TURKISH ATROCITIES, The Sale of Slave Girls, Though Con ducted Secretly, Has the Pro tection of the Law. ABDUCTIOKS IK BROAD DAYLIGHT. Christiana Murdered That Their Blood May be Used Id the Religions Bites of a Fanatic Sect. A BOI BLED TO DEATH AT DAMASCUS. Ike truth f the Reports Trnd'd U Dr. Tkomss L. TThltc. of UcKcesport. rCORRESrOlTDKSCX Or THE DIErATCH.1 CoNSTAXTKfOPtE, June 27. A sojourn of two weeks at the Turkish capital, during which time I was making some investiga tions of a special nature, has put me in pos session, throucb my intercourse with per sons of prominence and position, ci certain facts tending to show what manner of men these Turks are, and as illustrating the true condition of affairs in this far Eastern Em pire. Shortly before leaving America, I read in a leading daily what purported to be a letter written Irom this city over the full signature of the writer, stating that Circassian girls were weekly sold openly an slaves here. The writer went on to describe with great minuteness all the details of the traffic lie located the open slave market In Scutari and, according to him, "Wednes day was the market day. "The letter interested me, ni It doubtless did many other, and I determined to in rettteate the matter on my forthcoming visit here. This 1 did thoroughly lelng aided by missionaries, physicians, professors nil persons in official position here, not Turks, and can say Hint the letter must have been written on rrronrntu luiorninlloii re ceived, or was a pure flitloii. Tliero n no o I if 11 slave innrkcl In Hctitnrt, or any part of Conttmiiltiopte. Hut I have fun nil nl that liivrry dors ex 1st litre, ntul to-day In tUnmliotil there arc a number o places whete ArnifiilMii, Clrrnsslnii ami Turkish clrle limy he purehitseil outright and n legal bill of snip isIvpii wlileh binds Hit sellers to rrluml payment I tin person sold is not found as imirenented. SMIOTKCTKII JtV TIIR !,AV. If X could make n satisfactory liuraaln with Uiq father I iiiluhl rniua Into iOesliin of the must handsome tvouiin In the land, Hlie would have (no vnloo In llm mutter, and It would ho a legal, binding transnnllnn. There ara 'men rejrularly anuiiped In this business heir, aim the liuslne.a us thus curried on is .almost entirely In females, mid they am boiijjlit lor thn most putt lor no gooil pur pose. The wrilrrol the loiter was wrong only In one particular, it were belter, perlinpi, lie were rlitht. The open market could lip more emlly controlled than the secret slave marls ol Hlmiilioul, 3 lie market nt present lor a female Slavs Is (-C00 in f 1,00(1, according to co parity ii imI brainy. In tump Instances the slaws thus bought are taken to wlfti nurl well treated bv the purchaser, but In the larger number of rae tliev are wnr.r. Apropos of this subject, a handsome JeweM was yesterday abducted by civilians In broad ilxyllglit at )Ius Kuri, una of the suburbs, and tho mut ter occasions hut Utile comment, 1 am as. surrd that such occurrences ara frequent hero. The abductors will ha well puid to keep silent, and (lis poor girl's chauoes of rtcupoor discovery are very 1 in I led, Tho wlieol an attache of the JCutilmi legation was akulln by Turkish soldiers a lew days ago while on a pleasure excursion to Qaratirl, Though it has not occurred yet, the offenders In this euse fortunately will most likely meet with summary punish ment. INTEHNATIONAI, TnODJlLES MAY ItKSULT. This outrage, taken in connection with the arrearages of the war Indemnity now n year or more overdue, and about which ltuisla is clajiorinc, might bo construed as B "casus belli." As further showing the character of the Turkish soldier a number ot them recently made a German soldier drunk and maltreated him. The malter was brought to the knowledge ol the German Minister. He demanded the punishment of the offender", but the Turkish Minister of Justice showed such an unwillingness to do anything in the matter aud desire to shield Hie soldiers that finally he threatened to publish the details oi the shocking affair in every paper in Germany. Last week the surprise in diplomatic cir cles were the resignation of the Minister of Justice, a chance in the Governorship ot Constantinople, and Black Bey, formerly Ambassador to Washington, and late .Mayor oi I'era, was sent as Minister to Itoumania, a step backward for the said Bty. Those who ought to know, look upon the grand change as the;final denouerneutof the affair of the German sailor, yet the sctnal offenders are unpunished. One of the greatest needs of the American colony here i that ot belter postal arrange-, meiit-. The Government exercises a strict censorship over the mails. Letters I am informed, are frequently suppressed, and some newpapers not allowed circulation in the countrv at all and others are mutilated. England, France, Russia, Austria and Ger many each have their own postnffice and postal service, receiving, distributing and collecting the mail ot the residents and officials of the respective countries, living here for the reasons mentioned. It is true the number of Americans here would hardly justi y tbe establishment of a separate American postoffice, but some arrangement could easily, and should, by all means, be made with some of the Governments which have already established local offices, look ing to the proper and decent accommoda tion of Americans as regards their mail service. DOME IK TItE NAME OF BEMOIOX. Another of those (hooking tragedies which from time to time hare startled the Christian world hits occurred at Damascus. 1 re er to tho shedding of blood by certain religious enthusiasts, tiittt lliesntiie maybe used by thcin III their lellglous riles. A lew years hack Midi nil outrage was perpetrated nl Alexandria; Inter on at Damascus thn Jesuit iiilMloiiary, Father Thomas, was liiurdeied lor the same einl. In this Itmlnuct a barber who IihiI ilont the nelunl killing at n bouse to which tho pilest IihiI been entiued for lli purpi'sp, eonlit.neil, nml between the Jaw's avinMim Maml nml Ihe lire if the pop. ulni'DOver 00 Htm wpiii nmolM In xjiln Hun of thn muni, Only five or six vriifs g" nl a low ii in liumjary voUUi Ulirlsllan ulrl was similarly liiimoliiled. J remember mailing in thn iiiiiiiriiiinii, bill do lint rotmll Hint anyone whs piinUhml fur llm ihIiiip, llunli n.y.lHNr skpius always to slirinllllit I leifMAits, ll Is with Hm MiMlnsl ilirtltHillJ li nuliixl euiiiHIs ean lm itiipreliemleil, ml imw wiiuei this ti. at Dsumsvns, about th niiili ol Hhloli J IHV wIHt up! jie-rs in beiliii;ii.lJ.fl,i,i,fy Nh, ,HUI)le InriirniHiiiiii, 'Jlieilixmy upmi tthlnli iIipn neiiiKiiiH i"inn an in iht niurtlaroiis eulbwksol rli(ilus MimllnUni Is, ilittt it Uliiiit Urn inn. MkmihI, idm'wIii b Tilby iisrt.Mnij oi nlt) blood of Qliris. t Urn, or tliow wlm so blira in Jllni, This tliay dp, If lits Klb-pUrtu, Bre trns, by roUliiR ilia blood wUK the hreod uiaii In tMr MPrinoa, I dnt prnfms (a sy or know whether (he eharses me tfUB 0f iB but rplma tho lollowing Incident in my p' jiivUj as a correiondnt end as bearing upon the oise in geiiHral 3 in L'Biiurai THE FACTS IV TUB CASK, My Informant is a prote.sor in the Medical Collage here. lie is a Byriau by