The Recorder. CENTRE HALL, Micisanisnaoms sma PA, Merchants in Belginm are urging their Government the duties on raw cotton and those on manufactured goods. ————————————— to reduce greatly increuse The thorny question, “Should an Ants- Vivisectionist Lat Meat?” been the subject of a debate by London Vegetarian ciety. has the Sos (England) ———————————— The loeal authorities in some of the Italian alarmed at the excessive emigration of the coming less and less frequent. country districts are grossly peasantry. Marriages are be- A recent writer ealls attention to the Swiss method of insuring an interest in elections. A fine of about 20 cents is laid on those who abseut themaseives from the polls on election days. ———————— The Royal Dotany Society of Eng- land is anthority for the statement that 110,000,000 500,000,000 use tea and 2,000,000 use people use coflee, coffee-ten, or prepared coffee leaves. ————— Sb — State Senater Durban of Wyoming, gays that “rustlers” have ruined the cattle business in that State, and that a war of extermination is likely tc goon be begun against the thieves by ranchimen, es ————————— The University of Derlin, Germany, with 6000 students and scores of famons professors, but £720,000, Its | that of Countess £150,000, —————— Editor De Young of cisco Chronicle, one of its has a capital of rest endowinent, Dose, is the ouly the San Fran the commise- sioners of the Columbian Exposition, thinks it would be a good idea for the government to coin silver pieces of the value of fifty cents, which might be used to pay the price of admission to the Fair. —————————— te London (England) Iorticul- tural bv asserting that American apples arg Times caused some alarm HE poisonous, owing to the limbs ol trees being syringed with chemical insects. A de- Board of Trade the * importation of golutions to destroy maad is made that the shonld restrict apples, as in the cas» of pork. ee e———————— Miss Willard, the ance crusader, pays a high tribute to the quest and to the work of women ecially Frances temper- who wield the quill. She s favors those newspaper women whose n i the por. quills are not borrowed from 3 i cupine, but rather from the wing of some angel seeking to raise humanity to a higher plane. In a humorous vein Miss Willard writers to use quills taken either from the of the American eagle. ————————————— exhorts women dove or from the wing becoming of United circulated Canadian bankers are alarmed at the gunantity States money that is being in their province, amd have resolved to petition the Canadian Parliament to impose a tax of 10 per cent. upon it. No doubt, cominents the New Orleans New Delia, the people who use it as a medinm of exchange will have some- thing to say about this, as it is purely a scheme for the benefit of the bank- ers who derive a large profit from the cirenlation of their own notes, which would greatly increase if American money were driven out of the country. ————————————— A United that no armor that will turn an enemy's shot fiom Recent 100-ton naval officer says devised S.aies fins yet been the enormous modern guns, experiments show with English guns that 16-inch projectiles through 44 and one half feet of de. fensive material, consisting of layers of sieel, iron, granite, concrete and brick work of various thicknesses, Such guns have been found too un- wieldy for advantageous use on ship- board. The limit of size is said to be 13-inch 60-ton guns, ——————————— Considerable difficulty was experi- enced recently by the Frenchmen who paid the King of Dahomey his annual pension of $4000, becanse Le could count only as high as one hundred, Eventually the silver, in which the pension was paid, was done up in packages of twenty five-franc pieces each (equalling $20), and these pack. ages were delivered one by one to the forty chieftains whom the king "had summoned to see that he was not swindled. Upon the delivery of each ~ package the chieftain who kept book Jaid aside a shell. When forty shells had been laid aside, the bookkeeper indicated to the other chieftains that the payment was complete, and all then affixed crosses to the receipt pro. sented by the French agent. ER IN THE WORLD, Miss Kittie Wilkins Tells How She Got Into the Business and Gives Interesting Information on Range Breeding. Miss Kittie Wilkins enjoys the distine- | tion of being the only the United States whose sole occupation is horse-den Sho is a tall and stately | blonde, with a profusion of light golden | eves, woman in ' ine. regular features firmness hair, ¢lear blue and a moth and chin denoting a no doubt acquired in her business. ‘A head for business and an eve on the world,” one could truthfully Her manners are perfectly