CLAY EATERS. STRANGE HABITS CF LIAR PEOPLE, A PECU- They Satisfy the Cravings of Hunger by Eating a Blue-Gray Clay, Found “in the Banks of nu Credk, The special correspond at of the Phil- wadelphia Press, writing from Wise C. H., Va., gives many interesting facts con cerning the habits and inanners of the clay eaters of Kentucky, Tennessee, North Carolina and Virginia. He says oetorious with numberless crimes and murders, with dated and located as victims of his bloody vapacity, and the arrest and imprison- ment of the almost as notorious “Doc Taylor, the wholesale murderer of Ira Williams and his family, some time since, near Pond Gap, together with the fact that ‘‘Doc” Hall, while acting as an officer ot the State, has made the little mountain vil to the newspaper correspondents of the country. The story of the life and crimes of the two notorious citizens above men- tioned has been detailed in the press of the country, and it is not my purpose to add at this time to the terrible but to give the readers some information apon the customs and habits of a most peculiar class of people who live upon the narrow creek vallevs and mountain sides, some miles away from the county seat. The readers have doubtless heard of a people called Clay Eaters, who reside in ithe wildest parts of Kentucky, Tennes see. South Carolina, and Virginia, loubtless many, if not all of them (the rreaders, I mean), believed the stories to be nothing more or less than emanations of the vivid imaginations of the writers. But many of the There are such human are clay-eaters in the literal the term. One day, not long since, the writer, acct mpanied by a cuide, crossed the Cumberland Mountains at the Gap, near McClure Creek, and into the depths of a wilderness over a narrow and but partially defined trail for twenty-five miles. At the end of our trip we found ourselves on a narrow wr stream which came mountains, clear, pellucid, For ten miles we had not human habitation and the first one ia iii 1 Lis beginni sett were true, they stories and meaning of beings, rode ribbon of a creek down out of the and cold seen 1 : } +} : ) leme a hundred cabins, perhaps we ruck shortly after ascent the stream ¥ person long viay-eater,” said the proached a low crowne which stood in branch. A sallow, SLO wr 60 stood near rihe faces of seven and bare-footed 3t0d8 years of a yas as wr ADDITON i "The guide called “Polter,” and i rode over here from t SOC ROM doesn’t believe svants to see for himself “Yer kin lite down an’ Kun Hank,’ calling boys, w-headed urchinof 13 y ek o dren, varving e, pet red with curi name, ‘his gentien g t House to i He $ rel body ever eats it, and of yon 1} cat clay nry " one of the ears, "'t ‘an bridles an’ turn them hoss paster lot The boy took charge of and after unsaddling led the short distance up the creek to a paich of grouond fen el in with a fend es, After alight enter the cabin on much pleasanter un i Big tree in front « guest Peiter sent @ 17, who, like headed, bare-headed, after a piece of the clay, there has been much guide and myself went to know where and how they got the stuff. A few yards on the bank of the creek, the boy stopped in front of a ledge or layer of blue-gray clay two or three inches in thickness, The stuff, when taken in hand, had a feeling, and when wet directly became pliant and soft, like putty, and had very much the same general appearance. animals a small brush vor we politely declined to . that it shade of the At our re 16 or tow bare footed, which The with him, curious plea wns vr the €r i} brother, and hia nis was about 80 written below about into a ball and Polter gave the clay and then began stuff. which he rolled handed his father. another light wetting putty, until the greasy, slippery stuff be came soft, pliable and tenacious, He then separated the mass into big pills or balls, from the size of a bullet to that of an ordinary marble, and a few perhaps twice as Jarwe. He gave the smaller chil- dren several of the smallest pills and the larger ones two or three of those as large as marbles, reserving to himself two or three of the biggest boluses in the lot, The boys and girls, and the male and female heads of the families, placed the balls of clay in their mouths, where hy constant chewing and manipulating and Yy the aid of the secretions they soon sonverted them into a soft mucilaginous sass, which, with no apparent difficulty they succeeded in swallowing. Determining to try for myself to satisfy myself that there had been no sleight of Band or hocus pocus about the affair J took a piece of the clay about as big as a pullet and put it into my mouth. In a very little while, and without manipula ting or chewing, 1 found that the saliva had dissolved the mass, There were no gritty particles apparent: on the con- trary, there was an oily feeling, without semblance of taste, didn't swallow the stuff, but could have done so easily enough, but for the fepugnance I felt. After the clay had been disposed of I said ;— “Will this sort of clay satisfy hunger?” “Certainly ; that's what we eat is for. A feller ken sat "nuff to las’ three ur foh «ays, but tuis what I et’ll only last till