I t t, h f t 8 F 14 THE WOELD OF MAGIC Mysteries of Jugglery in India and Theosophy in America. OPIKIOSS UPON MME. BLAVATSKY. A Tarietj of Expressions From Patient Bta dents of the Occult. FEATS OP THE HINDU MAGICIAXS pitrrAKED roR thk disfatch.1 This article consist ol .the answers of scientists and students of occultism to the following; questions: First What havo you seen and what do you know of the Hindu or esoteric marvel workers? Of the Buddhist miraclo workers? Do you be lieve they think themselves inspired by a spir itual or supernatural force? Second What do you think of Mme. Blavat sky and her school of Theosophists? Do you believe Mme. Blavatsky has done the wonder ful things related of her? Have you ever seen or known of any theosophic or esoteric marvels? Third Do you know of the Hindn fakir who buries himself alive for nine months? Of the basket and sword trick? Of the boy who climbs a tree and disappears? Of the rod tnrned into a snake? Fourth What is the most wonderful thine jou ever saw a Hindu do? Fifth Whom do you consider the best living "magician?-' THE WOELD HEEDS HUMBUGS. MadBm ItlaTntsky Quoted at Sayius Half the TbeoiuphUts of America Are Iluty Fsollnc the Other Half and Vice Term The Hindu Psrclioloetzei Bis Au dience. First Aside from some very particular and private sources of information, of which I beg to be excused from speaking openly, lay knowledge is little more than any one might inquire from intelligent study of Indian occultism, coupled with some per sonal experiences in the effects ot Yogism as laid down in the works of Fatanjali, for example. The Hindus, as a race, seem temperamentally better fitted than most other persons for the operation of natural magic, and many of their subjective hallu cinations, as well as the objective phenom ena they exhibit by psychologizing crowds, ' and thus inducing collective hallucinations, are certainly as wonderful as anything in the "Arabian Nights." The true adepts not only believe, but know themselves to possess so-called supernatural powers, and the professional conjurers simply understand their own business. Second I have thought agood deal of Mme. Blavatsky ior several years. She is the most picturesque personage I ever knew. Virgil describes htr best in the words, "Varium et semper mutabile." She is dauntless, incor ricible, tempestuous, resourcelul, impera tive, unique. "God moved in a mysterious way His wonders to perform" when he in Tented Blavatsky. Whether He has re pented or not I do not know. Everything about her is gigantesque. But people make a great mistake when ther take her too seriously. Blavatsky should be taken in a Pickwickian sense: she should be humored in her amusing eccentricities, but be neither too much believed in, nor denounced, nor held up to ridicule. She is iuil of fun and mischief, with that keen sense of humor which is the best touchstone of genius. She knows people are "mostly fools," as Carlyle says; she knows that this'is a world of lies, of delusions, of Maya; she is sure she can humbug it a great deal more effectually and dramatically than it can humbug itself, and her scorn for those who believe in her miracles is boundless. IT TICKLED BLAVATSKX'S FANCY. It tickled her fancy to set upon the stage of the world the most colossal hoax of modern times; and it must have surprised even Blavatsky to see with what avidity Asia, Europe'and America, to say nothing of Australia and the rest of the globe, sought admittance to the drama. How well the play drew may be judged from this sentence in the last letter I have seen from her pen: "Half the theosophists of America are busv fooling the other half, and the other half are busy fooling themselves." Blavatsky needs no defender, being abun dantly able to take care of herself; and to accuse her of anything wrong, except before a mock tribunal, would be sheerly fatuous. Sometimes I think she half believes in her 2Iahatmas; let us kindly agree to think so. She certainly believes "in herself, which is more to the point. "When the"cosmicdust" she has raised has subsided, and people have rubbed out of their eyes the cayenne peeper she has thrown into them, the world will be wiser, it not also sadder and better, for 2f ellie Blavatsky. Third Yes, I have heard of that Hindn individual. The other exploits you ask about are familiar. The gist of such things lies in the power of the periormer to psych ologize bis audience, aided by a few simple accessories to the illusions he produces. It is mainly a matter ol mesmerism on a large scale. Any good mesmerizer in 2few York can make his sensitive subject think and say and act and perceive as he pleases. I have seen Carpenter operate on a dozen at once, victims of identical hallucinations produced at his will and pleasure. It is only nn extension of the same process to 100 or 1,000 persons. The resources of the oper ative occultist are boundless. I draw a broad line between, the sleight-of-hand tricks of the prestidigitator, which depend for their success upon dextenty in deceiv ing the natural sense of sight, and those far more subtle procedures of the real magician which cause the mind of the persons opera ted upon to take any desired lorrn. WOJJ'T GIVE TJP THE SECRET. A person may be deprived temporarily of theuse ol his natural senses; his judgment, volition and memoir may be elTiced;"his mind becomes a blank, and while he is in that "psychologized" state his individuality is merged in that of the mesmerist, who may do with him as he pleases. The secret is one which I consider inexpedient to make public, because not all personB are fitted to receive it uadcrstandingly. Social chaos would be upon us if the resources of opera tive occultism were at the disposition of every knave, fool and coward. Fourth That depends on what you mean by ''magician." Il you mean professional conjurers on the stage their names are as fa miliar to you and to the public as to myself. If vou mean real psychists, I suppose the Indian adepts in occultism now take the palm. Next after these I should be dis posed to place some of our genuine Ameri can