:' r . f,w 10 EVIL II MAGNETISM. Congress to Be Urged to Pro ceed With "Vigor Against the Black Art. THE EMOTIONAL CRAZES Since the Days of Jansen Brought Up to Furnish Evidence That THEIR SPREAD MOST BE CHECKED. Evils of Religions Excitement and Fanat icism Eeviewed. aLAEJIIXG GROWTH OP IAD PRACTICES In one war and another labor, in this free and clorious country, may be said to have a hard time of it. In fact, the constant occu pation of labor seems to be warfare, and when it is not engaged in actual conflict with the world and the flssh it finds itself called upon to take arms against the devil. The exact meaning of this proposition, says the St. Louis rott-Dispatch, is conveyed by Samuel Gompers, President of the Ameri can federation of Labor, who has received an alarming and highly interesting warning from S. Heydenfeldt, Jr., who has given to the study of electro-magnetism and other pernicious acts much careful attention. "I jiave been informed," says Mr. Heydenfeldt, "that there are seventeen secret societies which electro-magnetize their members, who are, without knowing it, connected with a system in India, Arabia and Germany. Those who have adopted it did so undoubt edly withont investigating or studying the injury to physical or mental conditions of man. It is easy, then, to account for the nervousness and restlessness of the people of the United States, which physicians tes tily as steadily increasing." To understand properly the advance of conditions that have produced this alarm ing result, Mr. Heydenfeldt asks the reader to begin with Jansenism and trace the de velopment of magic, convulsionistn and magnetism. The Heresy of Jansenism. . The heresy of Jansenism first made its appearance in France A. D. 1641. The Bishop of Ypres, Jansen, published a book entitled "1'Augustinns," setting lorth his doctrine, which received the support ot the Abbe ot the Bernardlns at Port .Royal, which was founded in A. D. 1204, by one of the Montmorency, situated near Ghevreuse, five leagues from Paris; the support of the Abbe Sr. Cyran, who was suspected of Quietism, and also the allegiance of the young theologians of France. Urban VllL condemned the doctrine of Jansen and par tially suppressed the beresy. Its principal adherents retired to Bruxelles and after ward to Amsterdam, where they founded a small church. The tomb of a deacon named Paris, of the Church of St Medard, at Paris, who had passed for a saint in certain quarters, be came the object ot great veneration among the unfortunates whom he had relieved dur ing his life, and at the place, it was .ru mored, miracles were worked. The Jansen jsts, who wished to prove the authority of a divine call among the sects of miracle workers, concluded to appropriate those of the Cemetery of St Medard. This person was not the only person endowed with the power of miraculous cures. Xiraclcs Became Too Common. Several Jansenist saints had the same girt. These so-called miracles commenced in Julr, A. D. 173L About that time they became very common, and at the end of sever.il months there were 500 known Con Tiilsionists, that is to say, people who went into convulsions under the influence of re ligious emotion. All ranks of society, as well as the no bility, were among the witnesses ot these strange spectacles. The prodigies provoked discussions as to their source and genuine ness; each side invoked scriptural text to support their denials and assertions, wtiich for many years continued to be the subject "of publications. Their novelty had attracted all Paris. Women and girls had been hired to take part in these scenes, which became so scandalous that the Government ordered the cemetery closed. Driven from the cemetery they continued to exhibit their convulsions at other points, until by an ordinance of Feb ruary 17, A. D., 1733, they were prohibited from giving exhibitions in public as well as in private reunions. Interdicted and suppressed in different cities and villages they continued never theless to increase. The popularity and rage tor these convulsionsgained accessories from all classes of society, their ranks aug mented and their proselytes, among whom were women ot birth and persons of high rank, assembled at their meetings. The re fusal of the priests to administer sacraments to this heretical sect was lor many years the cause ot trouble and misrepresentation. Their assurance was sneh that they even claimed that the Catholic priests were obliged to administer to them the sacra ments. A Bitter Controversy for Tears. This relusal to administer the sacraments continued lor many years to be ibe subject of bitter controversy. Upon the Jansenists securing more than a majority of the jfrench Parliament the decrees of the Bishops which were not in accord with their demands were reversed. During this time, notwithstanding the watchfulness of the municipal authorities ojf Paris, the followers ot the Convulsion lsts met at the houses of distinguished peo ple. Sometimes the police made arrests, but the zeal ot the Jansenists did not rest, and from A. D. 1740 to A. D. 1760 their ex hibitions continned and their doctrine was preached. i In attacking the church, Jansenism had disturbed the religious faith of the country and the respect ot authority which consti tute its power. From its origin it was sup ported -by the philosophers whose writings, apparently directed against ecclesiastical power, attacked the rights ot the King. These philosophers, whose object was the religious and political emancipation of society, foresaw that the disciples of the Jan&enists in disturbing conscience and be lief promised an element of Juture useful ness for them in carrying out their designs, and hastened to sustain them. Parliament Aids the Philosophers. "Voltaire, as little in