, . - THE 8CHANT03 TMBtfUT!! SATURDAY MORNING. AUGUST 17, 1895. 9 Fasts of 1-Interest Td-Women Readers. Symposium of Partly Gossipy ome .Hints ror viriB, vvu trlbuted by UBie at Best to the House keeper, are good enough to be recopled here. "Every girl," writes Miss Best, "whether she will acknowledge the tact or not, cherishes In her secret heart an ardent desire to be beautiful, bril liant and attractive. Not a-few of the daughters of Eve, like Becky Sharpe, are' possessed of a modest ambition to be recognized ns 'the handsomest wo man in the world.' Now, while the real ization of this desire Is not possible to every girl, yet every girl can In crease her attractiveness tenfold by carefully studying her best points and making the most of them. With this preliminary, let us proceed to consider in detail several toilet matters of Inter est and importance to girls. "One of the easiest and most com mon ways of detracting from the beauty of a face is by adopting en unbecoming style of coiffure because It happens to be fashionable. Too many girls make caricatures of themselves by becoming devotes to each mode of hirsute arrangement just as It appears, Utterly and recklessly regardless of Its suitability to their particular style.. The arflaUo girl sensibly studies the poise, Shape and size of her head, and the general cast of her feature and then adopt the manner of hair dressing that harmonizes with these points. Having discovered what Is becoming and grace ful she clings to it unflinchingly through all the. changes that fickle Dame Fashion dictates and she rests content In the knowledge that she has styles that were' no more meant for her than a, peacock's tall was meant for a beaver. . . " !! 11.11 "It la rlfht and proper to take good car of the hair. Vaseline rubbed Into he roots nightly will remove dandruff and will also promote the growth of the hair. This treatment is apt to make the hair uncomfortably oily while It Is In progress, but the results Anally ob talneC are satisfactory. Never curl the hair on hot irons or pencils this dead ens the ends and makes the hair harsh and stiff. Use paper or crimpers in preferencc to these. If your hair stub bornly refuses to curl In the summer easoatry wetting with alcohol the por tion you wish to curl and 'put it up' while it Is yet damp. This is said to be a great 'curllfler,' to coin a word. It will darken the hair slightly, but only after, long usage. The practice of bleaching the hair is a most reprehensi ble as well as a most dangerous one. If the statistics were published showing how many inmates of Insane asylums reached their present quarters through the use of hair dyes. the figure would be startling. No bleached or blondlned 4 locks could under any circumstances rival the well-cared-for hair of a nat ural hue. II II II "Thecareful grlrl will brush and comb her eyebrows as regularly as she does her hair. Combthem always Into as i aYtfhed' an appearance as possible and vthey will eventually grow into this de sirable sape. If they are thin pencil them Mfthtly with a fine eyebrow pencil to improve their appearance. This is an innocent and (harmless method of adding to their beauty. .The practice i of clipping the eyelashes to promote their growth is not one to be com mended. A very email portion of olive oil rubbed well on the Hds atAhe roots of the tashes every night, will In a short time cause them to grow con siderably. Care must be taken, how ever, to let none of the oil enter the eye. "Complexion Is a matter with 'us wimmen folks.' Of course we oil want a brow like the lily and a cheek like the rose, but It is very poor taste, Indeed, to acquire these by resorting to white washes and rouge, to say nothing of the Injury to the skin that eventually fol lows the use of these things. The first essentials tdaflne complexion are good food, fresh air and plenty of exercise; but every girl has heard this so often that to repeat it 1s to tell an old story. A too free use of nuts and pickles will . generally result in a patch of pimples. Foul air and lack of exercise result In ghastly pallor. No girl likes to have her face shine and to avoid this she should use either rice powder or pre pared chalk, but beware of fancy brands of powder that are composed chiefly of white lead. - Nothing Is more ruinous to the complexion. ' . ii ii ii. For an occasional pimple touch with Pints of camphor. This will general ly serve to rout the enemy if it is not caused by some constitutional disor der, in which dase Internal remedies .Clone will effect a cure. Cold cream, vaeeltaw and 'glycerine containing a few drops of bensoin are excellent emol- llents for qm at nlght-the same to be thoroughly washed off in warm water wir morning aner. Buttermilk Is an ; excellent wash or the skin and a few drops of toMat ammonia or alcohol in the wash Water are advisable as they ,;. are very. Invigorating. There Is noth ing that will thoroughly remove freckles. Lemon Juice