- ACCIDENTS AND INCIDENTS EVERYDAY LIFE, OF Quoer Facts and Thrilling Advens tures Which Show That Truth Is Stranger Than Fiction, Tur little port of Taltal, Chile, is to the fore with a curiosity which is ahead of all others. This is a three-weeks-old baby, whose right hand bears the imprint of a human face. The face occupies nearly the wholepalm, and is as clearly outlined as if drawn on porcelain. It is the countenance of a little child about three years old lying asleep, with the eyelashes drawn in fine dark lines on the full cheeks. The mouth seems to be slightly parted and the lips are delicately tinted. The baby whose palm contains | this singular portraiture is the child of Garcia Meron, and Mrs, Meron declares | that the face in the infant's palm is that | of a little girl she lost about three months before the baby's birth. Relatives and intimate friends profess to be able to see the strong resemblance to the dead child. When the baby was first put in its | mother’s arms she looked at 9 hands, aad, with a loud ery, fainted away, but | on coming to herself exhibited the little crature's hands to the attendants, who | saw at once the strange likeness to the | dead ana gone sister, Mrs. Meron was | at first much frightened over the singular circumstance, but was at last convinced that this strange portrait was sent to comfort her. Physicians say, however, | that the mother’s caress of the dead child impressed the unborn infant, who merely | repeated her mental pictures of the little | girl as she last beheld it. The image on | the palm was much clearer the first few | days of the baby's life than now, and is thought to be gradually fading away. ‘The family are very sensitive on the sub- | ject, and have refused to show the child | except to relatives and most intimate friends. ‘“Ixpiax Jonux,” an aged Columbia | River Indian, was recently committed to the county poor farm near Portland, Ore. | According to the testimony of pioneers he is the oldest Indian in the Northwest, his age being placed at mote than 125 years. Deputy District Attormey Hall, who has been a resident of Portland | thirty-five years, says that when he first knew “Indian John,” he was reputed to be at least 100. He was always a friend of the white men. It is related that when Dr. Whitman was murdered at Walla Walla, and the Indians talked of | attacking Portland, John was one of those who left The Dalles, went to the city, and warned the settlers to be pre. | pared for a raid. John, whose mind is still clear, relates the following story “Many years before I became Chief of | the Columbia River Indians, my tribe | was saved from destruction in a remark- | able manner. One day the Klickitats came down into their lands and camped | in a bottom under a vast, overhanging | cliff near the Sandy bridge. My tribe were few in number, but brave. They would not fly and could not fight their enemics, who were very numerous. So during the night they appealed to the Great Spirit to destroy their enemies, and in answer to their prayers he felled the rock, and the Klickitats were buried beneath it. Not a man escaped.” A story comes from San Francisco, to the effect that the British ship Drum craig on a recent voyage from that city around the Horn, saw a vessel frozen up in an iceberg. The weather was heavy and foggy, and the Drunicraig was mak- ing fair headway, when a slight accident | compelled her to lie to. Suddenly out | of the fog in front loomed up a huge iceberg. Had it not been for the ac cident the Drumcraig would have run right on to the berg. As the damage on the ship was being repaired the Iceberg veered around and there was disclosed a sight that struck terror into every heart, On the berg, high above the water mark, was a wooden bark of about 2000 tons. | The we completely surrounded her hull | up as high as her decks, and her masts and rigging were hung with icicles From her build it was evident that the bark had been launched years ago. With his glasses the captain made out two bodies in the ship's shrouds. The crew would have refused to make any inves. tigation even had not the rough sea pre- vented. So the derelict, frozen fast in the iceberg, is probably sailing in| southern polar seas A curious specimen of the collapsed | boom towns that are to be found in parts of the West is Sullivan, some ten miles from Denver, Col. It was started bythe | promoters of the scheme of the Denver Water Company to dam the subterranean flow of Cherry creek and pump it into | an enormous reservoir for the use of the people of Denver. The work was an engineering failure, and a financial one, as many Eastern bondholders found out. While the boom lasted thousands of men were employed, buildings sprang up like mushrooms, prices of corner lots soared, and there was even a bitter post office fight. A year and a half ago operations stopped, there was an exodus of specula- tors, tradesmen and laborers, the post office was shut up, and Sullivan's great- ness was a thing of the past. Among the acres of building materials, sand. stone, trusses, pipes, boiler stacks and plates, ete., abandoned when the crash came, the