TBffy gj"i ' lS- "V-1 "Hrf ' w THE PITTSBTJEa DISPATCH, " SUNDAY, MAT- 5, 1889." 10 lieve that you really lone for death at all." "To that I can only answer that you de ceive yourself." , "No, it a you who deceive yourself. What you Ions for is not death, but change, a change of condition. No truer words were erer spoken than those ui Tennyson's: Whatever crazy sorrow saith. No life that breathes with human breath Hath erer truly longed for death. "What,you crave under the name of death is forgettulness. Yon yourself compressed the whole truth into a sentence when you said, 'To live is to remember.' Tour infer ence was that to die is to forget. It is mem ory "which agonizes you. It is the past which lives in memory that handicaps you, that Jiangs like a millstone around your xeck, and goads you to despair. If you could forget, if you could obliterate the past from your consciousness, you would cease to suner. as not mat truer "True enoueb, bnt without significance. A mere quibble. There is no forgetfulness except in eath no Lethe save the" 8tyx." "That may or may not be so. How do you know, ior instance, that there is forget fulness in death? You ignore the possi bility of a future lite, the dread of some thing after death, the undiscovered country. Suppose bttyond the grave you preserve vour identity, that B to Xf yur memory, In what resp'tct will you have gained by the change?" "I must take my risks. This much I do know, there is no forgetfulness in life. There may be in death. I will take my chances. Any change must be a change for "the better. I am in hell now, if you must know it I "will lake my risks." "You say there is no forgetfulness in life. But suppose there -were? Suppose it were possible for vou to obtain total and perma nent forgetfulness without dying, without takinar those risks, without taking any risk at all? Suppose somebody should come to vou and say, Seel I have it in my power to bestow upon you total and permanent ob liviousness, so that the entire past, with all its events and circumstances, shall be per fectly erased from your mind; so that you shall not even recall your name, nor your language; btit with unimpaired bodily health and mental faculties shall begin life afresh, like the new-born baby, speechless, innocent, regenerated; another person, and yet the same: soppose some one should come to you and offer that?" "It is 2 idle supposition. The age of miracles has passed." "An idle .supposition? You deem it such? let us see. Let us consider. To begin (jrith, answer me this. Have you never fceard or read, in newspaper, medical re port or novel, of a case where, through an accident, a human being has had happen to 2him exact! v the. experience which I have Just described? A case where a lesion of the cerebral tissues, caused perhaps by dis ease, or perhaps by a concussion of the brain or a fracture of the skull, has resulted in the total annihilation of memory, with out injury to the other intellectual facul ties, so that the patient, uponrecovering health and consciousness, could remember absolutely nothing of the past neither his his name, nor his nationality, nor the face of his father or mother, nor even how to speak, walk, eat, but was literally born anew, and had to begin life over again from the start? Surely everybody who has ears has heard, everybody who can read has read, of cases of that nature." "Oh, yes, I have read of such cases. Cer iainly.'' "Very well Ton have read of such cases. Sol Now, then, suppose that an accident of that sort happened to you; every thing you can hope for from death would be accomplished, and yet you would live. "What better could you desire?" "Ah, but it is not within my power to cause such an accident. It is within my Dower to die." "Not within your power to cause such an accident? Not within your power, I grant But will you say that it is not within hu man power, not within any man's power? Imagine whatever thing you like, -which can happen by accident; will you tell me of any conclusive reason why that thing should not be caused by design? "Why man, inves tigating the causes ot the thing, enlightened by his fccie:: ?nd employing nis skill, should sot be able at will to bring that thing to pass? Take this very case which ve have been considering: the total obliter ation of a human being's memory oi the past A blow upon the head, the result of an accident, can canse it; why not a blow upon the head, the result of man's deliber ate purpose? Insanity, smallpox, consump tion, deafness, blindness, paralysis each of these it is within human power to inflict Why not forgetfulness?" "I have never heard of its being done. I once read a novel in which something of the kind was related 'Dr. Heidenhoffs Pro cess' but even in that novel the author had not the audacity to pretend that his Story was possible. It turned out to be a dream. But then that was quite a different thing. It was the obliteration, not of the whole memory, but simply of the memory of one particular fact or train of facts. The memory in respect of other facts remained Intact" "Ah, well, that of course it is not within human power to accomplish. Not as yet. I cannot, it is true, cause yon to forget any pne triven fact while leaving your memory unaffected regarding other facts. But the annihilation of the whole memory is a very different matter. You say you have never .heard of its being done voluntarily. "What does that sienily? Because I have never heard of a thing's being done, therefore it cannot be done? No, indeed; nen sequitur. Twenty years ago I had never heard of two men five miles apart being able to talk to 'each other viva vooe. Yet to-day the tele phone is an established institution. Now here is the long and short of the matter: That same obliviousness which, as the phy sicians' case books bear abundant testi mony, nature frequently produces through the- medium of disease or violence, 1 I who speak to yon I can produce by means of a surgical operation." "It seems incredible," said she. "Howsver it may seem, it is a fact "What a stone striking vou upon the head may ac complish, J can accomplish with my instru ments. J. can cause a depression of one of the bones of your skull at a certain point, so that when you recover from the effects of the anaesthetic which I administer, you are returned to the mental condition of infancy. Tou remember nothing, yon know nothing. The past is utterly abolished. The future is before you." "If what you say is true, you possess a, terrible power. Are surgeons generally able to do this?" t "I believe I may be mistaken, but I be lieve that I am -the only man alive who knows how to do it I discovered the secret more than 30 years ago. I have never ex plained my method to anyone else." "Why not?" "You yourself have named the reason. It is a dangerous power. I have thought it prudent not to put it into the hands of the faculty at large. For aught I know, how ever, other men may have discovered it in dependently." "You say you can do this. Have you ever done it?" "I have performed the operation with un varying success upon 20 dogs, 3 horses, 6 monkeys. Each animal was upward of C years old, intelligentand thoroughly trained. After the operation each animal was a help less cub had even forgotten how to eat had to learn all the lessons of its life anew." She smiled. "Animals