blrtb, and a mend of the mother ol the alleged victim p, vuo """"B-. v"' ion oay oeiore ray introduction he had reoelyed a letter fce her imploring his aid in haying the J guiltv persons punished. He was in Ereat distress about the matter, a he could see but poor prospect ol being able to do any thing to help the mother. The faots briefly recited are these: There lived in Damascus a widow with a bright little boy 5 years of age. She was a Syrian by birth, but had embraced Christianity some years ago. In the neighborhood lived a woman, who was devoted to the religion referred to, who manifested great love for the little boy, coming almost daily to see him, bringing him sweets, and often with the mother's per mission taking him out for a walk. One davrecentlv during the mother's absence the little lellow disappeared. Search for him by the widow and her friends proved un availing. Davs passed and brought no tidings of the lost boy. It was ot course the sensation and mys tery of the place. One day the employes of a livery stable having noticed 'or some time a stench arising from the cistern, decided to clean it out. The result of tho cleaning was the discovery of the body of the lost boy. The proprietor of the stable was arrested. He was dumfouuded. He could give no ex planation o the presence of the body in the cistern, but he recalled the fact that some time previous a woman and two men had called to see about hiring a conveyance, but lelt without doing so. He now remembered also that when they called the woman car ried a bundle, but had none when leaving. Sis Life Blood Had Seen Drawn. As a result ot this information the woman referred to and her two companions were in time arrested and fully identified by the liveryman. A post mortem examination re vealed the fact that the boy had been bled to death, two small incisions over the arter ies at the wrists showing this conclusively. Alter a time the prisoners were released for want nt sufficient evidence to connect them with the murder, and there the matter rests. The Governor of the Province is of the re ligious class interested, the present Grand Vizier of Turkcv is of the snme extraction, and it is the policy of the leaders always to try to smother thee affilr lor fear ol the judgment of Christian Europe. This may explain the apparent apathy of the authori ties in the present case. Oi course there Is no positive cvidenco here that the bov was killed for the purpose under dis cussion, but the fact that the woman and tho two wen, the only persons so far known to be Implicated, are ol this religious class aud as they could have no motive of vengeance or (rain In Ills tak ing off and the nmnnerof his death by bleed ing, looks suspicious. In licr dire cilstros, the poor widow lies appealed to the Turkish doctors, and il will be Interesting to watch wlmt proceedings, If any. are taken, in imnnfclliiii with the subject, I rend few days nun, In an American monthly which 1 picked up In the reading room of llio hold, that a memorial signed by tho leaders o this religion, which by the way, Is not Catholic, was in be prrsmiteil In the Pope nuking lilin m nfJIolally deny that such occurrences ni this evrr took plsre. It will be wall fur Ills lliwllnau to lnvrll(ul this Damascus tfl'iilr berura signing suoli a dnou ment. If, IniTlng dona so, and having passed upon tho oilier slmllur OMtei. he can sign ilia memorial, the wlmlo world will, fur iiuumully's sake, rrjnlct, TllOMAH I(, WllITlt, M. D, TEMrEKATUllK OF BOIL, It Is Tart- nimrrlatlr Itnlsed br lb Adrililoa of Onllnniv Manures. Newcastle, Knrlsnil, Chronicle. J The Important o Inimical Influonet of manures upon soils Is generally well under stood, but a physical effect, wliloh Is equally Important, is not so lully anproolaiori namely, the Inlluenee of manure upon the temperature of the jsoll. That such an luflueneo Is exerted has been demonstrated by a series of expert menu In Jnpun. where the soil Is light nnd porous, consisting of vnlcnnlo nsli mixed with 7 or 8 per cent of humus. Boll thor oughly uilxrd with manure In yarylngquan titles was plscrd In four frames, while a fifth frame Hits filled with foil unmixed with manure. 'I A thermometer sunk Ave Ino!t In cseh bed was read eTt-ry Ore daysifor (We pe riods, the result being that at the end of the first five days the bed with? no manure showed a temperature of OO.S5) that ma nured at the rate of 80 Ions per Acre 05.1, at 40 tons per acre 63.10, at 20 top" per acre 63.8, and at 10 tons per acre 02-. These temperatures gradually becamelower, and at the end of the fi tb period the unmnnured plot showed a terapTature of CO 8, tlir 80 ton ner ucre plot B2.6, 40 ton fil.0, SO ton 60.1" and the 10 tor per acre plot 49.8. The experiment shows con clusively that provided all other conditions are similar the quantity of heat developed in the soil is in direct proportion to the amount of manure applied. , It Is seen also that manured s(ls lose heat more rapidly than unmanureld ones. According to Proiessor Penballow vbe soil at a depth of three Inches maintains"! tem perature uniformly higher than thatf the immediately overlying layers. The super ficial layers are affected by ev.ipora'iob and radiation, as well as bv the l me chanical condition of the soil. AloosepoVous son cTaiiorikicr. us moisiure mncn mlurc rapidly than a compact one, hence its ti perature mnst be lower, and actual obser vations indicate a difference oi temneratue between compact and porous soils vnrvin from 0.1 C in the morning to 6.2 C in thP afternoon a difference ol great importance1 where the growth ol plants is concerned. WEEK THE STAES TTT.t. 1 Tbe Event From Which the Agt at Blares Were Reckoned Before Ihe War. During the slavery days there was often great difficulty in ascertaining the age of a slave. The negroes themselves did not re member the ages of their children nor their own, so in the last 25 or 30 years of the slave era it became a common prac tice to take 1833, the year of the great meteoric display, as a starting point Every negro in the country who was old enough remembered the thrill ing scene, and their fright was terrible. It fixed Itself on their minds as a most im tiortnnt event and so constituted an epoch known to all. "How big a boy were vou when the stars fell7" "What slued girl were you when the star fell?" were olten heard and well under stood questions. "I was old enough lo work In the fields with the hands when the stars fell)" or, "I was just old enough to remem ber when the stars ell." furnished Infnrmn. tlon from which an approximate estimate might be made of Ihe slave's age by the would-be jiuroliAser, noiiTiNo tub Monig, Tnrprnllne nnd I'mnnher Absit ihe Heel Dnae fee Ihe lessen. Hi. LoRlidlebe-Deinoerali The mold's good time Is Just omtnsnelng, The lint weslher mikes hi in active and In diistrlous, and list winter's furs mil wraps, ami Ihe regular spring clothing scaitereii up and ilowi; In drawers nml no pegs nfliinl III in sin lil r senie Inr world Tim prcmr lions sold si drug nines are t-fleatlvD, bill they smell sn airiielnusly Dial (hey miike rimiiis iiiiliilirtiillaliln. (Jainiihor ami lur fieutiii, liliuliig t If 111 of ertAk In every drawer is a simple piitveiitive nm f n ninth enn stand the eoinbliiatfeii it daisrces , all It (mil eel. ONE WA8 TOO MUDDLED, The tJnfflrlHiinle llisiili ef nn Allempi le Deprive Twe Yewii Indies. I'orllsnd I'rsfi.I Two Maugnr young men were coming Gut of n suloan tne oiu?r nay, wliloh Is run under the guise of restaurant, when they, mw two young ladles whosa good onlnlon ii themselves they desired to retain, Una fit the youths showed great presence of mind fuy pulling out a tootnplcK, at tne same remarking to bis companion! "Well, that we've had dinner what shall we ...