -Wool Cloth, in all eolors, Fine ;iii!'h;iii, - FiiH- Ileaehel Muslin, .... Fine Fnll-aeheil .Mnlin, .... Fine leaeliel tuiii L'nbleaeheil Cotton Flannel, Fine l'.lne Calieo, - A full line of l'.lankets, .... A full line of Horse l'.lankets. How Do You Like These Prices F tie Floor Oil Cloth, 1 yard wMe, l ine F'oor Oil Cloth, 1$ yards wiile, Fine FliMr Oil Cloth, - yanls wide, Fine Table Oil Cloth, assorted, or Cl t h . fr in 4(e. up to 1 .t'5, the L st. Fine have a line line of '1 1 links. the Cliea tst itnd WEARING QUEUES IN CHINA. It Is Merely the Prevailing; Style, ami Is Not lcinaiideil liy Law. 'It is to the Tartars who conquered China several centuries ago that we are indebted for this much - discussed iiueue." said Wiiitr Lock, a prominent C hinaman, to a w riter for the l'ittsburgh Dispatch. "You Urar a great deal alKiut the laws of China relating to the wearing of queues; how a Chinaman cannot return to bis country without his queue, and all that. Well.it is all bosh. The wearing of a queue is no more required by law than your gentle men wearing whiskers. It is a custom and a style, and a Chinaman realizes some truth in the saying that yon might as well be out of the earth as out of style. A Chinaman retains his queue simply Wcause if he should ever return to his native land be would not care to go about among hi friends and make himself conspicuous by such a radical departure from the style of so many millions of people. Strange, too. that the Chinaman should hold to hi., queue with such tenacity when it wa.-. originally imposed upon him as a mark of subjection. When the Tartars came over and set a ruler on our throne they decreed that every Chinaman shoule wear a queue such as they did. f .-nurse, thi.4 - as at lirst galling totbein fur I In v could not ee or loiieh 1 hei. plaiU-d bail without being reminded o iheir conquest. Cut time heals al . v.ou:nl. and it was not long be fon liie Chinamen lK-j;aii to cbei isti tin i iaiksof subjection as a good fashion orst vie. This wa also t me a 1m 111 1 t he M vie of tlrers the Chinamen now wear. !t in the queue that a Chinaman wears hi badge of mounting. W hen a China mail's father or mother dies there i!r.. sent to him. astoall the membeis id the family, colored garters. These an not garter: i;:. we understand. lnt soil of rfbbons. white, green or blue, which are plaited with the hair. White, green and blue are the colors of mounting, while the riblmn that is ordinarily plaited in the queue i.s black. These blue and green garters are worn in the hair for one year after the death of a parent." FOREIGN NOTES. A IloMK of rest for horses has been started in England. Its object is t take care of horses sulfcriitg frou lameness, sores, or overwork until the are tit to work again, the owner Winf. supplied with a sound horse in the in terval. Tliol'till the Campania did not In-at the vast ward ocean record on a recent trip to (Juecnstown. her mails were de livered in London in six days ami six hours front the time of her leaving New York, twelve hours sooner than they have ever been delivered lcfre. Saint Tin 1mn, a Christian village on the banks of the Congo, colonized by negroes educated by the missionaries, is the product of postal stamps. Over 10.iHM.iKMi used stamps were collected in r.russcls, from the sales of which the money needed was obtained. The Con go state gave the land. A fl'Klol'.H instance of how phrases are spread by school books is shown in the last number of Dr. Murray's dic tionary. Xo earlier authority could le found for the term "Hlack Death, " de scribing the plague that devastated Europe in the fourteenth century, than Mrs. Markham's celebrated histories for young persons, which first appeared in lSli. . m Iyry GoodN. 35 tvnts. 5 eenLs. worth -Ue. worth 5(V. worth IKKr. worth Se. worth UK, worth Me. worth lUc. worth He. ::.., :;;h-., s.-., s.