used constantly will tighten them somewhat and at the - same time It will whiten the skin. ' n il ii Do without a fine dress but be sure J and take care or your teeth. Not the most perfect 'store teeth In the world -f can recompense you for the loss of , those given you by nature. The occa , atonal m4 pulverized, charcoal as a tooth powder 1s not Injurious, but the constant use of It Is, as it serves to make tiny breaks in the enamel. ..As good, cheap, and harmless a powder as can be used-Js the same recommended for face use prepared chalk. Never uso , Mln Wise teeth, a fine thread drawn ; between ithem .Is less Injurious and . more agreeable. , "In- these days when every girl has a . tnanloure set K is hardly necessary to I mention the Malls. But don't polish them too highly, that Is a mark of vulgarity! and don't cut them .with . scissors, the use of a tile Is more com ?' fnendsbhs. , ; ' . ; "It you have a "scrawny neck, ion't -.. wear' low-cut dresses.. or if you do, be f, pure an use filmy lace or net to 'fill in.' '; ., .' v .... . 'C "Donl lace! Hi these oay a wasp . J like waist Is not artlstlo and for this woman ahouh) be' grateful. They can ' comfortable and stylish at the same "time, in this particular, at least ' 1'" ' ' ' ' II ' II II "A large hand and a large foot never 'i;look worse than when they are en ,., ( cased In oovertn too small for them. ; ' A word to the wise Is sufficient' T ' 'A' sweet low voice la an excellent ...hm in woman It Is ald that the T ioat elsafmahl feature about the American tfrrt it her rasping vole, ana Information, Partly Grave, and Partly Gay. tl must be conceded that In the main the accusation is true. A sweet voice Is a rarity, and yet it can be readily cultivated, and when it Is attained there la no charm more potent. Es chew that nasal twang and don't try to strike high C, especially In public places and public conveyances, for there It is not only unmusical but 111 bred."' . : II II II HOUSEHOLD HELPS: Tou can drive nails Into hard wood With out bending them if you dip them llrst in lard. Weak spots In a black silk waist may be strengthened by "sticking" court plas ter underneath. Llcht scorch marks may be removed by simply molBtenlng them with water and laying lt the sun. Kisks care be more quickly beaten by adding a pinch of salt, which cools them, so that they froth rapidly. Centra cloth, embroideries and the like are being reserved more exclusively for luncheons than for dinners. The bent way to set the dye of black lisle thread hose Is to put a couple of good pinches of common salt In the water, you wash the hose in. Ueautlful nupery, silver, china and glass all set out with Keometrlc exactness, and all exquisitely spotless and clean, are the characteristics of the dinner table, and the choicer and more costly and beautiful, tne nearer is reached the standard of perfec tion. To wash red table linen, use tepid water with a little powdered borax (borax sets the color ; hang to dry in a shady place. The washing must be done separately and done, quickly with very little soap, the rlns:lng water should have a very little starch In It. Iron when neurly dry. A window without a shade is only half dressed. lraperles may be dispensed with; they are decorative, but shndes are essen tial. They temper the llcht for the room as .the lashes do for the eys; they dress the window and at the sometime form a buck- ground for the laces and stuffs of the dra pery. A pretty article for hanging beside the bureau to hold the button-hook and other small articles is made of one of the wooden eKRS ustd In stocking darning. At equal distances around the centre screw in four of the small brass hooks such as are used on bangle boards, then paint tho bb white and decorate with tiny flowers and attach a ribbon to two opposite hooks to hang It by. The ck may be gilded Instead cf painted, If preferred. For Coffee stains try putt.'ng glycerine on the wrong side and wash I k It out with lukewarm water. For rannrirry stains weak ammonia and water Is tho best Stains of fruit on good table linen ran be removed without injury by using the fol lowinjr with care: Pour boiling water on chloride of lime, In the proportion of one gallon to a quarter of a pound, bottlo H cork It Well, and In using be careful not to stir It. Lay the stain In this for a moment then apply white vinegar and boil the table linon. What Is the truest economy in market ing? It, says the New i'oik Times, is to buy the best and most nutritious food ma terial that the markets afford, and then use those materials with cure. Nothing need ever Imj wasted. 