-,.., ...- .. .....- K . "Go to dinner," ssld his thick-witted (h The young ladles milled, ai tbe yontl previously done, and the icbeme fall bohiIbIousIy, ' " j Tbe young ladles smiled, ai tbe yootl THE TEICKS EVEN IN ART. Replicas Sold as Originals and fraud Indorsed by Law. the DISPOSING OF INFERIOR WORKS. The West Has More Enthusiastic Collectors Than the East. SALES 0P PICTURES HT GAHADA ICOBRESFOXDEXCX OV TITE OISrJlTOn.1 ' New York, July 12. It is always a thankless task to undeceive people; its more than thankless when the undeception af fects beliefs and traditions that have become respectable and even dignified with old age. Yet this is what must be done re specting our preconceived notions concern ing high art in the United States, if we are to believe two of our greatest experts whom I encou..red at the Hoffman House last evening. "If there be any well-established legend," said one, "it is that New York City is the art center of the Western continent, and that all good pictures go to its many gal leries. Nothing is further from the truth. 'While there are many excellent art collec tions in the metropolis, there is but little enthusiasm, and, oddest of all, there are very few art collectors. At. the present time there are two worthy of the name Cornelius Yanderbilt and George L Seney. The former keeps what he purchases, while the latter periodically sends his treasure trove to the auction room. He did this a few years ago, and almost stripped tho walls of his home. He has made up another collec tion since that time, and proposes to ouctlon It off in turn the coming autumn. Of his farst accumulations tws.thlrds were eventu ally secured by "Western buyers, nnd n larger proportion ol the coming sale will tiike the same path. Tliero are no art col lectors In Ilottnu or lJhlliideliihla worth mentioning. There Is none In Washington since the death of W, W. Corcoran. In Dullltnoto is it distinguished collector, Mr. W. T. Walters, whose fame Is world-wide. When vou get this Inr you linvo exhausted the ICiitorn and Middle Btntes. MOItrt nXTJIUHIABTlO IN TllH WEST, "When you look nt the West you find ten times the enthusiasm aihI nt least ten times rs in nny collector, There are so mit n r of the fuller Hint It would lake nn hour lo call the roll, Hut Among tlieiu may be mentioned, ns leaders. J, W, Klliwnrtli and Marshall lTleld, ol Uliloagni (Itinera! lluuell V, Alger, of Mlolilgiini T. II. Walker, oi Mlunenpolls Kelmid fttiiiiford, ol Hsu KrHiiclncnj Jlyrnn Itocil, ol Omithn Andrew Oarnrgle, nl I'lllshurgj ex.Hunalo Catlin and llrtuh, the elentrleul liivautor, of Cleveland. In I nut, (here Is scarcely n thriving Western oily that hasn't at least one soaious an collector, lial alone New York, but the entire K.ist sinks Into lualg nlfJrsuoe nlongslda matters of this sort. nlfJrsuoe ntoiiKslde of the West In all "To Illustrate llm difference In enthusiasm between ihe two) It Is seldom or never that mi Kasterii mini attends nil art sale in Uhl cugo, while on the other hind every sale In Huston end Mow York Is crowded with Western buyers. You'll find the hitter in Montreal, Mexico and Kurope grail ring his eslhttio desires, while the staid (loth nmlte usually employs an agent or waits until some rich dealer brings over an Invoice ol Ann works, O Imported ploiurrs 7fl per cent In number and value go West mid re main there, and this Is true In the foe of the slnuulsr tendenoyol millionaires to break un their homes end eel tie perma nently In Mew York. How lirgu this ele ment amounts to Is easily shownjliy such usmrs as u, u, wins, .inuu y, miicKHV, U. 1. Huntington, Charles Crocker and James W. Keene, who are a lew ol those who have oomo lo the metropolis for good. Had all of these remained in the West, the dispropor tion would have still neen greater to the disadvantage of Mew York. I suppose the reason Is that tbe Umpire City Is so rlob and satisfied with Its accumulation In tyerj field that it has lost amnltlon and become a slow and conservative community, ruLL or cunAr johx methods. "Another popular delusion," said the second expert, "is that the high art business is conducted upon the same heightened, elegant and conscientious lines as the dia mond, jewelry and lace trades. It is honeycombed with cheap-John methods and can give poluts to the brightest members of the bunko profession. The art collectors and buiers of the country number a few thousands and are more or less known to the dealers, who keep an index of names and addresses that is correct down to date. Many of them have gauged their customers so carefully as to know just what goods can be sold to ibem. Upon this knowledge and a large amount of humbug all the tricks are based. "An importer or dealer has a lot ot pict ures which have fallen flat on the Mew York market. He marks out a route along which reside his prospective customers or victims, summons his 'representative,' 'manager,' 'superintendent' or 'airent,' bat never clerk or salesmen, and sends hyn off with tbe invoice. The representative reaches Pongbkeepsie, hires a hall or en gages the parlor of a hotel. He scours the town, huntine up some laudable charity. AnvthlMf will unit frnm a fn tin ,4 1 :..".. ) asylum to a melodeon for a mission school. iThis secured, he promptly advertises 'A Uuperb art exhibition tor the benefit of, 'etc.' The receipts are usually larger than the hotel bill, the local newspaper or news papers give gratuitous reading notices and Ariticisms, and the oni or more ministers eWvertise and praise it from the pulpit. Tn tne meantime the home house has sent to eyWy known buyer within 20 miles of poVghkeepsie a highly diplomatic letter, in which the prty addressed is delicately fLt terd'lt or 'worked to the Queen's taste,' as it li Milled by the trade. fntlCES ALWAYS ItlOH EKOUOH. i" Che salesman does the rest. The prices aski d are very high and are put so with a vlei ' of encountering the bargain fiend. The prices accepted are high enough to mal e the sale of one picture pay all the expt uses oi the trip for a month, Seme of Ihe talesmen are exceedingly clever and inok e a handsome living by applying olrcns methods to flue art. The man pulatlon of Muukaesy'i 'Christ belo I'llftte' ft few seiisoni ago and the ! i roll manner In which the artist him mil employed as his own best advertise men ' will he remembered by most people. Wh 'ii the pleture was finally sold to John W iiiffiaker, it Is said that the dealer and bin i hrewd representative had untile more mnn 7 out ol the entire Internum! than thn arlli i himself. HUM. atll' i ill Nei'1 1 1 asnisii city in tno