indeedl It is a descent from the sublime to the grotesque. Never upon a human being!" "I did not say that Yes, once upon a human being." "Yes? And with what result?" "With the best possible result The man was a discharged convict, an Austrian. He was 'a bad fellow through and through, brutal, thievish, untruthful. Like all of us, he had inherited from his ancestors a million potentialities for good and eviL .But his environment had been such as to develop those that were for evil, and to leave latent those that were for good. He was 32 years old and in excellent health. I operated upon him. He came out of the ether as ignorant and as helpless as a babe in arms." w en, ana tnenr w bat followed 7" "Well, you mutt bear In mind, he, being an aauit, naa wuam mi cranium a brain which, a an crcran. was full grown, was mature. Therefore he learned with aton ; Jthing jpidity alsaoft u much in avreek as a child learns in a year. At the end of a fortnight he could walk, feed himself, dress himself, and was beginning to speak. At the end of two months he read without diffi culty, and wrote a good hand. What was most remarkable, however, his moral nature had undergone a complete transformation; his vicious instincts bad been completely eradicated. In a new invironment, treated with kindness, surrounded by wholesome in fluences, he became a different man. Now those virtuous predispositions which hered ity had implanted in him were vivified, the bad left dormant. At the end of the year he entered as a medical student at the Uni versity of Tubingen; and to-day he is one of the oldest and most respected practitioners in Frankfort" "It is like a fairy tale it is marvelous," said she. "Science abounds in marvels no less stupendous," said I. "But," she added .after a pause, "it is dreadful to think that the character and the morality of a human being can be influenced by a mtrt physical operation like that; to think that the color of the soul may be changed by a change in the structure of the body. It is enough to convert one to ma terialism pure and simple; therefore to cynicism and pessimism." "Not necessarily," I objected. 'It only proves that while it is the tenant of the body, the soul adapts itself to its hibita tion." "It would seem to prove that the soul is sot simply the tenant but the slave, the victim, the creature of the body. Will you describe your operation to me?" "Yon would need a medical education to follow such a description." "Is it anything like what they call tre panning or trephining?" "But very remotely. A partial fracture and a depression of the bone is caused; but no particle of it is removed." "What are the chances of the patient's losing not only his memory but his intelli gence coming out of it a simpleton or a maniac?" 'Practically none. It is as safe an opera tion as any in which the knife is employed. Of course, in all operations which involve the use of the knife, there is a possibility of serious consequences, of inflammation, and so forth. But I knowof none in which that possibility is slighter than in this." "And finally, do I understand that you offer to perform your operation upon me?" "Mas not that been the sole purport of all that! have said?" "How much time must elapse after it be fore I shall be able to take care of myself again? Before I shall have gained sufficient knowledge to act as a responsible and com petent human being?" "l shouia say a year. Jf erhaps more, per haps less, isnt i will say a year. "And meantime? How am I to be pro Tided for and taken care ot? And what what education will I receive?" "You will be provided for and taken care of here in this house. My sister, ten years younger than I, the kindest and wisest of women, will be your nurse and your com panion. As for your education it shall be the best which our means can afford." -"Oh, but all this talk is in vain. I have no right to impose myself upon you in that way." "It is not a question of right You im pose nothing upon us. I have volunteered everything. You are answerable for noth ing "And I shall be a new woman? As you have said regenerated as if really bom again?" "Yes." "What is your name?" "My name is Benary Leopold Benary." "1 don't know how I can ever express my gratitude to yon, Dr. Benary. There is nothing that I can say. But vou will un derstand it,-you will imagine it Can you, will you, operate upon me here, now, to night?" "Oh, you must have some sleep first. I will call my sister. She will show you to a room. Then perhaps to-morrow you will be in a favorable condition.'" "It is very late. It would be a pity to disturb your sister. Can you not leave me to rest here, upon your sola?" "No," I assured her; "my sister will much prefer to have it as I have proposed." And I went upstairs to wake my sister, Hiss Jo sephine Benary. (To is continued next Sunday.') Copyrighted, 1SS9. by Henry Harland. AUS I rights reserved. AN IMPORTANT EXCEPTION. A mother's Rigid Rule Caniei a Child to Make a Ludlcrons Blonder. Covington (Ga.) Star. A good joke is related of a kind sister, belonging to a church not a thousand miles from Covington, who was devotedly attached to her pastor, and piously taught her chil dren to reverence the minister above all men. They were strictly and conscien tiously taught that, when speaking of him in comparison with other men or things, he must always be excepted as the greatest and best This rule was so rigidly adhered to by the good mother, and the children were so punctiliously trained with regard to their .high esteem and partiality for the minister, that they never spoke of anyone or any thing without always adding the one ex ception. Now, it so happened one day that one of the little boys, who was a precocious youngster of six years, was out playing in the fields, near his home, and discovered an immense hog grazing in the pasture, when he became alarmed and ran to the house with all the swiftness his little legs could command. Upon reaching the "paternal haven of safety," and almost out of breath, he called to his mother with all the anima tion and ardor of his boyish nature: "Oh! ma. mat I saw the biggest hog down yonder in the field that 1 ever saw In my life except our minister." Whereupon it is said the good mother fainted. NOT TO BE TKIFLED WITH. An Oklahoma Squatter Who Is Likely to Hold Hli Claim. Chicago Trlbnne.1 "So this is my. claim, is it?" mused the new comer. "My good man, I don't wish to put you to any trouble, but you're on my patch of ground." "I am, hey?" said the fierce-looking Okla homa squatter. "My friend, d'ye see that inclosure staked off thar the other side of the cabin? Well, that's my private bnryin' ground, an' it's full of fellers that thought thev had a claim on this ranch." 