""? 14: . 1 i, if GlY LAKE GEORGE. A Famous Watering Tlace Sought by Wealth and Fashion. MOEOSIKI AND HIS DAUGHTEE. Cute Old Cephas riatt and His Battle snake Preserve. THE CONFIDLNG BKITISH TOCKIST. lSrECIAL COBBESrOJfDEJICI OX TUB DISPATCH. 1 LONORTD'E I" -r 4- ,r-T,r XIAiUl ULUfiUXV, August 1G. Several of the routes to famous watering places are common ly made to include a sail on Lake George. It is close to Saratoga, only a little further off from th- Adiron dacksaud the Green Mountains, and not remote from the White Mountains. Its scenery is so famously beautiful that tourists are willing to go a little out of their direct course to sail over its phenom cnally clear water and to look at the mount ain scenery which surrounds it. There is hardly a place in the country, away lrom a big city, where one sees so many nationali ties represented in the guests at the hotels. But when you come to settling in your mind, without outside evidence, what coun try each foreign looking man has come from, you are liable to mistake. Here is a Morosini and Bis Daughter, Lake George incident. At the dockrail of the steamboat stood a father and daughter. "There is a typical German tourist," said a companion of mine. "He might almost be taken for Bismarck himself." But he was no German at all. He was Morosini, formerly partner of Jay Gould, and noted also as the father of the pretty girl who married the family coachman. It will be remembered that Victoria Morosini went into the chorus of a New York comic opera company, but quitted that employ ment and her husband rather mysteriously, after which she was lost to public view for two or three years. It was known that her father bad regained control of her, and that she was cured of HER SIKGULAR INFATUATION for just about as commonplace a coachman as ever wore livery. Even intimate friends ot the family did not know where she was secluded, and they are not yet able to get any trustworthy information on that point; but Mis? Morosini and I call her that be cause, as I am credibly informed, a divorce has restored the Morosini name to her is this summer for the first time since her elopement an associate of her parents and sisters. They are spending the season at Saratoga, where Victoria is one of the most expert of equestriennes, and a conspicuous, although very modestly behaved, young lady. She was with her father on the Lake George steamer, and they had come up from Saratoga, as many people do, for a day's float on the famously picturesque water. Jay Gould and his family frequently in dulge in these excursions! The Goulds have been away for a wild outing in the Adirondack;, but this week they returned to Saratoga, where they expect to remain until September. A RATTLESNAKE TRESEHVE. C. P. Huntington is another millionaire admirer of Lake George, and he comes here from Saratoga every week or so. Upon his last visit he took a sailboat, along with sev eral companions, and visited Battle Island. That is a new thing. The island has been there long enough, and it is one of tbe more insignificant among those that dot the lake, but this year old Cephas Piatt, locally famous as a catcher of rattlesnakes, has taken possession. The island is wooded and rocky, and Piatt has stocked it with snakes. He tells the tourists that he found the rep tiles there, but upon getting at all confi- Confiding British Tourists. dential he confesses that he transported them in a big canvas bag, such as he uses as a cage for his captives, and set them free. He is a professional snake catcher. The State pays a small bounty for each head of a rattler, and Piatt used to get a meager living, along with considerable no toriety, by hunting the snakes, trying out their oil to sell to druggists; disposing of their skins to pocketbook makers, and col lecting the State fee for the heads. Corre spondents found readable matter in him, and the publication of such articles made him believe that lie conld profitably become something of a showman. That is why he has seized upon Battle Island, as he chris tens it, and lets it be known at the hotels that rattlesnakes may be plenteonsly seen there. There is something fascinating about enakes to man folks, and sail boats land not a few venturesome visitors at Battle Island. They are not much inclined to ex plore it, and are generally satisfied with a view of about a hundred big and little snakes in glass cages; but if they are will ing to take tbe risk, Piatt will conduct them through his small domain, and more than likely afford them a sight of one or more snakes at large. ENGLISH TOURISTS. The tourists at Like George who look most like touruts areVEnglish. They dress distinctively for travel; they use guide book almost constancy, and they ore very y-itf IT: ?& M ""i -i - thorough in seeing everything worth look--ing at. At the hotels and on steamboats are sola volumes ot description oi .uane G?orge scenery, interlarded profuselywith Indian legends. Tbe writer has seemingly made an industrious collection of these aboriginal tales, and has not hesitated to locate them with an exactitude that is al most convincing. To see a typical Briton, with a shawl crossed lrom one shoulder to the opposite hip, his sturdy legs clad in knickerbockers, his hard head surmounted bv a helmet hat, and in his hands one of A. Fair Huntress. these guide books, is to get a reproduction ot the English tourist as he is much more numerously encountered in all parts ot tbe European continents. If he is accompanied by a daughter, she is equally well outfitted in the matter of clothes lor rough travel. I saw such a couple yesterday solemnly and trustingly identifying a rocky precipice as the very one from which, so the guide book narrated, an Indian maiden had leaped suicidedly. I felt like telling him that the American mountainous resort without a "maiden's leap" is quite unknown. One of the eccentricities at Lake George is Miss Mamie Woolsen, an heiress from New Orleans, and related in some way to the wealthy Morrises, who own the Louis iana State lottery. She is living for the summer with her parents on Bound Island, and her favorite pastime is squirrel and rabbit hunting on the hills of the mainland near by. She doesn't often shoot at the