. .. i : - " - Ml ....t.ed Weekly t AtlvertiKinf-f Rates. The larva aDd reliahl rlrrnlatloa el tbaCaw bkia Kkeemab K.gjBrnji It t tha favorable cun ride rat :un cf adverttwrc who lavora will be mrend at tta following low rate: 1 Inrb.S times TLtO llnrh,3 moottiK..... - 1 Inch, 0 iBonlbn -- ........ . t 3 1 Inr-b I ;ear a.m 3 Inched. 8 month. . llorfiu.l j f-r .... 10.CW S Inches. months .. ...................... S iDcheo. I year l- i colnma, 6 montbe.... ............... ...... 10. WO C column. moDibs... Su.oe column, 1 rear as m I column. month ...... 40 1 column, 1 year................ ............ .(.00 Knrinena item, rim Insertion. 10c. per Its abttrNjiient InrertionH. be. r Una Alio. ml?U-a tor aoj Lj ecu lor IS'ottce..f3 M Auditor' Notice ................. SJ Stray and similar Notice . ....... X.M -KeolutKn or .tMceeln ol any corporw tlon or society and rtimaiunlcatton fjeltm-d to call attention to any matter ot limited or indl vidoal lntere t mn't tie paid lor a ad vent meal. Koek and Job Prictin ot all kind! Deatly and exeaionriy execaled at the lowett price. A ad dQn'tjou lorxet It. 11 H AS0, 1,200 b.rr.l " , ,n i.i:in f l.fw ;.'-' . ..,,) Kittini 3 uioiiiIih. 1.75 "l- " ,.', .( wiilun ti month, a (HI .' : .i;.t anliiti the year.. t-s ,.,r ,,utst1e of th county T.".V"vear ""1 1,0 chanced to , .,.K,QAi - olf? at'ov term be do- - in i.ivance must not eg. JAS. C. HASSON. Editor and Proprietor. , e -nine i.fou-. - 'IK IS FBEEM1K WHOM TBI TEETH MAEES FKKK AND ALL ABE SLAVES BEPIDK. 81. BO and postage per year In advance. i'tly understood from '.-. . re you f top It. If stop .T,.ur !' T.f i-ut VOLUME XXIX. .V htwats '1 otherwise. !.j too snort. I E BENS BURG, PA., FRIDAY, AUGUST 30, 1S95. NUMBER 34. HAY- FEVER we m a u AND OLD HEAD n0RT DEFIES THE KING." THEN :: PRINTING. rut: rnr.r.M.iX Office ;!r i:a.v to L'ft your : PRINTING -ati-fitri.il ily rxecuted. V j, t'li- fn if-. ..I hIII himoianle ..,.), r iL.ii't .! any hut wink rtini want a t:-H I'Miv f.T it. F-s! Frcssi s and NcwTvpc . I L I. . . . . . .r,,,rr.i in uirii ..in . mi i lining i ,! -.nun in tl.i UN r 1 'i V I . K uti.l at I lie rv st M Prices. ; ;jttv l"t matt-rial ! uffl and ;.r:!it on t: linrtc- notice -. !'!. 1. M Mr , ...l ,- I I :n I. MEAD:', rVMIt-Ml-.V I - K". KI.l U-K, ; - c - I U;-, KI'lUMi AM) V, I !:! I Hm k. Nii'I'KS, I.K. Kil-i- :.'M W OliK, t.tM .: Not'K IIkm, am ?is:i l'u:ti 1 n i i TioNr' F.TC v.ttiir.i Ir..in the fmallest -i : i-.fiti ar 1 to tt.it laruest - -' rt i.i.t .-f an,i t t tie (Vlliilili;! FlCCiilini F i'.KN-lil'IM,. I'F.N'N'A Xc. I. -" -V. ", ...n 1'ruHcisco, :::.:. ; c f w -men : -3 c:y :..:y w is bnm, r , I r t u;i in six Lr t-, s ... -i. Result: - : - v. Hvcr sinca 'T: tver-t:.i:-. : doctors, , tut grew A; and ' r.-i rvlvrrtise- ; t I'uikham'a an,l de- :' :t. 'i ;.c t ffect was : r- .c :r.ce I to-jk the ; r..y v. .: ,') has not KL'S Vfitft.toi. HAIR Newer.' -v-. ...... . :,- .;,' ' -! i" j.firati.in. . ." : klnniiii be an ti. u!. tlmt . . . i(J nave . ; '-"K-AEk kuuw that "I wtio Iiave ' ' -.'r on hsl.J ' ha r "i rr not r ., " ' pestfireii ,' r, ' '! hair; prtv ...'v"',f:!!-f" I'-ar of :'"k " i'"1 "J or " w ivTuw long aiiJ i:t ir t.t Its a linl-nratf? tyi-, ami la t uw. i.n- It S .ip. ""t ".ai- 1 vlr ' " t-'ural oil. -la 1 bri11- a (U I., 1HSKers !t.kt, nA, '"Jotitj,,.,.' "'J other. fit. Mhli. W IjED AGENTS W.' . J , v-"."l tin. ".. ' i,i 1 r (, mnirr. - -. !, thanks only - sr. !...;v well. Kvery ;:';vjVr .... 1; j THE Crr, i it lij'iiif. unvjT in- jxurdrr. AnnUetl intn H, 7. it .: .7. It. eh (in.ii the hfinL allniix i rf..,,.,,, .. r V ,-., .s-" '.' ilruiiyixt or xeut by until ait, rrreipt i,f prire E II aw. ELY BROTHERS. 56 Warren Street NEW YORK. DUG OLIO IS GREATER THAN ROYALTY ITSELF. nevBr wants tt learn, but the reads that QLiD Honesty CHEWING TOBACCO is the best that is made, and at ONCE tries it, and saves money and secures more satisfaction than ever before. A.VOID imitations. Insist on having the genuine. If your dealer hasn't it ask him to get it for yon. ilO. FIIZER & BROS., lonfciffle.D. Constipation Pomanil! prompt treatment. The re sults of neglfct may lo serious. Avoid all harsh and dntstic purgatires, the t ndeni-y .f whii-h is to weaken the x.vel.s. The best remedy is Ayer's l'illa. Iiting purely vegutahle, their ai tinn is prompt and their effect always Uriit-i.ri.il. Tliey are an admirable Livrr and After-liuner fill, and every where endorsed by the profession. " Ayer's Till are hiprhly and univer sally "spoken of by the people abou l.ere. 1 ni.iko flailv n.so of them in luy pr:i. tier." Dr. I.'E. Fowler, Uridge jMrt, 'unn. " I ran rerommend Ayer'a Tills above all othrrs, having Iouk' proved - their value as a rutliartic for myself ana family." J. T. llesa, LeithavUle, I'a. Por srve ral vears Ayer's Tills have l-en used in ujy'fauiily. We find theia au Effective Remedy for eonstipation and indigestion, and ar never without them in the house.' Moses (Jrenii-r, Lowell, MadS. 'I have used Aver' Tills, for liver troubles and indigestion, during many years, and liavti always fouud thelil prompt and etiieinit in their action." L. N. iSmiih, L'tira, N. Y. " I sufTi-red from ronstipation which assume. 1 snrh an ol.sl imtte form that I f. ar.-.l it would rau.se :i stoppage of the bowels. Two l.xes of Ayer's Tills ef-f.