'I see it," replied the visitor carelessly, "and it doesn't scarce me any. I umpirea ten baseball games in Detroit last year," he added, with a capacious yawn. "For heaven's sake, misterl" exclaimed the squatter, his face turning frightfully pale and his knees knocking together, "give me five minutes to pack up my traps and light cut" A Moment of Agony. f 3tsw First Tramp Murder! Helpt Help! Second Tramp What's the matter, Denny? First Tramp I dreamt"! was wur-r-r-kint mac ,?;- "?.... :- , mnp s- HOW TO BE IN STYLE. Shirley Dare Tell3 of the Beautiful New Fashions iu Dress. SPANISH COSTUMES IN VOGUE. Women Who Study Dramatic Art to Acquire Grace of Figure. HOW TO BE HANDSOME AND HEALTH! rWEITTEN rOS THZ DISPATCH.! Let us begin with fashions to have the serions affairs of life over and done with. The new gowns are a happy blending of sense and caprice, so varied in inaterial and trimming that almost every dress at a good private modiste's seems unique and sensible in short skirts, simple drapings and forms which dispense with tight corsets and bustles, The main difference noted as spring wears on and reverse styles appear, is that directoire dresses give way to the beautifully fitted, easy princess 301ms, with embroidered or else open fronts, filled with while vests or chemisettes, the tti aicjht skirt showing a velvet, embroidered or broche petticoat between the breadths. This style suits the fine figures of American girls better than the directoire, which looks like the mischief, save on very piquant wearers. Spanish styles are taking the fancy, from the pictures of modern painters, allowing rich color and luxurious fancy. But Span ish styles are not to be attempted in any but the most generous materials. A superb cos tume for dinner dress seen yesterday in a royale, thickest, softest and glossiest of all silks, in a warm, brilliant, Spanish red, finer than poppy color, with short matador jacket of gorgeous brocade in red, black, gold and green, square and loose as seen in pictures of bull fighters, the crimson sleeve slashed with deep puffs of brocade, and a narrow, straight train of brocade turned back from the hips over the red silk petti coat, which looked thick enough to stand alone, but was almost too solt to rustle. Frills of magnificent point finish throat, bosom and wrists. Directoire dresses re quire fine, filmy French and Flemish laces, the Spanish style calls for the heavy corded Escurial point, which is rather between passementerie and lace, or for the Spanish point and cut work with its high relief and spidery bars. Three yards of Escurial point needed for a dress front may be had for $33, which is cheap for a life's wear. SUMMEE HILLIXKBY. One establishment shows conservative coronet bonnets in fine straw with velvet ap plique on the low brim, trimmed solely with loops and rich brocade ribbon in the color of the dress, a little thread lace and aigrettes. Flowers are overdone for the tastes of the select, and soft, wide ribbons, lightened with aigrettes and fine grasses or seeds at most, come with the handsomest costumes. Flowery hats for theater, the park drive or the races, but for the street, for calls and picture galleries, something quieter and richer is desirable. The stylish shops which furnish walking and driving hats -for ladies and children as well as gentlemen, coaching hats in satin rough braids have the crown covered with small plumes, from 7 to 13 being required to go around the crown and veil the 'top. New sailor hats .are of plaid straw, navy blue, red and ecru or green, black and a dash of red, trimmed with ribbon of one leading color and bunches of berries or seeds in another, A blue plaid cactus braid had loops of navy ribbon standing stiff, and sprays of red currants on the blue with very good effect Derby hats of the finest- vel vety white felt for riding and driving are snown ior laaies, ana wnite iston caps and Tarn O' Shanters for children. Both the new sailor shape with its chimney pot crown and the Eton with overhanging top and visor are as ugly and unbecoming as can be, the latter being the hideous cap seen in Cruikshank's illustrations of Dickens where the small boys seem pressed down by their caps. CENTENNIAIi STYLES. One thing the Centennial hasleft us is a revival of quaint and convenient fashions of a centurvago, including tbe lace mittens, ruffles and dress aprons worn as a part of afternoon dress, and the sensible hats and looped petticoats for out-of-doors. A pretty little white cambric cape bonnet with nar row ruffles and the headpiece stiffened with pasteboard slats, was shown in a fashionable shop window under tnePifth Avenue Hotel, the center of a host of expensive foreign novelties. . It was demure as a snowdrop, and recalls the shady sunbonnet which Dolly Madison's precise mother sewed on her small head every morning when she went to school, lest the sun should reach her pretty face. Her complexion won her first a rich husband and then a President, but most girls would consider these honors dear at the price of being shut in a close bonnet every time they went out of doors. A complexion cleared with taraxacum and charcoal, brown bread and wheaten grits can defy the sun to do more than add to its brilliance. But there must be no interruption to the careful diet, for ladies whose faces are rose and white clover usually, say they never omit the coarse fare for two days without having a coldso re or ugly pimples follow. THE B1L4XI, TOUB1TT7BE, so long talked of, perceptibly modifies the appearance of dresses on the street Not that there are not plenty of large tournures still worn by 'women who cling to pronounced styles, and cannot believe themselves dressed "except in accented shapes and colors. But the best dressed women no longer wear a half-moon shelf at the back of their sKirts, nor do you see every woman who goes out of a car mechanioally smoothing down the back of her basque over her prominent drapery. It used to look fanny on the suburban trains to see a file of women going through this bit of drill as they went out ot the car. Now the dress skirt is fitted as carefully as the waist, the underskirt having straight breadths, gored only over the hips to fit without crease or fold, and the upper skirt of five straight breadths shirred over this. The back of each skirt is left full, a single steel spring run in the underskirt seven inches below tbe waist, giving all tbe relief allowed the draperies, and very pretty is the effect The long French polonaise worn with this has a pointed belt from the side seams, the skirt laid in very large flat box.plalts at front and sides, showing the underskirt nearlv its full length at the seams. This skirt is plain velvet, paisley broche, in palms like the shawls, or the heavy ap pliques, passementerie panels or corded laces for street wear, the Iront and back of the waist, top of the sleeves, belt and collar being trimmed to correspond with the skirt A PEETTT "WEAP. For cool days the Breton jacket is neces sary, in black or dark green, or the soft French crays, with vest of annliane or heavy stitchery that looks like braiding. The jacket must correspond with the dress to insure good style, and the bonnet be the darkest point in the attire. For use a black jacket is chosen of twilled cloth.with a vari ety -of vests, in applique, in pleated surah, with square neck outlined by embroidery, and the silk drawn around the neck above this, a white sprigged pique or a silk vest to match any dress which may be worn. Fronts of black cord lace over silk fill snch a jacket prettily it a dressier style 4s wanted. The newest, expensive Bretons have vests of passementerie and beading, garnet, gray or black and steel, which are very handsome. With such a Jacket, a coronet bonnet of straw or crinoline should be worn, the brim embroidered in beads and a few fine bead aigrettes sparkling jlong the trimming. 