'Mooshroom stems, left after sautelna mushrooms, may be chopoeu fine and used for a sauce Horde laise with the breakfast steak. Turkey bones, cracked, make the nio-Mt delicious soup. A cud or "left over" tomato will season a soup or give the delicious sauce beiloved of Mr. Pkrkwlck With his chops, Bread crumbs dried In the oven and rolled fine on the moulding board will do for breadmg those same chops, or assist In the creation of a scallop or a dressiuir. A cup of sour milk will be the motif for a Johnny-cake delicious morsel! Kits of mutton, bam or veal shine resplendent In salads, croquettes or cannelons. A saucer of peas, a carrot, a few slices of beet, an onion, a little asparngus, or a few string beans, by the exercise or a little thought and "a twist of the wrist," take on added charms in an annetizlnir vegetable sa lad. The yolks of eggs, debarred from being a component part of an angel's cake, will nil an uening void in a. custard or a sun shine cake, whllo the whites of eggs re malting ofter a mayonnaise dressing or a creation "a la Newburw" will be promoted to an angel's or delicate cake, or give the crowning grace to a pudding in the guise oi a meringue. II II II EXCELLENT RECIPES: Apple Pudding An aunle meringue oud ding makes a dessert which will temot every me.mber of the household. To pre pare It the following Ingredients are neces sary: One pint of stewed apples, three eggs, whites and yolks separate; one-hair onp of white sugar, one teaKpoonful of miner, one leaspoonrui or nutmeg and cin namon mixed and one teaspoonful essence bitter almond for tho meringue. Sweeten and spice, and while tho apple is still very hot stir in the butter and, a little at a time, the yolk of the eggs. Heat all light and pour Into a buttered dish ami bake ten minutes. Cover without drawing from the oven, wrm a meringue made from the ueiuen wnues or tne eggs, two tablespoon fiHs of white sugar and the bitter almond flavoring. Spread smoothly and quickly, close the oven again and brown vrv slightly. Kat cold with pounded sugar mi ui over inu iwp ana nerve wu-n rt cream insieu or sauce. xiew lorn world. Cream Cookies To make cream cookies take a cupful of sour cream, two cupfuls oi sugar, six or ,siriei Hour, an egg, a teaspoonrm or soma, one-third of a ten. spoonful of salt and half an nutmeg. Dis solve the soda in a tablespoonful of cold water. Beat the egg till very light.- Add the dissolved soda to the sour cream, then stir the sugar, salt and egg Into the cream. Keserve a small part of tho flour and add the rest to the liquid mixture, finally add ing the nutmeg grated. Sprinkle a board with about two tablespoonfuls of flour, and, after rolling a small piece of the dough down to the thick, bnke In a quick oven for six or seven minutes. When the cakes got brown they will be baked sufll ciently. Tomato Salnd To prepare a salad of lomaio aspec: strain one pint of tomatoes, add one tenspoonf ul of alt, a saltspoonf ul of pepper and a teaspoonful of onion Juice; add a quarter of a box of gelatine. Put aside for half an hour. Then bring to the tootling point, and pour either Into tiny vxayim wr miviun. rui away lo harden. Make hnlf pint of mayonnaise dressing, add one-half pint of whinned cream? mi. carefully. When ready o serve arrange on each individual plate three or four preriy leuuce leaves. Turn out the to mato Jelly, heap around the mnvnnnn: sprinkle with finely chopped parsley or crenn, aii.b k, uvin aigniiy ana good. Lemon Salad A lemon salad is a Ger man) aisn. rnai is mgmy recommended. Pull the lettuce leaves In 1im ni.. eueese the Juice of a small lemon or half of a large one into a tumbler, add a little uirar, a nine water ana a good pinch of salt, and pour the mixture all over the salad. Froxen Peach Pudding A dessert fit for an epicure is a rrosen fruit pudding made with ripe reaches. The ingredients neces sary tn preparing it are one pint of rich mMk, one pint of rich cream, whipped; one pint of cut peaches, three yolks of eggs and one and a half cups of sugar. Beat the eggs well together with the sugar. Bring ths milk to a boll and stir It care fully into the and sugar. Return ft to the kettle and stir over the fire until It thickens slightly; do not let It boll or It Will curdle. Set the custard aside to cool, then freese. When partly t roxen add the whipped cream. Turn a little longer, thtn stir tn the peaches. Pack In a mold. A Summer soup To prepare this soup take two pounds of the neck of beef, a quart of sliced tomatoes, a quart of com sliced front the cob, three pints of water, one tablespoonful of butter,- one of flour, and salt and pepper to sutt the taste, put the meat and water into a soup pot, and as soort as the liquid begins to bell skim It oKMfiNlr. Simmer for Uirae heura. thm add the ,t ornate and corn coba. Cook for hair an noun men iirata into another kettle and add ths eorn, the Bow and but ter mixed together and enough salt and pepper to season well. Cook forty minutes kiuger, then serve. New York World. II II u HEALTH HINTS: Kegardlng . Baby During the warm weather the children's diet must be care fully watched, as their tittle stomachs are very sensitive. All their food should be thoroughly cooked, and children under three years of age should be allowed but a very limited diet. The supper of bread and milk may be