-eteil .1 romi.U-te cure." V. llurke. tiaro. Me. " I have used Ayer's Tills for the past thirtv vears and ronsiilrr them an in valu ibie family mr.li. -iue. I know ot no belter reme.lv for liver troubles, and have always found them a prompt -ure for .lsN .sia. ' dames Quinu, UU Mill. lie st. II n lfoid. Conn. Having been trouble.! with oostive Iiexs bu h serms ine liable with ier nous of sedentary habits, I have tried Alt's Tills, hoping for relief. I aiu gla.1 to s.-n that they have served ni Ulter than any oilier mediriue. I arrive at tins roii. lusioii only after a fail!, ful trial of their menus." - faaiuuel T. Jones. Oak at.. Ikisloii. Mass. Ayer's Pills, 1UKI MKIU T Dr. J. C. Ayer &. Co.. Lowell. MaM Bold by Jl Ieal.ra In Mh1Ic1i. Steel Picket Fence. r.HFAPFR . THAN 1 W00O I . t Q r a jyv T. ! it PI'trt Tt w" 5t. fThl. lama mrumt I tr Ot. W. wHUc Ut pricrm t.Mlitr. l.hT of )t. Ita.bl. M illMl., ..11. W. mlm m..fr.r. hvr.? I to. Keucl.C. m.1.. riu..... nr. an.iu-r. ..4 rms ri-rs. r.ur U.r. .o.l k-.llt,,.. Sr... ..d Iru. Ortll.. WIKK wiaiKiw t,tivs. ud ii ku.( H ik wuaa. TAYLOR S DEAN, 0I. 203 205 MarkatSL Pittkttrk. Pa. tell JSm- MONEY F0J MAKUVlXli. A Great Deal Necessary for an TJp-to-Date Ceremony. It Cottta Like the Misrhit-f to Ht-loug to tle Swell St ami Keep lp with, the F million - Some of the KequlreuivuU. To pet married nowadays consistent ly with the regulations .f fashion is very expensive, even for ordinary folks wlm desire to keep up appearances. If you do in it believe it. just do the sum ill arithmetic fur yourself, writes a New York crrcsMindeiit of the St. Louis I .lobe-1 leiiiocrat. There i.-, the church to begin with. The fee for ox-niiig the sacred edifice is one hundred dollars. If you want the choir to sing you must pay one hundred dollars in addition. The clergy man's honorarium is extra. What it shall be you are at liberty to determine, but it is hardly considered proper to give less than twenty-tive dollars, whereas one hundred dollars is by no means excessive. At t he church, as well as at the house, you must have awnings, and the price for these will be forty dollars. Flowers are a very important item. The altar has to be decorated, and you cannot make any kind .if show for less than two hundred and fifty dollars. For fifty dollars you can only get a few palms. 1'alins e.mie high because of the risk. If the weather turns cold and they are chilled, they will die, and it takes fifteen or twenty years to grow a palm of decent size. Obviously, the bridesmaids rc.piire boii.piets, and for ci.cli of these you can hardly get orT for less than twenty-tive dollars. Tin: jmimcs are more apt to come to fifty dollars each at a season when fine roses cost two and three dollars each. Then there are the bridesmaids' gowns. It is exjiected that they shall be furnished, and they will cost at least one hundred dollars each. Of course, they are not made so much to please the wearer as to satisfy the re quirements of the occasion and the taste of the bride. It can hardly be ex K'l ti'il that a bridesmaid shall go to such cxiiense for a frock to be worn R-rhaps only once, ami which is for the fn-netit of somebody else. Thus, as a mere matter of common sense, it has come to Ik? regarded as the proicr thing that these toilets shall be sup plied. Necessarily, they are all alike. If there is a maid of honor she must have a drerss, too. A bride may be married in a traWl ing dress, but for a really swell wed ding' she must have a special gown, which will hardly cost less than two hundred and fifty dollars. I iressuiakers charge extra prices for articles of cos tume furnished for weddings, by the way. Of incidental expenses there is no end. In New York there is only one woman who know s how to arrange a bride's veil proH-rly. It is her speeial ty. and she charges accordingly. In fact, she docs Very little else Iteside go ing from tine house to another and pin ning brides veils. It is a business that requires a high degree of skill. (HI ess tulle is handled by skillful lingers, it is very unliccomiiip. To adjust the wreath of orange blossoms- always artitieial. because real orange blossoms quickly fade and have too strong an nlor is an art in itself. It must lie put in just so. else it is ugly. Fashion requires that the bridegro. mi shall jrive to each bri.lesiiiaid a pin or bracelet, and to each usher a scarf-pin or some such remembrance. It goes without saying that the licst man and the maid of honor are not left out. These must be handsome, and fifty dol lars each is not too much to pay for them. When lie was married to M iss (ionld. Count Castellane gave to each of the ushers and bridesmaids a pin the design of which was a C and O tied together in a t rue lover's knot. Theli was in rubies, the knot was of dia monds and the C was in sapphires. Thus were united the national colors of France red. white and blue. In the almve account no mention has been made .if the cost of the reception at the house of the bride. It is expected that the drawing-rooms and dining-room shall be profusely decorated with flow ers, and in this way five huudred dol lars docs not go very far. Then there is the "spread," which may run up to almost any price. Among the inci dentals are invitations, w hich are not cheap w hen one thousand or so of theui have to be sent out. On the whole, it is a costly business to get married