'Tn mafrtnfl. nvnT fmuju If .rtrt'fclinvt filiM the'gkirt off smoothly a't the feet and add al plain border a few shades darker or lighter as you fancy, cover "with rows of narrow ribbon a quarter of au inch apart, adding vest, collar and, cuffs similarly -finished. Waists too short only need a width of snrah folded round them as a sash to lengthen them stylishly. If the darts have worn out, veil the fronts with lace two fingers -wide, laid in a few fine tucks at the inner edge, and turned square below the belt line to suggest a lace Test DBAHAXIC EDUCATION. "You would be snrprised," said a friend, "at the number of society women who study dramatic art under the best teachers without the slightest intention of ever going on the stage. They do it as,the readiest means'of acquiring charm of manners and a good presence." The Delsarte system of training, rightly taken, is the finest way of acquiring flexibility of figure, grace of movement and facial control. I nave often wished, in ob serving the gauche motions and tricks of manner in even educated women, that they could, for a few months, have the training a good actress receives. One sees these tricks of face conspicuous in country people doming to the Centennial, and plenty who are not from the country, either. The women smile and theywrinkle up their eyes, their noses, and show their gums and teeth like enraged poodles. A good dramatio teacher would attack these faults at once, and keep criti cising them till the pupil was cured. Delsarte's "decomposing exercises" at tractive name are really the finest things for acquiring grace and control of the figure. They are, you know, a series of re laxing movements by bending each joint separately, from the finger tips to the hips, differing from calisthenics in being less formal and fatiguing. Delsarte had the fault of a Frenchman, in the passion for formulating theories whichafnicts that na tion. Formulas seldom do justice to an art, and his rules sound absurd, while their practice is quite another thing. A woman desiring the completest physical and emo tional training should put herself under an enthusiastic pupil of Delsarte. Mr. Steele Mackaye, I am told, charges $25 a lesson, but his pupils carry out the training with ability at less rates. COSMETICS AND OTHEBrEMnTINITIES. "Three Lively Girls" write to say that bony necks are their great affliction, and have been "thorns in their individual flesh" for some years, and invite me to earn their everlasting gratitude by showing them how to gain round throats. The "Two Es and an A" must think their request forgotten as it has lain unanswered so long, but that is not mv fault. S. D. never means to leave a letter unanswered (unless on superfluous hair), though it almost takes a year to reach the end of correspondence. I am not so sure as to the gratitude either, when the "Two Es and an A" learn that the only road to their wishes Is careful physical culture, not the semi-occupied life young ladies lead, of which the principal exercise is chattering, which does not tend to round throats. It is a physical, fact, that many of our young women actually talk theflesh off their bones, the quick effort of pind and voice being of a most wearing kind. Ask anv teacher who has to talk in her scbool half as much as these girls do, every day of her life. The first thing they want to do is to pro vide boxes of the charcoal tablets which come at 15 cents, 60 in a box, and are the most convenient way of taking charcoal. There is a charcoal and pepsin lozenge of English make, which is sovereign for indi gestion and the thinness attending, but it is an expensive confection, at 60 cents a quar ter pound, though a good many wafers go to a quarter, and it lasts one a month. These charcoal wafers are invaluable forpurilying the breath and the blood, so thnt the food taken affords its best nourishment. Then use filtered -water and drink plenty of it Eat figs, apples and pure candy before meals, and when really hungry, at other times, always brushing the teeth carefully and rinsing the mouth after eating. The corrosive acids formed in the mouth in flame the stomach and waste flesh, and have much to do with the scrawniness of women. For breakfast take hot maple syrup,cracked wheat, not oatmeal, which I repeat is starchy and clogging as usually cooked, fresh, soft-boiled eggs, three if possible, and rood coflee. with meats or fish as preferred. At night, on retiriug, take a milk puncb, or calvesfoot jelly beaten with orange juice and a fresh egg, or a tablespoonful of salad oil mixed with three tablespoonfuls of Ber gundyor port, adding a little honey or lemon it liked. EATHTO AT KIOHT. Something in shape of light refreshment before going to bed is the best recipe to gaii flesh rapidly. Nourishment taken then is, not wasted in exertion, bnt laid up in the form of tissue which rounds the figure, and is a little reserve of strength for the next day. Women who work hard should always tace, if possible, some little agreeable thing to. eat or drink before sleeping. A cup of chocolate and Graham wafers, or jelly, or a cup of clam broth will buildup the strength better than port wine tonics. To develop the muscles of the throat and shoulders, and gain a graceful, birdlike flexibility as well, practice turning the head from side to side as far as possible, slowly at first, but never very fast, for that wrinkles 'the throat Try" this five or ten'minutes night and morning, bathing the. neck well in warm water and rubbing in almond cream or salad oil before sleeping. A linen bandage, wet with scented oil, worn round the throat nights will nourish the skin and flesh, es pecially while one is warm with exercise. Singing is, however, the method of gaining round contour of the throat A woman who does not sing is a mistake, which should be repaired immediately. How sel dom we see a singer with a scrawny throat INHALING PINE TAB. If the leanness proceeds from incipient weakness of tbe lungs, it is well to keep pine tar or creosote evaporating in sleeping rooms, and use fir pillows. Inhalation of refined tar is a notable cure for consumptive indications. A little oil lamp, with a small tripod and saucer over the flame will be all the apparatus needed. The saucer is filled with water and a spoonfnl of tar. which keeps a very healthful atmos phere in the room through the night The pure rosin which exudes from green pine trees is the finest for sanitary purposes. There used to be a preparation called Olive Tar, which was far too good to be-lost sight of, being a delicate aroma and a sooth ing remedy for consumption. Its main or only ingredients were olive oil and pine tar. It Is. a good plan for those who wish to im prove their throats to chew pure spruce gum, pine gum, or that of the compass wood of the Western prairies, for the exer cise of the jaws develops the throat, and the resinous qualities of the gum strength ens digestion. I don't mean to recommend the habit of chewing gum as practiced by its devotees, but there never was an unsight ly habit which had so much to be said for it Bank dyspeptics with the coating eaten off their stomachs, as tbe doctors say, find relief to their cravings by chewing pure spruce gum, and' all agree that tbe lungs are better ior it. The compound of paraf- nne ana sweet sinn soia ior gum nas noth ing to recommend it EEMOVING PBECEXES. "Marguerite" wishes to know what will