wesiernimri or r iuin mine, niiieii uiiinrininir III' renl to all art innltsrs, n mnrnieiiintlvfl llll! snli iwn innvisfi iii a very iuiiii wily, eililblllnn hail lallnd in bring a iiur Tin ha er, ami mnisUiIng new liml in he trioil, lie mit lie) pluUml nut a wealthy, imliltliiiis, nut rly resident, tnduesd him to deliver a tire on Us ntlliUiOr the benefit nl soma erinrlly. fiiil 'wreU up' Hie leuiiire mid Jeoflurer In Hie, loeal presi. The Inner, lis iuMiiv that he hail heenuia sudduiii fanous, was n everjnyeil Hint he hfiuglit rnune mmwoui tne pieiures, Un these ipitlie inltuniwi leaves mi stone unturned i effect a isle. He takes wlvAntuue of rlamlly quarrels, personiil feuds, party anil factional lines enu lasnienauje vagaries. ALWAYS A flHOW OF K&RQAHOR. "It should be added that everything Is done with the refinement and elegsnco that ii supposed to surround tbe iirt world, Ills raiment is tbe finest, hiscsrds and stationery are tbe latest that France and England bare evolved, and all bis surronndings are so ar ranged as to give the impression of wealth and social prestige," "Another trick," said the first expert, "which is rtrr common, but of which the .average picture-buyer Jtuowi nothing, ii tbe PITTSBURG DISPATCH, selling of replicas for originals. While It Is dishonorable, it i, Rtrange to say, legal. Tho -practice comes from a custom that has obtained in Europe for. centuries. Nearly every prominent artist there has a group of Btudents who work with him in his own studio. When ho completes a painting which promises to be successful the pupils make copies in whole or part of it, which be in turn corrects aad perfects with his own brush. While these replicas are naturally not so valuable as the original, they always command ex cellent prices and are classed as being ot the artist's own handiwork. When people have bought replicas and afterward gone to law on the ground that they had been de ceived, that the picture was not made by the artist a advertised or represented, the courts of highest resort have uniformly held that a replica is a legitimate work of tbe artist who made the original, and that un less sold as the original, or so warranted to be, the purchaser has no redress. Ol hun dreds of foreign paintings brought across the Atlantic a large number are replicas. Importers and dealers ol high standing in form .their customers of the fact, but they are in a minority. TVOBKIUO THEOTJOH CANADA. The latest device in the art business in. this country is the "Canadian racket" and is nothing more than a shrewd system of beating our tariff svstem. A dealer orders an invoice of fi.'tv high-class paintings. If they were landed in New York, Boston or other American ports of entry, the duty would be a very considerable sum and would have to be paid on not only tbe pictures that hit the popular funny, but also those that proved unsalable. Besides this such an in voice would be appraised by an expert offi cial so as to prevent a fo'reign agent billing what cost 100,000 francs in Paris at 53,500, ns has been frequently attempted. The dealer, therefore, has tho pictures shipped to Canada where there is no tariffon works of art and where rent and Incidental ex penses are much lower than they are here. The favorite place is Montreal, but Quebeo, Ottawa, Toronto, Hamilton and Windsor havo also been utilized In this regard. Tho pictures are put on exhibition and a neat catalogue prepared. The dealer then sCuds by mail u copy of tho catiilogue and a business letter to nil his regular customers and to suoh art collectors ns he thinks may purchase, It may seem queer that a man will undertake a long Journey to buy n palntlntr, hut suoh Is the met, A genuine art collector or nn ctithuslastfo nrt buyer will travel 1,000 miles to obtain a treasure mid think nothing of It, It Is not long be fore tho Invoice is quite sold nil'. Of the CO the Cituadlaus will buy one and Ihe Ameri cans 90. Of the remainder a half will then he seut across the boundary to the United Htates and another half will be shipped buck to Kuiope as unsulled to the American mar ket. The denier mves money at almost every step nl the operntlon. The American buyer saves money likewise. AVOIDINO TIM DUTY, The Custom House uinohluery between the Itepubllc find the Dominion Is a mere bubo (inmpuied with that of the great ports of entry. It muy bu questioned If there he nn ollialul of the Inruier olitss who could ap praise any art work within it hall' or n quar ter of Its value, The dealer, or many of them, Is willing tn bill his sales tn a good customer ut any figure which will enable the tailor to save the Custom lluuie duty, As a onnspduenue there are hundreds of plolures which come across the Hue without m vlnir iinv dutv at ell. nnd ii simillsr num ber which pay hull or quarter duty nud a mere haiidlul which pay the legal tux. I am told that a similar condition of aflulrs exists on the Pacific coast hetwoen our country and Mexloo, but of ilils I know nothing ol mvown knowledge. With tlio Canudlitii irullli'Iain persouullyncquiilnteil, nud know It Is on the Inorense. It will con tinue until Congress abolishes all duties upon works of art. Although the art business is undermined with tricks nnd devices, It Is Improving nevertheless. Tho Tew great houses which do not Indulge In these underbuild ways of making money grow stronger every day, and will eventually control the Industry, In the meantime the nouyeaux rlohes ii our growing cities, unit especially of the West ern communities, are slowly acquiring a knowledge ol nrt matters, which some day will put a practical end to the dishonesty now so prevalent. Wilmam E. 8. Falbs. ES BEAT YON M0LTKE. A French General Who Out-Maneuvered llm Prneslaa Leader. London Tlmes.l General d'Hautpoul, of whose death wa are iniormed by our Paris correspoodent, was once pitted against Count von Moltke, and beat blm. General, then Captain d'Hautpoul was then, in Louis Philippe's time, tho head of Ibrahim Pasha's staff. He was also aid-de-camp to Boliman Pasha. Count yon Moltke was the virtual commander of tbe Turkish army at Nezib, as w.is General d'Hautpoul, oi the Egyptian army, of which Ibrahim was the nominal chiet. The Turks were routed, owing to the skill and foresight of Captain d'Hautpoul in occupy ing as he did the positions dominating the road to Aleppo. The interventionof Europe alone saved Constantinople fiom being entered by the Egyptian army alter the defeat ot the Turks at Nezib. General d'Hautpoul was sent by General Trochu to Versailles in 1871 to ne gotiate an armistice and met there his old foe, Moltke, but relused to sign until in formed about Bourbaki's army. General Yalden then took his place and signed, and Bourbaki, to avoid being captured, was forced to retreat in baste to Switzerland. General d'Hautpoul was tbe last of the French military men who helped to build Mehemet All's Egyptian army on a Euro pean model. SACCHABHTE TR FEUITB. now the New fcweeicntr Has Almost RcTolullonlzrd Canning. Bt. Looll Olobe-Uemocrat.1 The discovery of that substance known as saccharine has almost revolutionized the business of canning fruits. This new "sweetener," which the French Government