lady-like, though frank; i tne. tainted, and she possesses a great fue. Miss Wilkins, say. somewhat her language is ulty for conversation, . one of ranches in Southwestern Brown River, in Ihey have now on the ranch season's sale, 2.000 head of | the largest Id tho, on Owy hve after this horses ane 1,000 cattle. The horses have | bred wight from blood in them. are from American mares originally br They trotting stallions; good judges say the horses formally brought by her to St. Louis are furabove t and the averaee Western horses, chiefly from fifteen to sixteen hands high and from are shown and sold in the rough, as not one of them hus ever tasted grain or hay until they are rounded up for shi Miss Witkins, whon intervyi ‘Now, I don't ee why it should interest the owed ¥y Bu , ctor zi 3c} reports Fy BORG usiness in ne i Mississippi cago, al York i Riv long way in giving the ange ani bred out there strong lungs to siart Then the whole country is underia a n of i nates limestone which only the even the not gptings and { courses but grass itseil, a abundance of fume plenty o climate i= such that horses and cattle run out of doors the year around. i the increasa larger stallions; if our colts course, this f bone. and of good qua it we wish to size of our horses we secur become too leggy we employ stout, com. pact standing on short legs. When we find we have sufficient size and substance we turn our attention to style and action. I hold that in open-air breeding we can obtain just as good re. sults ns those who treat their colis like Of course, much can be done by special preparation, and forced in| the direction of early marsrity, and this | is nll very well for high-priced trotters and race-horses, “Now, | will give you my reasons why | I beiieve in range breeding for horses for every day use. In the first place they are always in the open air and breathe no impurities and take into their | stallions, babies system no germ of disease and take all} the exercise nature intended. You will, perhaps, understand the principles of this when I tell you in our whole herd we haven't an animal with spavin, ringboue, curb or splint, while distemper, pinkeye, epizootic and such ailments are equally unknown. In time, 1 suppose, this range will be surveyed and divided np, and ultimately this system of growin stock on big ranges will come to an end, but you cun rest assured that by that time the range system will have produced a stock of horses that will be found hardy, sound and thoroughly salable,” (8t. Louis Republic. A Rest at Any Price. A stot} is going the rounds on the South Side which makes a weli-known society young man and a millionaires rotty Saughior the principal characters ” au rather lnughable comedy. accompanied the young lady to hr home on Friday evening, and, as all trae lovers do, lingered vet a little while at the gate to have a lover's tete-a-tete with his fair companion. The night wns beautiful, no one near to intrude, and, above all, he loved, Why shouldn't she kiss him? With meidenly modesty she refused she still withheld from piness, The request wos repeats 1 sen thnes, and so engrossed did ths failed to notice the approach of a pa The who had there himself, and did not care old gentleman, been quis tly stopp wl behind a convenient rosebush aud waited, thinking the young soon leave. In this he The tarried over the request until the patience of the renticman was exhausted A young couple well knew nr om their happiness in a tone of man would Wiis mistaken. lover oid voice the waged them ! in- patient nner by BLY ing “* Alice, kiss the ve Chicag by him go home! y Inter-Ucean. THE AFRICAN BUSH. A Land Where Silence Frightful, To see this land typieall OUISEDIN ol height on a crosture stirs pours down its ray covered lens driver has g Dushes and the the lank out vo it 18 sa intensd tent of the wage Prehistorie Canals, Prehistoric irrigation canals in Ari. na are really worthy of more notice Fhe Salt and Gila River valleys are intersected by n in is usually given them vet network of these canals, which antedste, at least, the arrival of Coro nado in 15062, for he ruins and the traditions of regarding a once dense population in this region. Modern engineers cannot improve upon the lines of these cana's, nor in the selection of points of diver from the rivers. The first irriga- in this seetion, the one that has made Phenix, with its present § lation of 206K), : followed lines of ono of the e 0 d + annls Their extent may be appreciated when ver Valley mentions thea the Indians ion tion canal apa. simply the once aggregated over 200,000 acres, and the cann's themselves, with their Internals, kauve esceeded 1.0MX) miles in This country is filled with pre- rains, with walls of stone or fragments of pottery, shell ormaments, stone implements and other remains of n in its aggregate. —{ Engineering News, An Impromptu Dress Coat. “About eight years ago.” raid Auditor Joseph Brown to the 8t. Louis Chronicle, of was in Lowlon, England. One day 1 bought a stall to see Patti at the Royal. A stall corresponds to our boxes, When the evening came I took the ladies around and walked in at the door. Bat I did not get far. ‘You cannot come in here,’ said the doorkeepor. ‘Why not?’ [asked in surprise; ‘here are my seat tickets.’ ‘Well, you cannot enter,’ he replied, de- cisively; ‘your coat is a frock, and noth. ing but dress saits are allowed.” I eox. postulated. 1 told him that my hotel was u long way off and that the ladies would be greatly disappointed. Iwas an Ameri. can and did not know the rule of the the I'he young man, who is noted for his handsome ria winning voice, atre. Finally he told me to go into the dressing room, where the nttendants might perhaps be able to fix me out all right. 1 went, expecting to pay two or three crowns for the loan of un cont. The feltow looked at me a moment, whipped n pin from his lapel, and pinned my coat tails back, and I found myself in evening diess. 1 gave the man bulf a crown.” Pennsylvania Pelt-Hunters, and hunters of the Lebanon aud sehuvikill now reaping their harvest by skins of the valent in Berks, ' Lehigh, them to some of thie skunks, opossums, other ounties for their fur The amateur trappers valleys are BOCUring iid animals Bid Montgom and other coun the small w Lebanon, ery, Lancnst ties, and sending leading foses, furriers in Country Fuecooaus, me skrats, and animals caught in 5 alone number thousands annually. In a single season teading denlers have alone purchased furriers as high us 20,000 10 and other SOAK) skins, unimnls these have been exceeding y ple utiful, and the | Lis 5 et shipments have been very heavy. Some New York to the centers of ir tra in Germany and elsewhere, ind there prepared wecording to methods i with which th ae f iversant, Greater Than Niagara, s Jatest brador he Philadel; Kenaston, of W New 3 ork inst Jit the existence of little more than fra thre eYeR Were until months af gladdened by a sight of th Mr. Bryant describes the magnificent The roar almost impossible, groat falls, falls as truly makes conversation and they are more thas Niagara. Anaroid measurements made, carefully checked by other meas. we the falls. The 188 feet at an angie o thirty degrees over ite rocky bed, The abrupt deacent of the water is 316 foet, and the river here i= from 100 to 200 foot wile. The column of mist that arises is very striking unl ean be seen nt a great distance. The banks are ox. tremely rugged, Photographs were tnken., The return journey to the const was made in seiea days, while it had twice ns igi ns were urements, abo " rive r f Louis Republic, Home-made Tooth Powder. —— Some of the best powders {or the teeth are prepared at home. A simple old | a ix made of pure charcoal pound. ed and sifted and mizxel to a paste with | water flavors] with myrrh, if you like | the slightly bitter refreshing flavor. 11) a charcoal paste is used, abundance of water should be used to riuse the mouth, | as nothing is more objectionable than a | residue of black streaks left sometimes by this powder. Equal paris of prepared | chalk, powdered pumice stone and pul. verized orris root make a good paste, There is no better wash than the well | known one of a few drops of myrrh dis. | solved in a tablespoonful of water, bat | where this is not ble there are many delicious washes now found for sale which are equally valuable.—~{New York Tribune, White satin ribbons are usel on ful dress bonnets, A Musical Well. One of the most curious wells in the West is on the place of Henry M. Hen- derson, on Oakes avenue, This well can play a tune on a dozen different instru. nents at the which is an human being is known to game time, and has done it, aecomplishment that no The well is about 100 feet deep. At nearly all hours of the day or night a wind blows up from the bottom of it, and whistics through the eracks in the tight board When the wind does not blow out it seems to be sucked in by the well, PDOSBORE, i Covering An abundant supply of good water is in the well and where the wind comes from or where it goes is 6 myst ry which Mr. Henderson not One day not long ago Mr. Henderson cols lected the ut ull times, hus solved, ull musical instruments he could, amounting to eight, from his neighbors and frien He bored holes in the boards co ing the well, and at srnet, at another a bass horn, ut another a clarionet, then a fife, about threo yards