love with Jansenism as he was with the Catholic Church, did not dissimulate the joy he felt at all measures which nould arouse the autagonism of each towards the other. Another great auxili ary of the philosophers was the Parliament, which from its ancient spite aeainst the temporal power of the church was predis posed towards the Jansenists, ot which it was principally composed, and gave aid to their cause. In bis first chapter, "Birth and History of Animal Magnetism," H. Blano con cludes that all the phenomena produced by the Convulsionists are due to the effects of animal magnetism and magic. He says: "Jansenism, with its convulsions, devel oped the taste for the narvelous in every part of France. It bad also opened the road to a school of philosophy which was steadily directed to destroy "the basis on which the ancient society of France re posed, but ruined at the same time magical Jansenism, which pretended to have a re ligion at its outset, and consigned it to obscurity." 'Tiie end of this incredulous century," said a ladv of the court of Louis XIV., "Is marked by this character of love for the marvelous (I would say superstition, if I was not imbued with it myseip, which de notes the decadence of society. Never were the Bosicrusians, the adepts, the prophets and all that pertains to them, so numerous, so well attended. Conversation turns almost entirely to these subjects; it occupies everybody's mind, It excites the imagination even of the most serious." Marvels of the Mystery. Besides the blasphemous "bleeding Christs" exhibitions, and those grouped under l'elat de mort, and the cataleptic and physical ones, which Bertrand says were TintforahlA for their characteristic of in- vulnerability of the subject, whieh Calmell I does not account for, but aescnoes as ecsta toconvulsive tbeomanla, Blanc describes in fantile conditions and characteristics sud denly spread over the faces of adults, accom panied with gestures, attitudes, move ments and voices of children. Among the intellectual phenomena observed among the convulsionists, he men tions temporary gifts of intelli gence, eloquence and resolution; ignorant and stupid young girls talking with vivac- I ity, elegance and rhetoric; reading and speaKing 1U languages tney nan never learned, hearing with deaf ears and seeing with closed eyes. These convulsionists were attended" by assistants, who were called secours meurtricrs. It was always noticeable that the health of these convul sionists was not injured by these physical prodigies. Bichard F. Burton, the celebrated En glish traveler, referring to Methodism and to John Wesley and George Whitfield, savs: ''Both these religionists, and mostly the latter, who died A. D. 1770, at Newberry, New England, converted and preached to thousands in America, there establishing field services and campmeetings, revivals and conferences, which, like those of the French Convulsionists in the last century, galvanized Christianity with a wild and leverish life. Spread ol the Doctrine In England. "Falling among educated men, the doc trine in England and in the colonies was received with a bewilderment of enthu siasm, and it soon produced the usual fruits of such frenzy prophecies that fixed the end of the world. mir aculous discernment of angels and devils, mighty comings of the power ot God and outpouring of the spirits rhapsodies aud prophecies, dreams and visions, accom panied by rollings, jerks, barks, wavings and convulsions, syncope and catalepsy and the other hysterica! affections and obscure disorders of "the brain forming the charac teristic symptoms of religious mania." In speaking of the spread of pernicious emotionalism in the United States, Jules Bemy, the French naturalist and traveler, in "A Journey to Great Salt Lake," re fers to the ceremony of endowment among the Mormons, by which wives are sealed for all eternity, to conversion through mes merism; hearing voices of unseen persons and mind reading; to the tenacity of their faith, which has been confirmed by the evi dence of their senses through magical prac tices; to the Mormon theocratic andeclectie svstems and to the hatred of the Catholic Church and the Government ot the United States. Time for the Law to Step In. Mr. Heydenfeldt takes the ground that legislation and treaties, with the most se vere penalties, are needed to prohibit the use of electricity on human beings under certain conditions. He believes that the magic, sorcery and mysteries of the Middle Ages have been revived among us in America, with a more scientific knowledge of electrology. "Demonology (under the name of hypnot ism) is being practiced, including the in; generating, incubating and inhnmating from distances (on a large scale, going into the millions), as well as other practices of the demons incubi. There axe sects among them the Mormons (especially the seers of their church hierarchy), whose fanaticism is such that they seek to raise what is generally called the sub jective condition of man (of the whole people), which is weak and sub ject to the mental dictation, suggestion and control of other minds, in such a manner (there being different ways) that it can 'be assorted over the objective by the aid and power of other minds, with or without the use of electricity, of which the objective is usually ignorant and assumes the originality and responsibility of all thought, expression and act; whieh is' the first step and link in lifting the spiritual over the temporal." Congress Called on to Act. In view of this disturbing conditions of affairs a resolution has been taken to excite the interest and action of Congress, and to this end a measure has been drawn up, en titled "An act to prohibit electro-magnetizing, mesmerizing, or hypnotizing human beings, or aBecting one