has already prohibited, owing to whet they call a dangerous element which enters in Its formation, does entirely away with the use of sugar. It costs almost nothing. About a month ago a prominent member of u canning firm or an Eastern oily, while experimenting with eacoliarlne, discovered nisi pineapples preierveti in it would nl must entirely retain their uaturnt tnite. This Is in Itself a great dliooverr. aj almost everybody knows the difference In taste be tween canned pineapples and those which are Imported direct from the Houth, AirAIU'JINIrfO A KKU'H, The ltnwili (irlnridim Is Necessary Only In Verr II ore (Jnses. at. bonis tlloke Dsmiiorsti It Is it good ileal emler to spoil a knife limn In sharpen It. To begin wlln. n rough sinus Is used ten freely, Unless g knife him a very round or rugged edge It does not want any grinding et nil, ami It nun be lirnught into shape far ninre rapidly end surely by aid ot n wlielstnne end a little nil. It Is no use laying the blade flit nn the slnue nml riilihing hardi hold the Imek of the knl is well up and sharpen the edge of the bledennly. If ynn know how tn use It, the Imek of a knife makes tin excellent steel or sharpener, but the secret le hard to acquire. A Variety of Smokers. kenliTllli CRimerelsl. Now, as little Johnny would isy, there ere several kinds ol smoker, The smoker that smokes, tbe smoker that Is smoked by the smoker,the smoker in which tbe smoker smokes the erooker,and tbe smoker At which the smoker smokes tbe smoker that smokes bimseli and all tbe other smokers. Each one of these, odd and bicarre e it Bar ap veer, ie smoker, SUNDAY, JULY 13, PRESS AND PULPIT. Both Are Powers for Good, and as Such Should bo in Harmony. DUTIES OP A GREAT NEWSPAPER. A Variety of News Demanded bj Headers of the Present Day. DITIKES WHO PATEOSIZB THE PEESS rwniTTzx FOB TUB DISPATCH. 1 There are some ministers who havo a poor conception of the diversified and peculiar functions of the daily press. They fail to see why their sermc are not reported at great length, and sometimes severely criti cise the management for lack of enterprise or failure to come up to the standard raised in tbe mind of the critic. A glance at such a great journal as The Dispatch ought to open the eyes of the man oi average intelli gence to the wonderful discrimination and care necessarily called into action in prepar ing intellectual food and current news for the thousands upon thousands of people who scan its pages. If all the readers were mem bers of church, or even regular attendants, probably criticism would be in place, but when we remember that not oyer one-fifth of the people have any intimate affiliation with the church, criticism seems to be inap propriate when severe. A newspaper must be allowed to be in some sense at least a commercial venture, and meets with success, as a rule, in accord ance to the sagacity and business acumen with which it is conducted. It must touch every phase of life if It fills its mission. If a minister has distinguishing qualities that entitle him to more than ordinary notice, or if his productions from tbe rostrum are above the ordinary, tho live nowepaper will give him his meed oi publicity, but the In dividual pupor must be thojudge of its own policy, and ot tho fitness of things In gen eral. A Duly lo ilia Maeera. Very good people take up a morning paper aud lu It find things which they think would be better not published. The editors are eomlemned and threats of "stopping the paper" are uinde with suoh lerlousueii that i) It were not ludicrously absurd would be positively amusing. While, the public de mands an unloldlng nf the ereutsnf the day, no matter what their character, the paper is In duly bound to supply the demand. I know people who carefully sonn the head lines, and only read such things as are to them digestive and assimilative. It Is the exalted iirivllege or everybody to do the same thing, A gre.it metropolitan paper has no more right to omit the report of a baseball mutali than It 1ms a missionary meeting or a ilanonilnntlnnal convention, The goueral puullo Is Interested In the ball game, whereas, deplorable though It Is. a lew, comparatively epeiiklng,uiny be vitally oonourned In regard to snmu imrtlaular da. unmluatlonal sucoeis or failure. The uottspnper doesnotcompel Its readers to peruse every column. A critical reading ol Bliakespoure, or even the lllble Ittelf, will reveal the faot Unit both picture scenes and sentiments which aro lit vari ance with strict morality and purlti'inlo modesty. It contains an uoourato account of the dnlngs of men belonging to past ages, and surely somn of tho reoords of their performances may not be read with unalloyed commendation, With what tender solicitude we watch the lllble, and how sensitive we are ol orltlolsm o' It pjge. and yet It would never do to rend the whole book alnud in the publlo sohools, While acknowledging that man has no right to quosilou the propriety of divine revelation or the methodol recording saored history, does it nut seem Inconsistent when we hear men ol Intelligence adversely criticising the dally press for giving accu rate reporte ol the events transpiring in the age In which wo live? If It was right to place on record the druukenness of Noah and the homicide of Moses, how comes It that it is wrong to herald forth the delin quencies of like oharaoter when brought be fore the publlo in the present day? Two Great Alodera Forces. It is true that a newspaper which colors wrongdoing and makes it worse than it really is transcends the limitations of dis cretion, and yet to mince matters and polish them so that grave offense may bo diluted to that exteot that appears but folly is equally wrong. Were it not for the publlo press there wonld be no bound to tbe wickedness that would prevail. Tbe pulpit is a great power against sin, but the press is more potential. Denunciation from the rostrum Is a preventive to a great extent, but fear of newspaper condemnation and publicity is far more to be dreaded, xne man oi shady reputation who quarrels with the press puts his bead beneath the guillotine and para lyzes all bis opportunities tor reinstatement in tbe good opinion of his fellows. L.irga corporations realize the power of the press, and they will rather do anything than an tagonize even tbe smallest weekly weasel it it can be prevented. The pulpit and the pressl What a combi nation they might lorm if there was more unanimity between them! There are clergy men who tell us they care nothing for news paper notoriety, and have no soficituoe as to whether or no tbey or their work is no ticed. Of course one does not like to ques tion the veracity of a minister of the gospel, but I am inclined to think that such men labor under a misconception ol their innate propensity. Did it ever strike the reader that the pulpit and the press are and always have been the two great vehicles of material and intellectual progress? When rebellion stalked through the land tbe loyiil pulpit and the patriotlo press were the means of mobilizing and enthusing a nation. Had the Northern press beeu silent and the pul pit dumb, where would have been this grrat country to-day? Instead