remove brown spots from the arms, that is, freckles of the worst sort, which common remedies fail to affect She writes : "Of course I know the only way is to remove the onter cuticle, but the skin on tbe arms must he very tough, for what I have used has not been successful." If being successful means to take the skin off the arms. Marguerite nas every reason to be tnanKiui lor her fail ures. Bemoving the entiele wonld not help the matter, as tbe pigment is too deep-seated to be taken off by any process short of flay ing. Obstinate freckles require a course of medicine to stimulate the torpid liver. A yery good preparation is fluid extract of taraxacum, i. e., dandelion, mandrake and coninm, sold for $1 25 a pound bottle. This, with a glass of unfermented grape juice 16 minutes before each meal, and a wet pack or vapor bath weekly, will prove an -admirable method of bleaching the skin. It may be aided by a paste ofpowdered snlphnr and lemon juice, spread thinly on the arms and left to dry in the sun. This may, be used dally and left on the arms as long as possible. ax tne same time'coarse bread and wheaten grits must'be made part of regular diet, or all this effort goes for nothing. Caution: In taking grape juice, acid phosphate, lemonade or any spring drinks, they must be sipped and a little rest allowed alter half a glass, to let what has been taken be partly absorbed. Drenching the stomach with glassfuls of hot or cold drinks is a pernicious habit, which will surely derange digestion permanently. I am always happy to receive inquiries on cosmetic subjects. Sbtbley Dabs. A PE0FE8S10NAL TATTOOES. He Makes $6,000 n Tear Marking; Pictures and Design on the Body. . A Hong Kong journal gives au account of a Japanese who has lately set up in that colony as a professional tattooer of pictures and designs on the body. In a .room deco rated with fans, hanging pictures and scrolls, the visitor or patient is received. In a conspicuous place is hung a notice in the following words: "I do not business if fuddled." Sample books are first produced for inspection and selection; they are filled with colored drawings of dragons, birds, insects and scenes comic and serious. At the bottom is written the cost of tattooing each, the prices varying from about 53 for three butterflies to an elaborate group lor f 100. ' The operator himself was tattooed all over his body with groups of bright flowers here, ,the conventional Japanese girl's head there; a female figure with long flowing robes wound roundone arm from the shoulder to the wrist, while on the other was a dragon, with every scale carefully shaded. On the breast was a picture of the god of storms, with inscriptions in Japanese characters, and similar representations all over the body, the hands alone being free. The apparatus consists merely of a small box containing a slab of black Chinese ink, some vermillion and dark red powders, and a diawerful of penholders, on the ends of which were fixed tiny bunches of needles, numbering from three to SO. The customer chooses his design from the pattern books, the operator draws it on the part desired, and then with a large bunch of needles for the heavy-black and a small one for tbe fine lines the colors are punctured in. No blood is drawn and the pain is verv little. A dragon, which would be'tattooed for $20, would take five hours, on account of the number of scales. The part is then treated with vaseline to allay the inflammation, and in a day or two the skin would come off. After that the marks would be indeli ble. The Hong Kong operator tattooed the arm 01 an jb.ngnsa prince, and, in Kioto, was engaged ior a whole month in repro ducing on the trunk and limbs of an English peer a series of scenes from Japanese history. For this he was paid about $500. He has also tattooed English ladies, and seems to be especially proud of one picture, which was a tiny fan about the size' of a halfpenny, on which was a complete, landscape with fig ures well defined. His income from tattoo ing is about $6,000 per annum.'' A HUMAN INTERROGATION POINT. Questions Asked by a Small Boy Anxlons to Know a Good Deal. There was a youth on a Pleasant Valley car the other day whose mind was of a very inquiring turn. His age was perhaps 6 years, but he could ask more questions in six minutes than Solomon himself could have answered in six years. Here is a par tial report of a conversation that took place between him and his mother: "Mamma, what is that building?" "A machine shop." "What is a machine shop?" "A place where they make machinery," "What kind of machinery?" "The kind used in a mill." "What kind of a mill?" "Oh, any kind. Don't talk so much' Silence on the part of the youngster for one minute and 40 seconds. ,Then: "What bridge is this?" "Seventh street bridge." "Who made it?" , ' "I don't know." "Have we crossed it before?" "Yes, several times'." "How many is sev-everil times?" "More than twice," "How many is twice?" "One and one more." "Two times?" "Yes. Keep quiet" "What is quiet?" "Still." "Why must I keep still?" "Because you attract too much attention. Other people may want to talk." "Is the water still quiet, I mean?" "No, it is running just like your tongue." "What makes it run?" "It can't help it." "Why don't it all run out of the river?" "More runs in." "Where from?" ' By this time all the passengers were so much interested in the youngster's talk that all eyes were upon him. Themother saw it, became embarrassed, and wouldn't open her lips, although the fire of questions con tinued steadily until the car reached the post office. If that boy doesn't become a wise man it won't be hia fault, but that of his instructors. TWO TTA1S OP SAYING IT. Specimens of New York Slansr and Refined Boitonlan English. From To-Day. In New York. Sadie Skipabout He's a terrible Bample of a Boston dude, Dolly, to be sure, but I hear he has boodles. Molly Murrayhill Yes, but bless your heart, dear, he's tuch a precious fool! Why he thinks he knows it all, and he gives It to you in the neck whenever you talk to him. Come over to Maillard's and I'll ball you off for a cocktail. In Boston, Mass. Miss Priscilla Back-bay-Mr. Washington von Bnmmersville is, assuredly, not precisely geometric in his conformance with our cherished idealisms of perfect social intercourse, which we have been so sedulously educated to reverential ize at their exalted value, my dear, bnt you must commit your memory to tbe logically necessary task of recalling for permanent reference the very important fact that he is a native of the municipality of New York, and that his store of mundane wealth is credibly reputed to be almost unqualifiedly enormous. Miss Puritanica Kingschapel I thor oughly appreciate the latter fact, Priscilla, and do not underestimate its importance. I perhaps should not be averse to his atten tions were it not that he presents so su premely ridiculous an assumption of uni versal knowledge to one in the course of the most casual and commonplace conversation. Why, if one were to accept him at his own belief of himself.the scope of the wide woId preserves no secrets, mysteries nor problems from him: and his comprehension of every thing within the radius of human intelli gence, natural and acquired, far exceeds the conventional store of usefnl information that is popularly supposed to be embodied in