came, and still more rarely does she make a hit; bat she roams at will, accompanied by a favorite dog, and tooting a horn so me lodiously that its notes make echoing music ETjrBESSrNQ SLANO. One of the summer indications, as ob served at no less than half a dozen summer resorts, is that a sort of crusade is getting force against the use of conversational slang, and especially against its excessiveiemploy ment by the girls of the present day. Quite recently a well-known lady ot New York in distributing prizes to some people, dwelt ria much emphasis on the curious uses to which the words "awful" and 'awfully" are nowadays put; and since then the Columbia College annex ex aminers have formally pronounced their condemnation of the copious sprink ling of slang which they have discoved in the examination papers of certain incor rigible schoolgirls. I was reminded of tbis when I saw two girls, types of dainty culture, waving their handkerchiefs from the hotel veranda at some departing fnend. They Used Slang. They were exquisitely dressed, their manners were gentle, and they were uncommonly pretty. But one of them cried out, "So long!" while the other exclaimed, "I'll see you laterl" That was not very shocking as an example of slang, yet it called out a severe reprimand from the girls' mother, who until lately"would not have thought ot forbidding expressions much further off from dictionary sanction. Kameba. A SUPPLY OP WOOD FEEE. flow a Darkey and III" Doss Laid in a Store of FueL Savannah News.l One of Starke's colored farmers, who pos sesses more ingenuity than energy, was tired of hauling home fire wood, and put a pair of vicious curs in his yard to compel passers by to furnish that article. A Baling was knocked from the fence to allow the dogs to run out on the road and attack pedestrians. The latter, for defense, would never pass the place unless they were pro vided with an armful of pine knots to chunk the dogs with. At night the darkly ga&ered up the dogs earnings for the day, a'M fou..d fuel not only enough for the hominy department, but a surplus to lav up for winter. But now bis curs are both poisoned, and their owner sits on a stump beneath a wide spreading Jerusalem oak bemoaning his loss. SIXTEENTH CENTOBI PRINTING. Fifteen Years' Work to Get Oat an Edition of GOO Volumes. American Bokm&ler.l They took their time in printing impor tant books during the first century after the discovery of the art. For example, take the famous Polyglot Bible, printed under the patronage of Cardinal Ximenes. It was be gun in 1502 and finished on January 10, 1517. The last sheet was carried toXimenes shortly before his death, when he thanked God tnat he had lived to see the completion of his greatest work. The edition was limited to 600 copies and cost 50,000 ducats, a sum equal to about $5,000,000 in onr day. It has now become very scarce. A copy on vellum (oi which only three were printed), and supposed to be the identical copy reserved by the cardinal, was sold in 1829 lor nearly"?3,000. - They Met by Chance. &? - f- Thin Bather I bee pardon, sir. Have we not met before ? Stout Bather Possibly, sir. I am Blob Bon, the inventor of "Blobson's Great .Anti Fat Bemedv." Thin Bather Ah, I knew I could not bei mistaken. 1 am Jfrolessor Dingbats, oi tne School ofiPhysical Culture. Shake! Puck. fp. lj 'lr P I III 111! i A A- A FINANCIAL FOCUS. i From Hong Kong's Great Progress a Few Fishermen's Huts to the MONEY MARKET OF THE FAR EAST. Daring Speculators Making Mammoth For tunes in a Day. A! CHARACTER OP H0XG K0XQ FINABCE THOM OUB TKAVIXIXO COMJIIS8IOSEK.J Hono Kong, July 22. The Hong Kong Stock Exchange, if people at home only knew of it, would be regarded as one of the financial wonders of the world. But they do not. and indeed, to begin with, there is no Stock Exchange, properly speaking, in Hang Kong. One is being established at this moment. What exchange there is now, is the gutter. From the bar ot the club to about a hundred yards down the Queen's road is the local Bialto. But there, all day long, a financial business is done which I doubt if any hundred yards In tbe world, except tbe spaces including the London and New York Stock Exchanges and the Paris Bourse, can equal either for volume of money, audacity of speculation, or sensa tional ups and downs. Everything is done either under the punkahs in the hall of the club or literally id the gutter, and by the most motleey crowd of brokers in double decked hats that the world can show. There are Englishmen. Germans, Anglo Indians, Chinese from Canton, Armenians from Calcutta, Parsees from Bombay, and Hebrews from Bagdad. And from the princes of finance who play with millions of dollars (there are several of them in Hong Kong) down to the humblest who buys 10 shares here and sells 10 shares there, all are making niouey fast. There are practically no bankruptcies in Hong,Kong. The former live in their little palaces; they entertain like princes; they are as generous as they are prosperous, and the latter kick their heels all day long in the street and tbe corridors of the Hong Kong Hotel. And although to say that all of them make money is not unlike saying that two men live on what they win from each other at cards, still the paradox is a truth. Money in Hong Kong seems to have less value, than anywhere else, like wheat in Manitoba or petroleum in Pennsylvania. FORGOT THE VALUE OP MONET. A player at poker the other night dropped a "long chip," value ?100, under the table. "Maskee," he said, in pidgin English, "no matter." "It's 15," somebody reminded him; "if you were at home you'd look for it fast enough." "By Jove," he replied, "so I willl I forgot how much it was." And here is an example showing at once all three characteristics I have claimed above for Hong Kong finance. A few weeks ago, in the stock of a single mine in the Malay Peninsula, upward ot $1,500,000 dollars wa's paid by Singapore speculators to Hong Kong speculators in less than a fortnight, and the same shares were bought back by Hong Kong within u month at more than 50 per cent discount. As for ups and downs, here are a few ex amples taken at random. The shares of the HongKongandKowloon'WharfaiidGodown Comptny, issued at 5100, rose immediately to $103, fell to 125 witbiu a month, and are to-day quoted at $200. Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank shares, of $125 par value, were at one time nt 205 per cent premium, they fali again to 125 per cent premium, and are to-day back to 200 per cent. The Hong Kong and Whatupoa Dock Company's shares, of $125 par value, rose from 25 per cent premium to 135 per cent, fell to 26 per cent, and are quoted to-day at 95 per cent The Punjom and Sunghie Dua Samantan Gold Mining Company (mine at Punjom, in the Malay Peninsula) was floated at $10 per share, rose at once to $15, andjthen jumped suddenly to $80, fell back as sud denly, alter considerable over a million dollars bad changed hands, to $25, at which price most of tbe shares bought and sold again, and now they are firm at $35. But perhaps THE MOST SENSATIONAL of all is the Tongkinc Coal Mining Com pany. The shares, which by French law must be registered in Paris, were issued at 500 francs, say $138, they rose on issue to CO per cent premium, then at a jump to 120 per cent, then at another to 220 per cent, and to day they stand steady at 400 per cent premium, say $700, with ier or no sellers, in spite of the expense of holding them, as the local banks will not advance a dollar upon mining shares which have not yet paid a dividend. I suppose it would be difficult to match this in the history of re cent finance. Now tbis state of things is the rule, not the exception, in Hong Kong, and it is self evident that such high prices can only ex ist and have existed on one condition, namely, that the local companies in cluding, of course, the enterprises in Bor neo, in the Malay Peninsula, in Manila, etc., of which the capital is held in Hong Kong were lormed on a sound basis and are doing thoroughly 'veil. Many Of these ups and downs are, of course, the merest gambling, some of them not even honest gambling, as a recent lawsuit has shown, and I am sorry to say that niucli of this is done by young men, earning clerk's sal aries, who would find such a course impos sible elsewhere. But gambling is in separable from prosperity, and no gambling could produce the same steady effect as legitimate profit'" and promise. This is the case with the local com panies, but I fancy very few people have any idea of what the combined capital of these companies amount to. The total num ber of conmanies of all kinds registered in Hong Kong is 44. Space prevents me lrom giving a list of these, but I have made one, and the following facts are shown by it. The total capital of Hong Kong local companies is no less than $40,740,000. The average dividend of the local companies which have already been in existence long enough to pay one, is a fraction over 13 per cent per annum. And their average annual yield to investors at the so-called "inflated" current prices is 6.2 per cent. FLOATING NEW COMPANIES. New companies are being floated almost every month in Hong Kong. As the new lands of the Far East are gradually devel oped.it is to Hong Kong that they look and must look for financial aid. And capital there responds to the right call, as the flash responds to the trigger. For instance, a month ago a new issue of shares ot the Hong Kong Land Investment Company was made at-50 per cent premium, $100 for a $50 share. The number offered to the public was 13,000. No fewer than 52,000 weie ap plied for. To day they are quoted at $145. Of course there are not wanting prophets of evil who foretell an utter collapse of the Hong Kong market.as a consequence of what they are pleased to term the "gambling mania" prevalent in the colony. Finan ciers at home send telegrams to their repre sentatives here urging caution, and mer chants write long homilies to their agents. Yet I have heard that the very merchants and friends both at home and elsewhere in China who are so anxious on the one hand that Hong Kong should become a model of Scotch prudence, or are so ready on the other to denounce it as a "bucket-shop," are themselves among the quickest and most persistent applicants for shares in new en terprises, with the purely gambling inten tion of reselling them at the first rise. In the past,ishareshave been freely al lotted with'this result: in the future, I un derstand local promoters intend to be a trifle more particular whose fortunes they make. I must not presume to decide the question whether Hone Kong is or is not rest ing on a financial volcano, but I see no rea son to believe if and many reasons to be lieve the contrary. And in defiance of this opinion I think Hong Kong financiers will admit for a long period no stranger has given time or attention to the affairs of the colony that I have. For it is not until after you have studied Hong Kong that you begin to discover, and that slowly, what a marvel ous place it is. Less than fifty years ago, a barren island, with a few Chinese fisher men's huts: to-day, a port with 7,000,000 tons of shipping a year; a focus of enter prise with six and a quarter millions sterl ing of locally registered capital; a coal cen ter where 60,000 tons are consumed per month; an insurance base where in 1888 premiums were paid by Chinese merchants alone upon a capital value of 21,000,000 sterline (I have this fact upon tho best au thority); A FINANCIAL CENTEB for the whole Far East, since Japan, Manila, Sinpapore, Jav3, Swatow, Amoy and Saigon all finance through Hong Kong, and from which 6,000,000 rupees is the monthlv average remittance to India for opium and yarn. And unless all signs fail the development of the Far East is only be ginning. Borneo, the Malay Peninsula, and Siam are all certain to become the scene of enterprises of all kinds within a short time, and the Philippine Islands are mak ing great strides. Any development in any of these places means the increased pros perity of Hong Kong. If the coal of Tone king turns out as it seems to promise, and can be sold in Hong Kong as cheaply as is reasonably claimed by the urometers of the company, Hong Kong will become also a manufacturing center. And the introduc tion of railways into China, which is on the eve of being an accomplished fact, will bring infinite grist to her mill. In fact there is only one thing that can surely bring