person through an other by electricity, and to declare the same to be a crime against the law of na tions, and to define its punishment" This act in substance provides that any person who shall "apply a current of electricity to one person for the purpose of affecting an other" within the boundaries of the United States shall be deemed gnilty of a Crime, the punishment for which shall be death; and any person who knows that such cur rent is being applied and does not give in formation to the authorities shall be deemed an accessory, and shall be punished by a fine of not less than 5,000 and not more than $20,000, and by imprisonment during his natural life, or for a term of years not less than two. It is against such diabolism as is outlined by this bill that, doubtless, Mr. Gompers and the entire Federation of Labor are preparing to fight How well they will succeed is a question interesting to all who will watch the experiment A BLIZZARD BLOWING. Kansas Catching It Th Mississippi Frozen Over The Ohio and Kanawha Freezing Hard Cold In the Mohawk Valley Snowing in Arkansas. Kansas City, Dec 26. A typical bliz zard began its formation last night and at 3 o'clock this morning it had fully ma terialized, the mercury at that time having fallen to 6 beloYv zero. The blizzard was preceded by considerable suow and accompanied by the usual biting north wind. The storm is far-reaching, extending oyer the entire Southwest and is particularly severe in Kansas. In this city the thermometer registered 9 be low zero at 10 o'clock this morning. Several of the roads have trains in the drifts. A disriatch states that the thermometer dropped below 12 at Davenport, la. This afternoon persons were crossing the Mis sissippi on foot The weather in the Mohawk valley was the coldest of the season. At 7 JL it. it was 6 below zero and 14 below at Cloversvllle. A few days more of the present cold weather will entirely close the Ohio and Little Kanawha rivers to navigation. Both rivers are filled with floating ice and many of the boats are laid up. Several of them will be in bad condition should the cold snap continue. A hard snow fell in Arkansas last night. SEVENTY-FOUR DROWNED. Awful Result or a Steamship Collision In Japanese Waters. San Feascisco, Dec. 26. The steam ship Oceanic brings details of the loss of the.Japancse man-of-war, which was lost in the inland sea by collision with the steam ship Ravenna. Early on the morning of November 29 the man-of-war Chishima Kan was run into by the Bavenna off the shore of the District of Ito and went to the bot tom immediately. Of the crew ot 90 only 16, including two officers were saved. The Bavenna, which was also badly injured while transferring her passengers' to the Empress of Japan, cut into the Chishima Kan's boilers. An explosion followed and all of the rescued were severely injured. "fJ?THB PITTSBURG HUMAN WEAK POINTS. A Chapter on the Deceits Practiced Upon All the People. THE CHARMS, (MENS AND SPELLS That Are TJsed to Work Upon the Enpersti tions Folic. FRIDAY AND THE THIRTEEN CLUB Every piece of machinery, no matter how cartfuliy and elaborately constructed, has its w'eak point The same remark applies to the human frame, and the weak point is the tendency to a belief in the supernatural, more familiarly called superstition. Fre quently there are many weak points, and in this case superstition is the weakest and most ungovernable, but if there be but "one screw loose," it may safely be set down to superstition. It does not, however, naturally follow that superstitious people are necessarily moral cowards, says a writer in the New York Timet, for where there is no distinction there is no personality, and as all men are superstitious none can be a coward. Yet, -there are different degrees of absorption in different beings and some are saturated with superstition while others are only touched by this species of insanity. A Sign for Almost Every Act. There appears to be an inherent tendency toward a belief in the supernatural, and this induces faith in prognostications. There is a sign for almost every act of life, 'and misfortune, or the contrary, is pre saged by the most trivial circumstances. There is not a part of the human being's dress, not an article in use by man, not a thing which erows on earth, riot a star which twinkles in the firmament, not a thing under the earth, which has not its super stitions. The actor on the boards ol toe theater is gnarled with superstitions that cannot be eradicated by any amonnt of proof. The negro takes.them into his sys tem with his first breath and holds to them .with a tenacity strong as his love of life, and not only in civilized communities do thev exist, but they are found in the inte rior of Africa and in the very heart of China. A strong and healthy mind repulses su perstition, and the weaker the mind and body the more it will absorb the belief in the supernatural. The sick, weak-minded, nervous, debilitated, old and infirm are su perstition's easy victims. Strong-minded men laugh at tales of the manifestation of the supernatural, yet "a constant dropping weareth away a stone," and even the sen sible man has been known to waver, and, though rarely, to fall a victim to that worst of all insanity, superstition. The Thirteen Superstition. All countries have their pecnlir "folk lore," and it may be remarked that the Af ricans seem to have a superabundance. It may also be taken for granted that the English take the palm for "folK lore" among Caucasians. One of the commonest superstitions is that ill luck attends the .person who goes under a ladder. There is sense in this provided a man be going up that ladder with a hod of brick, for a brick is known to be harder than a human head, and the force of gravitation draws the hard ened clay toward the center of the earth. The superstition concerning the number 13 has been pretty generally eradicated by the Thirteen Club, of New York, lor the club has disproved it in hundreds of in stances. Whence it originated it is impos sible to say. Like all other superstitions, it seems never to have had a birth, but grew spontaneously and flourished until the lie was nailed to the mast Some attribute its origin7 to the Lord's Sapper, others to the 13 gods of Valhalla, and the seven-year archivist of the Thirteen Club remarks that it probably originated with the 13 tribes of Israel, to whom, including Ephraim and Mauasseh, sons of Joseph, thirteen portions of the promised land were given by Jacob. This superstition deolares that of the thirteen persons sitting at the family or festive board one must nec essarily die within a year. Like all other superstitions, when the saying comes true, believers are loud and eager in the circula tion of the fact, but the nu-nberless in stances of the fallacy of the ridiculous prognostications are never noted by them. The Birthstono Nonsense. A superstition attaches to every precious stone. Twelve of these have been selected as birthstones and applied to the twelve calendar months of the year. They are very prettily described in the following verses: jahcary. By her who In this month Is born, No gem save garnet should bo worn, They will Insure her constancy, True friendship and fidelity. The February born will find Sincerity and peace of mind, Freedom Irom passion and trom care If they the amcthjjtt will w ear. The same may be said of Friday, the sixth day of the week. It is declared by superstitious people that a journey com menced, on that day must prove unsuccess ful, and that the same is true ot any other undertaking started on Friday. Yet F. T. Barnum, the great showman, in a letter to the -writer declared that he always began his great enterprises on Friday. That he was almost invariably successful is well known. One material fact which cast odium upon the day was that it was gener ally chosen in this country for the execu tion of murderers. Owing principally to the efforts of the Thirteen Club the execu tion day has been changed or varied in all States of the Union, and this has, to a great extent, brightened the day, MARCH. Who, on this world of ours, their eyes In March first open, shall be wise In days of peril, firm and brave, And wear a bloodttont to their grave. APEIL. She who from April dates her.years. Diamond shall wear, lest bitter tears For vain repentance flow; this stone Emblem of Innocence Is known. XAY. WTio first beholds the light of day In spring's sweet flow'ry month of May And wears an emerald all her life Shall bo a lov'd and happy wile. Who comes with Summer to this earth, And owes to June her day of birth, With ring of agate on her hand Can health, wealth and long life command. JDXT. The glowing ruby should adorn Those who in warm July are born: Then will they be exempt and free From love doubts and anxiety. AUGUST. Wear a ardenyx or for thee No conjugal felicity; The August born, without this stone 'lis said must live unloved and lone. ' SEPTEMBER. A maiden born when Autumn leaves Are rustling in September's breeze A sapphire on Her urow should bind; 'Twill cure diseases ol the mind. OCTOBER. October's cnlld is born for woe And life's vicissitudes must know; But lay an cpal on hor breast, And ho po n ill lull those woes to rest, novxuBzn. Who first comes to this world below With drear November's fog and snow, Should prize the topai't amber hue. Emblem of friends and lovers true. , DECEMBER. If cold December gave you birth The month of snow and Ice and mirth, Place on yonr hand n turmoil blue; Success will bless whatever you do. How It Helps Business. One thing that makes business good for the dealers, in crockery is 'that when s DISPATCH: TUESDAY; DECEMBER' 27, 3892. J servant breaks a piece of crockery she must immediately and willfully break another piece'in order to destroy the spell. When the housewife drops her dishcloth she will surely have company that day, and the same rule applies if she drop a fork and the tines hold it to the floor, but in this case the visitor will be a gentleman. Should she, withont premeditation, place either two knives, for or' spoons at one plate or give two spoons with one cup or bowl, the person receiving them will be married within a year. Place the wishbone of a fowl over a'door and the first one who en ters under the bone will be the first in the house to be married. It is held by superstitious people that if a spotted or white cat cross your path you cannot have years of pleasure- A black cat following you indicates good luck, and coming to your store or house indicates wealth and plenty. To kill a cat is the worst ill luck and brings seven years of trouble. To meet a red-haired person on first get ting up indicates a dull day in business and if such a one crosses your door on New Year's Day you will have an unlucky year. While makine a trade if across-eyed per son looks at you it indicates that the bar gain will be unnrofi table. To hear a cricket chirp is good fuck, and it is always a wel come sound under the hearthstone of the farmer's house. A bird flying in the window indicates failure in business, so that in panicky times the poor birds are very weary. Every horseshoe found in the roadway should be placed over the door of the house, because it brings the best of prosperity and keeps witches and the devil out A streak of profit is coming when you find many, be cause it denotes good fortune. . Tho Kissing Prognostications. If your nose itches you will be kissed, cursed or vexed. If a horse stumbles wbile being rode to the race do not bet on him. If you fall when going upstairs you will have trouble or lose some lady friend. If your lips tickle you will be kissed by a stranger. The Hebrews have a custom of breaking crystal at a wedding to scatter brightness upon the happy pair, and they, in common with people of" other raoes, throw rice after the newly-wedded couple when they leave the house to bring them good fortune. When a dog howls at night it is a sign of death to one who may be sick in your house. Should a white cat come to your door there will be a death in your family. Upset the salt at table and you will quarrel with your host Two chairs facing each other indi cate a hasty visit from some one with good news. To get rid of a wart you must steal a piece of meat from the butcher's block, rub it on the wort, bury it, and when the meat rots the wart will disappear sure cure. When your left band itches you will get money." If your right itches, you will shake hands with a stranger. The Empress Josephine was said io have been a clairvoyant Napoleon constantly consulted his '"'book of fate," and placed implicit faith in astrologers, soothsayers, fortune tellers and other frauds. Josephine was said to have presaged Napoleon's de feat at Waterloo because ot the breaking of a vase. One Sign of Disaster. A toad on the doorstep is a certain sign that the house is under evil influence, and some disaster must necessarily follow. The toad must be killed to avoid sorrow. In "Much Ado AboutNothing" Benedik says: "Hang me in a bottle, like a cat, and shoot at me." This has reference to the prevail ing idea that a cat was an unlucky animal. There was a prevalent custom in Shakes peare's time of placing a cat in a bottle with a lot of soot and hanging it on a line, and the person who succeeded in beating out the bottom as be ran under it and es caped being marked by the contents was the hero of the sport Every profession, trade and 'occupation has its folk-lore. Even the farmer who studies the actions of animals will tell you what they portend concerning the weather, and in many cases sensibly, too, for they build their homes and lay in their food through, instinct given by Divine Provi dence with reference to the coming winter; they house themselves before a coming storm; their coats are heavy or light as the winter shall be severe or otherwise, and they often, give the farmer who watches them valuable indication concerning his crops. CHICAGO 18 A PABADISE, The Ladies In San Francisco Now Have Their Shoes Made in Chinatown. ' Chicago Inter Ocean. It seems that the only place entitled to be called America is that strip of the con tinent lying between the Alleghanies and the Bockies. East of the Alleghanies it is all English, don't you know, English dress, English mannerisms, and English drawls; west of the Bockies it is all Chinese, don't you know. In San Francisco and the coast cities, according to Mrs. Mark S. Bingley, who is at the Victoria, it's the fad now among society women to patronize Chinese merchants and workmen. "The fashionable women in San Fran cisco," said Mrs. Bingley yesterday, "are now having all their shoes made by Chinese shoemakers. Some one found out that in Chinese shoes there is not only economy but a whole lot of conditions involving new sensations, and the San Francisco girl is always reedy for a new sensation. To these sensation-loving girls the shoes are really worth the trip. It is exciting and unusual in that queer quarter of the town. The girls, as a usual thing, as soon as they come home change every stitch of clothing, be cause in that quarter there is no telling what contaminating germs 'may adhere to them. As the lady steps from her carriage at the corner on what the Celestials term 'Slock amenta' (Sacramento) street she is in a neighborhood where there is a very substantial reason for vigilance. The purchaser of Chinese shoes must pick her way among Chinese meat markets, sub terranean tenements, that are the most un savory places in the world excerjt the streets of Naples or the Chicago Stock Yards, opium joints, noisome alleys and foulness of every description. She must stand fire under the oblique glances of leer ing, evil-visaged, almond-eyed, long-queued denizens of that idle, overcrowded district She stands all this that she may get the fashionable Chinese made shoes. But, as I said before, the San Francisco girl likes ex citement, and as a rule is always out for an adventure. "San Francisco," concluded Mrs. King ley, "contains more concentrated badness, anyhow, to the square foot- than any city in the world, not even excepting Paris. Chicago is a paradise of purity compared with it." CASSAII IS HOT IN IT. He Hasn't Been Asked to Go Into Cleve land's Cabinet PHirADELFHlA, Dec. 26. The mention of A. J. Cassatt's name in connection with the Secretaryship of the Navy In Mr. Cleve land's Cabinet is the cause of some specula tion in political circles. A reporter Called upon Mr. Cassatt at bis home this evening, and asked him whether the President-elect had tendered him a portfolio. "Oh, no," Mr. Cassatt quickly replied. "Has Mr. Cleveland, through his inti mate friends, Intimated making vou such an oiler?" "Not at alL You must remember I am not in politics, and have no aspirations whatever for a Cabinet office, said Cassatt, Mr. It Is Punch All the Time. Chicago Mall.l Strange that almost all prlze-flghtors go to keeping a saloon.'' First it's punch and then it's punch. And Start Up In Europe. . Washington Post. If this outflow of gold continues, the Eeeley Institutes may bo forced to shut down. A SEDUCTIVE GAME. An Expert's Opinions on the Fine Points of Poker Playing, SOME THINGS TO BE OBSERVED. iot So Much What Too Win as What Ion tavel hat Counts. ONLY ONE TVAI TO (BEAT THE GAME In talking about the game of draw poker, one evening recently, a writer for the Bal timore American heard a gentleman who has played cards for a good many years express the opinion that there were no rules by which to play the game, and from the way he plays he is evidently sincere in his belief. As a matter of fact, there are a number of things to be taken in considera tion, if one wants to play with any degree ot success, which can as well be called rules as anything else; for If, they are not observed, it will generally result disas trously to the player who ignores them. There are many persons who indulge in the fascinating game who never take into con sideration anything but the element of chance or luck, as they call it Of course, there is a large percentage of chance in this as well as in almost all games of cards, but there is much besides that, and it is to refer to some of the fine points of play that this artiole is written. The writer, therefore, huntea up an old and expert exponent of the great game of draw a man who has spent his days and nights at the green table, and this is what he said about poker: How to 3Iako It Interesting. "Anyone can learn the rudiments of the game by reading 'Hoyle's Games,' but it is only by long experience that one gets to know how to play a good game, and not always-then. In order to make a game of poker interesting, afive-eent anto and twenty-five-cent limit game should be played in the same manner as one for larger stakes. There is one thing always to be borne in mind if vou don't want to be always a loser, and that is, that it is not so much what you win as what you save that makes you a winner at the close. It is the constant chipping ont that counts up in the end. Good average hands will win more than a few large ones, for, as a rule, when one holds a very strong hand there is nothing out against it "It ought not to be necessary to call at tention to the importance of each player Eutting up hfs ante in regular turn, and olding his cards till it is his turn to bet, whether he has anything or not; but it is such a common thing for some players to throw down their hands as soon as they see they have 'failed to connect,' that one can notretrain from referring to such actions as being in extremely bad taste. It gives one player an unfair advantage over another for one' or more players to throw down their bands before it is their say. For example: If it is the turn of A to bet, but, before he docs so, B and C throw down their hands, after drawing, say, one card each, and only D is left in, A, who has a fair hand, will bet more than if there were three to contend with instead of one. Lookout for the Draw. "A very necessary thing to observe care fully is the draw. No one has a right to ask any player how many cards he drew exoept the dealer, and he is not obliged to tell how many he took after a bet is made; so every player should watch and remember how many cards each one drew, which will pre vent asking foolish questions. There is a common saving among poker plavers that 'it is all in the draw,' and there is a lot of truth in that An old sporting man once said there were but two things he was afraid of, and they were a one-card draw and a locomotive. The player who has drawn one card is always dangerous until he has thrown down his hand. No one can tell what he may be drawing to. He may have either two pairs, three of a kind, a four straight or flush, or even four ot a kind; therefore, unless you can beat threes, be ware of the one-card draw. For example: Suppose A is dealing a jackpot which neither B nor C can open. D opens it, and B and C stay and draw one card each. The chances are almost certain that they are try ing for a strainght or flush. Now, suppose D has three kings it would be foolish for him to bet the limit, because, if either B or C fill, they will raise him, and he will feel compelled to call, while if he should mere ly bet a small check, the chances are, that neither B nor C would call unless thev did 'fill, when they would raise him. Where they play the opener to bet last, ol course, he would have to use his own judgment as to what to do, and be guided by the reputa tion of his opponent Now, as to Jack Pots. 'It is the almost universal rule that if an opener is not called, he is not obliged to show more than enough to open the pot. He may have only a pair of jacks, and for tear some one may have a higher pair, he will draw but one card in order to create the impression that he has two pairs or better, which will generally prevent his being called by the holders of but one pair. It he were compelled to show his whole hand, he would have to give away his play, and no one likes to do that To draw" one card to a pair of jacks is not always a wise thing to do, but when it happens, as it sometimes will, that one cannot improve the pair he opens with, one is tempted to resort to some other scheme to make them win, and that is one that works well some times. "Bight here let it be said that if you feel tempted to try some rrew play or feel inclined to do a little bluffing, don't try it on a winner, for he is probably playing with your money and can afford to see what you have. You can blufl a loser very easily, for when a player is continually being beaten he is apt to lose confidence in his hand. It has been said that more is lost on three aces than any other hand that can be held. To some, three acres look to be 'as big as a house,' while they are not such a particularly strong hand when straights are played. Against a one-card draw they are n6t much better than a pair of deuces until the one-card draw is disposed of. Where straights are not played, three of a kind is a good hand and one can afford to bet more on it, but in all small gaoies straights are played to beat threes. Some Fatherly Advice. "Many players think it a good thing to hold an ace with a pair of jacks when open ing a jack pot I don't agree with them, for this reason: In the first place, it lessens the chances of getting another jack, and, even it they do draw an ace, someone will just as likely us not have threes, and the aces top look so good the holder will call to his sorrow. The better plan is to draw to the pair; then, if you make the third one or better, you have not created the Impression that you had threes to start with, and the probability is you can get a better play than you could have obtained after drawing two card?. Who has not heard the saying, 'Winners first, losers last?' When I played marbles we used to say that, and it applies very well to the game of poker to this extent: I have often seen a person play in hard luck all through a game, but seldom have I seen any one play with uninterrupted good luck tor the same length of time. For that reason, if yourluck in getting good hands and mak ing them win is in the early part of the, game, have a care for the time when dame' fortune will desert you for some other fel low. Then you must stop trying experi ments, or you will be sure to stop with a loss. "When the cards run to a person, as theyj win suujEuiues, uc can uraw to almost any thing and get enough to win with. 'Draw to a shoestring and get a box of shoes' is the way they put it Then is the time to make your play bold and strong, and you will wlh lint when vnn GnA liof vein "mva ...... n.H, H ........ j wW ....- ,.UM- JVl U.V I not improving anything in the draw, play with ereat care, and rest assured, that some one is getting better hands than you. Stay Oat Till Ton Get Something. "As regards good or bad luck, the worst sind is to get good hands and continually have them beaten bv better ones. No oue can contend with such a turn of affairs. If yon can get nothing but poor hands contin ually, I can only repeat the advice I once received from an old card player, which was, 'Stay out till you get something. "I have been asked very often which was the better hand to draw to between a flush or a straieht, and I always say, to the strongest hand. It raav be easier to fill the straight, but the flush is the better hand to hold. So, when one opens a jack pot with but one pair and a tour flush, if there is but one raise before the draw, or unless some one stands pat, it may be best to draw to the pair, as the chances are that three aces or face cards will be the best hand; but if there are no raises befoie the draw, split thepair every time and draw to the flush, laying aside the discard that you may show it after the hand is played. A good play is to raise on two pairs, if you sit next to or within one of the opener, as that will prob ably keep ont those who would otherwise come in on one pair, which tney might im prove and ruin your chance of winning. "It is generally best to draw one card to threes, holding up the smaller of the odd cards, for it is about as easy to match that card, and thns fill your hand, as to do so by drawing two cards; besides, you don't reveal the fact that you have three to start with. 0 "Of course, if there is any betting before the draw, it may be better to draw to the full strength ot your hand, as you may need four of a kind to win with.. In conclusion, let me give one more good rule to adhere to, and that is, if you want to keep always ahead of the game, you can do so in one way only, namely: Leave it alone." TVHITE MEN ON KONGO. The New Ccnsns Hiows That 050 of Them Are Living There The Country Band ing; Up Conditions Constantly Growing Better. The Kongo Free State has taken the cen sus of its white population. On December 31 last year there were living within the limits ot the State 950 white men, of whom 012 were Europeans and 27 Americans, be sides a few Arabs, Indians and Malays. Four hundred and forty-five of the Europeans are Belgians. The principal centers of white population are Matadi, Boma, Banana, and Leopoldville. The greatest number are living at Matadi, where there are 279 white men, most of them engaged on tbe Kongo Bailroad, though there are also quite number ot State officers, commercial agents, and mis sionaries. The capital ot the country, Boma, which is about 0 miles from the mouth of the Kongo, has 116 white resi dents. Boma is an important center for trading companies. It has become a very comfortable place of residence. Like Ma tadi, it has a good hotel and a sani tarium, and it has a steam tramway to carry passengers from the river front to the hills, a mile or two distant, where most of the buildings of the State are situated. Banana is inhabited almost wholly by agents of various trading companies, and 123 white men live there. Leopoldville is the largest town on the upper Kongo, and the starting point of tbe steamboats which leave Stanley Pool to ply upon the upper river. Ninety seven white men and some women live there, while at Kinchassa, only four or five miles distant, are 33 more white men. This is the country where, according to Burton's testimony a few years ago, white men could not live. He had spent a little while on the lower Kongo,and got the idea that the climate was particularly deadly. No man ever said more uncomplimentary things about the Kongo climate than this great traveler. He thought ,a white man might as well commit suicide as to go to the Kongo, and yet, in spite of the forebodings of Burton and others, the white population is rapidly growing. In 1889 there were 430 white men in the country. Two years later, with 950 white residents, tbe foreign -population has more than doubled. All over the upper river and its tributaries these white people are spread. Even far away in Katanna, on the western head waters of the Kongo, a country which was not