FULL-GROWN SPECIMENS ARE RAISED FROM THE EGGS. Strange Adventures of the Butterfly Collectors in All Parts of the World. The chasing of butterflies has a | fascination which does not always | end with childhood. There are men who have never ceased to feel the en- thusiasm of the hunt, and, combin- ing with it the knowledge and resources of mature years, have gath- AFTER THE HIGHFLYERS. ered butterfly collections which num- ber thousands of specimens and worth | thousands of dollars. There are many of these collectors in New York, but flies. Jrooklyn he has a caterpillar farm While others are paying hundreds of | dollars for rare butterflies, Mr. Doll | is receiving the tiny e much lower prices and rearing them until they burst into gorgeous butterflies. ‘*An egg,’ he said the other day at | the farm, standing amid the shrub- | bery and wire cages under which were | thousands of caterpillars ‘“ doesn’t necessarily mean you are going to get a butterfly. You are lucky if you get one out of ten | egos. And it is mostly the fault of the wretched little ichneumon fly. This parasite, which is the everyday wasp, stings its vietim and leaves | some eggs in its body. The cater- pillar goes on feeding, and after full growth has been attained winds itself in the cocoon exactly as its fellows | do. But instead of a beautiful but- terfly emerging there nothing but | a mean little wasp. “There is another difficulty. The eggs come from all parts of the world and the caterpillars want the food their fathers Very often they won't touch any other and then they die, as half the time you have no idea what plant they feed on, and couldn't get it if you did Jut it o hap- pens that a caterpillar from Mada- gascar, say, will of our native leaves. ges at is ate. ten take kindly to one Sometimes you They eat all right and Then morning you find them dead. The eate pillars didn’t the plant they arrived at a certain stage of de- velopment. Then it them. I have dozens you haven't. begin to grow. some 11 ii a dislike of different a different species of caterpillar is feeding.”’ GOT ANY 'BACCA? “What are the stages of a butter- fiy's growth?’ I asked. “Well, to begin with the egg, it may be sent from the Alps or the Good Hope. I receive them on leaves inclosed in boxes. I keep the eggs in the house until the caterpillar crawls out. Then 1 determine, if 1 can, to what species the little fellow belongs and what he likes to eat, and put him on a plant under one of the cages, where he feeds and grows, meanwhile changing his skin two or three times, When he shows signs of having had enough of the world I put him into a box with two feet of earth in the bottom. He burrows in and is seen no more until he is ready to assume the gay life of the butterfly. This may be a few weeks later, or, as is the case with some species, it may be two or three years. When he does come up he getw a few hours of life as a butterfly, and then a sniff of chloro- form, which makes him ready for the -eollection. “How Iarge is the collection? Well, 1 suppose there are between 60,000 and 70,000 specimens, includ- ing the duplicates. Let me show them to you.”' With this Doll led the way indoors to the butterfly room. It is a room of cases. They begin with the floor and end with the ceiling. Every climate that will produce a flower which the gorgeous creatures eat has paid tribute to this collection. There are butterflies whose wings measure nearly a foot across, There are tiny ones not hall so Jago us a ten-cent ~ piece, There are magnificent Asiatic group In velvets of the most ! brilliant black, crimson, green and | orange. The snow butterflies are here, far from (he mountain tops, where they flit over perpetual snow. There are the Satrus Argentini from Chili, whose wings look like bitg of burnished silver; and the Caligos, whose reverse side bears a striking resembiance to nn owl, and the beauti- ful Thaliurae Rhipheus from Mada- gascar, with wings that glisten with a wonderful mingling of old gold and | red and blue and yellow. “The males and females are side by side. In many cases it is the former that wear the brighter colors A marked example of this is seen in the curious | and gorgeous sack bearers, whose females are crawling, wingless ereat- ures,’’ In the collection are many silk There sre members of | the family gaudy with markings on | the wings which are almost perfect re- | But | not the ones It meanest looking | these fine creatures are and makes their co- silk threads which | The spinners | from China, but] thrive wherever the mulberry can be be woven. silk i came It would be an endless task to de-| the strange denizens of sands of varie- this insect collector There are and family that tenth part Furthermore, are . collectors i tion. thou ties, yet go vast is no has of aone the many 0 whole number varieties Every nd butterflies which they in ex- Unknown, Ven? A WESTERN ADVENTURE. ! 4 1 x : . i rat a loss to classify It is nis | ossibility of capturing insects which § ’ ery rare orare complete strangers 5 hat lends so potent a « harm to scien tific butterfly hunting Once Mr. Doll was engaged in the Rocky Moun- rity flitted past over a precipice. s a A » on a fiower. : work of a while 3 wots butte him and disappeared Far below it alighted ns | the as bl moment for the Then they lowered | depths. Suspended in mid air, with a stream hundreds deftly swept rushing mountain of feet below butterfly into he his It was well worth the perilous the only one of its hie descent, being kind ever found. The Indians took great interest in hunt- | They would ride a long distance | to see what was! going on. “What doin’ ?"’ one of the blank- | When told that they were after man would turn at in- | wheeled around again | variably he “Any tobac?"’ : It is not necessary to go long dis- | attraction for the or night flies, have brought the collectors, and in the woods and swampy ground of Long Island and New Jersey a fly is occasionally | caught which is worth much more | than its weight in gold. But it is al- most impossible to capture them | without a minute knowledge of their time and manner of flying. be THE GREATEST COLLECTOR OF ALL. “Just last night,”’ said Mr. Doll, “I and a couple of friends went to a swamp near Brooklyn to see if we couldn't catch some wood borers. While these are not a particularly rare fly, they bring $1 or more aplece. It was 7:80 when we arrived at the ples and not & buses was 16. be seul ut all of a sudden at ten minutes to 8, they began their low and rapid flight trom bush to bush, _'* ‘I've got one,” somebody shouted. There was another and the another, until we had secured five. But they stopped flying as suddenly as they began, and by 8 o'clock it was as if the insect never existed. This is always the way. They feed for five minutes or so at twilight, and for the remainder of the time keep in hiding places that collectors have rarely discovered. “My methods in catching butter. flies? Well, except for those that fly rapidly a bottle containing a little chloroform is best. You can put it over the victim and brush him in without the handling which a net necessitates, and which is so disastrous to his beauty. The chlo- are attracted by a lantern, the bigger and brighter the better, and you can the trunk of a tree. The manner of habits. These are carefully studied by the successful collector. The late Prof. Hahnel spent five years doing this very thing along the banks of the Amazon. Noticing that the rare and beautiful Morpphos fly above the tree i secured enough supply the collectors ’ of the world.’ rh fais SOMEWIIAT STRAN( i SEASONABLE HINTS AND MAT = | TERS OF MOMENT. Queer Facts and Thrilling Adventuros Which Show that Truth is Stranger | Than Fiction. Dr. Guraerig, of Edinburgh, after | sarrying on ragged schools in that city for a number of years, sent in- vitations to a dinner to boys who had found a blessing in the schools. Two hundred and fifty responded, one gentleman traveling 500 miles to be present. A TAME crow with luminous logs | is owned by Zebedee Smith, of Elks tun, Md. At least, Zebedee claims that peculiarity for the bird, when it is placed in a dark room and some- body whistles ‘Sweet Marie.”” This, he asserts, will cause its legs to twin- | A HUMAN face cloux is on view in the window of a St. Petersburg, Rus- sin, watchmaker, The hands are piv. the and spoken into its ear are repeated by a phonograph through its mouth. It nose, Any messages nee very cl an ; Ive Work by oculist, pear nat in a Lid § 1 60 wore hundred ! SOnNs8, one of the workmen, in wi ing his ham- i 11 2 $ 1 .. mer, carelessly allowed it to slip from It flew ha his hand. if room and struck a felloy the left eve Ti his eye wi nougn 8 ans for of | offers of ¢ Under the factory was responsible conrts & joss of half fused al law the « the injury t of lieved that resulting from an this and although he the man was shamming, and : sind that the case was an attempt at swind- y his mind led to pay he day of the trial ar- open for be com pe the claim. 1 and in ist retained court an eminent the OX ember, jefensd jured n and gave it as hi hat it was as good as the right ey« plaintifl’s loud pr to 8 Opinio Uponthe test of his ing i see with | yroved him ¢ and 1 l court claim. And how do yon simply | C20rs green atu 1 two different glasses the rig being red for the left eve consisting o 1 hen and he wan nt eve i f wold 3 Gry { ordinary rigs was handed zie him a the writing on it. without was at once fitted was unable to dis- hesitation exposed. The sound right with the red gl} the green black surface of the left eye, which he sightless, was the one with which the reading had to be done.—{Sheflield, England, Telegraph. eye A writing on the card, while the pretended Sacrifices to the Sea. To the adventurous globe-trotter who has elimbed the rock-path to the sailor's church of Notre Dame de la- sacrifices and offerings for perils passed and to come must be no old | story, says Lieutenant J. DD. Jerrold in deseribing There is a leons, in the rusting the shrines, These grace’ after danger. these insurantes agains’ to come, circle the world, N people have escaped the influence o such hopes and thanks. Our Indiant were fettered by them, and no cere monious offerings were more come mon than those which went to ap- pease the angry Spirit of the Waters, On the upper tributaries of the Miss. jssippi, the Indians, with occult rites, gave tribute of tobacco from a beet ling cliff to the Great Spirit of the the water with blasts from the cav erns of the jealous gods. Algonquins in the North, Aztecs, sons of Ata- hualpsn and Marco Capae, in the South~-all blew incense out of their pipes, and strewed upon the currents and tide-ways just such