coyote sometimes picks his way now, and he is the only guest at the mammoth hotel that was once the sight of the place. : Aut. tue doctors in Bucks County, Penn,, are puzzled over the case of little five-year-old Justis Storck, whose eyes seem a law to themsel'n's, One day the boy is crossed-eyed, while the next his Syes are perfectly straight, and this cu- ous alternation hss been going on for years. The nonplused doctors eall it a case of intermittent strabismus probably the only one on record —and, despairing of caring it, will soon give the su of the Medico -Chirurgical hospital in Philadelphia an opportunity to study the matter, as the of the afflicted hoy has decided to send him to that in- stitution for treatment. One day the little fellow's right eye squints, on the me ae han the oft Brnight comes affected, and so on the year round. There is another peculiar feature of the ease. When the right eye looks squint the child can bring it into the cotrect the good optic, but as soon as the hand is re Loved the affected orb again seeks the inner corner of the eye. Pa rers cultivate what is called the ‘innocence of the eye,” trying io sce nature simply as forms and colors, ns a child sees it, without reference to what reason and experience may teach them, No two of them sec exactly the same way. One painter in New York says that he is astonished to find how gray everything is—even sky and foliage. Another finds the streets full of reds and urples. A younger artist says: ‘When began to paint, everything seemed to me dark. The longer I look at nature the more light I find in it. My great trouble now is to get my pictures as light as nature scems to my eye. [I find more yellow in the landscape than I used to. But, after all, these things are sub- 5 an Apache Indian that is pzaculiar,’ Judge Porter of Arizona. thirty for murder. with one exception, the Indian would occurrence. In the exception I have mentioned the Apache afterward told me that he wanted to tell the truth, but Axprew Fammcmino of Fallarsburg, Mich., owned a tame dove that was a favorite pet of his wife's until a child was born to them, Mrs. Fairchild and appeared to be very jealous of the baby, work left the baby alone in the room for some time, until she was attracted by its crying. Ruoning into the room she eves, one of which was so badly injured that the sight is entirely ruined. A rEw weeks ago, an English lady was obliged to pay four pounds (twenty dollars) as damages for having given a good “character” to a servant whom she knew to be unfaithful, Her written recommendation of the servant enabled the latter to get a place which she could not have in] without ihe recom mendation, and in which she proved un- employed her; and it was on the proof of these facts that the damages were ad- judged by the court. Tee American hen is a busy and use. ful fowl. There are 125,000,000 of them, and they lav every year 6,000,000. 000) In Waterloo there is which is an expert in catching rats, teases them a while them. The egEs. It and then releases owner of this remarkable the second time within reach of its claws, A report comes from a Peansylvania town of a fastidious hen that refused to Master, Ax Illinois man recently tried to dug a well and found a river. That is, he bored a well on his farm to a depth of 77 feet, when suddenly the entire bottom feil out, carrying all but about five feet of the walls witn it, At the bottom of the deep hole thus formed could be seen a swift-rushing stream. All efforts to rushing current carrying away everything thrown into it, Ose of the most remarkable sights witnessed on the face of the globe is afforded by the subterranean lakes of Sinoia, in Zambesia, in Central Africa, Lionel Decle, the French explorer, has returned from there and reports that the water is of the deepest indigo dye, and that the azure grotto of Capri can in nowise compare with the beautiful color of these wonderful lakes, A Neb. ranuen living near Grand sland, caught one of his legs in the rear wheel, He saved himself from serious injury by grasping the spokes of the wheel #0 as to keep it from revolving, and sliding wire fence, Passgxcrns on a train over the Pis. the Bangor Aroostook Railroad in Maine, one day recently saw an exciting race between a deer and the train. The animal was a buek, and ran alongside the train for a mile or more in a woods road above Finally, when the train crossed the road, the deer disappeared into the woods, A vouse man in Wrentham, Mass, his been finding amusement in mailing postage stamps and sending greetings He isdelighted ceived acknowledgements from the czar of Russia, the king of Greece and a fow others, Tie 20,000,000 men of the United States are wearing an average of twenty buttons each, making 400,000,000 buttons for all, estimated to weigh 3,000,000 pounds, Treasures of Anclent History. The contents of that wonderful treas- ury of antique records discovered in 1887 by a nt woman near the ruins of the ancient Arsinoc of Upper Egypt have now been laid before the bll6 In Maj. Conder's work on the “Tel Amarna Tablets,” comprising a translation of the text, with