mediums through whose organisms cer tain very real and very startling phenomena are continually manifested. It yon will let my thoughts take another turn, I may say that Helen P. Blavatsky and Pone iLeo X1IL are two of the most remarkable ma gicians now before the public. The chief difference between them is that one is the Pope and the other uould like to be. HELEN HAS THE BEST OP IT. Considering their respective resources, I think the woman in the case the greater magician. She has nothing but the weapons characteristic of her sex, backed with an in Tincible pen tor the benefit of those who are beyond the reach of her tongue, while he has the ponderous and almost irresistible machinery of a church militant at his back, with a tremendous traditional authority. Helen is modest She only claims to be the infallible mouthpiece of certain majestic Hindu personages whose will she wishes to be done on earth as it is in the heights of the Himalayas. Leo bees her game and goes his whole pile better. He claims to be the in fallible spokesman. And I think the smiles with which the old Bomau avgnrs are said to have always greeted one another would yield to a broad grin if Her Bussian High ness and His Boman Holiness should come to a tete-a-tete in the Palace of Truth. Does the world like to.be humbugged? Like itl Humbug is meat and drink and clothes and a house and carriage to the world! Eliot Coins, President of the Gnostic Theosophical Society, and Author of Many Notable Scientino Works. PROPOSITIONS OP THEOSOPHY. The Pplrliual Nnmrc Is na Susceptible of Culture as the Body or Intellect ftlndam Illnvanliy Accomplished What Seen Wholly Incredible. I know little of the "Hindoo" or ''esoteric marvel workers." But a man who is wise enough to be a "marvel worker" would not only be too wise, but also would have to do work of a more important nature than the performing of cheap tricks for anybody's amusement or mystification. I think that Mme. Blavatsky has been a very effective blister or irritant upon the pate of many a sleepy divine, and that the ideas which she has launched into the world have quickened liberal thought to a degree not generally realized. The fundamental propositions of Theosophy are: First That the spirit in man is the only real and permanent part of his being; the rest of his nature being variouslv com pounded, and decay being incident to all composite things, everything in man but his spirit is impermanent. Further, that the universe being one thing aud not diverse, and everything within being connected with the whole and with every other, of which upon the upper plane above referred to there is a perfect knowledge, no act or thought occurs without each portion of the great whole perceiving and noting it Hence all are inseparably bound together by the tie of brotherhood. Second That below the spirit and above the intellect is a plane of consciousness in which experiences are noted, commonly called man's "spiritual nature;" this is as susceptible of culture as is his body or his intellect. Third That this spiritual culture is only attainable as the crosser interests, passions and demands of the flesh are subordinated to the interest!, aspirations and needs of the higher nature; and that this is a matter of both system and established law. Fourth That men thus systematically trained attain to clear insight into the im material, spiritual world, their iuferior faculties apprehending truth as immediately and readily as physical faculties grasp the things of sense, or mental faculties those of reason; and hence that their testimony to such truth is as trustworthy as is that of scientists or philosophers to truth in their respective fields. Fifth That in the course of this spirit ual training such men acquire preception of and control over various forces in nature unknown to others, and thus are able to per form works Ubuilly called "miraculous," though really but the result of larger know ledge of natural law. Sixth That their testimony as to super sensuous truth, verified by their possession or such powers, challenge candid examina tion from every religious mind. The first object ol the Theosophical So ciety is, so far as possible, to induce men to study and understaud these laws and the real meaning of the interdependence oi man upon man. So far as Mme. Blavatsky is concerned it seems incredible that a woman who is a foreigner, speaking English indifferently, should have been able, without money, recognized position or apparent influence, to found a new school of ethics in Kew York City, which, in 13 years, should have repre- I uicu uiauvucB ju ujusl ui me otaies, in Great Britain, on the Continent, nearly 200 in India, others in Australia, in Japan, in Ceylon, and an independent uiembership-at-large representing nearly every civilized section of the globe. John Ransom Bbidoe, President of the Boston Theosophical Society. THE W05DEKS OF INDIA. Madame Blarnnky nt Simla ainde Flowers Drop From n Solid Ceilluc for. the Wife of Colonel Gordon Mystery of the Whirl Ins Dnncrri. The Buddhists' claim that by fasting and meditation, and by leading a pure and holy life, they develop a wonderful power the power of faith, a power born in every human being, but which, through lack of exercise, becomes almost extinct This is the power mentioned in the New Testament: "And the Lord said, if ye had faith as a grain of mustard seed, ye might say unto this syca more tree, be thou plucked up by the root, and be thou planted in the sea, and it should obey you." And again, "Jesus answered and said unto them, verily I say unto yon, if ye have faith and doubt not, ye shall not only do this, which is done to the tig tree, but also if ye shall say unto this mountain, be thou removed and be thou cast into the sea, it shall be done." I have no faith in Mme. Blavatskv as a wonder-worker. 