knowd at all seven yenr. ago when the Congo State was formed, ,45 white men are now living. At Basoko, at the month of the Aruwimi river, where tbe natives pur sued Stanley on his first journey, crying, "Meat I Meat!" as they fired their arrows at him, 40 white men are now living in the big State station at the confluence of the rivers, and at other posts up the Aruwimi. At Equatorville there are 14 and at Ban gala 23 whites. These two places are where the military training schools of the State are maintained. The conditions of life on the Kongo are constantly growing better. Doctors are now within reach when they are needed; supplies of medical stores and European food of all kinds are kept in abundance. Most of the whites live in houses exported from Europe and the houses are well fur nished. In fact, the whites have been mak ing a study of how to live in good health, and how to make life as comfortable as pos sible; and it is to their increased knowledge in these respects that they are now able to live in the Kongo region for some years in very good health. The rate ot mortality has'greatly decreased within the past four years. THE FLOWEB THAT FLIES. An Odd Creaturo or tho TJnrd Tribe Found In Asia and India. Philadelphia Press. One of the strangest ot the many odd cseatures that inhabit the wilds of Southern Asia and India Is the "flying flower," a small brilliant-hued lizard of the order of bracovolus. On the wing these curious species of zaurian resemble a richly-tinted insect When at rest he compares favor ably with others of the lizard tribe, with the exception that he has extraordinary protuberances on both sides of the body. These are the "wings," which are formed by a cutaneous flap, wing-like in shape, supported by series of false ribs. In color these flying lizards are blue and gray, with intermediate tints of various .kinds and shades. The tail of this creature is very long aud slender as well as very snake-like in appearance. A large pouch, fast to the under jaw, and extending to some three inches below tbe mouth, adds to the ferocious aspect of the good-natured, harm less creature. The wings are not what a scientist would call "true wiugs," but are used mainly as parachutes. When the lizard leaps from a limb of a tree Into the air the contact brings out its cutaneous flaps and enables the.possessor to soar away at an angle to a greater or lesser distance, depending altogether on the height of the starting point. TO LYNCH OR NOT TO LYNCE A Kentucky Mob Voted on tho Question, Being Stopped by a Girl's Appeal. Botoiho Gbeeit, Kt., Dec. 16. Bob Harper, the negro who has been in jail here for a week as the assailant of Miss Kate Anderson some time since, was identified by her last night. Great excitement prevailed and the mob that has several times assembled to hang him, again demanded him of the jailor. Miss Anderson had requested that the negro be not lynched that night, as each re curring Christmas would be an awful recol lection to her, and the request was so stated to the mob in several speeches by citizens, who preferred to see the law take its course. Tbe mob appointed a committee to decide the matter, agreeing to abide by its ruling. The question of lynching him that night or some future time was discussed and four voted to spare him for the time. The men then quietly dispersed, agreed to reassemble at a time not given out. The Bigger the Better. Chicago Mall. , Mr. Cleveland is to have a bodyguard He'll have to be a whale If Mr. Cleveland Is going to get behind him. MEW ADVERTISEMENTS, A SQUARE DEAL Is what we give to every cus iomer at all 'times. We don't advertise to-day overcoats at 50c on the dollar or $12 coats at $6 and to-morrow 50 per cent off and a premium for car rying them oj. All Bur goods are on the square, genuine and first class in quality. Our prices are square, too, and al ways marked as low as the con 'ditions 0 the 'seasons will per mit. There s one thing certain, that, whatever price goods you buy from us, yoic get the same honest home-77iade clothing for ' which we have built up a na tional reputation. Otir stamp ed repair guarantee accompa nies every sale to keep in re pair, free of charge, any suit or overcoat costing $10 for one year. So much for ready made. In our Tailoring De partment we are selling off odd suit patterns, odd overcoat patterns, odd pants patterns at very low prices. Come and get first choice. 954 and 956 Liberty St., STAR CORNER, de27 ELITE PHOTO GALLERY, SIC Market St. Come now and get your PHOTOS before the holidays. Cabinets re duced. Use the ELEVATOR. no22-TT8 LIQUORS ,, PURE OLD RYE WHISKIES From $1 to $1 0 per quart CALIFORNIA PORTS, SHERRIES, Efc. At 50c a quarc The Only Licensed Drugstore in the City. G. EISENBEJS, Successor to II. P. Schwartz & Co., WHOfSALE ASD RETAIL DRUGGIST. US FEDERAL ST., ALLEGHENY. PA. Tel. 3015. Established 1S3S. 0C13-31-TT3U THE NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRIGHT AND NEW AND MY COMPLEXION IS BETTER. My doctor says it acts gently on the stomach, liver and kldnevs. and is a pleasant laxative. This drink Is made com herbs, and is prepared Ibr usa as easily as tea. It la called LAKE'S HEDIGIHE Alldrturrfst3sellltat50c.and$lapack&ge. Hyoa cannot get It, send your address for a free sample. Lane's Family Medicine move the bowels each liar. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Address OBATOB F. WOOD WAED, Li Hoy. N.Y. WALL PAPER. 'Our 5c paper is the best Our 7c paper is the finest. Our ioc paper is good enough for the best of parlors. Send for samples of these papers, sent free to any address. G. G. O'BRIEN'S PAINT UD WALL PAPEH STDHL 315 Fifth Avenue, Four Squares From Court House. no30-2S-p P O. D. LEVIS, 80LICITOB OP ATENTS 31 Filth avenext Leader, Flttstrar; ! ,' '!