long, made, a mouth up to the ufter another them in. one aperture placed a « horn had instrome an immense tin which he nts, organ and other number mentioned they began to blow as he put he hourse growl of the bass horn min- led with and fi clarion ciarione or led cornet fones of the te When all » i} Were going ble, and there uote sounde up from gusts smusi ith rt How to Make A Woman's Game of Conversation ohiect these talkatis a point wi i guotalion ippropriate is to ation of To nd 10 OTe introduce this Whoeter succeods in getting off the and when also tries to head quotation first is the cach tries to w in she off the others, if she sees an opportunity It is rare sport and affords us p ents of fun. Todrag the quotation in badly, inappropriately, does not count. It must come in aptiy, so as not to exc ite the i are playing with them instead of at them Take, for in. stance, ‘A primrose by the river's brim a simple primrose was to kim. and it was nothing more,” and try to bring around to that connection the con. versation of a young man which begins with “shop.” takes a flight junto firta. tion, nl eads with the theaters or horses, “It tukes some ingenuity, 1 tell you; and the little mystery underlying all our remarks, which is known only to our. selves, gives the gume additional interest for no women, of course.” — New York Tribune, winner; coming suspicions of these youths that we as they fondly imagine the quotation, aa How to Avoid Catching Cold. Accustom yourself to the use of sponging with cold water every morming on first getting out of bod. It should be followed by a good deal of rubbing with n wet towel. This has considerable offect in giving tone to the skin and maintaining a proper action in it, and thus proves a safeguard to the injurions influence of cold and sudden changes of temperature. Sit Ashley Cooper, the celebrated English physician, said: * The methods by which 1 have preserved my own Loalth are temperance, early rising and spon ing the body with cold water immeo- diately after getting out of bed, a tice which 1 have adopted for yoars without ever having tuken cold, w= Newport Observer, PENNSYLVANIA ITEMS VARIOUS PARTS OF THE STATE. Willismsport, A shortage of $15,000 has the Ls s necusations, and wants Presi The y 11 becatise eetapiished by auiner, fireen bank was Bowman arrested 9 i i the Comptroller had mined 18 an I rLXBmner. own behnlf , fund hie, cause he je Maur i ever Lhe action of some ne gro inborers, people are tion was served upon slhenan ioah, Girardville Company by the water thie former from lsying over for $50,000 will + and work resumed nes aod Mini met at Harrisburg to leas he selection of an active Mesnrs biz exit of Wiiliams, Merritt and the anthracite coal & promised, MIX Saw, of Conshohoehen, asved od from the eficets of injuries receive March pork idgeport, Moun establishment was the ashier Green thinks they n by a sneak thief arrested the chur over Lie he consun redoced the } QePOoN : he Wii opened 11 wy pEiier Green was ares pork-packing Bridgeport, near Norristo Marcn's ment nai blown up by a boiler explosion were Killed and eight injured. PROCEEDINGS were begun at Norris coniest the will of Harriet Y. Plymouth Township, on the ground It is share of her son, Henry J. Shepard to his children, «6 that it coalki toubhed by Mr. Shepard's creditors will is being contested by the creditors Mrs. R. MoxacHAN, of West Chester, wife of the missing lawyer, received a cablegram from Australian in which her husband went his promised her a long letter by the 1st 9 March. signa the i i€5R ure was a forgery. alley i that wos The JON ER love and 21 Plymouth, Father Jakowitz of the Hane Church, ordered the BL Joseph Society from the Luilding., They re. fused to po, but were ousted by Constables. Armed adherents of the priest are uarding the building. The church is divided in fae garian Catholic Tie West Lehigh mine fire at Ashland is still raging furiously and appears to be of almost seventy fet thick. The outlook is very discouraging, there being no water in the neighborhood. A stream carried hy means of hose is turned on the burning eoni until is is cooled enough to be shoveled inte the mine care, when it ie removed to the sa face, Jonx Swrrrzen, of Wilkes: Barre, married Katrina Gottlieb through a matrimonial agency of $100 and departed. Tux condition of J. P, Witherow, ths New Castle manufacturer, who recently failed and was afterward taken ill, is improved and may recover, Wonk in the Iartford mine at Ashicy, none Wilkes-Barre, has been stopped. A fire was discovered in some abandoned workings. The inside boss was warned of the danger by a stream of warm water. nisin II nse A og at St. Andrews, Scotland, »