-., -., Te., Ik-., 75c. to H a pair. on Potters' Oil Cloth? -oc:. ier yard. 35c. ir yard. 55c. nr yard. 0e. er yard. FORMER PRICES, $5.00, Huts ft-oni .rlc. to 1.50 fctr the llest you ever saw. Ccuie one IS MAN LOPSIDED? The Subject Itlsruasetl from Variety of '. uteres! Inir Standpoint. Man at best is an ungainly animal. His head is an irregular spheroid, his eyes art? not alike or of equu1 etliciency; one shoulder i.s higher thau its neigh bor, one hand and one foot is larger than it corresjxmding organ. Despite the fact that the shape, size and color of the ear differs more widely in indi viduals than any other organ of the human body, says the Albany Times Union, they are probably more alike on the same head than any other of the twin organs. If one ear is delicate in fdtade. the other will be the same; if one looks like a dried fig or a conch hell, the other is likewise so. With the eyes, however, matters are differ ent. One eye is nearly always more open than its friend over the bridge, while in many cases people, while ap parently looking with both eyes, only use one, and makers of firearms, in making guns to order, carefully allow for the right or left sightedness of the sportsman for whom they cater. Uroad ly sjH'aking, women are more often left sighted than men, and, when they do happeu to le right sighted they are so in less degree thau the sterner sex. The reason why the left shoulder is frequently further from mother earth than the right lies in the fact that while writing most men rest the left elltow on the table, while in the case of porters loads are carried on the right shoulder. With an able-bodied man there i.s very little difference in the length of the limbs, but the hands and feet are usually widely different in the matter of size. The right hand is the bigger, while, curiouslj- enough, the left foot covers the greater amount of ground. Ladies have a certain unreasoning sense of satisfaction when they say that they wear lives in gloves, because, if this is a fact, then the human hand has grown snuiller within the last twen ty or thirty years, which state of affairs, however, may be questioned when the glovcmakers tell their story. Gloves are all marked half a size smaller than they really ought to be, which is the fatal result of the habit in which the ladies indulge of almost invariably ask ing for gloves a size smaller than they can comfortably wear. The left leg is better developed than theother male car ricr.on account of the fact that we stand habitually on the left foot, and mount a bicycle or a horse and kick a man while balancing tin the left leg. Most men jump chiefly off the left leg. Lateral curvature of the spine occurs more fre quently to he left than to the right, in dicating that the bxly in sitting is thrown more to the left than to right. This leads to the remark that nothing is more injurious, for the young es-jH-cially. than to sit for any length of lime in one position. C'anvasDack st Fraud. Geese and ducks are more favored by the Germans than the Americans, not one in a hundred has ever eaten canvasback thick, it is a cherished American tradition that it is the great est of all table delicacies. Well, it's a fraud. To get the boasted flavor of the '"wild celery on which it feeds it must Ik ettoked h.lf-raw ami is gener ally as tough as a boiled owl. With the exception of the little "blue-winged teal," no duck that swims can surpass a well-fed, well-cooked puddle, such as you can buy in our market for ten cents a pound. Canvasback is now fifty cents a pound. A WIFE AS A MASCOT. The Arte of a Woman Against the Skill of a Gambler. How at Mexican Cattleman Recovered Ills Mouey In a Losing; Game of Monte anil ( leaned Out the Dealer. 'It was in the state of Sinaloa, in Mexico, where I was in the employ of an American dealer as a collector of bird skins." said Thorn Lougee. a tax idermist, to the New York Sun man, "that 1 saw the charms of lovely wom an exerted in rivalry to a gambler's skill, and they won, as they always should. I was staying at the time in a little city called Tuxatapau, ami I strolled into the princqial gambling place one evening to watch the players at monte. There was a single large low room, with a bar at one end and tables ranged alxmt the wall for gam bling. The place was lighted by can dles, and was half-tilled with Mexican charros, with here aud there an Ameri can mining man or some native visitor from the capital city in London-made -.lothes. "l'laying was slack, except at one ta ble, w here a Mexican cattleman from up-country, in full cltarro costume of sombrero with silver braid, jacket, wide pantaloons with a row of big sil ver disks running down the outer sides ami bright ivory-handled revolvers at his belt, was dropping his money at monte. Tne dealer sat at the center of the kidney -shaped table, with high heaps of silver dollars at his elbow, while the players sat round the outer circumference. The cattleman was sharp ami watchful, so that the dealer had no opportunity to do tricks, but the regular odds of the game caused the stranger to lose slowly, until, with an exclamation, he