in these days. An Ancient lort)tB- "Speaking aliout mortgages," said a well-known Miniicax.lis banker the other day in the midst of a conversa tion on the eating-up powers of inter est, "I was shown a mortgage some time ago down in New York by a banker friend that had a history. It had been in existence just two hundred years, having lieeii given in the year 11.115. It was on a piece of property lying in the farming region outside of New ork. where. The some six or c: it had been 1 don I reiiieuincr jusi amount was not large, ight hundred dollars, but kept precisely as it was given in the old Dutch days. The in terest bad lM-en at jmt cent, from the very liegiimiiig. and it bad always. Wen kept up. The document hud been in the same family, too. all these many years, and for some reason or other it had never Wen thought worth while to pay it off. Oddly enough, the pres ent niortgageor had the very same name of the original grantor of the mortgage The original document was very odd as to form and makeup, but it was sound and staple, and would hold water in the courts to-day as well as Ibe most approved document of the times." 8h W t ompliuienterl. "Tie yer shoe, miss?" Yes," hesitatingly; the time of dragging shoe strings had come, but t,he hated to W reminded of it. Tut yer foot right thar." He dropped on one knee, and placed his kit to receive the f.x.t, and in a twinkling the strings were tied. Then the young woman fumbled in her purse and produced a nickel. "I'd ruther not," Raid the boy, " 'cause yer see we want yer for a mas cot." oh:- "We're going" into pardnership, me an' Jim that's my brother aud Crippled Mike, and we agreed that the prettiest young lady we could find should be our inaseot an' you jest filled the bill." Detroit Free Tress. - ABOUT MOSQUITOES. The Little 1'ewtH lirl Looked At by a Keien title Kye. There are supjM.sed to be ab.iut one huudred and fifty species of mosquitoes in the world. Already twenty -one species have Wen identified as native to North America. The largest va rieties occur in the tropics, where in sect life of all sorts obtains its fullest and most pestiferous development. No where, however, are these blood suckers more abundant than in far northern latitudes, as in Arctic Alaska, w here they apjH-ar in countless swarms .luring the brief boreal summer. There are at least three or four species of Jersey mosquitoes, one succeeding another during the progress of the sea sons. The biggest know n mosquito is only found as a fossil, happily. It lived in tertiary times. Wing contemporary with the mastodon and megat heriuiii. To it has been given the appropriate name .if "cilicx daiiiiiatorum," mean ing "gnat of the damned.' There is no reason to doubt that mosquitoes carry diseases, says the Washington Star, and t hey are seriously suspected of propagating yellow fever. It has been noticed that yellow fever comes with them and goes when they depart; also that it is worst in seasons when they are most plentiful and in lo calities w here they are most abundant. I.ut respecting this complaint compar atively little has been definitely as certained. The mosquito is likewise accused of propagat ing malaria by carrying the infection from one K-rsoii to another. This charge is not proven, hi iwever. It has long been known that only t he female mosquito bites. The male jxissesses no lance for inflicting a wound, such as his mate is provided with. The purpose t-f his existence is merely to pcrH-tuate the species, and he never enters a house unless by ac cident. The natural food of tin- female is the juices of plants, and it is not known w hy she seeks blood. The in dulgence seems to be a kind of dissipa tion with her. like whisky ami tobacco with human beings. I'nlikethe latter, she never gets full but once. Her sting consists of five extremely sharp needles, two of w hich are barbed. They unite and form an awl. which, having in dicted the puncture, serves as a tube for. sucking the IiIimmI of the victim. The suggestion that Mis.uious tluid is intro duced into tin- wound for the pur(mse of making the blood more liquid is mere theory. The female mosquito lays her eggs in a litt-shaK-.l mass on the surface of still water. From these the larvae, called "wrigglers." are hatched. When the wriggler considers that he ha.s wrigsfle.l long enough be comes to the surface and carefully extricates himself from his skin, which serves asa raft for liiin to stand i!".ii. This is the danger (xiiiit of his life, for the least breath of wind may upset the raft and drown him. Happily escaping this fate, he tl ies away as so.ui as his wings are dry. If a "she." the insect loses no time in seeking for some animal or K-r-son to torture. It has Wen contended that the larval mo-iuito has some use fulness, consuming iniasin.it i,- germs in the water; but this is nit.re than doubtful. A POOR OPINION OF US. An KKyptiau Think A merlcai.it Live In a Killhy .Manner. A communication received from Sheik llirdari. an Kgyptian commissioner to the rec.-nt I'nited Trt-sby terian gen eral assembly, gives various views formed of Tittsburgh and of the assem bly, says the I'liite.l Tresby terian. He says Americans, and especially Titts burghers. live in a filthy manner. Our hands and faces are quite dirty, he says, but this is Wcause the air is con taminated with a tine black dust. The sheik found it difficult to keep himself clean. He says: "The pave ments are v.