the encyclopedia. Let us drop in at Jones', dear, and assimilate a bean and a flagon of miik. A Social Outcast.' Saddsy Did ye went to de Centennial balL Winks? ' Winks (sadly) No, Suddsyr I couldn't go 1 didn't nave no lawn utiruuc 0 Wfi BRINGING UP ARIEL Gail Hamilton,in the Bole of Miranda, ' Enthuses Overa Baby and GIVES A LESSON IN PDEE LOGIC. American Mothers Can Obviate thejfeed of Laws and Jails.. SOME TOOTHSOME HAWAIIAN DISHES wjuri'iur roa rax dispatch. There is nothing like Summer Isles of Eden lying-in dark purple spheres ot sea for one who does nofknow how to cook, because there are so many things here that a states man or woman is not expected to know, that individual ignorance is mercifully merged in continental ignorance so I can enjoy the strange new dishes without a pang. Ban anas are of course delicious as we know them at home, but here more so, and when cooked more so again. One day Ah Chang fries them; another, we have them sliced with milk and sugar; for desert, baked with nutmeg sauce ano jer day boiled. Then the taro is excellet 'ing. It grows under water, shaped like & Targe turnip, and when cooked is of a lavender color. We have taro regularly for breakfast and dinner, as one would have potato. For dinner it is boiled, and if I must do without either I would let the potato go and take taro. For breakfast we have the left-over taro fried in slices or we pound the boiled taro to a paste and then fry, and I do not believe there is a waiter in the Great Bepublio who can cook rice as we do in a great quantity of water, never stirring it, as that makes it less light, and when fully done pour off the water and let it dry. For breakfast this morning we ' had it with milk and sugar, iu place of mush; also steak, with fried sweet potato, two (de licious) fried bananas, alligator pear, and cakes and syrup. The alligator pear is a most delicate thing with bread and batter. Pepper and salt are ail I put on, but many make a regular salad of it It looks queer, a light green color, soft and oily and very rich. It is not always liked at first taste, but I fell to at once, and the liking grows into a rapture. ABIEL'S MTTIiE ATE3 Ariel has mellensfeed. I believe this is a Micronesean dish, not native Hawaiian. At any rate, she is growing fat on it, and her mouth and chin are my hourly admira tion. And oh I to see her creeping I She sits down, rests on hands and doubles her right leg under, dragging the left yfter her. In this one-sided fashion she scuttles across the floor. Her delight is to get be tween two rocking chairs and rock, first one and then the other, getting quite absorbed in the work. She can pull herself by the aid of a chair, so as to balance for a minute on her knees. And she chatters to the birdsl While sitting playing yesterday she heard the canary on the veranda, and look ing through the door she cried: "Ach? Ach?" answering ever time-the biril sang. She is as hearty as possible, eating loaves of bread at each meal! I just asked her if she would send her love to Native Land, and she smilingly answers "Dabblerabble," which of course every intelligent American understands. She persists in creeping to the wall and rubbing her hands over the paper, the colors of which rub off badly. I have had to slap her hand quite hard, but she is tough as a knot, for she won't cry, but she will yell at me and struggle hard to get to the paper. To-day she was playing and suddenly remembered the paper. She looked at me, grunted defiantly and scram bled for the wall. I tried to divert her from her purpose, but in Tain; so there was tbe nsual scene defiance, yells and maternal firmness. Mademoiselle gave in quite easily mis ume, However, ana x can see mar sne begins to reason a little and to understand "Nol nol'' - - She is a veritable will-o'-the-wisp now here; now there; bnt her grandfather Frrd wisely writes, "better be so than one of those quiet, flabby, sleepy, soft, easy, month wide open, tongue-out babies" which is very nice of him. She stuffs everything she can lay hold of into her mouthand when I protest back go the defiant little hands behind her and she shakes her head, "Ach! achl" To-night Ferdinand brought home a roll of dollar coins in a paper, which he gave to Ariel. She suc ceeded in pulling off the wrapper and then had a gay time with the money. At last papa coaxed her to put one piece in his hand, and after that she took up each coin, slowly turning round to drop it into bis hand when he said "Give itrto papa" until she had deposited 16 dollars. Then" she was sick of it and yon could not hire her to pick up another. A EE1IAEKABLE CHILD. She doesn't seem like a babv any more. She looks grown up. And it is true, she isn't a baby and her ways are not babyish. She has long spells of thoughtfulness, actual wisdom and she doesn't care for play, things much, but only to work hard climb ing up by the help of the low steamer trunk or tugging to open abnreau drawer. No mat ter bow hard she bumps her head she only stops long enongh to look around at me and then back again to business. This morning as I was putting in her pin, she clutched it before it was clasped, making a scratch across one finger. She held it up and gravely inspected it, then put it up to my mouth. I kissed it and she seemed quite satisfied. She fell over to-day and made a bump on her forehead, but merely winked hard and resumed her climb up the piano stool. Oh! there is no doubt about it, she is remarkable! Ferdinand says this will never do, that one must write abont politics and society and literature, and that Ariel will be a bore. Our Ariel a bore! To whom. I should like to know? Show me the man who dares say mai 01 my sweet angel, wno is a raving beauty and so fascinating to-day when she 'was playing with the strip of sunlight on the floor, that I put away my book to enjoy her. Politios, indeed! It is I that am bored that have been bored all my life with man's miserable pig iron and three mile line inshore fisheries and the balance of trade, and duty on silks dead, dumb things, that are of no good to anybody, and keep one from nice clothes. Beal politics is human beings. Ariel is a political entity. Little, fresh soul, starting out as pure as heaven and as transparent as the sunlight. She is sunlight, showing in every look and lisp how souls grow. And this hnman soul is the end for which houses are built and constitutions written and laws enforced. Z.ESSON8 IN rOQIC. Is it any less important, pray, and train a little soul right, whe: to watch en it is be ginning, than it is to trounce it and chain it and warp it and bribe it and whack away at itiu me puipu anu in tne courtrooms and in the newspapers when it has become all bard and dingy and deceitful, and can not move easily and cannot see clearly? No. If tbe Senators and indues and edi- Ltors and merchants would take a little of the time which they spend in reading their nonsense columns abont stocks and what the chances are for some one to be elected, when, if they would wait a few days till the election is over, they would know for cer tain; and if, instead, they would, all sit down on the ground and watch Ariel nnder the algeroba trees on the little blue, and pink crib blanket which I carry about everywhere because she looks so pretty with it for on underground, add just watch and listen as she