introduction and notes, says the London 7ablet. Inscribed on clay tablets, su uently baked into brick, and win n a be ihe ancient language of Syria, in cuneiform charac- ters, we have here nothing less than a series of dispatches sent to the ian proiciad of ttary Kings af Camas, ploring assistance st various in- vasions, The most g are the letter from the king of Jerusalem and other chiefs of vn Palastine, for in them we can trace the dismay and alarm created by the advance of Joshua and the Hebrews, called “Abirl,” and “People of the Desert,” A vei} wriking ge occurs in one of the dis gatches fugitiva monarch. shnerentle ! after the battle of Ajalon, in which, seeking as it were to apologize {or his defeat, he speaks of the leaders of the enemy af “‘sorcerers,” doubtless in alla- sion to the miracles of Joshua, The date of the Exodus is also shifted back to that assumed by earlier biblical ex- yonents, while the contrary theory of Jr. Brugsch, too hastily accepted as conclusively established, is overthrown. AROUND THE HOUSE. will keep mice away. To purify a room of unpleasant odors, burn vinegar, rosin or sugar, Just before retiring at night pour into { your clogged pipe just enough liquid soda lye to fill the “ trap,” or bent part of the pipe. Be sure that no water runs into it until next morning. During the night the lye will convert all the offal into soft soap, and the first current of water in the morning will wash it away and clear the pipe clean as new, CreaniNeG rag CELLAR. —In no part of { the house is it so important that the { cleaning be thoroughly done as in the cellar, writes Maria Parloa in the April Ladies Home Journal, Not a corner i should be slighted, Begin with the fur. i nace, Have the registers closed in every room. Remove all the cinders and ashes and clean out all the flues and Ppipes. Many housckeepers have the | pipes removed, but the smoke-pipe is | really the only one that it is necessary to i take down. This pipe is liable to rust, because of the moisture it gathers from the chimney: nevertheless, if there no way of heating and drying the house during a cold, damp period in summer except by building a fire in the furnace, it would be cheaper to renew this smoke pipe every few years than run the risk of having the family made ill from re. ceiving a chill. While the men are in the house to clean the furnace it would be economy to have them clean the flues | the range and also the chimneys. Open | the cellar windows, to bring everything into the light. Have the coal bins cleaned. Brush everything free frow dust. Now sweep the ceiling and walls as well as the floor. Brush the walls once more. Wash the windows and any closets, shelves or tables there may be in the cellar. Now have walls white.washed., Before the various ar ticles stored in the cellar are put back in place, brush them again i floor once more be i in the Sweep the . A Learned Irishwoman. Actonian Prize of one hundrod guineas has been awarded to Miss Agnes M. Clerke by the managers of the London Royal Institution, for her works on as tronomy, as illustrative of the ‘wisdom and beneficence of the Almighty.” Un like most prizes, the Actonian is awarded 7. when she was informed that at the preceding afternoon, it had been con ferred upon her. Oddly enough, Sir James Crichton Broome, M. D., who has said and written so much on the inferior brain-powe. of the sex, presided on this really interesting occasion, It is a triumph for all women, and especially the Irish women and Catholics: Mins Agnes Clerke is of purely Irish descent, was born near Skibbereen, and is a devout member of the Catholic Church. Her father, though Irish, held a legal ap- | pointment in Eoglapd, asd for this reason his family have for many years made their home don. Miss Agnes Clerke, ever, has been a great traveler, « assed some years of her early girlhood in Italy. Later, after she bad made as tronomy her special study, she made a | voyage to Cape Town, on the invitation of the head of the Observatory there { and yet more recently she has been to the extreme North asd to Russia, in order to enlarge her experience Save | for these occasional absences, Miss Agnes Clerke lives with her mother and sister in a charming house in Radcliffe square, and is of too home-loving a disposition to thoroughly enjoy her travels, She has had several most pressing | offers of professorships, lectureships, and { the like, in American observatories, but has never felt the least inclination to “emancipate” herself. She is, indeed, { the most modest and retiring woman in {the world, and it was long before her | friends connected her with any achieve. i ment more intellectual than music, in | which she and her sister are both exeeed- tingly accomplished. Miss Agnes Clerke | was chosen by the Women's Committee { of the Chicago Exhibition to select the scientific books written by women--a wit for which she was admirably fitted oth by her scientific and literary knowl- edge and her extremely just and gentle character, Miss Clerke has the fluent pen, characteristic of her nation, and her “History of Astronomy” can be read with pleasure by