of 04,000,000 of people with one great putslnghenrt we should have had ndlverslfied conglomeration of nationalities productive of naught but chaos and confusion, These two engines are the mighty motive foroes which keep the world In n prcgresilve state, nnd that they should work In friendly unison Is some thing very desirable. Ureal Forces ltlalulr Used. )0rery force can be so used as to be de structive, Bteani Is a splendid servant, but when It panes beyond human control It Is a ytrr monster. Uleetrlolty Is a fair end lovely handmaiden, hut when freed from certain Ilii'lUtloiii It become" n terrlflo virago, lire Ii a loolhlug, com flirting Irluml, hut when il ms the hmimls of utility II lieciimes a very lleml. Wilier Is the primitive necessity to tlm siistnnnnce oi lire, nml yet It dun, under unrMln dmnll. tloiis, ilegeiiirnte lino nn nvnlsniilie of da. tlrniiilveiie.s, Md with the press nnd Hie iulillj In the Mouth then emiihliied inrees gnadsd the people on tn slmiil rebellion and nearly destroyed a mighty nation. An overruling I'rnviilsiioe prevented nioli a fearlul oonsuininatinii, hut did not the lamentable results nf misapplied force demonstrate tlmt wonderful power resides In these twn agencies, either fur good or evil, us they may he applied? Antagonism between the pulpit and the preis Ii folly, Neither one can perform the peculiar function of the ether, but tlmt they should go hand in hend every thinker will agree. As a general rule those pulpiteers wiiu strongly eonaemn tne press inr us shih posed delinquencies are among what may he termeu tne unsuccessful men. very popu lar snd prominent clergyman has a liking for tbe newspaper press and tbe reporter. Henry Ward Beeoher was a friend of "the boys that do tbe work," Telmege treats the knight of tbe pencil with due consider, "on, s I myself have witnessed In Brooklyn Xabernaala. flnnrff.nn Irnnwa tinw tn vain. Joe power of tho prese, end acknowledge 1890. its supremacy. Tbe country parson keeps on good terms with the village editor if he has any sense. A local newspaper of lim ited circulation can make or mar a man far more than the unsophistocated suppose. Dead silence in regard to tbe doings of a man in any publio position is as blighting asablizztd. Supposing it to be possible for every newspaper in the land to solemnly agree never again to mention the name of James G. Blaine, it would kill him "a dead aa a door nail." The same rule ap plies to town and village life. When I hear a preaober say he cares nothing for newspaper popnlarity, I have to qnestion either his veracity or bis good sense. A Glorloun Minion (or Each. The press and tbe pulpit make life com paratively safe. While these two mighty engines have full play, anarchy and com munism in its worst form will never gain much headway in this country. A daily exchange of opinion through the press, and a weekly unfolding of the gospel of Jesus Christ, the former touching the material and physical aide of man's nature, and the latter the spiritual and eternal, are the strongest salegqards against irrational power and brute supremacy. A censorized press is a clog upon the wheels of progress, and a weak-kneed aud a tender-spined pul pit is a rotten viaduct oyer which perishing souls go down to perdition. Let each fill its sphere with a direct positiveness. Both press and pulpit have a glorious mission, and very few men can comprehend the things which belong to both unless they hare bad a dual experience. It is not such a long journey from the press to the pulpit if the conditions aro favorable. More than one bright theological light has commenced his career on the press, and all will tell you that it did them no harm. There are points in each which the other may not be able to fully understand, but so long as both conscientiously perform their duty in accordance with tbe light possessed naught but good can ensue. The pulpit has no better irjend than the press as a whole, and It seems to me to be tne height of in consistency to condemn all because one may err. This applies to both press and pulpit. Our work In lift will not bo long as Indi viduals, but the spirit of it may live through endless ages. A Covxthy PA8SOH. THE OIFBY M0IIL An Iosect Thai Does Hauls With Ihe Mass nehuselia l,elslaiure. rrom tbe llosien Herald. It Is a uew thing for tbe Legislature ol Massachusetts to pass an aot ereatlng a commission to destroy an Insect pest, And appropriate a suui of monoy,to be expended In the work tlmt would of itself Le a fortune for a man of moderate habits and desires. Hut this Is Just wlmt has been done, and the Gipsy inolli Is the Inseot aimed at. It was Introduced Into New Kugland In 1870 by Mr. L, Trouvelnt, an entomologist, now living lu Paris, but nt the time In question living near Uleuwond, In Kist Medford, where he attempted soma experiments In raising silk from olir unlive sllu worms, and nlso Intro duced European apoales for Ihe purpose, Tho Gipsy ninth In lime became aoallmated, and'has multiplied lo such an extent as to cause tho entire destruction of the fruit crop, nnd also to defollittu the shade trees In tint region Infested by It, wliloh was at first supposed to be n small one In Medford, but wliloh has slues proved to bo a large one, covering five towns and three oltles In an area nf CO squnre miles. The Olpsy moth Is abundant lu nearly all parts of Europe, Northern and Western Asia, and It even extends to Japan. The Gipsy moth was brought to the at tentlo'i oftlio Legislature during the late session, nnd referred to the Committee on Agriculture, who reported a hill to provide egiilnst Its spread aud or Its extermination, with full powers to enter upon lands, and employ such men and means as would be found neceunry or oarrylng nut tbe Instruc tions embodied In the aot, with other regu lations Inaldent to suah a work, and author ising the expenditure of a sum not exceed ing (33,000 to do the work. BAYED BY A COCKATOO. It Attacks a Hnnke Which Was Abonl to HirlUn Iia Bleeping Master. 1111 and Express.; One Charles Durand,- of whose travels and adventures a book has been written, owned a cockatoo, which be carried about with him on bis Journeys. The bird's name was Billy, and be seems to have been as wise as he was .loving. He came to his msster with a good character, haying been tbe careful attendant on a sick man, bringing blm bunches ot giapes to quench bis thirst and refusing himself to eat one till the sufferer bed set the example. Durand was asleep In his tent in those hot latitudes, where strange wild beasts and dangerous reptiles abound, when he was aroused before hie usual time of waking by a sharp, shrill cry of the bird of "Time lo liseltime to rise 1" accompanied by a vio lent'fiapping of the wings, and then a series of sharp screams in the cockatoo's own natural tone. So awakened, Charles looked around wondering what bad disturbed his feathered friend. The cause was soon plain a deadly snake lay coiled up close to his bed, which, as he gazed, reared itsel up and prepared to spring on the defenseless man. Just when he thought that all hope was at an end the brave cockatoo sprang from bis perch, seized the reptile by the neck, and held him tight till his master could summon help from without. The snake was then killed and Billy was raised to a still higher place in his master's esteem. SEVEN HOTTBS OF SLEEP. Early Rising I Nonsense for Those Who Don't Retire Early. Dr. Talmage tn Ladles' Home Jonrnil.1 There is not one man or woman In ten thousand who can afford to do without seven or eight hours' sleep. All those stories written about great men and women who slept only three or tour hours a night make very Interesting reading; but I tell you, my readers, no man or woman ever yet kept healthy in body and mind for a number of years with less than seven hours' sleep. Americans need more sleep than they are getting. This laok makes them so nervous aud tbe insane asylums so popu lous. If you oan get to bed early, then rise early. It you oannot get to bed till late, then rise Inte. It iiiuy be ni Christian for one mnn tn rise at 8 ni It Is for another to rlieatO. I oouuiel my readers to get up when they are rested, lint let the rousing bell he rung at lemt 00 min utes before your publlo appearance. Physicians say that a sadden Jump out of bed gives Irregular motion to the nulse, Il takes hours to get over n Inn sudden rising, (live lis time, nnsr vou sail us, to roll over itusn nt the world full In the face, and look before we leap. 0JII0KKNB AHH DAHOKHOUfl. (Jitsee of Infeellmis Diseases MureMd by I'd v Is nnd IV I Anlliisls. Pel animals," isvi Dr. If. flaunt lu ihe the Bt. tenuis aiobS'Dmoetat, "and even elilokeiis will olten paime disease and spread Infection, Home people let dogs sleep with tliefn and see nothing wrnng about the prac tice, forgetting that the favored eanlne may have smelt and even lain upeu Inleoted ragi end retuie during tbe day, Pet dogs and birds confined In siek-rooms with patients suffering from Infectious or conta gious diseases frequently spread the disease to other members of the families, Careless ness About chickens Is alio a cause of a good deal of sickness at thls.senson of the year. In tbe country there is nothing so healthy as a chicken, but when kept in close eon. flqement or allowed to range In dirty stables and alleys tbey become regular disease spreaders. I know of several oases of seri ous malarial affections cangbt in this man ner, and at least one of typhoid," 0UE GENIUS ABROAD. The Most Wonderful Things to-be Seen in Europe Nowadays. ARE INVEKTI0HS BY JONATHAN. Tariff liars as Knmerona and Persistent Over There as Here. EFFECT OF THE DUTY OX TI5 PLATE . rCOIlBXSFOXDEXCE OT THE EISFATCH.1 PABIS, July 4. The most wonderful things in Europe were invented in America. I refer to the telephone, audiphone, phono graph, telegraph and sewing machine. Tbe French are using both the audiphone and phonograph for business and pleasure. On the Eue des Italiens there is an alcove room or niche fronting on tbe street in which are a dosen public audiphones, each one .con necting with a different theater, variety show or cafe chantant. It was crowded with listeners holding the audiphone bandies to their ears. "Who do you want to hear?" asked the attendant as I entered. "Give me tiara Bernhardt!" "Here she is," he said, handing me the handles for my ears. "Pnt a half franc (10 cents) in the slot and listen five minutes." "When tbe time was up the attendant pointed to anotber audiphone. and said, "Yon can hear Coqnelin there, the Vaude ville here, or the Grand Opera in the cor ner. Pnt your money in the slot and listen." So I listened to plays, songs and opera in elx theaters In Paris for half an hour at an expense of GO cents. I afterward secured the barrels of a phonograph on which were recorded these songs nnd plays, and will listen to them again In Now York. OKEAT VOICES TltAT KKBD EMBAI.M1SO. It Is unfortunate that the phonograph should come too Inte to entoh the thunder ing oratory of lforest and Webster, the drollery of Durton, Josh llllllngs, Nnsby Artemus Ward, and the eloquence of (lough, Conkllng, Phillips and iieecher. I hopa that Mr. iSdlson will see that the voices of suoh living men as Dlsuinrok, Gladstone, Denew and Illalne, may not be forever lost. My own health Is pretty good, end my lungs nil eound, but Nye nnd Twiiln nnd Jlurdettv should have tholr voices embalmed. , Alter visiting the Government lee factories In Ilrusaels, where thousands of poor women were making useless lace by hand, I called nt the rooms where they were selling American sewing machines. There were hundreds nf Winters, Domestics. Howes mid Wilcox ft Glbbs machines all made In America. As Ihe sewing machine has been used by both parties to Illustrate tnrllf argument, Inquired the price of them. "We sell good Amorlcan sewing maahlnes," ssld the agent, "(nrflO. Kortr live buys one with three drawers, and f0O Is the price ol the best plain machine with a top.". THIS LIAR Of KUJIOPU. I don't know which American tariff Hare this fact will helu. Mr. Thomas II. Terrlll, a sewing machine agent from Michigan, brought over American maohlnee to sell, and tells me that slnoe sewing machine patents had expired lu Amerlon, they were selling for less money there than here in Europe. The tan ft llur Is all over Europe, and Is as effective here as In Amerlon. tie can scatter a crowd of Americans with ten words on tbe tariff quicker than the Iiostun musician can scatter them with a plituo re oital, If he Is a high tariff man he i.rms himself with a 13 suit of olothes from the Bowery. Then he marches Into Pool's und buys a ICO suit. "Bee," he s.iyi, "how aheap in high-tariff America, and bow dear in free-trade En gland," "If he is a low-tarlfT liar be comes over here with a (70 Filth avenue suit. Then be goes down on Cheapslde and bays a 12 suit, and, lully equipped, he strikes an American crowd with: "See this 13 free trade English suit and look at that $70 high-tariff American suit" The faot Is, the price of the suit Is gov erned by tbe price of labor and locality in both places. If it is a machine-made cheap laboring man's coat, tbere is not 3 differ ence in the price, whether made in New York or England, but if It is a hand-sewed coat of a dude, made of hand-combed wool, it will cost $20 more In America. JOHN Bt7I.Ii OETTINO ALARMED. The English are beginning to be alarmed at the Idea of so much British money ($400, 000,000) going to the United States for in vestment in manufactories. When I asked the cashier of the Consolidated Bank why John Bull was so solicitous, he said: "It not only indicates hard times here but that there is a feeling of uncertainty in England. Land has shrunk almost one-half in value and our manufactories are being run at a Ios, and beyond that there Is a political uncertainty." "In what way?" I asked. "Well the Government is solid under the Queen. The people respect her. The Prince oi Wales is very popular, but beyond him ail is uncertain. Albeft Victor is a weak boy. We do not know what the people will do with him. The Queen is ill and may die at any moment, and the Prince of Wales is apoplectic and may die before his mother. Brazil and France threw away their kings in a day. Why may not England do the same? Wise Englishmen are apprehensive of tbe future. In case of revolution tbey don't want all their eggs in one basket. America, having withstood the Rebellion of 1861, is considered tho strongest Govern ment on the ertb." "How about Germany7" "It looks uncrrtaiu there too without Bismarck, who united that nation. Itussia is hovering over dynamite. Revolution in London would be ugly. As Oulda says, It would be a debauan of plunder and beer. Paris gets drunk on the Marseillaise, bnt Loudon would soak Itseli'ln porter and gin. Why should not carelul John Bull deposit a little money In America?" T1103K AWVUI. YAXKKBfl. I met Adam Hunter the other day In lllrmlngham. Mr. Hunter line extensive tin manufactories In England, lie was complaining about tho lueannosi or Atuer- "Why," said be, "the whole aim of your Yankee politicians seems to be tndrlveJohu Dull out of your market. Our firm has been barely able tn keep 400 men nt work mak lug tin plates and pay the present one cart a pound to get lliem In In ymr market. II kepi nur poor laborers from starving, Now ynitr Yiinkee iinllllulane propose to put on a iliily of 'J'J-10 eents ptir ynuiid, We can't pay It even II wa should reduce wages to n starving liulnt." , , , . , . "What are you going to do about II," I i"1'1 . ...... "We flan do nothing but olnse up or move our tin piste iiiwiiiliiolory to Auieilea, My partner will go In America neit month, aud If your Amerleanidn niitnn dial grinding 9 1-10 cents pel pound turlff we will buy one ol your manufactories or build one ol our own." "Hut where will you get your workmen in America?" 1 Hiked. TIIR WORKMAN AND TUB IIK, "We will take our own ben workmen and teach green Americans, America Is John Hull's market, and your Yankee politicians shall not steal it from him," "Bnt where will you get your tin In America?" I asked, "O, that will come. They are mining il now n tbe Cmur d'Alene eonntry, near Spokane Palls, and large tin mines have been fonnd west of tbe Blaok Hills An English syndicate has ptU nearly 11,000,000 into American tin mines already. Then Canada has tin mines, but of course we could not work their nines and make tin t 15 plates for the American market without reciprocity between the Dominion and the States. Will that ever come?" "The great American idea," I said, "on which all American statesmen agree, is to have reciprocity in the New World from Hudson's Bay to Cape Horn and a fair tariff for revenue and some protection against European paupers and kings. What do yoa think of that?" Mr. Hunter looked down and said with a sign: "It maybe fun for the Yankee boys, hut is death to the John Bull frogs." Eli sTCEKura. CAUT TJSE THE ELEYAT0B. An Example of a Peculiar Affliction That la by No Sienna Hnre, A strong, healthy man who looks like ha is good for a ronnd century, was caught puffing and blowing at the bead of a flight or stairs in one of the big city buildings yes terday, right up against an elevator. "I can't do it," he said, seeing the reporter' evident astonishment at the fact that he did not take the elevator. "I earn my money," he went on, "collect ing bills, and spend many hours a day climbing up and coming down stairs, but I do it in preference to riding in an elevator. If 1 breat my resolution my beart seems to quit beating, and I find it very hard work getting out when the elevator stops. I have tried all the advertised remedies, such as closing eyes, clenching the teeth firmly, taking a long breath, suspending respira tion and so on, but without result. There is a clerk in an office on the ninth floor of a down-town building who has to pay me a dollar every Monday, and by the time I get out of that building these warm days I am inclined to wish his firm would move into the basement." OTTXIZIHO OLD SHOES. Tho Scavenger Find, n Kendy Mnrket for All His fcrnp of I.rnlhr r. Worn-out shoes have their uses. The Italian scavenger who rakes up youraih barrel and sends tlio dut living over your doorstep knows this well, and his black eyei glisten at the sight of old leather. If tha shoos are not worn to shreds he sells them to a second.hand dealer and they are patched up and re.olod; but if they nro past mending he takes them home to his cellar and rips lliem all apart, or his wife and children do. The pieces ho sells to lh inannf icturer. From the larger plecei nitor being soaked till soft, tho uppers of children's shoes are out. The soles are cut Into small pieces to make up tho layers of the heels of other shoes, the iron pegs that are not bent, can be lined over ngnln, and the little scraps that are left after all this am subjected to n treat ment Hint makes them all one pliable mass, from which a kind nf artUtlo leather I rolled out. This le used for covering ohalre, books, trunks, boxes, etc. Many fanny pat. terns lira stamped on It, and the trade In this kind nl "emboaird" leather In tbe United Hlates Is a well stlihui one, J SUUAMI! A, KUfl'KItT. New York's pnpnlar complexion specialist, who lias met with such unexcelled success In all large eltles of the United Htates ami Eu rope, has opened permanent parlors In I'llts bursr. where sha will keep on sale tier wonder ful KAOM IILICAfll. Ksoa Uleach Is not a UOHMHIIU. not a WIIITK WASH, buta thorough tonlo and skin bath. It opens tha pores or the skin, so tha hlnod can throw off its Impure matter. P,ire iiieacb Is healthy for aiiysUln. It removes Hie old dead cuticle that has aocumulateit. Kara lllnach ha been thoroughly lestert for tho LAHT TEN YKAIM bv UUIes whose faces have been cured nf hide ous kteiutsbes of every nature. One side hav ing been cleared at first. The gennral puhllo Invited to call and see ooa slda ENTIRELY FltKUII AND WHITE, six weeks I .ter tbe ro malnlnc side clear. No more CONVINCINO PROOF Is necessary. Write to your Now York friends and ask them to oil at oar main office and be convinced. Face Iiieacb perma nently removes all blomisne', moth, freckles, excessive redness. Eczema, Salt Rheum, In fact every skin blemish, making the complex ion clear, smooth and beautiful. Does not give a washed out appearance, but a healthy look. This wonderful Face Bleach, guaranteed, will be sent to any addres-. on receipt of price, J3 CO Eer bottle or three bottle., usually a enre, 55 W. adits ont of city can seoil for It securely packed. Bend four cents or call for sealed par ticulars. Very interesting to ladles who ars desirous of havlwrcood complexions. MADAME A. KUPPERT. Room 2113, Hamilton Building. Jel-101-So, FUth ave.. Pittab'ir '. Fa. B Like my Wife to use BflllilP mag-M. IM ES MEDICATED UflElEie.ll ESsi Because it improves her looks and is as fra grant as violets. BOLD MViBMYWIIinniB. KIMY SPONGE 7 ' SMINK your jiMoes WOLrTS AOME BLACKING, G i O Rli!fflPl fiSlifcrK 1 DQeytflK'I lLVlXA7uls sfl rrarWRaeffieaap VoKw00 i Vt i m I did m ONCEAWEEK! V'JK 1 Other (lure wash them m X fflj clean with Wt 8P0NQE AND WATER. "..".' sMPmnwmisaiM ii wrrsissssassiiieswssawewse MH ;VERY Housewife lVE V Counting Roorr) S VE Y Carriage; Own,or S VE Y Thrifty Macrianio .VtltY Body Ablo to hold brush fj (3HQOT.P UBH Bj wiuiTiiOi.aHfriTvas f ". M wiu.TsiausaNCMiNawaa I rrM aj WillSt'im yinw 1 " J-M Win arsm vou" o sumstsi Jf " 191 teiu.Tii Cosoh I timtm .. WOUf BAHDOLPH, rUUOalsUa. iflj m&3t-CTHH ' -JV H