-ry filthy, owing to the habit all the M'ople. men and women, have of ex ectorat ing. 1 t hink most of the -.iple must be of a class about equal to the ltcrhcrs. used in Cairo and Alexandria as tl.mrkeeers and serv ants. I don't know, though, for many of these people seem to be very rich." Of the trolley cars, t he sheik declares: "It is very strange to see the people riding about iu wagons that look like the railroad cars of Kgypt, but they run without either steam or horses. They run with a bu..ing sound, and I think must be possessed of .lemons.'' In the assembly sessions the sheik says he saw commissioners at times reverently bow their heads low-. He discovered a sort of vessel in front of them tm the floor, which they guarded carefully with their feet. This was st range to I )irdari, but he found that "the people regard these vessels with the same reverence that tin Italians manifest towanl the pictures of the Virgin. I learned that this particular idol, the like of which I never saw in my travels, is called "cuspidor,' but my limited knowledge of Lnglish has made it difficult to learn what peculiar tra ditions are associated with him." The sheik expressed thankfulness t hat his people w ill never take into an Kgyptian church this "cuspidor gtitl." WHY ICE FLOATS. It la Specifically I.l(hter Than Water Jost About to fr'reeae. Ice is sjH'citically "lighter" than water just aWut to freeze, and. therefore, floats uimiii it. says an exchange. There is one reason why the formation of ice usually, but not always, Wgins at the surface. Another reason is Wcause of its peculiar law of expansion. The general law is that cold induces con traction. This holds go.nl in the case of water only to a certain point. When water ha.s cooled down to within 7.4 de grees of freezing it ceases to contract as Wfore. and, with increased cold, actually begins to expand, ami con tinues to do so until it freezes. This expansion causes the colder portions of the water to rise to the surface. Above we have said that ice docs not always Wgin to form at the surface of the water. The exception is in the case of w hat is know n as "ground" or "anchor ice." In this case the whole luidy of the water is cooled at the same time to nclow the freezing point, ami the substances at the ImiUoiii. such as the stones and pebbles of river or lake lieds. serve as a nucleus or point of congela tion and crystallization for the water. This rare siieeies of ice is formed under such iieculiar circumstances that others than students ami experimenters sel dom see it. BLUE RAYS KILL GERMS. It Ih Shown That the I pper Kn.l of the Suu'h SMvlniiu lion, the SIhukM enni; Although investigation has not been idle, experimenters have not Int-ii wholly agreetl as to the exact proiN-rty or litddof the sun's rays w hich is most efficient in action tm bacteria and fungi, says Popular Science Monthly. The inquiry has been continued l.y I'rof. H. Marshall Ward, to whom the thought occurred in the course of his work that the most direct answer to the question: "Which rays are the most effective ones'." might be best attained by shining the solar spectrum directly u Kin the til in of sHrws and making ft record the effects by their subsequent behavior, according as the different groups of rays fell upon them in other words, by obtaining a photograph of the spectrum iu living aud dead bac teria. The results showed conclusively that the rays that kill the bacteria are the blue and violet ones. An observation was made during the investigation which may go far to account for tire unsatisfactory character of the deter minations of former experiments. The chief difficulty to W overcome was the great weakening of the in tensity of the disiH-rsed rays of the Wain of light decom posed to form the siectrum a weakening eattsed bv the distribution of the incidence of the rays over a larger area ami by their ab sorption and reflection in passing through the lenses ami prisms. It was found, also, in working with the electric light, that the jh.w.t of the 1.1 ue and violet rays was further im paired in other words, that they were stopiicd by the material .glass) through which they hail to pass. The effect of the glass was practical ly the same as that of mist or haze in the atmosphere, which so filters out the blue-violet rays that the light of a dull day was tif little effect in the author's experiments. These difficulties were overcome by using quartz instead of glass, with which it was possible to obtain a very pure sjectruiii sufficiently rich in blue and violet rays to kill the spores in a few hours. The author found it easy to obtain satisfactory results iu the summer with solar rays, even with glass lenses, mirrors, etc., and ex posures of five or six hours, but in w in ter the cxiiosurcs required to be so long as to W almost impracticable. QUEER USE OF A CIGAR. Story Which. Sht.wa a s.- (aptain'rt Prea-euc-e of M in.l. A good story is told of a sea captain who dietl not long ago and who was formerly iu command of a ship in w hich passengers were carried from London tti.Lisli.iu. On one occasion, says Tit Kits, t he ship caught fire and the pas sengers and crew were t-omiH-i i-! to take hurriedly to the boats. The cap tain remained jierfcctly cm1 through out all t he confusion and fright of t he debarkation, aii.l at last everyone ex cept himself was got safely into the Ixiats. Ily the time he was ready to f. llow the passengers were aim. .st wild with fear and excitement. Instead of hur rying down the ladder the captain called out to the sailors to bold on a minute, and. taking a cigar from his pocket, coolly lighted it with a bit of burning rope which had fallen from the rigging at his feet. Then be tle se. il. led with dt-li Wratiou and gave the order t push tiff. "How could you stop to light a cigar at such a moment?" he was asked after ward, when some of the passengers were talking over their escape. "Itecause." he answered. "1 saw that if I did not do something to divert tin minds of those in the lxat there was likely to be a panic, and overcrowded as it was. there was danger of the boat being upset. The act took but a moment, but it attracted the attention of everylaaly. I was not nearly so un concerned as I seemed to lie. but was in reality in a fever of excitement. My little plan succeeded. You all for got yourselves because you were think ing of my curious Whavior, and we got off safely." WAYS OF NOTED MEN. (Jakkick was generally so quiet that he often created the impression of diffi dence. Hknky Ci.av was said to make the most engaging bow of any gentleman of his time. Maiicts Ai bki.h's was said to W the politest Roman emperor who ever sat on the throne. IUxtk was solitary in his habits, and, by his austerity, chilled most of those whom he met. Mii.ton was quiet and reserved in Conversation, but thoroughly refined and well bred. SviiXEr said that the soul of polite ness lay in preferring the happiness of others to your own. l'llll.ll' of Macedon was courteous to all who approached him. even the hum blest being sure of a hearing. TlfS IX., both lie fore and after his elevation to the pontifical chair, was a model of studied politeness. Mohammed inculcated politeness in the Koran. He himself was one of the most courteous of men. Andrew Jackson was rough in his manners, but could be jiolite when he pleased. He was alwp-s courteous to ladies. C'artouft fuMtori. In Holland. When young Queen Wilhelmina visitetl the other day the marvelous vaults at Maestriche. which arc one of the sights of the place, she was re quested by the authorities to inscribe her name upon a marble slab in the wall, which bears the signatures of many other sovereigns, Dutch and for eign, prominent among them Wing the autograph of the first Naxle.ui. Just at the very moment when she was aiu nit to comply with the request three tiny gnomes sprang out from behind a pillar and exclaimed in accordance with the time-honored custom: "Who are you that dares add your name to that of William the Silent anil of the man y illustrious rulers of the Netherlands?" Queen Wilhelmina, who had Wen pre pared for this little piece of pantomine, replied: "I am the daughter of this King William III. whose signature you see here, aud his successor tt the throne of Holland," w hereupon the gnomes three small loys dressed up for the oc casion Irowed low, received some coin, and retired. THE I LACK AIM. SifiraB of a Revival of the Practice of Voodooism. ItiiTereut Method In Vogue of Canting; Spell and Hew Itt-hloic Need of a Keforui In the Old Style HtMMl.M. Modem tiecnltisui, or, to put it in diplomatic costume, l'occultisme mod erne, is becoming decidedly aggres sive, to say the least of it. if we arc to Wlieve the kerne Illustree. Strange as the news may aptt-ar. says the New York Sun. it is nevertheless rejxirted that the black art is nourishing fiend ishly Wth iu KuroiH and America. Casting a sm-11 um.ii an individual, or, as they say on the Bowery, "hoodo. ing a fellow," has not. aco.rdiug to the Ilevue. fallen into innocuous desii.-t ude. We all remember the scene depicted by Alexandre Dumas in the licine Mar got, ill which the iicrforuicr of Catherine Medicis plunges a golden iice.llv into the heart, or rather the place where the heart ought to be. of a little wax statuette modelled iu the image of King Charles IX. Hut the magicians of the present day have brought modern improvements int.. the art. They practice three kinds of hoodooism, according to the caprice of the client and the degree of hatred with which he is possessed. Iu one they Use a toad, in another a doll, and ill a third they operated Tesprit volant, or. in other words, they remove the spirit and place it temporarily just where they want it. Here are the prescriptions for the three methods: You take a toad, male or female, according to the sex of the person w hom you w ish to reach. You baptize it as you would a child, giving it t he full name of your enemy. While you are committing this sacrilege. vui must endeavor to work yourself up into a paroxysm of hatred toward your vic tim, and you must sandwich the sacra mental wr.ls with the most horrible imprecations. Then you inflict 111011 the toad all the tort urcs t hat your im agination ran suggest, for yourt-iiemy is bound to suffer correspondingly. If you take an eye out of tin toad, your enemy will lose an eye, etc. In Amer ica, according to the Kevue. the Dark Crooks have recourse to a more sum mary expedient. They bury the toad at the threshold of the residence of the M-rsoii selected for a victim, wit h the result that he dies as if suff.K-ated. The doll method is the ill. st ancient and the most classic. It requires a wa x figure called a "manic." resembling the victim as much as jiossiblt. It is also necessary to have some little objects that Wlongcd to the victim, or Wttcr yet, one .if his teeth. Hirlioiis of his nails, or one or two hairs of his head. You mix these things iu with the wax of the doll and baptize it. '1 hen. just like the jxii.n.-r of Catherine tic Medicis. you stick a pin into the figure. If at that moment your t-iit-my is t-vt u flirting with a voting woman, he imme diately Wgins to suffer from palpita tion of the heart i naturally enough i if he docs not die from suff.a-atioii. The proceeding a Tesprit volant is the latest improvement iu t his science, and it is the child of hypnotism. In order to execute it you must have a sub ject whose astral laxly, which we are told is of a fluid nat tire, w ill abandon the material ImhIv on your order and transirt itself toward your vict imn. It slips into his veins the poisons which you have learned how t.evolatili.e. The tiKrati..n terminated, you return the astral ImmIv to its carnal dwelling, and you arouse the subject. The crime is committed without auylxidy in the world being able to accuse you. and you are left alone with your conscience. I.ut the conscience of a l.Iack Crook is particularly elastic. Now. that is the way they work the machine, and the Kevue refuses to re veal the places where the ceremonies are iK-rformcl. for fear of leading its readers into temptation. It is Wttcr. it says, to let them Wlieve that the busi ness tif casting spells Wloiigs to the domain of fables. Kut the surprising thing about it is that men of learning and apparently endowed with common sense indulge in this kind of rubbish. Wit ncsscs well worthy of belief have told extraordinary stories of a certain Col. tie Kochas. stories that outdo the wildest inventions tif the "Devil on Two Sticks." Col. tie Kochas, we are told, has discovered a nieth. d of ""ex teriorizing the sensations of individ uals." Asmotleus used to put the souls of Christians w ho died iiiijH-nitcnt into liottle.-.; but M. tie Kochas, more ingen ious than Asmotleus, concentrates and dissolves in a glass of water the sense of enjoyment and of suffering of a sub ject previously magnetized. If this water is Wiled, the subject writhes like St. Iaureut on his gridiron; and if. on the contrary, the water freezes, the unfortunate victim Wcouics blizzardlv cold. Like the story of "Jack and the Lean Stalk," all this may not be as true as the Kible. but in these days of ad vancement why shouldn't the black art W reformed and rejuvenated just like our own ever glorious city government? I'roteet lnif II In Chicken. A Sangerville (Me.) man has baffled the hen hawks, and so far the laugh is all on his sitle. He makes a large yard for his chicken coop, putting lioardsaround the sides to prevent escape from the in closure. and over this he stretches wire netting with coarse meshes. Inside the hen and chickens run at will free from attacks of every sort. A nuinWr of times since he made this arrangement his family have Wen entertained by the antics of the hawks who swoop down upon their supposed prey all unaware of the interposed netting. Fetching up against it has seemed a great puzzle to to them, for they flutter around on it so greedy for their prey that they can scarcely Wlieve the chicks beyond their reach. ItallMl t Lawyers are not more free than other public speakers from slips of the tongue. Mr. Asquith. of the English cabinet, in a recent sticech in parlia ment, said: "Let it W known, gentle men, that of those just demands we abate not one jit or totth:" A few days later an English judge, after a policeman had testified that he had found the prisoners in Wd with their clothes on, asked, in amazement: "Do you mean to say that they had gone to boot with their W-ds on?" CHASED BY AN ELEPHANT. MlraruliMW Kacape mt a Hunter In the In dian Jungle. The author of 'Unn, Uif'.e and Hound" narrates an adventure which Wfcll him and two companions. '"Will" and "F ," in Ceylon. "One tif the most miraculous escaties ever known in elephant-shooting." he calls it. F . it should Ih said, was a famous killer of elephants, and bad brought with him a native tracker well used to the business; "a little w izened-up creature, but absolutely fearless." They were in search of a notorious rogue elephant, which had killed so many men and done so much other mischief that the government had put a reward of fifty dollars iin his head. We started early in the morning, and were soon on the fresh tracks tif the brute. He was evidently moving pretty fast. The tracker followed the trail almost at a trot, and it was rather hot work keeping him in sight. At last it was obvious that we were close upon the elephant, which was heading more and more into the thickest jungle. "Nasty, dangerous brute." whisjiered F ; "we shall hear him W-fore we see him." A minute or two more and the track er stopped and pointed to a branch which was still oscillating violently. The elephant could not W a minute ahead of us. We all stopped and looked intently among the thick trees. With a scream t.f rage the rogue crashed out at Us. We all fired. I think. The tracker ran toward Will, the ele phant close after him. Will tired again, and turned to run. The tracker bail slipjied out of the way. F and I ran after the elephant, reloading as we ran. He was gaining rapidly on our poor friend. "'Kound a tree!" shouted F . "round a '.reef Will made for the nearest tine, the elephant not two lengths In-hind him, and we still forty yards Whind. To our horror we saw Wi'.l catch hi foot in something and go down at full length. F groaned with despair. and dropping on my knee I tired two baar.