persons quite ignorant of the subject. i sor The “Barometer Well,” In the town of Great Valley, in Catta. raugus County, New York, there is an interesting curiosity locally known as the isting Well.” It is located on the Wesley Flint farm, and was dug about fifty years ago. When the well had been sunk to a depth of about forty feet with. out striking the coveted vein of water old man Flint and everbody else declared the venture a flat failure. A few weeks or months later some member of the Flint family noticed that occasionally there would be a strong current of air rushing int) the well for some hours in succes. sion, and that it would again be belched forth for a corresponding of time, By way of safer she well was cov. ered with a large rock. This rock had a drill hole through it about an inch in diameter, and through this opening the alr would ebb and flow unceasingly. Finally & whistle was fitted to the open- ing and the whole contrivance has ever since been relied upon as an securate neighborhood barometer, In settled weather the whistle is silent, An ag proaching storm is heralded by the whist ns tha air rushes out to mingle with the atmosphere, As clear weather approach. os the air is wail o wb RiFaman “ma FOI THF LADIES. RAINBOW DRESS, A rocent order in this city was for a winbow dress which was exceedingly pretty. The ground was of soft gray bards of ribbon, following the colors of the rainbow. The very full puffed dlgeves were also ribbon trimmed, and a arge gray fan was shaded in the same The beauty of this dress was that The waist had a trimming of This rain-drop effect was very good in- deed, the whole outfit, A FEMALE MUSICAL DOCTOR. cess of Wales, who holds the title in a Doctor Patterson is a native of County She is a voung and handsome woman of brilliant Her career has been an tionally promising one. When but four. teen years of age, Miss Patterson wus proficient in the Italian, Latin, French and Greek languages. She had previ. of great musical ability, and when fifteen music, from which she lué time with high honors, Subsequently she became the conductor and musical director of the Dublin Doctor Patterson has written many sonys and cantatas of great merit and has i medals in ognition She was graduated from universit as bachelor bachelor of arts in 183% ated of music Irish academy in 1880 i pretty poetry union wen the recipient of silver of her ability, the Royal Irish of music and and was gradu. the Royal she has written and many able Chicago Herald, red v doctor ns at some music very al © MBA YS, HANDSOME The stout a handsome appearance, will wear, sug rests the New York World, mtterns or plain weave, hair wall of color, draperies nd trimmings, if at all, put on in vertical if she wants to look trim Tight sleeves and gloves give the arms the out lines of a ham nod the hands the appear ance of abbreviated head-cheeses, A bulky woman should never wear white, not even at night, and in her will I¥ STOUT. woman who wants to make cither seed stripes in tones slraigat gra ince, Dassementerie, high shoulders, curled feathers or 8 low style of hair dressing. Lot her wear her hair on the very tip top of her head, to increase her altitude; let her wear a high comb or hair orns ment, quills ian her bonnet, high but broad heels, and a trained skirt same obiect; let her avoid jewels, per. fumes, cosmetics, and bright colors to Sue has no business with decollets bodices, ve clothes becomes great people. ¥ Is THE The hoop-skirts of our grandmothers were not only unsightly objects to be hold, but owing to their great weight they were often injurious as an article of dress vogue they were made of heavy steel CRINOLINE INJURIOUS upon the waist But subsequently they were improved so that their weight was But even at their best sround the waist. They cannot be sup- is required around the This led to bands, which became woman was considered the ideal of per fection is concerned. The crinoline material is heavy and stiff, and it sets Be Wear which can it a burden for one to travel through our streets on windy days. chance of eatching cold is much greater with the crinoline than with any other fashion that has been in vogue for many years. — Yankee Blade. DBUSTSESS JIAIRTS FOR GIRLS, accurately and knowing to a cent just what she does with her money, whether she has ten cents or $10 to expend on An allow- that every sum spent should be set down with unfailing regularity. In black and white one notes how much more quickly it goes and ust what foolish little nothings have lured it from our pockets. Without setting down each item, it is ten chances to one that you will con- clude you must have lost some money when you can not see how that #10 bill went when you only bought such a few things. The neat little figures are a nuine restraint, besides instilling a abit and system that will be of great value if ever fortune smiles and a great estate comes to your hands, and still greatas if economy is a necessity and the ollar has to be forced into doing duty for two. Unless the accounts are kept accu- rately, and the cash made to balance every evening, you had better not at. Bmp