1 knew Mrs. Gordon, wife of Colonel Gordon, of Calcutta, India, very wen. aae reiateu to me mat on one occa sion she visited Mme. Blavatsky at Simla, and after lunch, in broad daylight, the two ladies were seated at the table, when Mme. Blavatsky told Mrs. Gordon to ask for some manifestation of the power of Koot-Hoomie-Lal-Sing. the great High Priest of Theoso phism,supposed to be a hermit 2,000 years old, residing in the Himalaya Mountains. Mrs. Gordon requested some roses brought h'er from the garden. She had scarcely ex pressed the wish when a mass of roses seemed to sift down through the ceiling to where she was sitting. If this was a trick, it was a remarkably clever one, as Mrs. Gordon is a brilliant woman and not easily hum bugged. "When I was in Lucknow, India, I became acquainted with Colonel Jenkins, Secretary of the Chuddermunzi Club, who related that be had seen one of these fakirs buried and a guard of soldiers placed over him, and the guard was changed every six hours for 40 days.arter which they exhumed him and the fakir's companions resuscitated him. Before he was buried he threw his tongue back into his throat, his face was covered with a bandage, and his companions chanted a monotonous "liam-ram-ammer-ram," and repeated this chant until nearly all the spectators were in a drowsy state, and the fakir himself became rigid like a corpse. The most wonderful feat I ever saw per formed by a Hindu was in Calcutta. "We entered a long vacant room, which we were permitted to examine in every part There were four fakirs present Thev requested us to seat ourselves on benches" about half wav down the room. They lighted a cencer, from which exuded a sickly, sweetish smoke, tilling the entire room." The four fakirs then began a. wild whirling dance, all the while chanting and beating tom-toms, when suddenly the dancers appeared to increase in number, until a few dozen were dancing and whirling about These then decreased until but one dancer remained, an old man with flowing beard. "What became of the other dancers we could not tell, as we again examined the room and could find no secret exits or entrances, places of concealment or any means by which glasses such as are used ii the ghost illusion could be smuggled in or out of the room. The whole perform ance is still a mystery to me. Kellae, the Magician. SIMPLY EXAGGERATIONS. The Performances of the Hindus Not What Ther Are Claimed to Be Duplicated and Excelled on the American Staee A Snake Trick. I have been all through India and have seen a good deal alike of Hindus and Buddhists. Their performances are ridicu lously exaggerated. They simply play on the gross credulity and superstitions com mon to all Eastern people. Many of these Eastern marvel-workers are shrewd knaves. Others are sincere and really believe them selves endowed with supernatural powers. But the latter are all more or less loose in the head, having become crazy by the fasting and general mortification of the' flesh laid down by their peculiar code of ethics. As to Mme. Blavatsky, I certainly am not idiotio enough to believe that she ever THE performed those dematerialization feats ascribed to her; I regard her as simply a very clever, very ingenious, very brilliant humbug nothing more. The sword and basket trick and the ser pent and rod trick are illusions which have been very often shown on the modern stage. Upon one occasion, however, now I come to think of it, a Hindu did per form quite a wonderful trick in my pres ence. At Bombay, some years ago, a na tive called one morning at my rooms. After some conversation he performed the follow ing feat: He divested himself entirely of his clothing, and then advanced into the center of the apartment, holding a small silk shawl in his hand. He placed the shawl on the floor. An instant later a live snake, two feet long, writhed from beneath its folds. Taking the shawl, the Hindu threw it over the snake. An instant later he raised the little strip of silk, and, be hold! the snake was dead. Again he took the shawl and threw it over the snake. Once more he lifted it. The snake had vanished. This is certainly the most wonderful Hin du trick I have ever seen. It perplexed me sorely at the time, but in these later days I think I see through it, and I am confident that, if I took the trouble, I could dupli cate the feat Heemank, the Conjurer. THEY FOOLED BLAVATSKY. SIio Wns Induced to Pronounce n Fabrica tion of nn Ancient and Reranrknblo Manuscript Genuine A filnda Anions Methodists. There was a company of young men about ten years ago, most of them living in Brook lyn, who used to have conversations with Mme. Blavatsky for the purpose of finding out what they could learn of her lore. Among these were ex-City Chamberlain Ivins, Charles Frederick Thomas, now of "Washington; F. "W. Hendricks, also of this city, and, if my memory serves me correctly. Mayor Cbapin, of Brooklyn, but I am not positive about him. They enjoyed Mme. BlavatBky's society and derived much in struction from her for a time, until it oc curred to them to test her powers, which they did by the fabrication of a verv ancient Boston, which was discovered there, sent to New York and presented to Mme. Blavats ky, pronounced by her to be genuine and to be of extraordinary philosophic import On her discovery of the fraud she lost confidence in these young men, and the theosophical sessions ceased. The most wonderful thing I ever saw a Hindu do was to go down to Ocean Grove and attempt to teach his religion to the Methodists there. He listened attentively to what the preachers had to say iu the auditory, but when he attempted to explain his religion on the piazza they promptly ar rested him without a warrant and took him to Freehold jail, where he was incarcerated, and where the Judge or Sheriff there, troubled with his conscience or fearful of punishment for holding a man on no charge, let him. go. This was Gowiuda Bowsutte, who has since died. Daniel Geeenleap Thompson, President of the Nineteenth Century Club. ANOTHER TALE FROM INDIA. A Story About as Easily Believed a Ulnar Better Substantiated. Yes, I have heard of the Hindu fakir who buried himself alive for cine months, and of the sword and basket trick. Also of the boy who climbs a tree and disappears, and so forth. I have never been in India and have consequently not seen any of these miracles performed, but a friend of mine who was much interested in these mysteries and made a serious study of them in the East, once saw a fakir toss a heavy chain into the air, where it remained upright and rigid, one end touching the ground, the other apparently penetrating the clouds. An elephant then climbed up the inclined plane thus formed, jumped off at the top and was seen no more. A second elephant followed, then a third and a fourth, until seven elephants had vanished into thin air. The fakir then took down the chain and calmly put it away. Tbe'Mabquise si Lanza. OPPOSED TO NATURAL LAWS. A Scientist Who Abjures Blavatsky nnd Ex plains Away Hindn Dolnss. I am more or less familiar with the wild claims of the theosophists, but my faith iu Mme. Blavatsky and Colonel Olcott is, to say the least, a very slight one. Their claims, so far as I know, are utterly incom patible with our knowledge of natural laws. All Eastern people, and especially the Hindus, bring into their religion an amount of sentiment which fully explains the belief in the supernatural. De. Allen McLane Hamilton. Piercing the Ears. A writer in an English scientific journal suggests that the cruelty of piercing young girls' ears is so palpable that the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children should take the matter up. He states that in Paris, after removing the piece of flesh from the newly-made incision, the hole is frequently cauterized to prevent it growing up again, and this arrests the bleeding, which is often so troublesome. Some Italian ladies have their ears pierced for a week or two, and then have gold eyelets inserted. Gold tubes are put in, the flange put on the top aud closed with a tool exactly like that which squeezes a own an eyelet in a shoe. It requires a good deal of nerve to stand the pain of this, as the pressure on the ear when the flange is pressed down is very great The practice of putting on anything to heal the ear after piercing is deprecated, and it is recommended that the ears should be left to heal of themselves. Some, before piercing, pinch the lobe to deaden it.but this isfntile. As to gold or silver earrings, undoubtedly gold is the best It is a common impression that piercing the ears improves the eyesight, and it is stated that beneficial results will actually follow the piercing if a piece of worsted is inserted in the holes and worked at intervals, instead of a ring. It is very questionable, however, whether many would be found willing to go through this painiui ordeal merely as a remedial meas ure. Operating; Power for Street Cars. Experts have for some time been experi menting and estimating upon the compara tive cost of runuing a line of street cars by electricity and by horse power. After careful inquiry and investigation they have re ported that, taking a line of 50 cars the averace cost of operating per day with horses is 5303 75, aeainst a cost "when electricity is used of $ 08 60 per day. This leaves a bal ance of $231 25 per day, or nearly ?5 per day on each car in favor of electric traction. This means the saving iu a single year of a large proportion of the amount necessary for eqnipping the cars with electric appliances for propelling them. Cot Rates Via the Missouri Pacific By., the Colorndo Short Line. Notwithstanding the reported boycott of the Missouri Pacific Ry., tickets via that line at the cut rates are still on sale at all ticket offices. Parties who intend taking a trip to the West will sajre time and money by insisting on having tneir ticcets read via the Missouri Pacific By., the only line 'running free re clining chair cars between St Louis and Pueblo and Denver without change. If you are going to "Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, Colorado, Utah, Calitornia or any other "Western State, ask for tickets via the Mis souri Pacific By. For rates, time tables and further informa tion apply to B. IL Thompson, Central Pas senger Agent Missouri Pacific By., 1119 Liberty st, Pittsburg, Pa. 200 ladies' capes to be offered on Monday at $1 90 each. Knble & Shtjster, 35 Fifth ave. Tho Ace of Clubs. See announcement in advertisement Page IS of this issue. PITTSBURG- DISPATCH, TWO GREAT CLAIMS. The Christ Asserted He Was Free From Sin and One With God. NO HEED OF HIS OWN" SERMONS. Teachers Before and After Him Put Forth Ho Such Doctrines. EXPLAINED ONLY BI HIS DIY1NITX ."WRITTES FOB TUX DISPATCH. I "Which of you convinceth me of sin?" "Before Abraham was, I am." These two sentences represent two singu lar phases of Christ's teaching. Here is the ideal man. Nobody will dispute that Nobody will question Christ's humility, or Christ's sincerity. Nobody will think of finding in Christ's life any stain of self seeking, any effort after any prize which wordly men count as worth having. Here is a life of absolute self-sacrifice. It has no parallel anywhere. Think how Christ dealt with men whom He had healed, sending, them away with 'the command of silence. Remember how he put away whatever pointed toward any cheap and unmeaning popularity. He cared not for the applause of crowds. He catered not to the prejudices of His time. The men who would seem to most people to be likely to advance His cause men like Nicodemus who had influence, men like the rich young disciple who had money, He made no effort to gain. He set them hard tests which they could not pass. He chose 12 poor peasants. He had stern words for the Pharisees, whom anybody with worldly wisdom would have conciliated, the repre sentatives of the nation and the Church, the people in power. He had kind words for the common people and for common sinners. There is no trace of "policy" in any word or deed of Christ. And what sought He for Himself? Only the privilege of helping the needy and comforting the sad and uplifting the (alien; only the position of one who camo not to be ministered unto but to minister, with the cross at the end of it THE IDEAL MAN. There is no need of emphasizing what everybody knows, or of reciting that which all men, Christians or not, will agree in saying about Christ Here is the life of un exampled humility and self-sacrifice. Here is the ideal man. Now, let us think what we will do in this confessedly ideal life with such sentences as these: "Which of you convinceth me of sin?" and "Before Abraham was, I am." These sentences, as I said, represent cer tain phases of our Lord's teaching. They do not stand alone. They might be blotted out, or be shown to have been thrust in by some piously dishonest interpolator, still the characteristics of Christ's teaching which they represent would stand. Indeed, the only wav to get out of that teaching the two facts which these two sentences show would be to leave out all Christ's words from first to last. Nothing is more absolutely certain about Jesus ot Nazareth than that He said not once but many times, "Which ot you convinceth me of sin?" and "Before Abra ham was, I am." But think what these sentences mean: "Which of you convinceth me of sin?" That is an assertion of a distinct difference between Christ and all other men of the whole race. All the rest of us are sinners. But noboby can convince Christ of sin. 'Before Abraham was, I am." The Jews knew very well what that meant They took up stones to throw at Him when they heard that. That was the speech of a blas phemer. It was the assertion of an equality to God. And these two assertions, of a dif ference from all other men, and ot a dis tinct likeness to God, Christ made in one way and another, again and again, so that they can be read between the lines of al most everything He said. A TEACHES OP MOBALS. Our Lord was a teacher of morals. He taught a morality which not only went very far beyond any instruction in goodnes's which had ever been given to men, but which has never been surpassed in all the centuries since. No religious teacher after all the progress of these 1,800 years has gone beyond Christ.or even taught any truth which Christ had not taught already, and taught better. It is not a little noteworthy when we consider how all other teachers have been outgrown and left behind, that Christ is still beyond the most advanced of us. Indeed, it is not even imaginable how any morality can ever get closer to the heart of man and to the will of God than this which touches even the most secret thoughts. But through all this teaching Christ never shows the smallest consciousness of sin. He never confesses in any way, as every other teacher must, that He needs His own ser mons. There is not a hint of the slightest imperfection in Himself. He is forever on the outside of the world's sin, speaking to sinful men. Indeed, He challenges crit icism. Which of you convinceth me of sin? Now here is a phase of religious teaching which has no parallel anywhere. It is, on the contrary, true universally iu all the an nals ot sainthood, that nearness to God and consciousness of sin go together. The in different sinner, who has no ideal which he is striving after, and who never looks at his own life, may be in a measure unconscious of sin. But you will never find that true of a saint Why, in every department of life the bet ter a man is the more aware he is of his deficiencies. The great artist knows a hun dred weak places in his work which the petty painter never dreams of, nor could even recognize if they were pointed out. The master in music' is conscious of pos sibilities and ideals and a difference and distance between himself and them which are not present to musical mediocrity at all. To be satisfied is the SIGN OF FAILING POWERS. And yet, here is the ideal man, absolutely unconscious of defect, never admitting it in positions where no other man could help admitting it, even putting aside the sugges tion that He too may be imperfect like the rest of us, as a foolish thought not for a sin gle moment to be entertained. But Christ preached something beside morality. He preached Himself. He whose perfect humility all men reverently ac knowledge, He whoe absolute unselfish ness has inspired acts of self-sacrifice unnumbered, and uplifts and helps us every day, the Ideal of humility and the Ideal of unselfishness preaches about Himself. Let us recall some of the things which Christ said in these sermons about Himself: He is the light of the world; He is the bread of life; all that came before Him were thieves and robbers; He is the Good Shepherd and all we are His sheep; no man can come to the Father but by Him; if ye ask anything of God, He says, in Sly name, I will grant it; ye are from beneath. He says on one occasion to His congregation, I am from above; He Himself, nt the last day, will raise all who are in all the graves of all the earth; He is the King of men, our master, and our judge; He Himself, at the end of the world, will personally judge this whole race ot ours. and send us fight or left into either of the two eternities; He claims entire allegiance, nobody may love father or mother, son or daughter more than Him; the souls of all men belong to Jesus of Nazareth; all men are to give to Him the worship which is due to God. ms 'WOKDS TO PHILIP. Philip comes with that strange request of which I spoke last Sunday, "Lord, show us the Father." And Christ answers: "Have Tbeen so long time with you, and yet hast thou not known Me, Philip? He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father." Judas comes also, a little later, to know how it is that (jurist, as lie had prom ised, will reveal Himself to the Apostles, but not to the world. And Christ answers: "If a man love Me, he trill keep My words, and SUNDAY, MARCH 30, Mv Father will love him, and "We will come and make onr abode with him." Think what these two conversations mean. Imagine any other teacher saying as Christ says If you would see God, look at Mel or, If yon do as I say then God will love you, and "We that is, God and I will come and abide in your heart! What Christ meant by these and many other startling assertions of himself, the Jews understood perfectly well. "I and my Father are one," He said, and down go their eager hands reaching after stones to punish Him for blasphemy, because He, "being a man, made himself God." "Be fore Abraham was