sits with a fistful of grass talking to it and her new sunbonnet flops over her face bewitchingly,they would learn lessons in pnre logic, they would see developments of pure reason that would stand them in much better stead than their gossipy newspapers and their musty, fusty, dusty disquisitions. Now I turn to tell you about the fish mar ket, not because Ariel is a bore, bnt beeaase I can spare the time while that incompar able child, tibat Master of Arts, takes her afternoon nap. . t amo. 10 say or to ' tuasr tor a moment tsat one child creeps just like another shows a lack of observation in .Ferdinand which makes him seem more like other men than anything I ever detected'in him before. A trained eye, such as Harvard Annex .gives to women, would show even a man that children creep as differently as men live. SIGNS 07 CHARACTER. Ariel's little curling leg is her own charm ing sign manual, or, as Oirton girls say, sign crusculine. Another child creeps on all fours. A third sits flat down and straight up and bitches alorrjr. It is character. But instead of watching the dear babv so as to see what the kingdom of heaven is, men will sit and smoke, or go off to their clubs or the banks or the offices, and try to bnild up the kingdom of this world. And Ariel will not creep much longer! The consequence is that a whole country is rocking up and down with prohibitory laws and prison idleness and solitary con finement, and things that ought to have been settled when the drunkards and the prison ers were in their cratiles. I am a prohibi tory law to our baby. She is already be ginning to understand that "no, no" means absolute prohibition. The next thing will be to make her understand that one "no"' means just the same as two. Then she must learn to say her own no. If all the babies of oneT generation could be taught this I consider mat it would be equivalent at least to the anti-saloon movement. Then when a habit is so thoroughly ground in that it be comes a principle, why it is equal to a Con stitutional amendment, and the woik is done. All the cost of electioneering is saved and the country has a generation of temperate citizens, temperate not because tne oars are closed and tbe laws enforced. lDnt because they like to be temperate; be- cause it is ill-bred to be intemperate; be cause 11 is vuiear not to be self-controlled. And all this is owing to the women who watch their Ariels, and see when the little will lurches into self-will and curb it; see when the pleasantness of enjoyment is in danger of becoming the pleasantness of selfishness and check it; see when courage dares to push itself into defiance and soften it back to courage. , WHEEE TO BEOET EETOBM. I don't suppose we shall wholly succeed, we mothers; but we shall do a great deal better than the State prisons and the laws. If you can't reform a man when he is a baby you certamlrcan't count on reformim? him when he is a grown man. All the goodof crown-up reformatories is in their application to the poor creatures whose fathers and mothers did not know how to rear them. They have no reform for the well-reared. If I can't teach Ariel to be a good girl some one else must, but it is of more importance that I try than anything else in the world, and so I just say to the great men who are talking abont planting Ireesfor the future and suppressing Mor monism and establishincr schools and mat ing treaties for the Northwest passage and the Samoan reefs, that I am doing better work than they, because it is closer work; and it is much more important that they listen to my report and see how fast Ariel develops in her tiny teeth and in sweet little intelligence and her lovely lit tle character, and what develops her, than it is for me to listen to them to know how many miles a minnte a fast horse trots or how many shakes au earthquake gives to the square inch. The horse is nothing but a horse when all is said, and what good does it do to know all about an earthquake if you cant stop it? And if you could stop it you would doubtless do more harm than good, since now they say it is only the liv ing earths that quake. The worlds that are still are dead. So it may comfort the poor earthquakers to know that after all there's life in the old land yet! GAII. HASHLTOir. FLYING UiNDER WATEE. Birds That Can Swim Qnlte as Easily as TUey Can Fly. One of the most water-loving birds is a dainty little songster beloneintr to the thrush found in most parts of the world, and likes i -r ai u j 111 I best the neighborhood of those merry mount ain streams which rush boisterously on to their fate, now leaping headlong over some high rock, now swirling in some deep pool, and now eddying, dancing, splashing down a steep incline. Waterfall, pool and eddy ing stream are alike to the water-ousel, which will dash into one or the other with the same ready confidence as the- ordinary bird into the air. In winter, when its watery home 1V frozen over, it will seek other and milder parts.un less it can be sure of finding holes in the ice, in which case it will not hesitate to re mainat home, for it will plunge through a hole into the icy water with no care at all for temperature, and having made its ven ture successful by the capture of a small fish, will return to the air once more. So fond is it of water that it will build its nest as near to It as possible, and one in stance is recorded of a pair which actually built behind a waterfall, taking advantage of the space made by the shoot of the water over tne top or the rocar. Although tbe ousel uses its feet while swimming, its progress is chiefly dne to the wings, which are moved exactly as if flying in the air. The wings are admirably adapted to this use, being almost as broad as long, and of comparatively great power. The tail is very short, and the body is cov ered with soft thick down, which, as the true aqnatic birds, affords an impervious shield against the water. Like all other birds which either casually or habitually re3ort to the water, says .Har per's Magazine, the ousel seems to regard that element as its safest retreat in time of danger. Even the little birds which have never before ventured from the nest, and which are auite unable tn flv. hv tuun known, when alarmed during the absence of the parents, to rush pell-mell to the nearest water and with extraordinary facility to run along the, bed of the stream for many yards before seeking the air. Allowing everything tothe overpowering force of instinct, there still remains something to wonder at in the feeling of confidence which can inspire the fledglings to take so anxiously to the water. A Remark Frequently Heard. Ptmxsuuiroey Spirit While walking the streets of Pittsburg, since Judge White's last onslaught, it will be proper for a man to say to his traveling com Dan ion occasional!? what thr- nrnn. of North Carolina said to the Governor of boutb Carolina. Had Had Experience. Toledo Blade. Employer You say you can hang paper? Ex-Editor I'm pretty sure I can; I'm quite handy with the scissors and paste; I used to edit a country paper. In Defease of His Locality. Mr. Genesee (making his maiden speech in tfieXiegisIatare) Yon may think, gea tlemen, that my coMtitaeata are what yea are pleased here in Albany to- term Ofay, seeds,' bat I want yea. Is understand tfeftt you oan't,feol us aet.sy, a" colossal sm- ','T4 '.