to-morrow. “Pan't it make you sick? Don’t it hurt you some way when you make what you would consider a full meal of it?” “Never heern uv its makin’ enybody sick, but some claims it makes a feller weak. Don’t know ‘bout that,” “Do the other people living in this neighborhood eat clay also?” “All uv ‘em do, But we don't eat it all uv the time. Its only when we get short © grub an’ thar's no game, In [summer time an’ fall thars plenty o grub, an’ then we don’t tech it.” A half hour later we were again ascending the creek, and at the end of another half hour came to a second cabin, a prototype of the first even to the number and appearance of the fam ilv. All were lank, eadaverous, and bluish looking, with dull, leaden cyes and an appearance physically as if the whole neighborhood had become par tially paralyzed. They were all, so far as I could find, mentally slow and obtuse also. At the second eabin the questions were. asked and the same ad- | missions as to the habit of earth cating made, and again the entire process pre the first cabin was gone { cisely as at through with, found at cach one a family of earth eat- ers and none of them appeared to think { anything strange of the custom. {of them said in explanation that this habit had been handed down, inherited as it were, from generation to generation, and none of them could inform us of the origin of the clay eating custom. One | thing peculiar I noticed about these peo. { ple, and that was wherever a clay eating | family was found there were invariably i several of them. They had either be- come communicative by preference or more likely had been ostracised by others who believed the habit to be disgusting The latter supposition is probably the j correct one. What there is in the stuff to support life I cannot tell, and although I have talked with a number of well in formed people among whom were Gov ernment and civil officers, who knew of these peculiar people, none of them could give any explanation of it. 8 informed 3 tains in «on lensed nutritive properties, well vera is pe ‘sons say that the clay con form sme highly but they p analysis of these alleged properties, and all of the the suppositions and opinions in the end amount to nothing tangible. ‘That there is something of this sort, however, in the peculiar clay eaten by the carth must be true, from the fact, which is undisputed, that these people often » without the banks gUVe no eaters go days at a time n other food than that dug out of of the crecks Right-Handedness is Now Natural. Fhe causes ht. handedness have given anatomists much material for spec ulation, and more ti Me CUrious theory has been advanced the fact that men habitually hand in have attempt d to pre ference to t on anatomical y course of the ig more direct blood Of means the not tiv CAKE hanism Globe be subije should erence for ceptional the accounts h of trave mnded ness is as among to indicate that their * genct ul the ivi te nele I stitut onal , not only . . ag I Tr y double amount Ser Yoifs the lef 18 formed by the right, . of required foot and Hmb a deg: a contrast Few peopl walk eve uly wad training Is give lency that being seen by the will prevent tators the greater strength of the right side is in always turning to RIM shan 3 tat 108% iis the cause of persons woods traveling in a circle, the left. These facts, with many others that may be cited, lead to the cond lusion that nature is the guide in the fre. quent use ft : more of the right hand, but whether the present preference is the result of an original condition or of hereditary train. ing will always be an open anestion A MARVELLOUS MEMORY. Encyclopedic Knowledge of a Little French Girl of Five. i An infant phenomenon has been dis covered at Plaisance, a suburb of Paris, in the person of a little girl ealled Jeanne Eugenie Moreau, aged only five, but en dowed with a most extraordinary memory She is a walking encyclopedia on all matters appertaining to the history of France, and especially of the great revo. | lution ; is an adept also in natural history, and at the same time answers without hesitation or error practical questions about cooking, gardening and household management, | The youthful prodigy was born in { Paris in Janua:y, in 1887: her father, { Phillippe Moreau, being a humble | laborer, but descended from a revolu- tionary hero whose name figures in the annals of 1786, and who wus decorated | by General de Lafayette after the taking of the Bastile, Owing to the poverty of | her progenitor, Eugenic Moreau was i adopted by a widow-—Mme. Cally—who, | noticing the retentive faculties of the { child, cultivated and developed them with assiduity until the phenomenon had | become capable of passing a tiff compe- | titive examination and of putting to | shame many a schoolboy or schoolgirl of maturer years and more extensive educa- tion. The fate of Eugenie Moreau will no doubt be that reserved for all intellect. ual prodigies of years. She will be ex- hibited to scientific men and reported upon ; she will Jrobabiy receive an offer from an enterprising showman, and in all likelihood Eugenie, should she survive academical testings and public examina. tions, will eventually settle down to the life of a schoolmistress—na calling for which her marvelous memory will pre. eminently fit her. [London Telegraph. Tur dark horse is acquiring a military as well as a political value, German military authorities say that the smoke. less powder makes it death to be on a pale horse, and white teads will here. after be excluded, * NOTES AND COMMENTS. Oxe of the best and most convincing results of the unselfish activity of women that can be found in the whole wide sane of woman's activity is the work done at Hull House, Chicago. This is an old residence that, as the city has arown, has become surrounded by the densest population, the greater propor tion of whom are foreigners who have not yet adapted themselves to American ways--Italians, Germans, Jews, and all the medley that dwell in the most rowded tenements, In Hull House gome years ago a little band of devoted women set up their residence in order to try to improve the condition of their neighbors, and it has grown to be one of the notable institutions in the Christian world, It nurses poor women while they have to work, it teaches foreigners the literature of their own tongue, it keeps relenticss landlords from committing crucities to poor tenants, it finds homes for deserted children, it enters the law courts in de fence of many an oppressed woman, it most has distinguished lecturers and attentive listeners to them even on abstruse sub that in every ministration to the of the fects 80 prov tical way, | rudimen to stimulating rom most tary wants Poot their this most ambitious intellectual efforts, multifarious There are work is carried on. almost innumerable there are exhibits that would de credit to the wealthiest portion of the | there are sod inl i in there classeg art city: entertal nts fact, mental, or moral, tha in nme Hull manage way to supply led unt of the growth i great SON! and exceedingly intercsth HADRON institution is published Miss Jane Addams, one of it, in the Foru claims that this ‘An effort 1¢3¢ no WOrk toward Soci charity work but that ought philanthropic; outgrowth of what ural desire of all perso: aid to the their { best tendency and ite as much good 1s re al f 0 neighbors, 1 who do Jlent serv) nis of it Imp Berlin Ww ho are [rst il Ca shipped to G Postoflice [eg munication fr ment acknowl mosiels fications the base, 250 feet high, tapering to 18 feet at the top Ihe frame w built of four main | columns 15 inches sq around which A piatiorn the covering will De Surround LE [ria od 88 feet in circumference will the top, furnishing room for 80 people tc stand. Another will be provided at about midway up the tower for those whe altitude electri lookout point 3 fear to ascend to a higher Two elevators propelled by tmvel the vertical path leading to the top They will have a capacity of 253 passengers each, and make the journey in half a minute, The entire be brilliantly illu 3 A three-story 100 feet, suitable for other business purposes, will be erected at the cf the tower. The ! from the observatory will take in | Lake Ontario, the tortuous course of the | Niagara River, and, the | spires of Toronto, pDOWeEr will structure will minated by electricity brick block 668 by offices or i brass View on a clear day, Tug law of Denmark now gives to | Danish subject, man or woman, | the right to a pension at 60 years of age, | except in of convicted criminals, | of those who have fraudulently made over their property to relatives, of those who have brought themselves to distress by extravagance, or who have during the preceeding ten years seceived relief from the parish, or who have been con- victed of meadiecity Tha parish ex. amines each ease and reports the amount of relief to be granted. It may be with held if the beneficiary becomes ineligible every CAtes persion, or if he marries, The State contributes half the expense f the parish in distributing relief pro- 270,000 each year from "31 to "95 and $50,000 in subsequent vears. There is No matter how crowded a harbor may She is better kept and cleaner; her sparring is more graceful, her sails are more neatly furled; her precisely trimmed, and her whole appear- ance is more shipshape and man-of-war- like than that of the vessels of any other But, all the same, American ships are lamentably jew. Tur Chinese who come to this count engage in almost every occupation whic give them the most returns, Of course there are many things which they can do, but which they are not permitted to there being enough white residents to perform the same, Almost every city has at least one Chi- nese laundry, They have proven to be of somo use out Wast in various capucities such a2 cooks, serveats, and laborers The latest occupation seem to have a great tendency toward agricul ture. and large numbers of them are en- gaged in farming in Montans Certainly, what w the pig-tailed embark in? Tue United States is « having the best blooded world, and there is no country should rot always honor, considering the careful given by the majority of our leading stockmen to the breeding of their ani- mals, of somt ¢ slestinl next with the this that attention redited stock in why hold reason Tur French have developed the making of butter to a higher point than any duct other brings a bigger price than We can raise ood butter hers when wae set earnestly to learning how tn do it WaLLis Brooke, a writer in the Lon. don Times, is of the opinion that shall milk imported from Australia in frozen blocks retailed London streets, It any peopl 's just a ourse] vos Wt SOON LA and can be done as How a Trout Swims, Wi wil ago on the east bank of the Beaver ol Rockland, says the American Ancler, and watched the trout of that coiehrated river the high *w an hour or more a few ever i mt passin dam or Ver feet ith which is neariv thre yout a four-inch volume of ng over ul trout ranged In en inche and dus v at Jeast twenty In many owing, hoy more Lo an parent want ol igment, or pg rhaps ex perience then fron of ability the smaller fis As Brie But CLean efor u fen ™ 1 +} v ¥ in Lhe rst TL A Wonderful Railroad nis beyn DOLED NRT me, bu he mystery still remaine 3 p One day an old man who had never been away {rom villager deter at ‘Mother Moe the Rus f wonderin. take a |} which mined to srk COW, is regarded by a sian peasantry the n city in the The down « Xpress met at Bologox half wav between St Petersburg and Moscow and sengers of both trains were allowed hald an hour for preps who alighted fre train the old peasant recognized a friend whom he hae, not seen for a ong tin € They had a delightful over their tea in the without any doing, the As FOIE work and he Up express fine as Supper Among the the othe: ether then, was restaiirnant ang what he bosrded his thought of old peasant The talk was very mbrry {or some time but at last the old man became grave and At what over something “Ah, Ivan, last he broke out a wonderful thing Here sit in the game car, I going to Moscow and you to St. Petersburg Youth's Compan n we Columbus or Vespuecl, Every schoolboy of course, knows that if Columbus had never lived Americas would have been discovered all the same, when Pedro Alvares Cabral, the Porta guese admiral, was carried by the trade winds over to the coast of Brazil in 1500, But in that case it would not have been discovered by Spain and the whole course of the inevitable European settle. ment on the continent must have been modified. When that can be said of any particular evont there can be no question as to its importance. There is a kind of historical eritic, rather conspicuous in these latter days, who finds a peculin satisfaction in pointing out that Colum bus discovered America without know. ing it—which is true. That he believed and died in the belief that he had reached Asia is certain, It is not less sure that Amerigo Vespucci, from whom the continent was named, by a series of flukes, misprints and misunderstanding went to his grave in the same faith, “ie thought that he had found an island of uncertain size to the south of the equa. tor, and that what Columbus had found to the north was the eastern extremity of Asin. But the world which knows that Columbus did, as a matter of fact, do it the service of finding America, and is aware that without bo the voyage from Palos would never have been under. taken, has refused to belittle him because he did not know beforehand what was only found out through bis exertions, — {Saturday Review, ; Wn & wy FOR THE CHILDREN, BE JUST YOURKELY. 0 little bird of golden wing, Go to your wild-wood nest, And to your downy nestlings sing The song that seemeth best Be just yourself birdling true, Whether the song be old or now in the scented field, A glorious sisterhood, Be simple daisies as you yield Your heritage of good, To deck in white the meadows fais Just showing the bright gold you wear O daisies (3, simple blossom by the walk, 80 very plain and small, The flower tht grows on the high stalk, (), envy not at all; 3ut bloom in just yous evealing your own pretty dress loveliness O). learn a lesson, little child, From flowers you daily sec Of singing bird in forest wild Just vour own self to be, And vou will better fill your place By wearing your own pleasant face, New York Observer, FOR CHILDREN, sorts for children FLOWERS Among the balsas, pinks and sweet flowers rent fare nasturtiumes, portulaca, phlox peas. These good, old fashioned groaw easily, ast long in bloom and and best flow As un 1 i flowers please times chilaren parents attention ]#Oa Dave children posses Annus rarer flow think 1O Know in fy the lier » mo manir bry SUL The but never HEY IN A STHANGE ROLE, 3» v a rict § Pe nue mounaaln 03 wiens had bult their In Yana iu two ti under the eaves of an old farmhouse the attaches farmer's household was a whit the tanw they used around the piazza in search of crumbs the ost wi family Among cat, when wrens became at] that to hop them, and several an When the farmer noticed the cat, and it was dangerous to wall "1 within birds Kit keel times came 4 3 aie aduit this he finally learned ¥ fool with the ae catching she that wrens When the baby wrens grew larger one and, being too weak to ran and unable to fly, lay helpless on the grass The cat saw the accident and ran rapidly to seize the bird, but, seeming to remember the lesson