I am," He says again; and again there is an endeavorto stone Him. What Christ said was a distinct claim to be equal with God. It is possible to read into these words in these days certain mystical meanings which would take away all semblauce of such claims. There is a union between man and God which might make such speech possible. But Christ was ad dressing Jews. He was not speaking either to pantheists or to mystics, lie had a certain meaning which He meant His words to convey. Because that is what words are "lor to carry the speaker's meaning to the hearers." And the words carried just the truth which He intended. The Jews understood perfectly. Christ was a blasphemer. The Jews were entirely right. If Christ were indeed a man like other men, then He deserved ston ing. He was a blasphemer, as they said. WHAT LED TO THE SATING. Take the sentence which we have selected as indicating this element of self-assertion in Christ's teaching; "Before Abraham was, lam." Our Lord has just been telling the Jews, "If a man keep my saying, he shall never see death." This, they thought, was an extraordinary utterance, and they re plied at once that all the saints and patri archs of old were dead, Abraham was dead, and the prophets were dead "whom mak est thou thyself?" "Art thou greater than our Father Abraham, who is dead, and the prophets are dead?" Christ answers, "Your father Abraham rejoiced to see my day, and he saw it and was glad." Why. cry tho Jews, you are not yet 50 years old, have you seen Abraham? To which, in reply, Christ answers, "Before Abraham was, I am." There is a difference, greater than the difference which appears in the two English verbs "was" aud "am," between the two veibs which stand here in the old language of the gospel. The only variation which the translation shows is in the person and the tense. But Christ used two different words. Abraham, He said, was born (gen esthai), but I am (eiini). Nor is this dis tinction all. "I am," we must remember, was the name of God. There was but one "I am" known to the men to whom Christ spoke; any one they knew who could look back into the past, into Abraham's day, and say "Even then, I am," and that was God Himself. This self-asserting sentence was a plain claim to equality, if not to identity, with God. And in that sense the "men to whom Christ spoke, at once understood it At once also they made it plain that such was their under standing, and Christ uttered no word of dis claimer. That was exactly what he meant to say. ALL THBOUGH THE BIBLE. It is all as clear as day. If it were but a single assertion we might, perhaps, invent some ingenious exegesis by which we could evade it If it were in but a single gospel, Btill some evasive theory might be possible. But it is interwoven with the utterances of Christ, as those utterances are recited by all the four evangelists. Again and again comes in this note of startling self-assertion. Indeed, it was this self-assertion and noth ing else which brought Jesus of Nazareth to the death upon the cross. "We have a law," the Jewish judges said to Pilate, "and by our law he ought to die." What for? "Because he made Himself the Son of God." Read the account of the trial, and you will see how plain it is. They asked Christ point-blank if it was true that he claimed to be the Son of God, and He gave them a straight answer. He said: "I do." "Thou sayest," is the phrase, meaning "thou say est truth;" "the Son of God I am." Thereat they rent their clothes, and the high priest said: "There is no more need of witnesses; you have heard his blasphemy. What is your sentence?" And with one rsice thev answered, "Death." Christ was crucified for blasphemy. Consider but one instance more. It is after the resurrection. Thomas, the doubter, beholds his Master. There is no room left longer in bis heart for doubt Thomas falls at Christ's feet And what does he call Christ? "My Lord," he savs "and my God." And Christ permitted that. He did not rebuke Thomas like the angel in St John's vision. He did not forbid him like the apostles by the gate of Lystra when the people took them for gods come down to earth. He did not say, as they did, "I am a man of like passions with you." No; Christ spoke no word of disapproval. He permitted Thomas to call Jtum God. THEEE STKIK.ING JISSEEXIONS. Now, here are two facts about Jesus of Nazareth which are beyond denial. Or three facts, let us say, which nobody can really call in question. One fact is that He was the ideal man, aud the other two facts are that He asserted a difference between Himself and all other men, in that He was perfectly guiltless ot any faintest stain of sin, and that He asserted a likeness between Himself and God such as no other sane per son has ever asserted since the world began, even to the extent of permitting a disciple to adore Him as God made visible. These three facts are not involved iu any aouDtiui controversy, xney are not touched by any criticisms of documents. They are not implicated in any question about the miraculous. They are so large and continuous and essential a part of the history of Jesus of Nazareth that if they can be denied nothing whatever remains. Into any discussion of the relation and dif ferences which some imagine between the "Jesus of history" and the "Christ ot dogma" these facts do not enter. There is no possible divorce between the history of Jesus of Nazareth and these three facts. But how can these three facts be made to go together? "Which of you convinceth me of sin?" and, "Before Abraham was, S am." How shall we fit these sentences and all that they stand lor into -the ideal life? There are only two ways in which that ques tion can be answered. If Jesus of Nazareth was only a human man, as we are, then here is a puzzle, an inconsistency, a contradiction, such as has no parallel in all the records of the race of man, and to which we can offer no solution. It must remain forever a strange, perplexing and unsolved enigma. But if Jesus of Nazareth was more than a human man; if He was what the Christian creed proclaims Him; it He was what we, with nil onr hearts, believe Him to have been and still to be; if He was what He Himself, the ideal man. the hero of heroes. ana the saint of saints, claimed for Himself; if Jesus of Nazareth was indeed God made manifest among men, then the three facts go together perfectly. All contradiction passes away. Kverthing is natural and right and plain. George Hodges. Well Prolecfed Is he or sho who, visiting or dwelling in a ma larious locality, has wisely fortified the system with Hostetter's Stomach Bitters. Whole com munities aro thus protected. Digestion pro moted, biliousness rectified, the blood enriched and stamina increased what are theso but so many guarantees against disease? Exterminate rhnumatism and nervousness with the Bitters. TTSU 1838. 1S90. Holmes, Gibson & Finch whiskies in bond or tax paid. Prices upon application. W. H. Holmes & Son, 158 First Avenue. 120 Water Street. Highest prices paid for ladies' or gent's cast-off clothing at De Haan's Big 6, Wyiie ave. Call or send by mail. wsu 200 ladies' capes to be offered on Monday at $1 90 each. Knable & SursxER, 35 Fifth ave. The Ace of Clubs. See announcement in advertisement on Page 15 of this issue.; 1890. EVERT DAT SCIENCE. Outdoor Prison System Adopted by the Italian Government. INTELLECT AND SIZE OP BRAIN. Figures on the Cost of Electricity and Horses for Street Cars. THE CDSTS0M OF PIERCING THE EARS rwnrrTBx tor the dispatch. A correspondent writing from Italy, gives some interesting details of the treatment of prisoners on various Italian islands he visited while on atrip in the Mediterranean. Each of these islands contained several hundred prisoners, who are locKed up every night at sunset, released at day break, and locked up again from midday until 2 o'clock. During the night no prisoner is allowed to be absent under any circumstances, but at midday those who work on farms At a distance from the prison are allowed to remain out by special per mission from the director. During these free hours the prisoners can go anywhere they like on the island and can engage iu any kind of work offered them by the towns people or farmers. Any infraction of the rules of ordinary life around them, or of their prison, is punished by seclusion iu special cells. The Government furnishes physicians and medicines, a summer and a winter suit of clothes to each prisoner every year, and allows each 10 cents daily in money for his daily food and other neces sities of life. Danger of escape is prevented by a squad of soldiers, one to every ten criminals, aud a swift-sailing felucca, manned by marines. On account of the cheapness of labor the islands are so highly cultivated as to resemble gardens. The correspondent adds: "As for the pris oners, the open air makes them the health iest of any criminals I have ever seen. There is no sign in their faces and bodies of that prison blight which strikes every visit or to ordinary jails or penitentiaries. Fresh, open, country air, sea bathing and contact with honest men, women and children, among whom these criminals must live and behave themselves properly, remind them that they are not simply jailbirds, but that, guided by a feeling of humanity, society allows them to hang on to its skirts without utterly casting tbem out The looks of these prisoners were so different from those of any I had ever seen before that the ques tion torced itself on me whether any better moral izer aud redeemer of criminals can be found than this fresh, open, country air and its concomitants." Size of the Head and Brain. Dr. Starr, of London, who has been writ ing very fully on this subject, adduces con vincing arguments to show that it is impos sible to draw from the size or shape of the head any conclusions as to the mental capacity. He shows the absurdity of judg ing of the brain surface by either the size of the head or the extent or the superficial irregular surface which is covered by the skull, without taking into consideration the number of folds or the depth of the creases, and states that a little brain with many deep folds may really, when spread out, have a larger surface than a large brain with few shallow folds. The phrenologists are not happy over Dr. Starr's strictures. Curious Electrical Phenomenon. A curious phenomenon, which assists the electric car very materially in the ascent of heavy grades, is alluded to by Joseph "Wetzler in his article on "The Electric Bail way" which in the April Scribner. This phe nomenon, was especially noted by Leo Daft in 1882, is, that when the current passes from the carwheel to the track, it causes an increased friction or resistance to sliding between them, the result of which is that slipping is to a laree extent prevented, and heavier grades can be attempted. The ex planation seems to lie in the direction of a slightwelding action between the wheel and the rail from the heat generated by the cur rent. Late (Scientific Developments. A Sydney, Australia, paper says that one of the wool companies there has a burring ma chine, recently imported from America, which effectually removes all burrs and otheix foreign matter from sheep skins. A new industry has been started In Sweden in the manufacture of paper and pasteboard from moss. The pasteboard is as hard as wood; it can be painted and polished, and used for door and window frames, and all kinds of furniture. The fact is stated as a sign of the modern tendency in the construction of marine enelnes, that fully one-half of the new steamers built in England have triple-expansion engines, worked witii steam at tne nominal pressure of 160 pounds that is, the valves are set to blow off at that pressure not before. AT a dental congress, in Paris, Dr. Michaels used a special cold plate which is very thin and pliable, smooth on one side and rough on the other. He obtained an impression with gutta percha, ran into it a mixture of two parts plaster to one of sand, and the further steps for the completion of a gold plate for teeth fol lowed, the whole process occupying hut half an hour. A Russian scientist has by experiment found that 63K per cent of tho solar heat is ab