-ls uselessly into the brute's hin.l qua rters. Then came the miracle. Whether the blood from half a dozen wounds had blinded the elephant, or Will's sudden disappearance into the long grass had deceived him. I cannot say. but half stopping, he turned and made tiff into the jungle, w here weltrst him, after follow ing him for hours. DWARFING DOGS. Taken frt.ru Their Mothers in Infancy They Are Itred tt. Lilliputian sZe. Specialists and doctors who take au interest ill the progress of alcoholism, its injurious action tm gent-ration and the iart it plays in degeneracy will W glad to add another branch to their study in the shajH- tif the falsification of dogs, says the New York World. For falsification of dogs exists in 1'aris ami thrives, just as well as the imitators tif Japan ware, old furniture and pic t urcs of inrnt. Tciiiers and KuWus. Ask f. ir a I ot t lc tif Chartreuse in any grocery store t.f Taris and yon will lx. served with a Wttlc tif Charm.-iisc. and as to truffles, diamonds. chamKigne and cof fee, imitators of these have obtained t. lofty a station for them to care for criticism of their products. It was generally supposed that the animal reign had not yet been tam pered with, so that m.ist persons will be surprised that the French have re cently discovered a met hod .if produc ing tiny dogs, which, when offered for salt on the boulevards or in the Hois tie llotilogne. fetch good prices on account tif their rarity. Like all tit her callings. ctimM-tition is afHiut to cut down the profits tif the originators of the idea and next summer visitors are promised any number of lilliputiau dog at an insignificant price. This is how the diminutive animal is produced: Snatched from its mother's breast when it is but a few hours old. it is put tin an alcoholic diet instead of a lacteal diet. When it reaches a cer tain age alcohol under different form constitutes almost the sole diet of the animal. The young dogs do not die. but. what is far more important, they tlo not develop and apjit-ar to Ih wast ing away continually. They s.n.h cease to grow entirely. Iy coupling these products the lilliputiau animal is ob tained after two or three generations. What a terrible lesson for drunkards and absinthe consumers! SPARKS FROM THE CABLE. Kniikavhks art n..w England to establish year, one year's rest Wing made in the Sabbat ica in seven, for school-teachers. Lisnox will have a great festival next June to commemorate the seven hun dredth anniversary t.f Saint Anthony, of Tad ua. who was ln.rn there in lll'V AltMKYI.KlX, in Ieinster. is troubled over a venerable pauper of Ilia. who. having Wen a Trot est ant all his life, ha s now concluil to laconic a Cuth lie. The T.erlin Street Car company paid c.VUKXI into the treasury .if the city for the privilege of crossing the princi pal avenue, Unter den Linden, at out point. Fkom Venice comes the announce ment that the Ixwlics in the old Trot est -ant cemetery, where many Americans and Englishmen are buried, are to W removed tothe new municipal cemetery. Tokt's CtutXKK in Westminster AbWy is hidden from the outside by a bl.x k tif old houses. These are to It- torn down next summer as a precaution against fire, thus allowing the architecture of the chapel of Henry VII. and the old Chapter House to W seen from that side. The on.en of Spatn. On Mrs. Lang's showing in the Hu manitarian the life of a Spanish woman must Ih dull enough. I!ut of course there is everything in the point tif view. The Spanish wotiwiu evidently has neither our ambition nor our uncom fortably developed sense tif tedium. She has no aspirations for a wider hori zon, she has no desire for a university education, or a parliamentary vote or a profession to rentier her independent. She is perfectly satisfied with lifeas it is; shehas no responsibilities, money affairs Wing attended toby In r male relatives and housekeeping Wing looked after by the servants; she has plenty of dan cing, flirtation and intrigue, which is carried to a science and is her chief amusement in life. What more can she possibly want? would W her answer to your query as to whether her exist ence realized her ideal of happiness. SIMPLE SAVAGES. How They llnnraH a Whloky 11 rate Oat of a st.op lioaded with Utuor. The Indians tif the west coast of Van couver island have ado. ted a novel and decidedly effective met hod of dealing with white whisky pirates who fre quent their villages, as James Johnson, t.f Victoria, formerly master tif the sealing s.htx.ner Kilmany, knows t bis cost. He had conic t the conclu sion that there was big money for the: man who made a systematic tour tif the w est coast with Wittled samples of gin an.l w hisky. Accordingly, says the San Francistti Examiner, he purchased a small trad ing sbxip. loaded her with a cargo of st imulants and sailed for ita relay sound sometime ago. There, for a few days, he did a rushing business retailing bis low-grade intoxicants at five to ten dollars jht Ixittle. The Indians kuew thcy were Wing robins! and remon strated, but uii reduction in the price wa made. Then they held a council and a great plan was evolved. The aid tif the In dian police was secured, and while the master of the sl.x.p slum Wretl he was surrounded, mail.- prisoner, hand cuffed and led in triumph to the vil lage. In vain be pleaded for release. He was told he would W held until the coming of the police itrol and then delivered to the officers for supplying liquor to Ind ians. This meant a tine of at least two hundr.-d dollars and the confiscation td his craft, so lie deter mined to suggest terms, and his offer of the sbxip and its cargo for bis freedom was quickly accepted. The cargo was consumed in a single night Ly the dusky diplomats in celebrating the success of their Naix.let.nic stroke of generalship. VARIETIES OF IDLENESS. Home l'erxt.tiM I ... Nothing frtiu. I boice, other. Tt I on Idleness iilays many parts. There are the c. .list it ut i. ma'.i v indolent tbttse who. like Dr. Johnson, are never, phys ically, ready to get up in the morn ing, but who. like him. are poss.-ss.sl of a conscience which com-. Is tht-m now and again to face the relieet it m .f what th.-y havt compared with what they might liav. done, and to stand aghast at the comparison. There are th. ic. says Chamlters' Journal, whom circumstances have made idle riches, absence t.f motive for exert i..n: ill-health, -eal or fancied; indulgent friends. and iini.-Ji m. .re often bv self-indulgence. That idle ness is one of the seven deadly sins gives them iio sort of concern; it is of the essence of th-ir complaint tit have ii. f,s ling t if their tw n iiitirnut v. Th.-y are as!,-,-;.: th.-y cannot tell their dreams, for they do n.it t-v.-n know that they are dreaming. i.ivingup. nerveless relaxation, has Wc.niie a habit, and to t hem as to the immortal Mr. T..ts. though front a dif ferent mot ive not hing is.f :mv conse quence Kut whereas it ua-. hisoun eon v.-ii it-nee. bis own feelings, his own ft utifort. that never were of const quell--,- to the uii-t-ltish T. x t s. it is pre cisely your convenience, your feelings, your comfort, that are. to the idle man. of no consequence. Floating idly atx.ut "on the great Tacitie tx-ean t.f indo lence" he makes first one compromise, then another, with self-rt-sp.ft. until be ends by sacrificing the esteem t.f his fcllow-nieii on tin private altar of his own sloth. His affairs get first mud dled, then embarrassed, then decay ing. then desperate, and he feebly flatters himself with an idea t f repose, now, that all is gone. OLD WORLD AND NEW. Akla Stand. till While Kurope and Amer ica I'u.h forward. The common phrases, the old world an.l the new world, have gained au a plicatioii which would hardly have Wen given them bail men know n in the jwist what they know now. that Ameri ca is. geologically considered, probablv the oldest- of the continents and that man perhaps inhabited the western hemisphere as f-arly as he did the east ern. In view t.f tiiis fact, says Lippin c.tt's Magazine, it might not Ih amiss to suggest "a different application t.f these phrases by giving to Asia tb.s title of the old world and to Europe and America that of the new world, leaving the remaining sections of the earth to lit into the division to which they logically Wl.mg. For Asia is the static realm of man kind: Europe and America are tho dynamic. Asia is at rest with the dead past; Europe and America are pushing forward into the living future. Asia, iu its political conditions, its religions, its learning and its literature, its sci ence and industry, remains in cl.tstt touch with the world of three thousand years ago: EuroiH and America iu all these conditions have left the ..1. 1 world ages Whind them and are building for themselves a new world vitally distinct from that of ancient days. He Will Succeed. Like his brother of the north, the southern small Ixiy is capable of much. A writer iu the New York Home Jour nal says that upon her arrival iu a southern town her cabman was a small Ixiy. aged a'x.ut nine. The cab had two seats, and the lx.y told her that if during her stay she wanted a carriage, she could get him any time by inquir ing for Jacksou's express price six bits an hour. ""Are you Jacks. m?" I asked. "Yes. ma'am. "" said the expressman. olitcly. and with great dignity. Then, lasping into Wyishness. he added: "You see. this used to Ih our carriage. Kut pa i died, and mamma isn't strong and there isn't much money and " Something certainly filled the Ix.y's throat, for his voice broke, and. hastily Weoming a cabman again, he tightened the reins and indulged in a flourish t.f the whip. Kut after a little he turned alx.ut an.l added: "It's a real comfort. I think, to earn your living." A . rt-at Lighthouae. On the Toiute de Tenmarch. in Itrit tany. the southwestern point of the Finistcrre promontory, midway W tween Krest and L'Orient. a new light house is Wing erected whose light w ill W seen tine hundred miles in clear weather, and from twenty-five to twenty-eight miles when the weather is hazv. It will W an electric light of ten million candle power, and will rise tine hundred and eighty-five feet abtive the sea lcel. aud is to be read3" by the WginuLng of 1S'J7. il -r-