taught her, when she reached the helpless little thing she only touched it daintily with her paw and then lay down and watched it Presently there came a black and vellow garden snake toward the fluttering birding The cat dozing and was awakened by the flutter ing of the bird, Instantly she arose and struck at the reptile with her paw. This of them one das fell out of the ne wl. was ciate, but was hungry, so it darted for- ward and attempted to seize the bird Like a flash the cat seized the snake just back of the head and Killed it with one in the afternoon he found the eat crouch- ten feet away was the dead snake. This made it clear that | Brandon THE BODY AND ITS HEALTH, Favs 1x Dir, Perhaps popular med London Hospital, for the growing habit of over-nursing organs which are quite able to stand ordinary work. Health articles are written by doctors, and these, secing people only when they are ill, for get the papers they write for--the “Family Journals" —are rend by men snd women, especially women, who are perfectly well, “Avoid pastry,” writes the doctor, Shinking of the confirmed dyspeptic who left his consulting room half an hour ago, and thereupon a hun dred folks who were never a walt the worse for their tarts avoid pastry con. sclentionsly and take to unending sago pwidings, whose monotony their weary palate loathes. If we were to renounce all that we see or hear condemned as overstraining or misusing ou digestive apparatus, we should probably take but pepsin, with Jathaps a little milk to exercise it on are times field dieting, the most for the green apples of us ones To consideration weak for lack of exercioe, proper reARGnaic is a matter of common make ourselves mentally of the monks of Mount food we eat, but parallels to all that w selves open to the chance of indigestion as much as if we indulged every day in the banquets of a Luculius, Nervous Exuavsriox, Irs AND ov rs ( ¢ should avoid, is to lay our BYMPTOMS SOME ARES Nervous ex of dernpgements of a nature means exhanstion of life, an less complete, It tal or an overstrain of some part or the whole of the nervous a multitude centres of exhaustion which may be more or marks a ie very Nervous exhaustion may be the the : sN =n end, or it may be the At the same timo yoy at and this BEIYOUS 8%8 force, A buman being has, but a certain esac of life, {ease ix dep ndent upon the When ordinary wear and tear of Efe is not replaced by nutritious foods of Dest, tem the necessity, degenerate in one degree or another of waste and "Tis simply a question When ¢ porcine exierns that thew wn be repair “wy TY than sup vetom beging to suf resist may have a a strony eonstito sifler in the Ong of pervous line of among which f° SOBOBERE ow LoOnent hand and co the i xvi in yor restless rate £134 and mental aml apg ine are ae train, fron and weaiher, Boris from menial depres. r aad from ex. k ly to develop in other peri ad Lhe we to the ex riod carries with LIOng an mean mstaners whi in giving uiter o hear his t {f his brain SCION OF CONSCIOUSHOSE OWN self motion, The ex many men wher weghial, and the i men who suffes is nots worthy Those insufficient there must : condition ions ore lispose to it e. 9g. ous temperament, deficient with which is associated ertion, These may be regarded as constitutional causes. An predisposing is defective The general education may have been neglected, or the want of op portunities of as juiring self-confidence may have been experienced Bashfulness is natural to youth, “Mod- esty is the graceful. calm virtue of ma turity ; bashfulness the charm of viva cious youth:” and ualess a young man takes advantage of opportunities of en tering society, he will retain “An air of bashfulpess which is in reality the want of habitual intercourse with the world” { Waverley As long ago as 1550 Ascham wrote that “If a young gentle man be bashful amd soon blush, they call him a babishe and ill brought up thyng.” Deficient social education Bb therefore a cause of bashfulness. Habit also predisposes to it. A mere indispo sition to exert one’s self, if indulged for too long a time, may cventually result in confirmed bashfulness. This indifference usually bat DNeCesSKaAry ness, rag other cause education iD sox i the surroundings. or may have its origin in unalloyed selfishness for many bash ful men are extremely selfish--or may be The man who enjoys the life of the taproom, because there he can ‘She Stoops te Lastly, excessive smoking or excessive drinking kinds, are sometimes the cause of bash. fulness, ——— AA Artificial Granite, Many costly experiments (as at Chica go in October, 1871) having proved that ranite is a poor stone to resist great eat, an artificial granite is now pro. . The natural stone is to disintegration, thon pulverized and mixed with the materials needed to toughen it. After being melded to the various forms dasired bricks, tiles, ete. the latter are carefully dried, then placed in = kiln and heated to 4,000 degrees which process the parti gether, the result being a more durability. jt is o med, than mar ble. It is ulso ot uniform texture, strong. not susceptible to the action of fire heat, may be readily cut and caused