announced himself broke and rose from his seat. "'Hut I have three hundred dollars at the hotel, he said; "if you care to wait, I will go for it, aud perhaps leave that with you.' " 'At the senor's pleasure, responded the dealer, showing his white teeth in an affable smile beneath his black mus tache. "The cattleman went out and the game went languidly on until in ten minutes he returned carrying in his hand a bag of Mexican dollars. Ik was accompanied by his wife, a pretty little dark-eyed SjMinish creature, in Dowered silk ball tlress and mantilla. At sight of her the dealer instantly sprang up to offer her a seat, but she cttquettishly declined the attention and. sauntering carelessly along. jitmiH-d upon an unoccupied end of the table with one leg curled under her anil the other, displaying a daintily Ixiotcd fot, swinging toward the floor. "ller husband seated himself oppo site the dealer and the game proceeded. As the stacks of silver dollars passed to aud fro. this time with no particular advantage in luck to either side, the woman, apparently becoming more and more interested, leaned forward with the palm of her hand on the tahle eagerly watching the game. Her man ner was frank and engaging, but from where I stood I could see that her eyes were dividing the attention of the dealer, who perceptibly was losing in terest in the game aud displaying less of the dexterity that in the begin ning had characterized his handling of the cards. "At last the ranchman was winning, and the canvas bag in which he had brought his three hundred dollars stake was full to overflowing and triple rows of dollar stacks lay at bis right hand. All other play was suspended as the spectators crowded altout the table to watch with breathless excitement the game, which now was running as high as one hundred dollars on the turn of a card. The conversation in the room was decorous, and none present failed in due manifestation of respect to the presence ttf the pretty little dark wom an perched on the table, who was well known in Tuxatapan as the wife of the gaming caballero with the ivory-handled revolvers. From my posit ioii near the wall, a little in the rear of the ta ble. I noticed that as in her intense in terest in the game she leaned toward the dealer her mantilla upon the side next him was slipping from her shoul der, which she Wing of Spanish nativ ity was a very charming piece of liv ing statuary. Mechanically the dealer lifted from Itetween bis feet a bag front which he counted out two hundred dol lars to pay the "cattleman's last win ning. Without a word the latter added this to his stake already on the table, making four hundred dollars to be lost or won. As the dealer shuffled the cards the mantilla fell front her head and shoulder, and she gathered it almut her with a half-startled, half-coquettish look ttf dismay as he turned the decid ing card without looking at it. 'I will again!" said the ranchman, and he ln-gau to pile the dollars again tin the cards. "The dealer reached down to the can vas bag ami emptied it in counting out four hum-red dollars. Then he passed the bag across the table to his op ponent. "The game is ended! The bank is broke! Let me congratulate the senor on his got! fortune. he said, smiling but behind the smile was the silent anger of a man who realized how he had been defeated, but must hold his peace. "Without a word the cattleman swept the silver dollars on the table into the bag and passed it to a wild looking vaquero w ho was standing le hind him. Ten dollars he passed to the bartender to be expended in treating the crowd. The little woman, her eyes dancing with triumph, liopjtcd down from the table, ami then, with her lean ing affectionately on his arm. the cat tleman bowed to the dealer and the spectators, said: 'Uuenos noches, sen ors, and passed out of the room into the street, followed by his cow -boy at tendant, carrying the two canvas bags, in which were over fifteen hundred dollars." Few Saints In New F.ne;land. Saints cut only a small figure in the geographical names of New England. They are abundant upon the maps of most of the southern states save Vir ginia and the Carol inas, and they are to be found scattered over the rest of the country in three or four different languages. KEEPING OLU AG t. AT BAY. Vegetarian Argument with Illustrations Which Appeal to All. A iew years ago an Italian bacteriol ogist proclaimed that he had discovered the "germ of old age." The idea was scouted by all scientific