offerings of tobacco as, in our more subjective days, we give with lost meaning to the minor gods who rule the man’s hour in our feasts, Superstitious Chinese Sailors. Chinese junks and boats have eyes carved or painted on the bows, which are usually supposed to be a mere fanciful form of ornamentation. But they have a real meaning, as a recent traveler found. In going up one of the rivers from Ningpo, he was startled one day by seeing a boatman seize his broad hat and clap it over ono of the “eyes” of the boat, while other boats on the stream were similarly blinded. Looking about for an explanation, he saw a dead body floating past, and he was told by the boatman that if the boat had been allowed to “see’’ it some disns- ter would surely have happened either to passengers or crow before the voyane anol od. ~{New York Dis I. hich a Rockville, Brahma rooster w James LeepoMm, farmer, has a of a company were performing Whether this i hiel ward from the hatched strolling Lee anythi act, 1s rung while perobats barn. ng to do with this une 1 was 1 in lom's has he ure Hixtox, a farmer gton, Ga., found the other day ¢ % 0 i CHARLES his sheep had got a large maypop lodged in its throat He took his pocketknife out and cut t turs’s the maypop the wound The Hinton had had n but throat removed ad ni iup aver, sh | rec at nary experience is naturally geons in Stony Strat are puzzled over the who has shed Wenver, sets of tecth Years. with a rubber 1 athing soothing in ribs his gum and doses him twenty wife is cutting a new » when he i marks inte funeral. id a Ket A few days surpri father Patona tirceece, alter ar He never which he was bor i He i sins $e jegrin his priestly o fond was i¥ ies he do Bec be. unrise, and to retire promptly His ii i i hearing were in R day of his i n made use of glasses. He was in the active min- istry for ninety-nine y¢ BE (fi Ne never A MARRIAGE resulting in an extra- ordinary state of complicated family relations recently took place in Bir mingham, England. The woman had been married three times before, and each time had taken for her husband Her fourth husband was a widower, and. as he had children by his first wife, who was herself! a widow with children when he married her, the newly mar- ried couple started their matrimonial companionship with a family com- posed of no less than eight previous marriages, Ir is a unique position which a young Englishwoman. a Miss Hamil- ton. of London, will fill in the palace of the Ameer of Cabul. She simply to pose as a lady for the in- mates of his harem. With an un- usaal liberality of spirit for an Asi- | atic potentate, he perceives the advantage to be received from his wives’ intercourse with a refined and intelligent woman, and he is giving it to them. Miss Hamilton is highly accomplished, and a physician as well, but she goes to the ameer's | court in the sole capacity of lady, and is well paid for it. Mus. Erver Harnaway, of Gering | Neb., has a little more presence of mind and a trifle more of muscular activity than most women. The other day she left her two babies in a wagon while she stepped into the post-office. In a moment she heard a shout, and looking down the street, she saw her team running away, with the babies behind riding to al- most certain death, Instead of screaming, she ran into the road, and, as the flying horses dashed past her, she seized the end gate of the wagon, pulled herself up into the box, secured possession of the reins and brought the frightened animals | to a stop. And all the babies did | was to smile. * Dip you ever see people bathe in | blood and drink it by the cupful?”’ asked Ellwood Johnson, of Boston. “1 saw that very thing recently in Rome during a tour of Europe, It wae at a place called the Zorronnle Insitute, and it is quite a fad there, I have heard of people drinking blood, | fresh from slaughtered animals, for | the cure of consumption, all my life, but at this institution people drink | the blood, or bathe in it, for the cure sf gout, rheumatism and the malaria, vhiel is such wu curse in the marshes wound Kome. The Roman doctors | wve great faith in the cnmtive ! cra of blood, and t t e wim | 0 bu baned at. is fi vice such, to me, revolting methods.” Oxe use of the whalebone to which the Esquimaux put it, and one case of which came under my personal ob- must not allow to pass Fugene Mellville, of the United States Navy. When. or 80, or dug up a cache of re indeer meat just when it needed, or in any way have aroused the ire of the he takes a strip of whalebone about the size of those used in corsets, wraps it up into a compact helical mass like a watch spring, having previously sharpened both ends, then ties it together with reindeer sinew, and plasters it with a compound of blood and grease, which was sufficiently strong to hold the sinew string ove ry second or third turn. This. with a lot of lar looking baits of meat and blubber is seattered over the at simi- snow or ground and the hunery wolf devours it with the ] thawed out : others and when warmth 4 stomach, it well known ef of whalebone on advantage Of are more rapid with the most couple of days, “A FEW years Patterson ered over to a cot i everything he hurried In ieted ONY nocked out ins fs by al and the third by su Zanes ns ro id he about #3 why thes suffering ‘and shock. Ido He was pole when the shock came sitting with his