any book-keeping at all, for slip. phy Be 4 are worse than none, and only confuse everyth rather than help matters. If anything is worth doing at all it is worth doing well, and there is nothing so productive of future good as the t of looking carefully out for ‘he pennies when school days are the only and the allowance of opin a clear womanhood ih & Siar Knowledge of where hier money goos and what she has to show for it, —| Baltimore Herald, WOMEN AS ARCHITECTS On the interesting subject of female architects the Real Estate Record says: is the latest from New York, and a writer there claims that there are few occupations to-day that promise more favorable resul:s to the those of the architect and builder As the woman manages the household, it seems only natural that she should seck ling; indeed, it is evident that this is her legitimate province, A few women { of architecture and others are ting. This is as it should be, and it is not too much to hope that before long we shall see better arranged and more { comfortable houses than those in which many of us are now forced to live, There are thousands of points in build- | ing that the man, who has no practical i realization of the inconvenience of cer { tain things, never | as for the amount of fruit and provisions | philosophers, At rational, sensible homes, {and success her efforts. When to | theoretical knowledge she adds the practical information gained only by experience, let us hope that we will find houses where comfort is not sacrificed to a bit of architectural effect, where con- venience of more importance than | of comfortable, to is arranged that one-eighth to seven-eighths of a width of carpet in every room need not go to waste on account of a fault in adjusting the dimensions of the apart meant. Every fraction in the measure of 4 room means just much added ex. pense in carpeting, and every angle and curve means just so much slashing and cutting, all of which renders the carpet useless for any other than the room to h it fitted. This {the gieatest importance to those who {rent houses, and frequent movement | means an outlay for floor covering that is a serions drain upon moderate purses, A great deal of room in the moderate house is wasted angles and corners that might ized as « and cupboards, This, too, will be the mis sion the woman architect to reform, to a certain extent at and to the house. wife some of the conveniences of which no maa can fully realize the need 80 i whic is in be util insets of jeast, give FASHION XNOTEs, New silks are not very characteristic this season, Rough materials for day gowns are in considerable variety, | The shapes of carriage parasols are changed to a rounder dimension. Silk and other blouses are more popu- lar than ever, and also more fanciful, Tricolored ing ends, are trimming. In brocades, May lilies arranged in bunches, flutings, palms and thisties are successful. bows, with sharp upstand among stylish forms of hat { white crepon, with insertions of baby ribbon. Some new dresses of camel's hair are trimmed with black satin ribbon A novelty spotted colored tulle, draped over silk of the same color, A French conceit in gauze is an un- dulated azure silk tissue, sprinkled with fine, irregular spots. green woolly-looking ruffies of The use of lace for trimming will con. | stantly increase from this time on throughout the summer The capes of velvet with narrow fur bordering are quite a feature of the present season's fashions, | A dainty evening wrap is of ivory molleton cloth, with warmly quilted lining of pale saimon-pink Very old coins are set in rims of gold {and worn as pins, Whoever has an an. tique silver piece may make this ase of {it Rival factions in Paris are contending { as millinery trimming, with odds for the flowers, Vivid scarlet blouses are shown which | are to be worn with black beaded zouaves, | haviny Jace epaulettes and bows on the | should es, A few white satin parasols are shown from the steeple. Round yokes of galloon, with wide, round corsets, also of galloon, are worn | with dresses of cashmere and other thia { woolen materials, one more to the front. They are of shot and brocade ribbon, and tie beneath the chin in the old fashion, Ostrich boas will certainly be worn both curled, or, as the French call them, rase-~that is, close shaved and uncurled, These taper toward the points, The new corduroy silks come in Por. sian and Algerian stripes and in pretty tricolors—-green, gold and English rose and various other bright combinations, The fashionable purple known as eminence is by no means a universally becoming color, and women who have not really good complexions should shun it, “Cre lisse” is one of the materials which bid fair to become favorite this ape, RE ape Meate tits b t by yard already pleated. An exceed smart little ish hat of black fons | a wide ke fashion, trols’ tails tied together with aguives) of wieux rose velvet trim the downgeras, Now, however, it is the ma- terial of which the kmars girl's dinner dress is made. Frequently one sees ig trimmed with green, Long stemmed flowers in high quiver- ing clusters, and in contrast, many