men, but there may lte something m it after all. At any rate, says Modern Medicine, there seems to be gttod ground for believing that germs, if not a specific germ, are at least one of the most iuqtortaut in fluences which bring on old age. It has long leen known that the ptomains or toxic substances produced by mi croltes are capable of setting up various degenerative processes. Degenerative changes in the joints, the liver, the kidneys and other organs, have been directly traced to this cause. The writer has for some time held the opin ion that the degenerative changes inci dent to advancing age are due to the same cause; namely, the toxins ab sorltcd from the alimentary canal. These toxins are constantly present in greater or less quantity, according to the extent to which fermentative and putrefactive processes prevail in the btoinach and intestines. These pn esses depend first, upon the integrity tjf the digestive prttcess. in the indi vidual, and, secondly, upon the char acter of the substances introduced into the alimentary canal as fttod. These considerations suggest at once the thought while all human beings must necessarily le constantly subject to the influence of toxic substances generated in their own alimeutary canal, and consequently must grow old and succumb sooner or later to the de generative process of old age, these processes may Ik- greatly accelerated by subsisting upon a diet which favors the pnxluct ion of toxic substances in the alimentary canal. 1 f this theory is correct we should ex ited to find the greatest longevity among those animals and tho.-; men who subsist tin the simplest and purest diet, other conditions Iteing equal. It would le impossible to find a sharper contrast than that which exists in this respect Wtween carnivorous and vege tarian animals. Contrast, for example, the dog w hich growsohl, becomes rheu matic and infirm in eight or ten years, with the donkey, w ho lives a useful life to forty or fifty years, and the elephant, which is still active and useful at one hundred years. The same is true among men. The greatest numttcr of jtersons who now live alntve one hundred years of age are to be found among Kussiau peasants, who rarely taste meat. These people have been practical vegetarians for so many centuries perhaps from the earliest ages that anatomists have noted a distinct difference in the length ttf their alimentary canals as compared with those of the flesh-eating Germans, whose ancestors were cannibals. Uheu inatism in its protean forms is one of the most constant and distressing dis-. orders of old aire. The relation be tween English roast beef :ind the front and rheumatism, which prevail so ex tensively among Englishmen, was clear ly pointed out by that distinguished physician and essayist, .1. Milner Fothergill. The alntve considerations, if not considered absolutely conclusive, are worthy of thought. SHE GOT GOOD MONEY. How a Neat Trick Wa Turned on a Street far Conductor. A woman gave a conductor on a Ravenswttod electric car a quarter and received in change two silver dimes. "Here, here!" said the passenger, "this coin has been tilled and I'd like to have a good one." "That's gttod money," retorted the nickel snatcher, with a look that showed he had expected just such an outcome. "I took it for gotnl stuff, and you'll have to do the same." The woman tlropjted the defective piece of money into her purse, says the Chicago Ti ibtine, muttering something inaudible, but al lowing. -i look to spread over her countenance that indicated trouble ahead for that conductor. Aud there was. When he got off and ran ahead to see that the Milwaukee track was clear, his victim removed her big woolen fascinator, pulled off hex im mense cloak, turned it inside out. made a muff of it; and changed her seat to the other end of the car. "Fare." said the conductor, opening the dttor with a bang. He had failed to see through the transformation and took the passenger with her cloak on her lap as a sure enough newcomer. Iy this time the passengers had all taken in the situation. Every eye was on the little woman as she fished out the identical silver dime which she had been forced to take. "Can't take that, madam. Company requires me to turn iu good money." "O. but you told me only a moment ago that it was good money and now I want you to make it goid or I'll under take to get you a long lay off. I'll take the names of any two of these men who have seen you give that tome as good money and then within five lnim tes re fuse it as bad. Come, now, giw iuv? a good coin and do it quick." The woma got a good dime. A Mixed I'rlnrelet. Among the hardest things which the infant Prince Edward of the royal house of England, the little son of the duke of York and heir expectant to the throne, will have to straighten out when be is older is his relationship to his own father and mother. It consti tutes a problem such as is seldom found outside of princely houses. It i.s cer tain, however, that he is the third cousin of his father and also the second cousin of his mother. This makes his relationship to himself somewhere be tween that of a third and fourth cousin. He is, as it were, his own double-third coukin a relationship which will doubt less take some time for him to compre hend. IJoth his father and mother are descended from George 1 1 1, of England. George lll.'s son Adolphus. duke of Cambridge, had a daughter Mary, who married the duke of Teck, aud became the mother of Princess May, who mar ried the duke of York; and the duke of York's father, prince of Wales, is the great-grandson of the same King George HI. Komana and .-arthaelniana. At the battle of Thrasymene Itetween the Romans and Carthaginians there were sixty-five thousand men engaged. The Homans were taken by surprise and defeated with great slajghter. The total number of men killed on ttoth sides was seventeen thousand, or altout twenty-seven per cent, of the number engaged iu the conflict- DISEASES OF THE NY ILL. Some Strange Manifestations of Mental Aberration. Persons tVho Wish to I to the Simplest Acta of Kveryday Life Are Stopped by Fall ins Will Power a Man W no Couldn't I'ut on Ills (oat. IVrsons who are interested in the cu rious side of human nature should look into the work of the French doctor and scientist Uilnit on the diseases of the human will, where are to Ik found some extraordinary instances of men and women losing their owers of volition in regard to certain acts while they keep fully active and healthy in all others. Eschewing all research as to first causes Kilxtt takes volition as a form of activity ami studies it in a purely ath ological sense. That strange power in us which every day says "1 will." that tower which "summons. sUsH-ntlsordis- misses, as anotner 1-rcucltman. Kcnou vier. defines it; that force in us ami be hind us which, iu its ultimate possibili ties, can hardly Ik limited, is shown in this work to 1- subject to the strangest diseases and to Ik; modified in the most peculiar manner. There are some persons, says the Chi cago Times, ami they enter into all the daily circle of life. v. hose wills are so soft and pliant that they need the strength of another will to le joined to theirs before they can act. This common phase of a weak w ill i.s accen tuated in disease to a degree hardly deemed possible by the nonohservant. 1'crsoiis suffering from this form of diseased volition can will themselves according to the dictates of reason. They can feel a desire to act. but thev cannot make a move toward that end. They are jtowerless to translate that desire into an act. Esq u iro 1 mentions in this instance the case of a magistrate highly distin guished for his learning ami his towers as a sjteaker. who was seized with mo nomania in consequence of certain troubles of the utiud. He regained his reavtii. but would not go into the world again, though he acknowledged him self to Ik in the wrong in in it doing so. W hen advised to travel or to attend to bis uiuch-iieglected affairs he would say: "I know that I ought to do so. but I ant unable. Your advice is very gttod. and I w ish I could follow it. it is cer tain that I have no will save not to will, for 1 have my reason uniiiqiairvd. I know what I ought to do. but strength fails me w hen I ought to act." The ease of the magistrate, however, is hardly as strange as that recorded by I'rof. J. H. Il.-nnett of a man who could not carry out what he w ished to jK-rform. even to the simplest acts of daily life. Often, on endeavoring to undress, this man was two hours In-fore he could get his coat off. .Ml his in. ntul facul ties were K-rfe-t. but his w ill w as im tuircd. Once he ordered a glass of water. When the servaut brought it he was utterly unable to lake it off the tray, though he was most anxious todo so. The servant waited half an hour In-fore him. at the end of which time the man overcame the dilliculty, seized the glass and drank down its contents. He deserilK-d his feelings afterwards "as if another H-rsou had taken posses sion of his w ill." The abuse of opium prtluees a some what similar condition. De Quincey says: "The opium eater loses none of his moral sensibilities or aspirations, lie wishes and longs as earnestly as ever to realize w hat he Ik-Hcvcs to lie possible and feels to Ik exacted by duty. Hut his intellectual apprehension of what is Mtssible infinitely outruns its tower, not of execution only, but even the tower to attempt." Another curious instance quoted by Dr. Lilliod of Nancy is that of a man who was greatly frightened at thirty years of age by certaiu civic tumults in which he, unfortunately. In-camo in volved. Thereafter, though he retained perfectly his mental balance, he would not remain alone, either tin the street or in his cliamlK-r, but was always ac companied. If he went nut it was im possible for him to return alone. "Whenever he went out alone, which he rarely did. he would soon halt on the street and there remain indefinite ly, neither going on or turning back, unless some tine letl him. "He seemed to have a will, but it was that of those around him. Whenever the attempt was made to overcome this resistance of the man he would fall into t i.-vo t." There are dozens of persons who every year take refuge in asylums lie cause they are- tormented all the time with the impulse to kill those who are tlear to them. "Sometimes," says Uilnrt. "fixed ideas of a character frivolous or unreason able find lodgment in the mind, which, though it deems them absurd, is pow erless to prevent them from passing into acts." Westphal tells of a man who was haunted by the thought that he might terchaiice commit to writing that he had I -ecu guilty of some crime and lose the paper. "lie accordingly care fully preserves every bit of paper he finds and even picks them up on the street and examines them. He knows it i.s folly, but he is powerless to dis miss it. Lesion of the brain will sometimes cause loss of will. A man who had re ceived a violent blow which destmyed tart of the frontal convolutions lost all will power. When an operation was performed and the pressure of the skull on the lira in was removed he completely recovered. Prices a Century A(o. One hundred years ago lKef sold in New York city at 3'd. to 34 d. a pound; mutton. "t:Vl; veal. fiV to 5--;d.; live pigs, i'd.; butter. Is. l-d.; new milk. 3'd. to 341. a quart: chickens, lud. to Is.; hay. JC-i 5s. to i'-' K'-s. 3d. a ton; wheat. .Is. T'jti. a bushel; barley, 3s. 1 ",'d.; corn. 2s. 04'd.; rye, 3s.l.V'd.; -tats. Is. H'jtl. The average yield of wheat per acre in the state then was 12 bush els: .f corn, bushels and of buck w heat 15 bushels. Interesting Statistics. States with the greatest tonnage of all descriptions are: New York, 1,343, bti5 gross tons: Michigan, 430,317; Mas sachusetts, 3ii.ssl; Maine, 327,053; Ohio, 32T,5!"l; California. 315.310; Penn sylvania, 3U2.C15; Maryland, 145.11. STEPS ON RAILWAY CARS. I An Authority Thinks They Are I seless and Should He Abolished. When the first primitive railway was built in this country, says the Railway Age, somebody thought it would le cheaper and handier to attach steps so that passengers could get tin or off whenever the train might accommodat ingly stop, without the trouble of draw ing up to a platform, and the fash ion once started has lieen followed un til now there are in the I'nited States not far from thirty-five thousand cars, tassengcr, Itaggage, mail and express, which are dragging around four times as many one hundred and forty thttusand sets of steps that are costly to build and maintain, are a constant source of danger, discomfort and delay, and serve no purpose that could not much iK-tter be accomplished by hav ing station platforms at a level with the platformsof the cars. The elevated railways in New York first demon strated the Heedlessness of stes for cars on the American dan of having end doors, as had from the first iw-cu demonstrated on all European railw ays where the dttors open at the side. The Illinois Central Railway company had the enterprise to extend the principle of no steps to surface roads by build ing special cars and high station platforms for its world's fair train service, with the result of han dling great numit-rs of tassengers with extraordinary celerity and safety, and the same pntgressive management is now preparing to altolish the use of car steps in itsextensive suburliau train service by elevating its station plat forms. It has had the principle in highly successful ote ration for nearly a year m its express suburliau service, in which are used ordinary day coaches, the steps having lieen removed and the platforms widened out. and if it were building new cars for that service it w-ould build them without steps. For remote stations on its local service w here it is not yet ready to provide new station platforms it adopts the simple device of having trap doors over the steps, which can le thrown back where the steps are to lie used an ex pedient that would facilitate the grad ual adoption of the high station plat form principle on all roads, allowing them to apply it at first only at the princital stations. A FAMOUS CODFISH. An Emhlem In the Masachusetts State stouse for liver a Century. The famous codfish w hich hangs from the base of the dome iu the Massachu setts statchousc. and inside the old room in which the representatives used to meet, will Ik absent from the chain-1-cr in the new extension which they are soon to occupy. Just why this em blem, which has always attracted the notice of visitors aud sometimes moved them to ridicule, should Ik ignored iu the transferof movables from one rtn.in to the other is not explained, and. ac cording to the New- York IVist, it is even said that the ctnltish is doomt-d to figure iu a museum, presumably his torical. The following account of its origiu is given: "In lstu; Charles W. Palfrey, editor of the Salem Register, and a member ttf the house for several years, undertook to fat her all the facts that could lie learned altout the placing of the figure in the cbamWr. After extensive research he found much con cerning the fish which, luckily, had teen preserved. It was by Mr. Pal frey's efforts that the actual facts were got from the records of the great ami general court, and while many links are missing, the chain is nearly com plete, tin Wednesday, March 17. 17-4, John Rowe, a nicmlK-r from Intstoii. moved permission to hang the codfish iu the house as a memorial to the im portance of the codfishery to the wel fare of the state. The motion pre vailed, and shortly after the emblem was placed in position, and there it has remained undisturtied through all the vicissitudes of the years w hich have in tervened. Once it was tainted, but it has never been taken down from the iron rtttl by which it i.s held in position. Mr. Rowe, who presented the figure to the commonwealth, was a well-known citizen of Iioston and a eouspicuous patriot, being associated with Samuel Adams. James Otis. John Hancock and other leaders of the H-riod. He was in terested in commerce and was an ex tensive property owner along the water front. Rowe's wharf and contiguous territory Wing among his possessions. He died on February 17, IT-?." NEWSPAPER WAIFS. Yol'Ntt IlrsHAMi "Are my eggs done yet. darling?" His llride (in tears) "Oh. Jack! I have Imiled them for an hour aud a half and they are not soft yet." Puck. Tkachkh (explaining that the earth is round i 'Tommy, what country on the plolte is China underneath.'" Tom my (who reads the nevvsiajHrsi -"Japan!" Chicago Record. "Do kai.thv Americans have fam ily plate?" asked the visitor from abroad. "N no." rcpl ied t he man w ho hates to lie outdone, "but some of tln-iu have armor-plate." Washington -star. "Tai.K is cheap." observed the mtn who Ik-Hcvcs in proverbs. -"Humph!" replied the man who dKsn"t. ""That remark shows that you never hired a lawyer or rented a telephone." Wash ington Star. First Mkan Man "Have you a cigar?" Second Mean Man ""Yes. but only one. ami I want to smoke myself." "Well. I have one. tm. And they smiled and smoked and each respected the other. Life. Why They Separated. The late Iird tlrford was one of the most aristocratic ornaments of the liritLsh peerage and the follow ing ac count of his seiaration from Lady Or ford. as told by Truth, is aeeordinglv interesting: ".!oth explained to me the reason. It was all alHiut a sugar basin. Shortly after their marriage. according1 to Lord Orford, her ladyship came down to breakfast without hav ing washed her hands aud took some lumps of sugar out of the Kiwi with her tinger-i. on which he requested her in future either to wash her hands or t use the sugar-tongs. According to laly Orford his lordship-objected to her tak ing so many lutups of sugar for her tea." Something long desired has at length been achieved by a distiller in Lexing ton, Ky. It is whisky without odor. Now a man may indulge in a dram or two without making his breath the btruneat thing about him.