sorbed by the atmosphere, and only S63 per cent reaches the soil. This figure rises in Oc tober to 41 per cent and sinks to 23 per cent In January and February. These results goto seriously shake the belief in the industrial utilization of the heat of tho sun in our climes. One of tho latest uses of paper is to replace wood in the manufacture of lead pencils, and railroad cars made of paner are more dnrable than iron. One of the most remarkable illus trations of the possibilities of paper in the arts is an organ, made by an Italian monk, in which the pipes are made of paper pulp, and they number 1,400, A MtJNicn firm has made a carriage which is propelled by gas generated from benzine or analagous material. The motor, which Is not visible from the outside, is placed fn the rear of a three-wheeled carnage over the main axle, ana the benzine used in its propulsion is carried in a closed copper receptacle secured under the seat, from which it passes, drop by drop, to the generator, and which holds enough benzine for a journey of 75 miles. A speed of about ten miles an hour can be attained. Sib William Thomson, tho eminent En glish electrician, says that it may be considered as definitely settled that the distribution of electric energy for light and power in towns of Great Britain shall be by underground con ductors, and that the postoffice telegraph de partment has already replaced nearly all the aerial telegraph wires ot the larger cities by underground conductors. The telephone wires alone remain in the air, where they are per fectly harmless to tho general public, and where they are much less expensive than they would be if placed under ground. AN electrician says that just what takes place in the human-organism to produce death rom an electric current seems to be an un solved problem. One of the theories some times advanced concerning it is that when a being suffers death from electric shock. It is a pure case of internal rapture or explosion from the generation of gas or vapor. In sup port of this view the way In which teletrraph poles are sometimes torn to piecesjs referred to. Tho lightning follows the moist portion of the pole, which is the core or heart: in this case the moisture is vaporised and an explosion oc curs. Tho high resistance produces heat, the beat in turn steam, and the steam an explo sion. An important addition to the data on the height to which waves attain is reported from Portland. A fearful storm was recently ex perienced at the Tallamock Light rock, and a "dornlck" of basalt weighing C2 pounds was thrown up by the force of the waves and fell on the roof of the ligbtkeeper's house. 110 feet above the sea level, breaking a hole in the roof. The waves were so high that the water came down the chimney of the boiler house of the fog siren in torrents, and poured out through the tubes of the boiler. The chimney is about ISO feet above sea level. The spray entered tho cowl of the chimney over the lamp, which Is 150 feet above sea level, and ran In stream to ths bottom. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. TheCoa That Helpa to Cure The Cold. The disagreeable taste of the COD LIVER OIL is dissipated in SCOTT'S EMULSION Of Pure Cod Uver OU with HYPOPHOSPHITES OF T.TTvyr-P! .A2TX3 SODA. The patient suffering from CONSUMPTION, BKOXCHITIS, COUGH, COLD, OR WASTING DISEASES, may take tho remedy with as much satisfaction as he would talta milk. Physicians are prescrib ing It everywhere. It is s perfect emnlslon. and a wonderful flesh producer. Taheno other oc2-28oiWFSu DEAF INKSS and HEAD NOISES uujusu or reel's rat. in visible Tabular Ear G'nsh- I nn- WhlSDera heard distinct. lr. Successful when all remedies fad. Writ or call for Ulnrtrated book FREE. Sold onlr br P. HISCOX. 853 Brosdwtx, oar. lfthat.. Jiew York. Itoagents. nol3-oi-TTSSuWK 307 Pi iifeii JWi'BiSwailBSsssswsssfF Jjtui.itii. k-'msbss. MPr -i. A Big Line of Bargains in CARPETS Will be offered this week from the common kitchen to the finest parlor. See our BEDROOM FURNITURE Before selecting elsewhere; we'll save you money if you will take the trouble to look at our goods. You will see the cream of latest styles in PARLOR FURNITURE (of our own make) on our floors at prices that sell in these goods; being manufacturers, we save you the middle man's profit We defy any house in the city to beat us in lowness of prices or quality of goods. We carry all the latest styles in Dining Room Furniture, such as Sideboards, Extension Tables, China Closets, and nearly ten styles in the very latest High Back Dining Chairs. We will compete with any cash house in the city in prices, at the same time offering the inducement of our EASY TERMS OF PAYMENT. HOPPER BROS. & CO THE LOW PRICE LEADERS, SOT "WOOD STEEET. Come in and see our new line of Baby Carriages and Refrig erators, and don't forget we will be open until 9 o'clock every night this week. Always A the FPr Cheapest. SPECIAL FROM I In connection with our EASTER MILLINERY OPENING -we shall display In our Cloak and Wrap Department, adjoining the Millinery Parlor (on second floor), the latest conceptions in Mantles, Capes, Connemaras, Walking Jackets, Misses' and Children's Jersey Suits, cute and pretty Infants' Coats, etc, of Berlin Paris and home designs. We show now a much larger collection than previou seasons, including the higher class of goods. Our prices remain ALWAYS THE CHEAPEST. DANZIGERS, Sixth St. and Perm Ave. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. TO THE PUBLIC. TRY Hunter's Ketchup IT IS ZFTTIRIE. Ideslreto draw at tention of to the of Hunter's Ketchup. It is mads from se lected to rn a toes, and is pare Sir. Thos. V. Jenx lns: DEAR SIR The sample of J. w. Hunter's To mato Ketchup received from you on Oct. 8. 'W, has been analyzed, and 1 find it free from all min eral acids, salicylic acid or artificial coloring matter. SljntdJ HUGO BLANCK, ChemUt. PUUburj. FOR SALE BY THOS. mhlS-IS-ssu. G. JENKINS. '-"? & w JF, MgTinsyJf! HOPPER BROS.&Co's BABGAW HOUSE! CASH or CREDIT. Wood st. 307 NEAB, FOTJBTH AVE. w'!'JJ 1 307 Always the Cheapest. OUR POPULAR PrXVa I . aft