about the collapse of values in this marvel ous island colony, and that is a war in which England should be engaged with a power represented in the Pacific, while Hong Kong still Jeels herself to be inade quately defended. The subject of the coming development of the Far East brings me to another matter closely touching Hong Kong, and which, although new at present, will soon be proni nently before local and London financiers. Namely, the question of increased banking facilities. Ot the five banks here the Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, the Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, the Chartered Mercantile Bank of India, London and China, the New Oriental Bank Corporation, and the Comptoir d'Escompte, only the first two can be re garded as having afforded important facil ities to local finance. MOKE BANKS NEEDED. The third and fourth mentioned do a com-, paratively small business, and the fifth is a foreign mstitntion and is in liquidation. The Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank is the divine providence, from a financial point of view, of the Far East. It has been the foundation and mainstay of British pros perity in this part of the world, and its name and fame were never higher than to day. Bnt the needs of the Far East have been tending to exceed its resources for some time, for the best bank in the world can only give what it has. So, too, with the Chartered Bank of India. Its local busi ness here, ancl business of a very profitable character, has increased several told during tbe last five years, bnt it, too, has all its available funds employed. So to-day. as I am assured on all hands. a constantly increasing amount oPi legitimate and profitable banking busi ness is being turned away from the doors of both institutions. Therefore, unless Hon? Kong is to stop where it is and the record' ana cnaracter ox lis lnuaoiianis maiwes iuav, in the highest degree improbable one of two things must be done. Either the local bank must increase its capital, or a new semi-local bank must be established "to meet legitimate business, with a very large margin to very good people." So certain is th,is that already the leading Chinese mer chants, refused in their applications for banking facilities, are threatening to estab lish a local Anglo-Chinese bank. The capi tal for a new. local bank could be raised im mediately,ofa new issue of Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank shares could be placed on the market at a heavy premium to-morrow. One course or tbe other is practically certain to be taken, and neither presents any special difficulties. But from the reputation of the directors of the present bank I do not sup pose they will allow a step of this kind to be taken over their heads. Henet Nobhan. TURTLES IN A TUG OP WAK. A Novel Contest That Afford Amusement to New York Broken. MewYorkBtar.j Dr. S. A. Brown, who keeps that old drug store near Fulton Market, has invented a new method of amusement for the crowd of Metal Exchange men and brokers, who are always running in and out of his office. The new scheme may be run up to any extent as a gambling game, omay be used purely for the amusement of the spectators. Dr. Brown goes down to .the market and gets a couple ot turtles about four inches square; little ones. Then he takes a piece of chalk and marks off about ten feet of space on the floor of his store, and puts the turtles with their four feet resting on the marks and their backs to each other. Then he takes a piece of carefully measured string and attaches one end to each tnrtle. Then tbe fun be gins. Bets are laid even or at preadjudged odds as to which turtle will haul the other over a line in the center. It has been said that a fishman down in the market has a turtle that, for its size, is the strongest so far discovered and can hanl any turtle of equal weight ten feet without stopping. It is a very amusing tug of war, and, as in a great manv other similar schemes, depends a great deal upon which turtle starts first. Dr. Brown has discovered that the turtle that makes the first move is bound to win,, as the other one, owing to its backward progress, cannot get suffi cient grip on the floor to withstand the efforts of the other. A half-dozen members of the Metal Exchange took a couple of turtles up into the new Fulton Market Club rooms the other day, and had unlimited tnn and no small quantity of wine at the ex pense of the losers. The game is creating considerable interest, and before long no one need be surprised to see the turtle tug-of-war in full swing around Wall street. Three Is an Assemblage. X- Mr. Clint. Boss (recently betrothed) "Who's my 'ittle dumpling? Miss Skate I is. Mr. Bosi Who's your 'ittle dumpling ? Miss Skate Oo is. Mr. Stubbles I couldn't hold old Enoch no longer, friends. He had t join th' crowd. Judge, m LIFE IS A CONYENT. a Picturesque and Historical Retreat on the French. Coast DESCRIBED BY A NOTED NOVELIST. Impressive Ceremonies at the Bishop's Reception. Yisitinjr NAPOLEON AND THE GEAND SALON COSaXSFONDISCX or TBE DISrATCH.3 BOULOGNE-SUE-MEB, July 30. HE Convent de la Betraite, where I () S am writing my new , M book', is one of the oldest and most in teresting in France, counting its age by centuries. Henry "VIII. once slept there, and in 1804 it was the residence of Marshal Ney while com manding the camp of Bou logne. It was originally built as a palace- for tho Archbishop, and contains the authentic portraits of he 12 bishops who occu pied the See of Boulogne from 1566 to 1789. Later it became a monastery, then a Jesuit College, and finally passed into the hands of the ladies who founded the order of the Betraite du Sacrc-Cccur. These ladies do not teach, but they do much good among the working girls ot the city and are never idle in their beautifnl home. They have a number of ladies as permanent boarders, tnd in times of re treat the" convent is full; it is the favorite resort of the devout Catholics of the En glish and French nobility. The boarders find.their material routine much like that of an hotel, except that one is served by black-robed, bandeaued sisters, and that the bell which summons to meals has a very cloistral sound. A BEATTTIFTJI, SITE. The Archbishop who built this convent had an eve to both splendor and tho pictur esque. The main building is nearly 400 feet long and from right and left wings extend, making a numberof courts in which are most beautifnl gardens. My own room overlooks the largest of these gardens, a wilderness ot green, with thick clumps of trees and a lake with gold fish beneath, the water lilies. On two sides are the cold, gray walls of the convent, above another side tower the ramparts, and at the end is the great sanctuary of the cathedral with the dome above. The trees and vines cling to the ramparts, showing vividly against the hewn grey stone, and here and there are niches with statues of tbe virgins and saints. At the end of the garden, just under the massive walls of the cathedral, is a statue of St. Michael and the devil, almost hidden by the luxuriant and rapidly-growing foli age. My window is shaded bv the magnificent trees on the ramparts, and" the place is so quiet that one can hardly realize that the town hums beyond. Jnst behind this wing is the cloister and garden de communante of the nuns, a sacred place, where com mon mortals are not admitted. Otherwise the boarders have perfect liberty and can go and come as they please, provided they ire at home at 9:30 at night. They have an im mense salon in which to receive their vis itors and a very handsome one at that It is in the main building, arched and heavily hung with curtains, and overlooks three of Engaged in Composition. the gardens. The floor is waxed and very dark, and the table and chairs are of carved antique oak. Out of it open the various winzs, and to the right extends a long hall leading to the chapel. The wide stone staircase leads to its door and in the marble paved vestibule below are always palms and shrubs. A VIEW OF ENGLAND. "When the boarders get tired of the gar dens they can go up on the ramparts and have a superb view of the city sleeping on its hills, and on clear days of England "across the Channel. The ramparts encom pass all of the old town, or the Haute-Ville, as it is called, and in which live the aristoc racy of Boulogne, whose forefathers lived there when the sea washed the ramparts, and the Basse-Ville was not. Leading off from the ramparts by a drawbridge, over hanging a waterless moat, not far from the convent, is an old gray castle, with massive towers and narrow barred windows, high up in the steep, rough walls. It is the Chateau de Boulogne, now the fortress and residence of the Governors, and in one of these great, round, Norman towers Napoleon HI. was imprisoned after his famous descent upon Boulogne in 1840. His room overlooked the court, not over the broad avenue of tbe ramparts, and he must have had a pretty dreary time of it Out of the walls, occa sionally, spring bunches of green, but other wise they are as stern and bare as a cliff that overhangs the sea. Quiet and peaceful and away from the world as convent life is, it has its distrac tions. I got up at 7:30 a week or two since to witness the first'eommunion of the little boys of the college. The chapel is a large and handsome room, with the carved stalls of the nuns at the back, many chairs and pne-dieus in front, and a rich and beauti ful altar smothered iu wonderful flowers made by the Beverende Mere, so perfect that I never questioned their truth. In the center of the a) tar. was a draped crimson mantle lined with ermine and. sur mounting a crown, and beneath was a mass of gilt roses. Thirty or 40 wax candles burned on either side, and when thepriest stood against this background clad in his heavy gold embroidered yellow robes, he made a picture which many a subject-hunting painter would have hailed with joy. Bed draperies were everywhere. THE FIEST COMMUNION. In a little room behind the stalls a choir of hoys sang, and after the parents and friends were seated, a door near the chapel opened, a procession of altar boys appeared, and two by two passed down the aisle and out into the hall to meet the communicants. They looked like little bishops in their long red silk gowns, with the delicate white lace falling above, and their hands crossed over their chests. In a little time we heard the sound of approaching chanting voices, and the little communicants appeared, clad in dark blue, with a white, band on their arms. They marched between the stalls and took their seats in the long red pews which had been placed in the upper part of the chapel, and each kneeling beneath-a tall stalk of white and shapely lilies. They were fol lowed by the altar boys,-and then left their seat, each taking cue of the great white candles ranged in the sides of the chapel, went to the altar. This performance was repeated several times, and there were two impressive sermons. It all lasted about an .hour and a half, and then the boys went IT3 L I m. fl BT),i Til ; KgrT a! outandhad'a breakfast downstairs and a half hour in the gardens. On Sunday morning last I witnessed a ceremony very interesting to an American. A high platform had been built in the front garden, with two wide flights of stairs lead ing up to it On the stairs were heavy car pets and thick rows of ferns where bannis ters usually are. The platform was covered by a red carpet, and at the back was an altar with the ermine-lined mantle sur mounted by the crown, and the candles and golden flowers. Behind this was a high painted scene, much like the scene ot a theater, representing tbe towers and turrets of ancient Boulogne. At the end of a street's perspective was a glimpse of the sea with a boat containing the two angels, who, the legend bath it, brought tbe statue of Notre Dame de Boulogne-to the favored city when the centuries; were young. Against tne gray deceptive towers were trees and shrubs, adding to their reality. The convent, ivy grown, runs around three sides of this gar den, the wall closing in the fourth. In each window were flowers and plants, the build ing was vivid with scarlet draperies and 100 flags waved in the court All this was in honor of the bishop, who makes his rounds every two years. This richly arranged plat form is called a reposoir. THE BISnOP'S BECKPTION. At about 10 o'clock the procession made its appearance to the accompaniment of a band of music and singing, men and women. First came the ladies of the town, who always walk in these processions, and as many as possible were admitted within the convent gates; the rest stood withont in the Enclos. Then came the servants and work-i ing girls who are under the patronage of the Ladies of the Betraite. They wore white gowns and veils and blue ribbons above the waist (Following, were the altar-boys, in their red gowns this time, and the little communicants whom I have jnst described. Then, under a gorgeous red canopy, came the Bishop and his chaplains, followed by many priests. He left tbe canopy at the chapel gates, and went forward and ascended the altar, while the assembled crowd bent its knees. It was a most impressive sight the bishop and his chaplains in their splendid garments against the gray and green of the old castle, the kneeling yellow-robed priests on the wide sweeping stairs, the white-clad girls in the court below. Then, an unseen choir, the nuns began to sing, the Bishop responded, and in a tew'moments the cere mony, all too short, was over. The most interesting room in this old A Peep at the Grand Baton. building is the great salon in tbe center. It is chaste and serene now, there are no rues on the dark floor, and a life-size picture of the Pope with uplifted hands holds eternal court But once, when England was trem bling at the threatened onslaught of France, Napoleon held many a ball in this salon, and the brilliant and beautiful women of the Hante-ville sped over the polished floor in the embrace of the brave French soldiers. I often feel tempted at midnight to steal down the spiral staircase from my room, tip toe fearfully down the long corridor and peer into the great silent salon with its calm virgin and commanding emblam of the Infallible. Perhaps a ghostly throng would flit in mirthful echo beneath the arches, and vague, yibrating strains of music imprls onecTeternally in the waves of air, would wander back and Inspire those dim, trip ping feet. Perchance I might see, stalking through his guests, with head bent, or pausing to pay some rouged and rounded dame a curt and doubtful compliment, the fiale image of the greatest man that ever ived. I verily believe that I would try it if I were not the greatest coward on earth! Geeteude Feankxin Athebtox. A SOCIABLE SNAKE. It Becomes a Stnr Boarder and Is Useful Aboat the Home. All the people of Jackson, Mich., are not liars, and one of the most truthful writes in the Saturday Star about a snake which he caught in Whitmore Lake while fishing through the ice last winter. The reptile was very large and beautifully colored, and when the hook was removed from its mouth coiled itself and sprang 60 feet into the air several times. It then sat down on a chunk of ice and took lunch with the Jackson man, and after smoking a mild cigar slipped back into the water. This summer it came to the Jackson man's house as a star boarder, and it saves his little girl from drowning every time she falls into the water, lifts pickles out of the barrel with its forked tongue, and keeps the lawn sprinkled by filling up on water and spout ing it over the yard, although it acted a little diffident about the last job until the Jackson man removed his keep-off-the-grass sign. G0ISG TO BACK OUT. Why a Detroit Street Car Patron Wanted a LoDg Ride. Detroit Free Press. I "Does this car go up Trumbull avenue?" he asked of a conductor as he got on at Woodward avenue. "Yes sir." "How far is it to the end of the line?" "About two miles." "Will you be an hour and a half eoinc up?" b "About that; why?" "I'm going up there to see a widder. We've been courting for a year. We are engaged. I want to flunk out ot it. I want time to collect my thought and get my ex cuses ready. An hour and a half will do purty well, I guess, but make it two hours if you can. I'm a patron, you know, and the line orter run for the benefit of patrons." Preparing: tor Revcsge. AnxiousPassenger Is thisPhillydelphy? Conductor It is. Passenger Ain't seen nothln of Bam Elson, haveyer? Conductor Don't know him. Passenger Shot I hped yer did. He moved over here from our town about 20 year ago, an owed me f2. I wanted t' git a chance t' swat him once with this umbril as the train went through. Judge, CHINESE . GYMNASTS. Physical Education Among the Celes tials of Ancient Times. T'HB INVENTORS OP MASSAGE. Little Mongolians Practicing Calisthenics in the Pablic Schools. DRILLING A NATION BACK TO HEALTH. rwarrrxN fob thi msPATcn.l In spite of the frequent reference among educators and In educational literature to the fact that all education should aim at producing a sound mind in a healthy body, it is well known that this important truth is too olten forgotten. That the ennobling of the mind at the expense of physical excel lence should be a trait of modern education is in one respect a remarkable protest against the time-worn charge of vanity preferred against mankind; for it is plainly evident to the careful observer that the modern youth of either sex does not maintain the pardonable and even laudable ambition of physical perfection, but generally depends upon tailors and dressmakers for beauty of form and symmetry of proportions. Whatever is said to the contrary, modern man during his never ceasing struggle for wealth and luxury has almost entirely lost sight of that manly ideal, which was char acteristic to the middle ages and more essen tially to the Greeks and Bomans of old. With the exception of a few European na tions," particularly the Swedes, physical education is almost totally a lost art, so to speak. It is true that in the United States a number of gymnasiums have been erected, but still it is not generally conceived that the best physical training will not aim to make either athletes, acrobats or professional sportsmen. . ANCIENT GYMNASTS. In order to arrive at a right understand ing of the ideal" purposes of physical educa tion and gymnastics, namely, the promotion of health of body and mind, by the harmoni ous developmentotthe formerand itsmaking into a ready servant of the later it is neces sary to study the subject historically and to consider its practice and customs among different races and dnring different periods and stages of development. The original gymnastic exercises of the ancients con sisted mainly ot rythmical movements such as dance and pantomime associated with religious worship and leasts. Much later it was developed into pedagogical training and warlike purposes, and still further certain exercises and movements were successfully employed with therapeutical designs. Con sequently it is manilest that gymnastics were intimately connected with the inner life of the people, being part of its religious observances, education and hygiene. According to P. Amiot, in his "L'Abrege Chronologique de l'Histoire de l'Empire Chinais," the diseases during the Emperor Yu-Kfang-Chi increased at an alarm ing rate as a result of various climatic changes and disturbances. With a view of ameliorating this condition and of improv ing the hygienic condition of his people, the Emperor ordered the performance by I his subjects of various military exercises I and evolutions, and by this wise measure the general health ot tne nation was in course of time maintained. It appears that diverse dances were included in these maneuvers, with and without the equip ment of shield and flag. This practice was persevered in until the reign of Emperor Fou-Hi, who flourished about 3,468 years before the Christian era. It is, therefore, evident that gymnastics were employed to the benefit of tbe people in China at this distant age, and much earlier than is re corded by any other cultured nation. It appear also that the Chinese were con versant not only with the pedagogical use of gymnastics for training and drill to tbe preservation of health, but also conceived the jjnrsioi.GOiCAXr effects thereof on the organism in a manner that even to Hatvey would have appeared a most valuable hint. From Chinese writings it is ascertained that their physicians and learned men held that within the organism circulates a subtle fluid matter, the motion of which wds supposed to decline or alto gether stagnate, if the body was not in mo tion. Various maladies originated in con sequence of such stagnation. Ancient Chi nese engravings represent anatomical de monstrations and gymnastic exercises not onlv active, executed without aid. but also passive and semi-passive, with the help of assistants, who were also stilled in knead ing, stacking, Dressing and all the multi farious dexterities of rudimentary massage. It seems, therefore, that the ancient Mon golians, to a certain extent, appreciated the therapeutical virtue of gymnastics, and, in this, as well as in other respects, were ahead of modern culture. ', ' In China it was deemed inseparable from a liberal education of the" voune to dance and ,sing well, and in the most remote times pumic scnoois exisiea wnere, oesiaes mis accomplishment, instruction was imparted in arithmetic, penmanship, history and in the art of driving a carriage. It is said of the great philosopher and religions founder, Kon-Fut-Tse (Confucius), that he partici pated in gymnastic practices with much skill and diligence. The priests have in their possession a system of gymnastics, named Kong-Fan, which includes different posi tions of the body and varions methods of respiration. The principal positions are the standing, the sitting ana the recumbent CHINESE CALISTHENICS. First From the standing position various different postures are derived, by the mov ing of the legs aoart, by the planting of one foot forward, backward or to the side. By the posing of the arms vertically or horizon tally, or by lifting one arm upward, one downward, or by striking an attitude akimbo. By leaning the body forward, sideward or backward, etc Second From the sitting position diverse attitudes are obtained much in the same manner as when standing. Third In the recumbent position expedi ent variations were gained by resting either on the back, prostrated face down or lying upon one side, and by all the numerous pointings of-arms and legs previously men tioned, including different positions of the head. 4 With a skillful and methodical system of bending and stretching, raising and lower ing, extending and closing of arms and legs, a peculiarly varying and almost un limited mass of gymnastic postures, move ments, exercises and attitudes are obtained in the svstem of Kong-Fan, tending to the development of every muscle and sinew of the body harmoniously and symmetrically. It is also worth attention that the Chinese have known and applied gymnastics for otherwise neglected organs, the tongue and eyes. Ac the and passive motions and manifestations of the tongue were designed to increase the secretion of saliva and for the correction of stammering and impaired speech. To the various modes of respira tioD through the mouth, through the nose, or both at the same time during inhalation and exhalation, quick or slow.forcible or elongated, no small amount of importance was attached in their gymnastic execu tions. A CELESTIAI. THEOET. The Chinese regarded the human body as a "hydraulic mechanism" the free circu lation of whose "fluids" was the agent of health and of restoration to health. This circulation had to overcome both the weight of the "fluids" and the friction thereof against the walla oi the vessels, and every thing, that, formed an obstruction against .either wai naturally looked upon as bearing influence" upon the health. Their theory was that the air. which continually enters the body through the'lnngs, increased the movabiiity of the fluids, the consequence of which was that anything that faailitates or retards the entrance of air into the body mmt necessarily either facilitate or retard the circulation. Upon thfs base the Chl nese constructed a gymnastic theory. Impediments to tho circulation of the) fluids depending on their own weight wero removed by diverse positions and attitudes. The horizontal position was imagined most favorable to the circulation, and the up right posture was supposed to act retarding. By the change of positions a means was ac quired to direct the fluids and to correct their motions. Accumulation of fluid in a certain locality of the organism was sure to cause a corresponding diminution or les sened motion in other parts. In spite of this rudimentary insight into physics and physiology their method of gymnastics was eminently applicable to diseases depending upon an arrested, sluggish or abnormally increased circulation. Missionaries among the Chinese corroborate this fact, and N. Bally has made extensive observations thereon, related iu his work, "Cinesiologie ou Science du Movement" It is quite in accordance with the ancient and high state of Chinese culture that gymnastics should be employed by this people as a means of preserving health, of developing and per fecting warriors and of coping with disease. When Metzger, some 25 years ago, ASTONISHED EUROPE with his successful use of massage very few were familiar with the fact that thousands ot vears before the Christian era the Chinese had no other remedy for anchyloses, contrac tion of muscles, neuralgia and rheumatism than kneading, rolling, stroking, hacking, chapping and such like dexterous knick knacks, in modern times simplified and perfected. The Chinese system of gymnastics has been developed without influence from abroad, has sorung up from its own soil and has never been transplanted to the benefit of other nations. The Greek ath letics and games were not formed after the Chinese model, at least history tells us nothing about it From P. H.'Ling, the founder of the Swedish system, down to the present day, no author or practitioner has ever quoted any practical experience loan or research from the Chinese gymnastics. The human faculties of one nation do not differ from those of another nation. Inven tions and institutions of one people may therefore resemble those of another people, although having been conceived and de veloped independently of each other. Mod ern gymnastics are conceivable without those of China, but their present use and mood of practice are founded upon tbe ground of modern science, compared to which the Chinese culture was obviously an inferior article. The nature of physical training establishes numerous resemblances, be it in different quarters of the world or thousands of years between; but that is no proof ot the assertion that modern gymnas tics ore merely a loan from the original idea of the Chinese. Axel C. Mallbeck. Something; Stroncer Than Salllran. Chicago A cits.1 The race is not always to the swift nor the battle to the strong, but if John L. Sul livan gets safely out of that Mississippi mess and will tackle the Chicago river to a finish we will lay odds on the creek and give the slugger the choice of rules. Tndigestion TS not only a distressing complalnt,'ot 1 itself, but, by causing the blood to become depraved and the system en feebled, is the parent of innumerable maladies. That Ayer's Sarsaparilla 13 the best cure for Indigestion, even when complicated with liver Complaint, is proved by the following testimony from Mrs. Joseph Lake, of Brockwa Centre, Mich.: "Liver complaint and Indigestion made my life a burden and came near ending my existence. For more than four years I suffered untold agony, was reduced almost to a skeleton, and hardly had strength to drag myself about All kinds of food distressed me, and only the most delicate could be digested at oii. Within the time mentioned several physicians treated me without giving re lief. Nothing that I took seemed to do any permanent good until I commenced the use of Ayer's Sarsaparilla, which has produced wonderful results. Soon after commencing to take the Sarsapa rilla I could see an improvement in my condition. My appetite began to return and with it came the ability to digest all the food taken, my strength im proved each day. and after a few months of faithful attention to your directions, I found myself a well -woman, able to attend to all household duties. The medicine has given me a new lease of life." , Ayer's Sarsaparilla, Dp. J. C. Ayer tc Co., Lowell, Mass, iTIccSl; six bottles, $3. Worth $5 a bottla A PERFEC1 A. purely Vegetable Compound that expels all bad humors from the system. Removes blotch es and pimples, and makes pure, rich blood. 3D2-SS MEDICAL. DOCTOR WHITTIER 814 PENN AVENUE, PITTSBURG, PA As old residents know ana back flies of Pitts burg papers prove, is the oldest established and most prominent physician In the city, de voting special attention to all chronic diseases. SKrsCsNOFEEUNTILCURED MCDni IO and mental diseases, physical IN t It V U U O aecay.nervous debility, lack ot energy, ambition and hope, impaired mem ory, disordered sight, self distrust,bashf nlness, dizziness, sleeplessness, pimples, eruptions. Im poverished blood, falling powers.organlc weak ness, dyspepsia, constipation, consumption, un fitting the person for bmlness.soctety and mar riage, permanently, safely and privately cured. BLOOD AND SKINSfU" blotches, falling hair, bones pains, glandular swelling, ulcerations of tongue, mouth,throat, ulcers, old sores, are cured for life, and blood poisons thoroughly eradicated from the system. IIDIMADV kidney ana bladder aerange U n 1 1 N rt n I ments, weak back, gravel, ca tarrhal discharges, inflammation and other painful symptoms receive searching treatment, prompt relief and real cures. Dr. Whittier's life-lore; extensive experi ence, Insures scientific and reliable treatment on 'common-sense principles. Consultation free. Patients at a distance as caret ally treated as if here. Office boars 9A. m. to 8 p. m. San day, 10 A. K. to I p. jr. only. DR. WHITTIER, 814 Venn avenue. Pittsburg, Pa. auS-16-Mnwk GRAY'S SPECIFIC MEDICINE CURES NERVOUS DEBILJTY, LOST VIGOR. LOSS OF MEMORY. rnll partlcdlan. la pamphlet sent free. The genuine Uray's bpeel&c sold by drujUti only lu yellow wrapper. Price, ft per package, or six for fa, or by mall on recelnt of nrlce. hr &rtdrM- ne THE ukai JJlfcLiluiE co, linOalo. a. Y bold lnPltUbnrg-byS.S. HULLA.NO, corner Bmlthflrldand liberty sU. apU-SS tool's Cottoaa Xoot COMPOUND isosed of Cotton Root. Tansv and Pennyroyal a recent discovery bv an old Dhvsician. Is tueeestfuUu uted numtMu Safe. Effectual. Price $L by mall, sealed. Ladies, ask your druggist for Cook's Cotton Root Compound and take no substitute, or inclose 2 stamp for sealed particulars. Ad dress POND LILY COSIPANY. No. 3 Fisher Block, 131 "Woodward ave Detroit, Mich. 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