around the pole. “*“When the shoek * he it just knockea me backwards the same as if you had hit the head with a down I went, but not very far, because my locked heels caught and numbed least sen- is ( rit é ; was half bad Up on a : and was logs interlocked came, anid me in head first on the lowest cross-bean I bung. My senses were right off, and 1 hadn't the sation, except waiting rather uncon cerned a couple of then | lost my senses,’ odds the worst seconds; stas the sunstroke ture as Dante deseribes, he had done in his life kept parading themselves before him. He could hear the people say that he was dead. gions over ways and means to deter. mine whether there was a spark of life left—all this was going on for several hours until he did really lose all consciousness, After that he was for three weeks in a hospital A USIQUE operation has been sne- cessfully performed by Dr. James Ha. ley, a veterinary surgeon of New Lon- don, Conn. A handsome little cocker spaniel was brought to him a short time ago suffering with curvature of the spine, as the result of a kick ad- ministered by some brute. The little fellow’s back was twisted out of shape and he was practically helpless. His not move. He was always a sufferer, and kept moaning and whining. Dr. to kill him, but he was such g hand- some little fellow the doctor thought to save him. After was straightened and the dog was en- eased in a plaster paris jacket, swung in gtraps and given vroper medicine and food. Finally the plaster was for a moment in a surprised sort of a spring into the air, and, with a loud bark started off on a dead run ina He kept it up for about ten minutes, and seemed anxious to show every one he was all right. He is just as good a dog now us he ever was, climbs stairs without trouble, and gets about with just as wich ease as any of his play fellows, The doctor is quite proud of his fob and the owner of the dog is, of wnree, greatly pleased, to say noth ing of the dog ldmsell.—{New Yor Dispateh, so Sr ——————— NOTES AND COMAJAENTS. Tue first Sabbath school was instle { taited in 1787. There are now in the | United States 108,939 Babbath | sehools, with 8,649,000 scholars. The | world has 20.078 596 Sabbath school i scholars. | Tur statistics show that the city thaving t rate in the {world is Rheims 28.62 he greatest death France, the propor. being per 1 GO in each Dublin follows with 27.00 and tion | year, i New York with 26.27. rf i pute the worth of the gentler sex in Oceasiox ALLY it is possible to com- | hurd cash. “Two Little Girls in Blue” | represent at least $12 000, i {what the pretty i New Rochelle (zlenroy i yo built which 1s residence at Mr. W. H. fa. yuthor of i new cost home profit MoUs few beer { BON. } ns NUupreme time ago Roman Catholic died in bile and bequeathed $2 000 Lo i for the mas for “8% JOT 118 SOU. 1 he YOId Decallse 150 structures destroyed { fire represent 8 money value i (HN), capable of produ are OH (KK IRN Ww URL EIREE ERTS FT i $2 a 2 ANN IKK) earning | $120 a year is0 ar MINS little over ye florins annual The situ- ation of small property-holders is noi 1.690 000 whose wages exceed that amount. { much better. During the last thir teen years 46.989 farms, valued at 205 077.000 florins, ha the ! which sum wen ve been sold by nsiderable part of to banks and money courts a8 {| lending societies, Exrenon Wiiniam of Germany has {| shown his versatility in many ways, i and it was not until a few weeks ago | that he made his debut as a matri- { monial agent. The debut was suc- cessful. Recently a young man and | two women from Berlin went to Pots- | dam to view the Park of sSan-Souci, the favorite one of Frederick the | Great. They lost their way, how- | ever, and were obliged to accept the assistance of a soldier who was fa- | miliar with the grounds. He showed them everything of interest, and fi- nally bade them farewell at the sta- | tion. But one of the young women . had taken a fancy to the private, and began to long to see him again. After days of indecision she wrote to the Emperor, asking him to find out the name of the soldier who had been so kind to her. His Majesty began the investigation at once, soon learned the name of the young man, and granted him a leave of absence to spend in Berlin. The young woman is well-to-do and the volite guide is to become her husband in a few weeks, M. Berrueror, at a banquet of chemists held in Paris recently, en- tertained the guests with a prophetic picture in the twentieth century. “Before the coming century is far advanced, chemistry will have solved the problem of existence so as to render the cultivation of tire soil un- necessary,” he said. ‘Already man. ual labor has been, and is every day still further being, replaced by steam, which is nothing more than chemical combustion. To secure this chemical combustion we have now to dig coal from the bowels of the earth, and soon we shall have exhausted the sup- ply. But before that exhaustion comes upon us, we shall have found means to tap the solar heat, and utilize the latent heat in the centre of the earth. There woe have thermo-electrig and chemical ene lying at ha ready to be used. ere are no m chanical difficulties in the way tapping these sources of ene yond the capacity of human nity ; and the achievements of ¢ cers show that when the arses means will be found Laas she sun or the internal