-a8i&-S LUCET WEDDING DAY Superstitions of Peculiar or Unknown OrigiaEegarding THE BEST TIME ' TO MAEET. Unlucky Friday, the bay TOws ika Scotch man Prefera-fofWei A STEANGB H0TI05S ABOUT BKID13 nramct job thi dispatcs.J Belief in luck is almost universal. Thto is not strange when we consider the profits and rewards men have reaped merely by taking advantage of favorable opportuni ties. It may be that luck is a myth aad that good fortune comes to him who haa good sense and is shrewd enough to raaka the most of what comes his way. But cir cumstances so cften help, appa rently, to make or mar a man's wojdly career that it is no won-' der that Fortune is constantly alluded to a "tne ncile goddess." It Is interesting to note some of the curious superstitions that hava grown from the doctrine of thepotentiality of. luck. Who has not heard them? Take, for example, that old belief regarding the num ber 13. Everybody has heard it, and not a few believe in it fully. According to popu lar belief thij superstition originated with the last supper of Christ, when Judas was) the thirteenth at the table. Bnt an old writer claims that it is founded on tbe cal culations of life insurance societies, which estimate that out of 13 persons 1 will dl every year. Friday, which is regarded as an unlucky day almost the whole world over, singularly enough is considered in Scotland a very auspicious day for marriages. Taking-s life partner is snch an important step for both man and woman that it is but natural that young people should be particular to have their wedding celebrated under the most favorable auspices. It is remarkable, however, that May, the season of love, cele- urateu as sucu uj poets wnuuut num ber, is looked upon by the English and English-speaking people generally, a AK THSLVCKY TI1IE 70S MAEBTDTO. "Marry in May, and you'll rue the day," has passed into a proverb in Great Britain. The superstition is said to have come dowa from tbe Bomans, but the origin and mean ing of it are lost to history. June, on the other hand, is regarded as tne best month in which to marry. No Scotchman will be married on Sunday a wedding on that day is said to be a thing unheard of in that land of rigid Sabbatarian observance. The Scotch also have a great fondness for getting married on the last day of the year, and the number of marriage certificates bear ing the date December 31, is from 5 to 20 times as great as any other date that could be selected. With tbe French Canadian peasantry Mon day is the favorite wedding day. In this country Thursday has the preference, and it is safe to say twice as many marriages taka place on that day as occur on any other day of the week. Christmas weddings are de cidedly popular, and many young Amer icans, whether from patriotic or supersti tious motives, seem to regard the Fourth of July as a good day on which to marry. Dismissing the subject of days and sea sons propitious for weddings, we observe that there is a great number of superstitions regarding that'always interesting being; the bride. The declaration, "Happy is the bride that the sun shines on!" is one to which the brides themselves attach grea importance. A young woman must be pos- sessed of more than average good sense and ' courage if she does not feel disappointed on arising on the morning of her wedding day to find the sky obscured with clouds and a, storm threatening. J .. osiocr or A sxrpEBSTrnojr. , T , Whence came this common belief, making- married life? Like many of the beliefs to which we Americans cling fondly, it dates back to feudal times in "Merrie England." It was then the custom to have the marriage ceremony performed on the church porch. Under such circumstances wet weathermade it decidedly unpleasant for all parties, and it is no wonder that a belief that ram on a wedding day was an omen of evil became general. It is considered lncky for a bride to shed tears on her wedding day; if she does not she surely will be unhappy. Should she meet a funeral procession while going to church or returning, if a woman's, the bride will die early. If the funeral be that of a man the days of the bridegroom on earth are numbered. A pretty practice is that of decorating the hives ot the bees on a wedding day, which is still kept up in some parts of rural England. It is hard to imagine what disaster could follow failure to observe this custom; yet it is deemed imperative that the intellizent insects be respectfully treatedand duly informed that a matrimonial event is to take place. A curious custom, the memory of which still survives both in Old and New En gland, was that of the elder sister or brother dancing in a hog's trough if the younger member of the family was the first to marry. "You'll be dancing in the hog's trough if you don't look out" is an expression still used to warn maids and bachelors that it is time for them to mate, thongh it is doubtful if the actual 'practice is kept up anywhere. OMENS 07 EARLY 1IAKEIAOE. In some parts of England it is customary for the bridemaids and other single females present to rob the bride ot every pin to be lound in her dress after the ceremony is over, the tradition being that whoever gets possession of one of these pins will be sura to marry within a year. Frequently thero is vsry eager competition to gain these val uable charms, so much so that the bride is handled very roughly. It is also said that if the bride while at the table cuts and bands a piece cf cheese to a lady friend, the recipient will be the next one of the company to get a husband. In Scotland it was long customary for the husband to lift his bride over the threshold of her future home that no witchcraft or other evil influ ence might come upon her. , In the North of England it is considered highly unlucky for the prospective bride to be in church when the banns are published, as any children she may have are likely to be born deaf and dumb. The superstitions attaching to the wedding cake and the wed ding ring are almost innumerable. Per haps one f the most curious is that of breaking the wedding cake over the bride's head, that the maidens present might scramble for possession of the pieces. Those so fortunate as to secure a morsel, on eating it, would be sure tn dream of their lutura hnsband on the same night This, also, was an old English belief. Babxxy. THE PAES0N WAS EIGHT. The Record of a QIbd 'Whose Consnblal Eo lations Were a Failure. Lewltton Jonrnal.l Elder Thompson, the famous TJniversalist preacher who died some years ago, was once . asked to marry a couple whose religious views were at variance with his own. After the ceremony the bridegroom expressed his entire satisfaction with the service. "I don'tsee,"hesaid, "thatyou could have done , it any better if yon'd believed In a helL" A little theological discussion followed, in which Elder Thompson advanced the idea that "a man gets his hell in this world.y Two years after, Father Thompson met bejj man again. . A'f "Yon remember yon married me?' 41iaW man said. , aS"4? Tm." JZ "And that I said I hoped it wouM he jsP as happy a marriage as if yoa belisvsd I s bell?" "" "" "YMjaMreBHtBtagllkeftsAi - '; "AbsI that von said MM Mh.ssJi iJ.... V11 .1.1- wa1j39" . At A . OTCiC BC11 la U. wu.. S VJ. atgWAav Mia so." ,'jranes, yea was ns)v K 't ". i.c . .A.L. Atrsz... . iL.j-.'ZiSf r-ri.'., .!! . .:, v: