rsfR THE " PITTSBimQ- " DISPATCH, SUNDAY, AUGUST 25, 1889." tff'-l m E ENCHANTED CAVERN -BY- ERNEST H. HEINRICHS. WSITXEX TOB THE DISPATCH. lis. Vi JHRRk OME few thousand years ago there lived a very power ful King who had two daughters. One of them was very old and ugly looking, while the other was young and as beautiful as the morning star. All the princes and noblemen in the world were in love with her. From day to day a long procession of young I .ii . r . . . auu minusome men could be seen wenaing their way toward the King's castle. They all came to pay their respects to the King and his beautiful daughter, and everyone was anxious to marry the lovely Princess, but the King refused to allow ier to be married before her sister. " 'What does it matter," he would say, whether the girl is uglr; she is a King's daughter, and as good'as the other even if she is not quite so nice looking." Thus it happened that all the anxious lovers of the beautilul Princess made their journey in vain, because none of them cared to have anything to do with the ugly sister. Affairs had gone along in this manner lor many years, and nearly all the Princes of the world had been at the King's court. One day, however, it was in the middle of the winter, a youns man appeared at the castle quite alone. "When he was taken be fore the King he stated that his home was thousands of miles awav. but havmc heard of the beautiful Princess he had come to ask her hand in marriage. The King replied as he had done before that he would intro duce him to his beautiful daughter, but M f7a. & tiki 3j The Prince Fuitt the Wizard. be that he would not allow her to married until her ugly sister was provided for. Then the lovely young lady was called into the room. When the Prince saw her he fell at once in love with her, and he realized that he could not return homeunless the beautiful girl accompanied him. But the same feeling of love had also been awakened within the heart of the Princess. No sooner did she behold the handsome youth than her love flew out to him and she resolved then and there that she would either become the joung man's wife or else die. Ttc Prince stayed around the castle for several days thinking aud scheming how he niieht get to see and talk to the beautiful lady. But as the Princess was equally anxious to meethim, bis suspense was con siderably shortened, and one night while the young man' was fondly gazing up at the King's daughter's window, he suddenly noticed a piece of paper tailing right in front of him. Picking it up the Prince read these words: "Go to the Wizard of the Cloudless Sky aud do as he bids you!" The ardent young man immediately went his way and inquired where the wizard could be found. After a long search be found a cave at the very summit of a high mountain. Here the wizard lived. The young j. nnce at once explained now he happened to come there, but the wizard had evidently expected him, "Here, my friend, is a horse for yon," he said. "Take it and lead it down the hill into the town where the King and his daugh ters live. In the rear of the castle is an old oat tree; tie the animal to that tree and leave it there until 12 o'clock at night But nhen the clock strikes the midnight hour be prepared to mount the horse and ride three times around the castle walls. If you can get around the castle three times before the 12 chimes from the big clock of the castle she said, "until you find a horse with a young man and a young lady on his back. Take the young lady away, carry her to the Enchanted Cavern and await my arrival." The winged monster at once disappeared, and not long after the two fugitives saw the ugly vision swoop down upon them. Before the Prince knew what was the matter he saw his beloved Princess carried away through the air. For a moment he thought he had lost his senses because the whole af fair had onlv occupied five seconds." Then he thought about what ought to be done next, and he immediately recalled the wiz ard. "I will go to him and ask his advice in the matter," be said, and so he did. When the wizard had listened to the manner in which the Princess had been stolen and by whom he replied: "That is the work of her ugly sister, who is jealous of the beautilul lady on account of her good looks. The monster who stole her was one of the Princess' menials, and he has taken her to the Enchanted Cavern. Now, if you will follow my bidding you shall res cue her." "All right," said the Prince, "what must I do?" "Follow me to my stable and I will give you another horse, the fleetest animal in the world. Let the horse run its own gait and its own road, and in three hours you will be at the Enchanted Cavern. Then hide your horse by giving him one of these pills, which will make him invisible to everyone except yourself. That being accomplished, drink the contents of this little flask. It contains the elixir of witchcraft, and while you are under its influence no witch, demon or monster can harm you. You may then boldly enter the Enchanted Cavern and tate the Princess away. Now hurry, but mind you of one thing before you go." The influence of the elixir will only last hve minutes, and in that time you must accom plish all you want to do. or else your lady .love will be forever lost to you!" The Prince thanked the kind wizard, and hurried to the Enchanted Cavern. He gave his horse the pill, which made him invisible, then he drank his elixir of witchcraft, and he entered the cavern. On all sides he saw witches and monsters of all kinds, but when ever they saw him coming they fled for their lives. At last he got into a small room where he observed the beautilul Princess lying like dead in a large stone coffin. With the greatest exertions he succeeded in getting her out and carrving her away But at every step the witches find monsters of the cavern followed him. In the meantime the five minutes were nearly elapsed, and the nearer the allotted time was ud the more witches came around him. While they could not touch him, they tried nevertheless to frighten him by iuak ing hideous faces. But the young Prin-.v carried hie valuable load fearlessly through the cavern and he gained the fresh air just the tenth part of a second before the five minutes were over. Quickly he ran to his horse and then once more the race for life beean. The horse ran straight for the wiz ard of the cloudless sky, who received them all with open arms. The Princess, who had by this time become nearly exhausted from her exciting experiences during the last day, stayed here to get some rest. After a while, however, the Prince and Princess took their QUEEN OF THE ARENA. The Eoyal Hippodrome of Empress Elizabeth of Austria. A DARING AND ROMPING GIRL. How She Won a Prince's Heart Away From Her Elder Sister. THE PADS OF TAEIODS EOIAL WOMElf J II WWJW3l mmrr. Aie-sr WMWmrW n 4 j. 17V 4 nt. Wk-x)3 : i )v Flight Prom the Witch't Cave. departure for the young man's home, where they at last safely arrived. The ugly Princess was so mad because she could not kill her sister, that she locked herself into the Enchanted Cavern never to oome out again. But nobody ever said that he was sorry not to be able to see her. A & , lill-f r f$m? i i ' " it 1 A Race for a Wife. tower have been struck the young Princess will be with you ready to fly with you to the end of the world; but it vou fail to get around in time she will be lost to you for ver and you will die, because your enemies will be on your track." The Prince promised to follow the in structions of the wizard to the letter, and, taking the horse's bridle, he hurried down the hill. Everything was done as the in habitant of the cave had said. He found the oak tree, and tied the animal to one of the branches. Then he went away until midnight. As soon as the sound of the first chime resounded from the midnight hour he commenced his race. Never was such riding seen before. The young man spurred the horse into a gait, the celerity of which bid fair to rival lightning. But the wall around the castle was long, and haste was necessary. However, just as the echo of the twelfth stroke died awav in the dis tance he arrived for the third time at the old oak tree, and behold there the beauti uJ Princess stood awaiting him. She im mediately jumped up behind him, and an other race commenced even faster than the one around the castle. But just before the fugitives started ofl a window from the royal castle was opened and the ugly face of the other Princess ap peared. "Kahah!" she muttered through her, teeth, "my beautiful sister wants to escape with the young Prince; but hold on, my two doves, you will not get very far." Then she closed the window again. The usly Princess, however, wis a very powerful witch, who had a whole army of demons, monsters and goblins at her com mand ready to do her bidding at a mo ment's notice. After she closed the window she went into the middle of her room, and, stamping with her right foot three times on the floor, an awful monster with claws and wings appeared before her. "Go out on the high road to the forest," OUR C0USTKI11BN ABROAD. Some Absurd Actions of American Traveler! Acroea tbe Atlantic. Springfield (Mass.) Union. I A story that would be ludicrous but for the disgust that an American must feel upon reading it is going the rounds of two young men from a Western State who are doing Europe. Not that they had the remotest idea of gaining any benefit from the trip or that they really saw anything worth looking at the second time, for the paint ings in the Louvre and the galleries of the Luxembourg were no more to them than chromos given away with packages of poor tea. They could not understand even "The Last Supper." An intelligent New Yorker took them in hand and every morning arose early and laid out a route for the day, but the Expo sition made them tired and thejr saw in the Champs Elysees only a place in which to sit down and talk over thier comrades at home. The New Yorker finally lost patience and said that he was tired of hurl ing the glories of France against the "jelly fish souls of these two galvanized mummies from the West" He said that he had asked them why they came to Europe and they did not know. Another story is told of a General from Maine who was doin? Enrone with his wifo and daughter a few years ago. At the door of St. Peter's at Borne he met an acquaint ance from his native State who offered him a eppy of the Bangor Whig. St. Peter's haa no charm for the American after that He took the paper eagerly and sat upon the steps reading while the wife and daughters inspected the cathedral CLEYER LITTLE CARL. He Blake HI Wants Known Without Dis obeying Orders. Toledo made. Little Carl called on a neighbor, and after inquiring into the health of the fami ily, he asked: "How are your grapes get ting along?" "They, are doing well. Some of them are beginning to ripen," replied the ladv. "well, my mamma said I musn't ask for any, but if yea offered me some I might take them. Of course they were offered. A Smoke Consumer Wanted. .Korrlstown Herald. An invention, about to be tried in Pitts burg, is claimed to produce perfect combus tion of fuel, so that no smoke is emitted. An invention that would produce perfect combustion of a cheap cigar and a rank cigarette so that no smoke would be emitted, would be more gladly welcomed. Beauties Born In Summer. New York World.! It is a strange physiological fact that handsome men and pretty women are usu ally "summer children," and come into the world with the flowers and sunshine about them. .Nearly every one of the-world's- rwnrrTEN roa the dispatch.! Since the days of Nero and his starring tour in Greece, royal amateurs have grown more and more shy in the display of their talents. An occasional duke may fiddle at a charity concert, but the real imperial stars only glitter before a very select, though often boisterous circle of intimes, and the exploits of their youth are not heard of by the outside world till their hair has become sprinkled with eray, and the very thought of tights and spangles would seem an insult to their dignity. It used to be an old joke in the profession that Manager Abbey had engaged Queen Victoria for a tour of the United States as Rosalind in "As You Like It" Jumbo had just left her, seduced by American dol lars, and she mourned for her playmate they had had such happy days together, romping around the park which surrounds Buckingham Palace, rolling over each other in the grass, till with the Queen's increasing bulk it was feared that some day she might injure Jumbo, and they were separated. She would have done anything to follow him, but they could not find a suitable lead ing man. I don't know whether any enterprising American manager ever made the Empress of Austria an offer or not, but an old Countess from the heart of hearts of the Vi ennese aristocracy has told me that the title of Empress of the Arena was more fitted to her than the title of Empress of Austria. But the old Countess was a friend of the Empress' mother-in-law, who hated her, so there was malice there A EOMPIJfQ OIUL. Do not make the mistake to thins: that she was a modern Theodora a saw-dust heroine lifted to the throne, by no means her father was the Duke Maximillian of Bavaria. Her eldest sister was engaged to be married to tho young .Emperor of Aus tria, so, of course, absorbed all theattention, and the Princess Elizabeth was lelt to her self and an English governess whom she easily ruled. Her rompish nature expended itself in all sorts of boyish sports. She was always trying to make her monkey drive her team of milk-white goats, or would hold a young pig on her donkey's back, while the other children shrieked with laughter at her mad pranks. "When I grow up I'm going to be a circus-rider," she would say, little dreaming that she was going to be an Empress. The fun of her youth developed later into a passion for hunting, racing and yachting, wbichshe followed with more than dilettante zeal. Modern Queens seem scarcely to know what to do with themselves. It never seems to enter their heads to only reign and govern, and we have no more Cleopatras and Catherine of Bussias. Having been from their youth accustomed to their posi tions, social success does not seem to them a triumph, so they usually settle down to quiet domesticity and child-boaring. or else become wild over the encouragement of their personal fads, which in these quiet days are much more likely to be guinea pigs than lovers. DELIGHTS OP EMPRESSES AND QUEENS. The passion of the Empress of Austria is riding. The delight of the Empress of Russia is statintr. Queen Victoria is never so happy as when sitting by a death-bed. Nothing delights the Queen of Italy more than to add another pearl to her necklace. The Empress Frederick is a miser. The Empress of Germany is a religious bigot The Queen of Portugal is the most extrav agant dresser in Europe. The Empress Eugenie is the saddest wo man. The Queen of Spain is the proudest mother. And the Queen of Greece is the finest swimmer. The last named has a pond lined with pure white marble, rivaling the famous rose marble bath of Ismail Pasha, where Cora Pearl used to bath in champagne. In former times a favorite pastime of the Queen of Greece was to bar the doors of this en chanted garden, and with her ladles-in-waiting and maids act impromptu scenes from Greek mythology. The Queen of Portugal loves the same sport, but in a more rugged manner and dashes into the fiercest breakers like a man. Indeed, several times she has been decorated for her bravery. As I have said, the Empress of Austria was not bred for the throne, it was her elder sister, who expected to leave a dukedom for an empire. Indeed the affaichad gone far enough for the papers to be ready to sign, and the young Emperor had come in person me vaBiio to see uis uriue. ie was alone in the great historical hall when the madcap Princess Elizabeth, not knowing anyone was there, came into the room in a short white frock, and her lovely curls reaching below her waist She paused abashed ou the threshold, making an enchanting picture, and burst into a rippling laugh as she fled. He gave chase, and an hour later was found romping with her in tbe rose garden. It is saidthat her sister in her rage spanked her, but in a few months was obliged to humble herself and address the despised child as "Your Imperial Majesty" NAEKCW-MINDED NOBILITY. At this time she was of that peculiar freshness of beauty which always makes one think of things good to eat; childish, yet voluptuous, the type both men and women feel drawn to, wishing to touch, to kiss, to caress. The young monarch fell madly in love with her and overpowered all reason and counsel. Every influence was brought to bear on him, her youth, her lack of edu cation, the unfitness of her temperament for me wruuc ii tuuugut ui nouiing out ner smile, her laugh, her lips. The sister was forgotten and he conquered. Viennese society is the most formal, the most exclusive and, aristocratic in the world Bud refused to accept this young hoyden as its queen. A princely wit has said: "Lhu manite commence par le Baron," but this, court was still more rigid, for it was neces sary to prove eight successive generations of nobility on both father and mother's side to be socially admitted even into its outer cir cle. She was snubbed and slighted on every possible occasion, and even by the imperial family. So she drew within herself and loved her dogs and horses and the cultiva tion of her athletic powers. She felt stifled with the formality of the court this select herd which felt itself so above the rest of the world, yet whose greatest amusement was vulgar gossip. The court geography she could never learn, and the chase for scandal did not interest her. She preferred a mad gallop on her favor ite horse, with the wind in her teeth and her hair flying behind her. Even in court dress she liked to let it hang down beneath her crown, and would only consent to have it twined with jewels. It has been de scribed to me as giving her a peculiar soft, shy look, these masses of hair hanging to her feet Her figure waslithe and slender, her eyes bright andjiquid, like some gen tle animal's. She loved to dress in soft fringes, furs, feathers and swan's-down. At this time she was thought the handsomest woman in Europe. The infinite number of gossiping card par ties forming the only diversion of eight-barreled Viennese society, which, .prefers gam' ing to dancing, found stories to circulate of "tbiyshorteoiTiinffft nf their nn-rprMo-n'D MT.Afiw.' duchess, her husband's mother, tried in every way to ruin her, but could not suc ceed, for this wild girl was a good girl and her only missteps were against sham - and snobbishness and bars to freedom of speech and originality of character. A PEITATE CIBCTJS. Bhe retired into a very small circle of in timate friends and mingled with the court as little as possible. She had a very large forest park enclosed with high walls. In this were bear-pits, cages for ferocious ani mals. Bare birds sune in the trees and fine domestic breeds grazed on the lawns. It is said that she could subdue the most sav age beast with a glance of her eye and would walk the grounds with a lion or tiger beside her, simply holding him by the mane. In the center of the park was a clearing with a race course and also a cov ered amphitheater. A court lady told me of hearing Her Majesty say many times how she would have injoyed the savage sports of the colosseum, the fights between wild animals, the great hunts of beast and men. Here the Empress would ride for hours, changing herhorses,exhausted from fatigue, then, becoming more and more excited, would call her companions Io the circus, where, altering their costumes for more ap propriate ones, a performance would take place never witnessed by anyone outside this imperial stock company. The servants were turned out of the buildings, even out of the park, and the gates double barred. Grand dukes were the grooms and clowns, and the Empress of Austria the queen of the arena. All this is, of course, tbe barest hearsay. For years it was kept so quiet that even many members of the intimate court circle did not dream of its existence, and it is only during the last few years that rumors of it have reached the outer world itself long a thing of the past The manners of the Empress are very nat ural and unconventional and she is very charitable. Two summers ago she cruised to England and staved at a fishine village, living at a little hotel over a shop. She could ride all day without fatigue, sleep on the ground, refresh herself with a bit of black bread and a dash of sour wine at a peasant's hut and then climb mountains till her attendants were almost dead with fatigue. I speak of her always in the past time, for everything is changed now, the grief over her domestic tragedy has left her much broKen, she does not care for society and can desire no diversion from her old pleasures, she is nervous and trembling. She has been one of tbe most individual women in Europe,but as her greatest powers were her physical beauty and endurance the loss of them leaves her most helpless and unhappy. In her family life she has been a noble character deepty wronged in many, ways. Olive Weston. THE SWISS SPOKTS. Interesting National Games of. the Helvetian Republic. AN OLD CUSTOM RE-ESTABLISHED. Wonderful Wrestling by Hardy Alpine Mountaineers, as DESCRIBED Br AN AMERICA! CONSDL. THE BABY AND THE BUG. Tbe Former Got What He Wanted and Still Wasn't Satisfied. A Boston, journal says: "Among the passengers on the St. Louis express yester day, was a woman very much over-dressed, accompanied by a bright-looking-nurse girl and a self-willed, tyrannical boy of about 3 years. N "The boy aroused the indignation of the passengers by his continual shrieks and kicks and screams, and his viciousness to ward his patient nurse. He tore her bon net, scratched her hands, and finally spat in her face, without a word of remonstrance from the mother. "Whenever the nurse manifested any firmness, the mother chided her sharply. Finally the mother composed herself for a nap, and about the time the boy had slapped the nurse for the fifth time, a wasp came sailing in and flew on the window of the nurse's seat The boy at once tried to catch it "The nurse caught his hand and said coaxingly: " 'Harry mnstn't touch. Bug will bite xiarry. "Harry screamed savagely, and began to xics ana pound the nurse. "The mother, without opening her eyes or lifting her head, cried out sharplv: " 'Why do you tease that child" so, Mary? Let him have what he wants at once.' " 'But ma'am it's a' " 'Let him have it, I sav.' "Thus encouraged, Harry clutched at the wasp and caught it The scream that fol lowed brought tears of joy to the passengers' eyes, "The mother awoke again. " 'Maryl' she cried, 'let him have it' "Mary turned in her seat and said con fusedlv: "'lie's got it, ma'am!'" HOW TO CONSTRUCT A HOTEL. A Recipe for Making a Loto Story of the Beenlatlon Type. Pnnxsutawney Spirit 3 A Canoe township correspondent wants to know how to write a short love story. Write it like all the rest of them are written. First, let your hero fall desperately in love with your heroine. Then manage to have him struck ou the head-by a pile driver or something.of that sort. After which he will be carried in an insensible condition to the residence of her whom his soul loveth. In about three weeks he will open his eyes and exclaim: "Where am I?" And the herione, who has been nursing him all the while, will answer in sweet.soft tones: "You are here with me Charley.and I am so glad." Then he rapidly recovers andthey get married. You can put in the variations to suit yourself", using either ac cident or tvphoid lever with which to pros trate your hero. But you must down him somehow. That is imperative. sated bi a whiski bottle. It Was In tbe Zllnn'a Pocket When a Snake Tried to Bite Him. Pnaxsutawney Splrltl A gentleman of this place, whose name we withhold on account of his hi eh standing as a member of the Corn Cob Club, was saved from a horrible death one day last week by whisky, without taking the cork out of the bottle. He was out on a huckleberry moun tain, and had taten some liquor along as an antidote for snake bite. He carried it in his hip pocket. Growing leg weary, he was in the act of sitting down, when a large rattler, which was coiled up just behind him, struck vici OUSir. Its fanes came in rnntunt xrith the bottle, and did no harm. Had the bottle con tained water the result would have been the same, but he would not have had it in his pocket ICOItRESFOXDEXCE OF THE'DXSFATCH.I Ztjbt,ch, August 10. One can gain no better idea of the inner life and character of a people than by a study of their games and amusements. And certainly the rugged, sturdy, indomitable endurance of the Swiss finds no better illustration than in the sports with which, in hundreds of remote villages and hamlets, lying far away in obscure vales, or perched high up in mountain re gions, accessible only by footpaths, they are wont to while away the leisure honrs of Sunday afternoons, of holidays, or of the long summer evenings, after their day of toil is over. Each canton has its own peculiar games of athletic agility and strength, games the origin of which, in many instances, reaches back into a long-forgotten past, and many of which, curiously enongh, bear a singular re semblance to those in which some of the tribes of North American Indians are wont to excel. The dwellers in the cities, on the other hand, have their trained band of gym nasts, or turners, who form no despicable rivals to the wilder sons of the mountains, and who make up, ia their wonderful agility, for the comparatively untrained brute-force of the others. For a period of 23 years past, however,no opportunity has been afforded to these two formidable competitors to meet and test their respective strength in open combat. The idea of orsanizing Buch a meeting was first suggested six years ago, when the Swiss National Exhibition was held here, but in viewof the numerous other festivals alreadv arranged for that year it was allowed to fafl through, and it was consequently reserved for the year 1889 to witness the renewal of this interesting national custom, till now unknown to all of the rising generation of Switzerland. The two-days festival just closed has aroused a storm of enthusiasm, and has met with a popular success which justi fies a belief that the custom now revived will be henceforth held in honored annual observance. A THRILLING NOVELTY. The "Hornet" players came from the land of the famous cheese, the Emmenthal, and the game, which is peculiar to that locality, proved a thrilling novelty even to most of the other Swiss in attendance. The "Hornet" is a disc of box wood, three or four inches in diameter, thinned off at the outer rim, and an inch or two thick at the center. A curved piece of pine or ash, some three feet in length, fashioned like the runner of a sled and provided with short pointed feet to make it stand upright, is firmly planted on the ground at one end of the field, its ele vated point forward, and upon this point the disc or "Hornet" is placed, standing on its rim, edge forward, a bit of clay being used to keep it in its place. One side of the contestants now takes the field, armed with thin board shields some 18 inches sanare. and provided with a sort ot gridiron handle; the other side, which has the innings.stands ready behind the disc, each man carrying a pole some three feet long, of well tempered oak, and an inch or so in thickness, at the further end of which there is a solid knob of box wood of the size of a large apple. The first striker stept up behind the sleigh-runner, carefully measures his dis tance, swings his pole with a careful aim, and with all his strength, and lol the disc goes whizzing off into space with the sharp buzz of the insect alter which it is named, and with such velocity as to render its course entirely invisible to the untrained eye of the spectator. But the sharp eyes of the opponents in the field are following it, and almost ere it has left its place, their wooden shields are seen vertically shootin? up, high up into the air to stop it The feat seems all but incredible, yet, notwith standing the elevation and velocity of the disc, it is pretty sure to encounter one or the other of theses well-aimed obstacles in its airy flight, striking it broadside with a sharp cutting report like the sound of a pis tol snot, and then falling idly into the earth. This counts one for the outs; should it, on the other hand, reach the earth unhindered, one is scored for the strikers. The wonder ful strength and dexterity which these Em menthaler men brought to bear in their re cent display of the game may be judged from the fact that, in several instances, the "Hornet" was knocked 60 feet high, and landed 1,000 feet off, And that the struggle was so closely matched that it was found necessary to divide the honors and award each side a goblet, and also a prize to the best striker of each. tion was 61 to 39 per cent A study of the two types as they enter the arena, shake hands, take their grip of each other's short hose, and begin the struggle, is extremely interesting. Tbe judges call out two names, and, as the parties jump up from among tie crowd of athletes squatting or lying around the edge of the sawdust arena, all eyes are turned upon them to study their respective physiques, and speculate as to the probable winner. Here comes a short, stout built man of about 30, with low forehead, close cropped hair, a tanned face that is mild and kindly in expression, broad shoulders, and a stooping, shuffling gait He looks like a cross between an Oshkosh lumber man and a Washington Market butcher; auu uiuves into toe ring wiiu someuunj; oi the sluggishness of an ox disturbed in its midday nap. He has on a coarse large checked cotton shirt, pants of rough brown serge, and heavy slippers. AGILITY AGAINST MUSCLE. To meet him, there springs litheiy forward a well-built young fellow of 25 or 26, bare headed, in white shirt and trousers and laced wrestling shoes, his mien erect, his manner confident and his clear complexion and white bared arms, showing him to be a city product The linen short hose are quickly dinned, the contestants shake hands, reach out and graip each other, generally Tiy the under or lower side of the short "hose, and the desperate struggle commences. At times the strain seems greater than bone and muscle can possibly withstand; in another moment, without relaxing their grasp, the two stand motionless, bendintr forward their heads, touching each other like gladiators at bay, watching for their opportunity. Then a sudden shake, another struggle and the Turner finds himself lifted horizon tally by sheer strength to the height of his opponent's shoulders and thrown down again, but only, in turn, to save himself by his marvelous ability, and to spring like a tiger anew to the attack, amid the deafening yens and plaudits or the excited bystanders. And so these tactics are repeated in endless variations until one of the combatants is felled or a draw is declared, when the hand shaking is repeated, and the weary, perspir ing and not unfrequently bleeding combat ants retire, only to be immediately followed by others. At a signal the wrestlers finally withdraw, there is a pause and then a man strides into the ring, bearing upon a thin flag staff, about six feet long, a red silk flag, upon one side of which is embroidered in gold the legend "Aelpler Bruderschaft, Stans," on the other "Gott schuetze unsere Alpen." He is a man of about 40, of medium stature. and spare build, clad in square-cut long jacket and baggy, corduroy trousers, and there is a patch of Edelweiss and Alpine roses visible in the band of his broad brimmed felt hat. A FEAT OP STEENGTH. He is one of the noted flag-swingers from his canton, and he lifts his hat modestly to the assemblage and begins swinging the the flag, passing it with lightning rapidity through every variety of movement, now flinging it 20 feet into the air, catching it with unerring precision as it descends, passing it now behind him, now under his feet, then high into the air again, yet keep ing it in a horizontal position throughout the entire performance. This feat of strength and dexterity is peculiar to the men of TTri and Nidwalden, and is an nually performed on the "Sennenchilbi" on the first Sunday in October by four officers of a religious fraternity known as the"Sennenbruderschaft," dating from the year 1593, and embracing the four town ships of Altorf, Buerglen. Spyrigen aud TJnterschaechen. "On the Sunday named," says a recent writer, "the flag is swung and fluttered in some open spot, under direction of the Captain of the order, in the presence of numerous maidens, and to the music of the "Sennenmarch.' " Stone throwing, ball throwing and a game lAVn 1G "Stfttl-.ln" llt.1 .4.1. 3- EVERY DAY SCIENCE. Development of Atlantic Express Pas senger Steamships. PHOTOGRAPHING IN COLORS. Hygiene Rapidly Becoming One of the Exact Sciences. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL NOTES. known as "Stoeckeln" ( littla stakes made up the remainder of the two days' sports, not to mention a constant round of table festivities and bouts, at which canton toasted canton, town toasted town, while all joined in pledging renewed fidelity to their com mon mother Helvetia, and to her significant watchword: "One for all; all for one." Geoboe L. Catlin. REMEDIES MONET CAN'T BUT. The The Earlswood Totter. famous beauties of to-dzv fcni . inmmer I as she was both darine and indiscreet and birthday. I scorned to conceal her BaliUke. She Arek 1 ,J I Our mashers are still Improving. They no longer enter 'the ball room .with their "hands iU their Dockets. Thev h ..lAntori a mode of progression more in harmony witfi NO USE TOR OCTLISTS. The contestants in this struggle repre sented two little Emmenthal hamlets, Heimiswyl and Erfinpen, both in the neigh borhood of Berne. Their wonderfnl eye sieht, as shown in following the flight of the whizzing disc, elicited from the lips of a jocose oculist present tbe remark: "I shall never get any practice from these people." A bystander asked one of the Emmenthalers, a lusty, stubby young her cules, in barehead and shirtsletvcs: "But when do you play this game at homer uertaiuiy every ounaay during the summer time?" "Oh, no," was the reply, "it requires a broad field, and we can't afford to trample down our grass for it We never play it until after Bettag (in November), and then we play it every fair Sunday until the grass comes again. We don't take evervbody, though'." The "Hornet" game, it mav be added, is of very remote antiquity, and a most inter esting description of it as played in the an cient time, will be found in Bitzius' inter esting romance entitled "Uli, der Knecht" A less novel, but equally exciting sport is the peculiar wrestling known in the Ur Cantons as "swinging," probably from the peculiar swinging motion forced upon the contestants in the most desperate phrases of the struggle. No less a person than ex President Schenk, of Switzerland, has re marked: "I prefer wrestling and swinging to all other gymnastic exercises, while Dr. Schaerer, who has published a book on the subject, remarks that "the Swiss proudly mentions 'swinging' as his most ancient and peculiar national sport" Up to very re cently, however, it has never spread beyond its birthplace in the Berner Oberland and the Emmenthal. ' A NATIONAL SPOBT. In Nidwalden it was for a time prohibited by law as too dangerous, but the prohibi tion is now obsolete. In 1853 it was first introduced as a national sport and since then it has constantly grown in popularity. That it is not without danger may be in ferred from the fact than no less a person than Dr. Kroenlein. President of the TJni- Lversity of Zurich, and one of tbe best known ot living surgeons, was engaged Dy tbe Zurich Turners to be in attendance during their two days' swinging contest with tbe short-haired, bull-necked sons of the Alps, who had come down to take up their gauge of battle. Swinging is distingnished from ordinary wrestling in that, in the former, contestants cannot lay hold of each other as they please, but must begin by gripping hold'of each other's short-hose, made, for the purpose, of stout brown linen in the form of bathing tights, and worn over the ordinary pants. The victory consists in throwing an oppo nent upon his back so that both shoulders touch tbe ground. In this trial of strength, the mountaineers with their wonderful en durance and brute force, undoubtedly have, in the long run, the advantage over the trained and agile turners of the cities. In a match between the two last year the propor- Proceas of Making Them Unown to Only One Pernon at a Time. Youths' Companion. In villages among the mountains of Vir ginia and Pennsylvania, where habits of life and thought have remained almost unal tered for two centuries, an odd custom still prevails which may be new to our readers. Prescriptions for the cure of dif ferent ailments weak eyes, scrofula, con sumption, cancer and hydrophobia have been handed down in the sam6 family from one generation to another. These prescriptions are never known to more than one person at a time, and it be comes his duty to make theremedyand give it away. According to popufar superstition, if he imparts the secret, or takes money or any recompense for the medicine, its virtue is gone. Many of these lotions and cor dials possess undoubted efficacy, haying been originally distilled from simples and eanns -oy men who were forced to go to nature for cure, and who came,. to under stand some of her resources better than we do. A similar superstition exists among the Hungarian peasants, with regard to the amulets which they wear to protect them from lightning, poison, or sudden death. The amulet must be given; as soon as it is sold it becomes worthless. The same idea formed the basis of the custom among the ancient Irish of bakin a cake at every meal for the possible .guest who might chance to come in. When the meal was finished, too, a few crumbs were thrown ouUof-doors and on the hearth for any invisible creature, whether good or evil spirit, who might be hungry. Beaders of The Dispatch who desire information on subjects relating to indus trial development and progress in mechani cal, civil and electrical engineering and the sciences can have their queries answered through this column. rPEIFAEID TOR TITS D1SPATCH.1 The Teutonic, says the Engineer, is the finest steamship afloat This circumstance would alone suffice to invest her with spe cial importance. But it does not stand by itself, and the conditions under which she has been built lend additional interest to the ship and her performance. The passen ger trade between this country and England is carried on under somewhat peculiar con ditions. The actual length of the voyage is 2,780 miles in the summer, and 2,880 miles in the winter, when the course steered is more southerly to avoid ice. It isjust short enough to permit a maximum speed being maintained. If the distance was only 1,000 greater than it is, no ship could be made to carry coal enough to run at 20 miles an hour, and at the same time earn a profit for her owners. No space would be left for cargo. The passenger traffic between the two countries is enormous now, and is daily growing larger. Those who voyage back ward and forward across the Atlantic have plenty of money, and are quite content to pay well if they are served well. These causes have all worked to the same end in the development of what may be called express passenger steamers. J.he White Star company was among the first to work for high speed and great com fort The Britannic was in her d iy the finest passenger steamer on the Atlantic, and she still remains an admirable vessel, although she has been superseded to a considerable extent by larger and faster ships. The Cunard company's Etruria was, for a con siderable period, the fastest ship in tbe world. The Inman company determined that, if possible, she should be beaten, asd to this end the company had the two magnificent ships, the City of New York and City of Pans, built The Inman and International company is really American, and its ships sail under the Stars and Stripes; but the White Star company is thoroughly British, and is determined that its ships shall not be excelled by any other company in the world. Accordingly two ships were ordered from Messrs. Harland & Wolff, of Belfast The first of the two is the Teutonic The second, the Majestic, will be a sister ship, and is now receiving her engines, but she will not be put to work until next spring. An impression got abroad that in tbe Teutonic and Majestic everything would be sacrificed to get speed. This is entirely erroneous. Nothing has been civen to cet SDeed. That the Teutonic is a very fast sliip goes without saying; but she is much more she is strong and safe in an unusual degree, and has, moreover, been carefully constructed for special and valu able service in time of war. ployed in connection with that single luterf est; and if to this number we.add 780,000 a number representing an average of five .to tbe mile as the number of personsTieBi ployed in connection with all those indus tries which are directly affiliated with and dspendent on our railway. system, such a3 locomotive and car building establishments, rail mills, etc., we have a total 0f nearly -1,716,000, or an average of 11 to to the mita of railroad. Assuming that each of thesa would represent a family averaging fiva persons, wc have an aggregate population of 8,580,000 nearly one-seventh of the total for the country at large ef which 98 per cent are actually dependent on the railway system for the sustenance of life. The Tnlne of GoodRoads. Prof. J. W. Jenks, in his "Boad Legisla-t tion for the American State," gives somej very suggestive notes on conditions in Uli nois. It is there found that a full load cam be carried on the State roads only threa months during the year, two-thirds of a load three months and half a load six months. Good dirt roads there would reduce the cost ot hauling one-half, and good permanent roads, if macadam, three-fourths. The de fective highways the State now possesses) cost it an extra $15,000,000 for hauling, and, depreciate the value of its farms $160,000,4 000. In other words, if it had a good sy tern of roads the farmers would be benefited 1 160,000,000 in the value of their farms, and save $15,000,000 annually in hauling. Sea Water for Street Watering. This is the subject of a paper recently read; before tbe Civil and Mechanical Engineers' Society of England. Inquiries sent to 3 coast towns which had been using sea water for this ;purpose showed that 23 towns had abandoned its use for various reasons. Ramsgate and Folkestone stated that it de- stroyed all kinds of road material except wood. Some towns advised its use in sewer flushing in sufficient volume, but others) thoughtlt produced gases when brought into contact with the sewage. The testimony is in favor of sea water preventing dust on, roads of flint or gravel, and Berwick-on-. Tweed highly commends it for this purpose. It is there found that one cart ol sea water is) equal to two loads of fresh water in lasting e licet Electric Matrix Type Slacbues. These machines are intended to produce 3 mnt.IT flnm n.T.(nl. aAAt....A nlafa. .nr. fi' cast directly. Each machine is only 30 inches long by 6 inches wide, and is worked on a table after the fashion of a typewriter. It is driven by a current from an ordinary incandescent electric light wire. An aver age of 25 words perminute is claimed as the) speed of which the machine is capable. Re-Papering Walls. Prof. Kedzie emphatically points out theft danger of leaving on the old paper when re papering a room. No room with such wall accumulations of paste and. paper can re- main in a good sanitary condition, and dis- ease germs are likely to be developed. Hiss' advice is: "Peel your walis of all old paper before applying new paper." A JUYEXILE SOCIALIST. '3 WHAT MAKES RABBITS GROW. A Remarkable Fact In Natural History Discovered by Small Boy. One day Eugene Field's three boys came home with a big white rabbit which some neighbor had given them, and the genial humorist, fearing damages to his books if the animal was let loose in the house, told them to dig a burrow in the back yard and put their pet in it They did so. Next morning they came racing to their father's room. "Papal papal Cnmf nnf in .. ...J We've found out how rahhita i.mu-1" ..wat on earth do you mean, children?" . , l y,.7.u know we Planted bunny last nl5ll': We", there's a whole lot of little rabbits there now: ten of 'em all in one Iljclene. Within the last 40 or 50 years it has been possible to follow out the subject of hygiene on a fairly scientific basis, and so to lay a foundation on which to build a structure which may one day entitle it to a place among the more exact sciences. Two cen turies ago the mortality of London was. 80 per 1,000; at the present day it is under 23. A century ago ships could barely keep the sea for scurvy, while jails and hospitals were in many cases the hotbeds of fatal dis eases. Now these conditions are rectified, or at least, the means of rectifying them are known. Thirty years ago the English troops at oome aiea at me race oi i'U per l,uuu; now their death rate is less than one-half this. In our country, although much progress has been' made, much remains to be done. Dr. Billing"!, in his work, for the tenth census of the United States, estimates the death rate of the whole country at about 18 per 1,000. It cannot be questioned that a proper regu lation ot the universal conditions of human life throughout the whole country would reduce this rate to 12 per 1,000, saving every year, on the basis of the present population, no fewer than 365,000 lives, which are now sacrificed to neglected filth, with its at tendant contamination of the soil on which we live, of the air we breathe, of the food we eat. and of the water we drink. The remedy lies chiefly in the complete removal of the organic wastes of life before the beginning of putrefaction, and the ulti mate disposal of these wastes by methods now understood, in such a way as to reduce them to their elements without sucn con tamination of earth, water or air as now re acts so fatally on the population. The process would be simple. The adequate sanitary improvement would involve drain age and garbage removal, water supply and some improvement in ventilation. By drain age is meant, in this connection, the removal of filth in sufficient currents of water, and this is by far the most important thing to be done. With the prevention of putrefaction in and about habitations, too, the need for costly artificial ventilation will be greatly reduced. It may, therefore, be sately as serted in the light of what we know of im provements that have been effected by sim ple changes of physical conditions that a proper application of tbe sanitary arts of the engineer would of itself suffice to save us the 1,000 lives now daily thrown away, and to multiply greatly the happiness and efficiency of myriads whose sickness, though not mortal, is grievously painful and incapacitating. Mo Chance for a, Flirtation. Mr. Partridge (a drummer, blandly) Is this seat engaged, miss ? Miss Holly Ha wke Well," I dunno; paw may find himself too much crowded with maw and the bundles in the'next seat, and mebhe he'll want this! "" Exit Partridge. Puck Photographing Colors. While endeavoring to obtain photographic films, which should approach in sensibility that of the human retina, it occurred to M. M. G. Lippmann that some success might be obtained by a rational and system atic arrangement of colored glasses. He carried out a thorough investigation of this idea, and at a recent meeting of the Acade mie des Sciences at Paris he cave an inter esting account of his experiments. M. Lipp mann operates with an Attout-Tailfer plate. Before the objective pieces xt colored glass are successively piacea ior a long enough period lor the various tinted rays to impress an image on the film. The final result of this exposure is to cive a clear photograph, which green foliage, yellow or red draperies, etc., instead of giving dark tints and blurred outlines, are rendered with a delineation and color value surpassing the finest engraving. Whatever may be the ultimate value of the recently-proposed methods, they indicate work in the right direction, and all similar research will be welcomed as tending toward the production of an instrument by the assistance of which the mysterious phe nomena of light may be more satisfactorily investigated. The results of Al. Lippmann's successive arrangement of colored glasses, surpass anything that have hitherto been described, and they appear to herald the dawn of a new era in photography espe cially in landscape photography. Blasrnltode of the Railway Interest. The following calculations will show how closely interwoven are the interests of rail road stockholders and the working classes oftheeountry. If we estimate that in the Operation of our railroads tbere are em ployed in prosperous times an average of six persons per mile of road, it would show, a fotal, on the basis of our present mileage, of knore than 936,000 persons regularly em A Bit ot Childish Strategy to Gain Coveted Plaything. Boston T'snscrlpt.1 Somebody who writes sagely about chil dren and their affairs says: "Children an naturally self-denying." Of course we all know that. Here is an instance: A small girl of the "Listener's" acquaintance had a visits from two of her young friends, each some what larger than herself, the other dayi Both the visitors brought their dolls, and iil was proposed that they make.common pro, perty of all their playthings, including thai Bolls, and go in lor a general good time. The plan was accepted by the youngsters and all went merrily. By-and-by the small "" hostess, returning to the member of tha' household who had originally proposed tho socialistic arrangements of matters under which they were proceeding so amicably, said, in her most engaging and honeyed; manner: "Don't you think that the biggest littla girl ought to have the biggest doll here?" , As the biggest doll was Known to be tha"1 inquirer's, this question was taken as a proof of rare self-denial on the little girl's part So the lady said: "Yes, my dearthat would be very wise." "And the next biggest girl the next bie-J gest doll?" "Yes." "And the 'ittiest girl the 'ittiest doll?" "Yes." The child ran away and reported the new arrangement to the other children; and it wasn't until later, when th5 pent-up feeli ings of one of the other little girls gava way to tears, that it was discovered that the "littlest doll" was a superb French ar rangement, which opened and closed its eyes, and wore a costume got ud in perfect recklessness of expense. The '"ittiest girl's" self-denial was a rare bit of strategy. AK EICELLEM EXCUSE. Why n, Policeman Allowed William Dockey to SI-eD la the Park. ' Detroit Free Press. I At midnight the other night a patrolman found a man lying on the grass under a tree in the Bandolph street Park,and he aroused ' him with: "Come mister, no one is allowed to sleepy here." Y "But I have a good excuse," replied the man. "Wat is it?" "See that house over there? Well, please do me the favor to go and ring the bell and' ask if William Dockey is at home." ! The officer ascended the steps and rang the belL A head was thrust out of an open ' chamber window and a female voice de-' manded: , "Now. who is there?" "Madam," replied the officer, "is Wil-, liam Dockey at home?" "No, sir, and I don't expect him until, daylight!" snapped the woman, and at the same moment a bowlful of water de scended on the officer's head and half drowned him. "Well," said the man pn the grass, as) thedrippingofficercameup, "yon see how it is, don't you? I'm Dockey. That's Mrs. Dockey." "I think I see," replied the officer. "Xou can remain neht where von are. , i Pi IU REWARD Sj3(to nronawnowin ooatradlet lTjWSi 07 proof oar cUnsttat bVTIk . Acme Blacking j h-fy """RE LEATHER. $ If 1 I W OUT A Rumoust. Sj 'To jn lira io jntenigral test of tab. by tie follow fag method i Hng s strip of leather in a bottle of Acme BlMMng, ud leare it therefor a oar or a """P"1-.. T,lke rt out and hang- it np to dry and ex- """' wvuiaswuu onnuiuiT, tt e T-rwrniTmTKl I HUM atone Jncs, Wolff'sAGMEBIacking Hikes any kind of leather WATERPROOF, SOFT, AND DURABLE. IU beintlf oL rich, GLOSSY POIOSII la SB. equaled. Ea-cn tabor and axxoyanc. A Polish tnata a Month for Women, sal AWeekforMen,irloanaraeLeatB erenFour JHoatha without renonttez. WOLFF A -RANDOLPH, rauion Bold hi &o Stores. Qrooen. aad dealers eoanB$v nm