flat wreaths of brier roses, hawthorn, gers | plums, ete.,w=are on new French hats, | | Grasses, thorny stems and pussy-willow | sprays are arranged in novel ways, A pretty way to utilize the skirts of {Ince dresses of which one has become jtired is to have them made over into {little Russian tea jackets, with a lace skirt portion about half a yard deep | gathered and added to the lower edge | of the waist which belonged to the dress when it was new, Broad sashes, also ribbons of all widths, are to be worn as much as ever, Many rows of velvet ribbon are used for trimming dresses, {ibbon trims in the same way. A new recently ex. hibited showed rows upon rows of ribbon, or of bias velvet three inches in | width, which came up to within a quar | ter of a yard of the waist, Lown FIFTY THOUSAND A DAY. When and How the Crisp Bank of England Notes Are Made, i In a picturesque Hampshire nook in {the valley of the River Test stands a busy mill, from which is produced that paper whose crispness is music to the human ear all world Since 1719 this Leverstoke mill has been busy in the manufacture of the Bank of Eng land note paper, and at the present time ! about 50,000 of the coveted crisp pieces of paper are made there daily, To a careless observer there | appear to be much difference Bask of England note and one of those which were he aver, does not Aa of the present day i , first issued nleenth Detween toward the end of the but when into found that the present note is, gards the quality of the paper and the excellence of the engraved writing, much more remarkable production. The fact is, the Bank of England and forgers of false notes have been ruoning a moe--the bank to turn out a note which defies the power of the forger to imitate it, and those pi keen-witted gentry the bank The no in use are most elabor. ately maosufactured bits of paper. The paper itself is remarkable in many ways; none other has that peculiar feel of crisp ness and toughness, while the eve (when it has satisfied may dwell with admiration on the paper's re markable whiteness thinness and transparency are guards against two onoce popular modes of forgery: The washiog ; out of the printing by means of turpen tine, and erasure with the The wire mark, or water mark, is an- other precaution against counterfeiting, and is produced in the paper while it is in a state of pulp. In the old manafa« ture of bank notes this water mark was caused by an immense number of wires (over 2,000) stitched and sewn together; now it is engraved in a steel-faced die, which is afterward hardened and is then used as a punch to stamp the pattern cut of plates of sheet brass, The shading of the letters of this water mark enormously | increases the difficulty of imitation. The paper is made entirely from pieces of new linen and cotton, and the tough | ness of it can be roughly guessed from the fact that a single bank note will, when unsized, support a weight of thirty six pounds, while when sized you may lift fifty-six pounds with it, Few people would imagine Bank of England note was not | same thickness all through. ti { though. The paper is thicker in the le hand corner, to enable it to take a better iand sharper impression of the vignette there, and §t is also considerably | thicker in the dark shadows of the centre letters, and under the figures at the ends. Counterfeit notes are invariably of only one thickness throughout | The printing is done from clectrotypes, the figure of Britannia being the design {of Maclise, the late Roval Academician. Even the printing ink is of special make, and is manufactured at the bask. Comparing a genuine with a forged note one observes that the print on the latter | is generally bluish or brown. On the real note it is a velvety black The chief ingredients used in making (the ink are linseed oil and the charred husks and some other portions of Rhe- { nish grapes. | The notes are printed at the rate of 3.000 an bour at Napier's steam press, and the bank issues 9,000,000 of them a | year, representing about £300,000, 000 in hard cash. [London Answers, BOY C05) be BR Te tury, looked it will 5 imble-fingered and to keep even with Cs DOW itself with the amount is knife Odd Freaks of Collectors, A Jersey City man devotes himsel! to the collection of doorknobs, old and new, sod claims a museum numbering over | 3,00) samples, Nebraska boaste proudly of a col lector who gathers Jocks of the hair shaved from the heads of noted erim- inals when they enter the penitentiary, labeling and indexing them with great care, Philadelphia is the abiding place of a collector of cast-off horseshoes, who will risk his neck to secure a prize in the street, and whose house is decorated with them in all sizes, shapes and degrees of dilapidation, Boston can produce a collector whose specialty is old bricks, each having been secured from some historical local edi- fice while it was being demolished, and being tag with a resume of tory of the building from which it wes obtained. A New Orleans iz a collector of Aafapios, is believed to have a granulated product of every tation in the State, some being plantation 3s 3 interest,