varied by a bowl of graham crackers and milk and occasion ally a dish of viewed fruit may be added to the evening meal. Don't let the baby sleep on the same Me of Its little body every night. It Is sure In time to prevent its proper physical development. Constant lying on oiwi side will make a difference in the sixe of the limbs on that side and will even retard the growth of that side of the face. Very dangerous results come from the practice of always sleeping In the same position, and the watchful mother should guard against these evils. If the baby is not very strong rub his little body well with good, pure olive oil right after ills bath and he will be a plump as you could desire in a few months. Bubles, of course, should never be buthed Just after eating. New York World. The way to eat corn "Physician" writes to the New York Sun: Now that corn on the cob thus aiipeared upon our dinner tables, may I suggest that It should be eaten from the cob. and not cut off. or if cut off at all. to be cut with a dull knife. If the knife be sharp enough to make a clean cut of the grain, it will also rut with It the ligneoas substance tn which the grain Is oinbedded. ami this substunce-ls as indigestible as sawdust and Is quite ns Irritating to the lining of the stomach and bowls. In biting tho grain from the cob, the wooily substimre is left on the cob, the teeth pressing the grain from Its bed, rather thun taking a part of its bed with It. THE ORIGINAL TRILBY. Do Maurter's Heroine a Famous English Prima Honno-Shc, Too Had Her Svcngall-A' Parallel for the Novelist's Two Characters Fonnd la Actual Life. According to the New York World, Oeorge Uu (Maurler's heroine. Tril by, was probably modeled after Mme. Anna iHishop, and his Svengall after Nicholas Charles llochsa, the eccentric Uohfinlun maestro. The theory Is sup ported by Frederic Lyater, once Bocha's chorus master, and now well known in New York as author, composer and operatic manuger. Ann ltivlere, after-, ward Lady Henry Hlshop, then Mme. Anna Bishop, and at last Mrs. Meyer Schultz, was not successful us a singer until she fell In with Bochsa, then a harpist In 'London. This extraordinary personage was chosen by Anna Bishop as her "guide, philosopher and friend," and under hlB Instructions and Influence she became a singer of rare excellence. Hrler beau tiful voice was modulated, her Intona tion perfected, and evuintually, Bhe broke away from tho restrictions im posed upon her by tSlr Henry Bishop, and started on a tour of the world under the direction and management of her teacher, 'llochsa, who from the first established such complete control over his pupil that she became a mere mar ionette In his hunds. She sang, as it were, because he willed her to sing. She left her busi ness as entirely In his hands ns if she were a child and he her father. With out him, she. was nothing; with him, she was a great prima donna. On the few -occasions when her maestro was Incapacitated by Illness from tilling the conductor's chair, and his place was filled by another, her singing lost Its style, tone and truth of execution. Though she did not break down so ab solutely as Trilby did on Wvengali's sudden death, she showed plainly that her Inspiration enme from her conduc tor, and not from herself. Artistically, she was a mere puppet of his will, and, with all this, the connection between the two was purely platonic and inno cent Svcng all's Prototype. Bochsa was a very aged man, sub ject to a complication of diseases, and the lust person In the world to attract a young and beautiful woman's fancy, save only in his professional capacity as a great musiclun ami a man of such extraordinary will power that with him to order was to be obeyed. She was of weak will, a calm, equable disposition, one of the most amiable of women and utterly devoid of passion or personal vanity. Even In her attempted rivalry to Jenny I.lnd in this country during that great singer's season of triumph, she wan never actuated by Jealousy or ambition. She simply sang because Bochsa willed her to sing, and troubled herself not at all about the matter. tSvengall-IJochsa Is reputed to have had the same sensational dread of wa ter, externally and Internally, that Trilby's master was noted for. "11 ne se balgnuit jamais," and his taste in costume led him, as it does most of his countrymen, to furred and braided overcoats with barrel buttons and elaborate frogs. In other respects he was exceeding careless in his person. He had also Svengairs aptitude In speaking all languages equally Incor rectly, lie used to say: "I vos porn zu Prague, und I cannot splk Cherman! I,llf many years ?.u London, and I cannot splk Atigllschel In Paris I pass oh fery long taime und I cannot splk Vrentch! I haf no lang vltch I cannot splk, noxzlng at all but une deux dhree fower und dam!" and, Indeed his instructions to the band when he was conductor were couched in language weird and wonderful. It was a common-remark in the orchestra that to look nt or listen to the conduc tor meant ruin. But as a singing mas ter and organizer of musical enter tainments he was without a peer and ninny years beyond his time. Is not this Svengall to the life? l)u Maurler Hears of Her. There was a resort on the Strand, where Telly's theater now stands, cele brated by Thackery as the "Black Kitchen," In which Jack Sharp, the well known comic singer, of the time, used to sing his own songs, mime of them not as savory an they might be. There was and Is still the "Cheshire Cheese" In Wine Tavern court, off Flpet street, where the print of Dr. Johnson's wig can still be seen on the panels, and which Is still celebrated for its beef steak pies and toasted cheese. In such places 'Du Maurler, then a very young man, used to meet with other fellows, and their conversation often ran upon the extraordinary Influence exercised by (Bochsa over Anna Bishop. In fact, it was known to all the world of Lon don. Du Maurler, then a young man-about-town, knew Mme. Bishop well, anil he was greatly impressed with the strange hypnotlo Influence Bochsa had over her. Du Maurler commented on it, and declared tha't It was an admirable theme for a novel. Exactly I.Iks the Story. An Incident occurred In Sydney, New South Wales, which proves conclusively the identity of Anna Bishop and Trilby O'Ferrell. iBochsa's long and eventful life was drawing to a close. He had suffered long from hernia, and was sub ject to spells of weakness that came without warning, and caused him to dose off in a kind of coma. At a concert in the town hall Mme. Bishop had come on the platform to give her exquisite rendering of "Home, Sweet Home," Just as she had reached the middle of the air Bochsa was seised with one of his attacks and leaned back In the conductor's chair, partly Insensible. Instantly her voles ceased. . She trembled, turned pale and tot tered off the stage, and not until the old man recovered was she able to go on with her part of -the programme, This was evidently the Incident so ad mirably worked up by Du Maurler In the traglo scene of Svengall's death; and It was not the only occasion on which, the same thing happened. In (Melbourne, while she was singing "I Know that My Redeemer Uveth,", In a performance- of Handel's "Mes siah," a similar falntness attacked Bochsa: he dropped his baton and she ceased to sing, On this occasion, how ever, ha speedily recovered and the per formanoe went on, ' the audience re garding the break at a mare accidental hesitation due to her lapse of memory. The old man died soon after, and was buried in the cemetery at Sydney. A handsome' monument was erected over his grave, which was dedicated to his memory by his faithful and attached pupil and friend, Anna Bishop. . UNIVERSAL PRESS CONGRESS. Newspaper Mea of All Nations to Gather la Hordcaax Meat September. The second International Press league meeting will be held at Bordeaux, France, In September. An effort Is making to secure the representation of the American press, and an excep tionally cordial invitation has been ex tended to American writers to send delegates. The title International Press league was . assumed by rhe Federation of United States Press clubs in 18U1. but they have never Justified it by affilia tion wlthj foreign ogantxatlons. The European league held its first congress last year at Antwerp during the expo sition. Nearly every civilized country was represented. South America and New Zealand sent delegates. England sent tlie officers of her great newspaper organization, the Institute of Journal ists, which has a membership of 4.000. The United States was represented only by a foreign newspaper man. Paul Ol ker, who lives in London, and Is regis tered as correspondent of American Journals. He was delegated to act for the Oerman Press club of San Fran cisco. - THE TOMB OF BURNS. What woos the world to yonder shrine? What sacred clay, what dust divine? Was this some master faultless-nne( In whom we prise The cunning of the Jeweled line And craven phrase? A searcher of our source and goal, A reader of Hod's secret iicroll? A Shakespeare, flashing o'er the wholo Of mun's domain The splendor or his cloudless soul And perfect brain? Some Keats, to Grecian gods allied, t'losplng all beauty us his bride? Some Shelley, souring dtni-descrled . Above Time's throntr. And heavenwurd hulling wild and wide His spear of song? . A lonely Wordsworth, from the crowd Ilair-htd In light, half-veiled tn cloud? A sphere-born Milton, cold and proud, In hallowing dews Dipt, and with gorgeous ritual vowed Unto the Must)'.' Nay, none of these and little skilled t)n heavenly heights to sing and build! Thine, thine, U Earth, whose fields he tilled, And thine alone. Was he whose fiery heart Tries stilled 'Neath yonder stone. He came when poets had forgot How rich and strange the human lot! How warm the tints of life: how hot Are Ixivo and Hate; And what makes Truth divine, and what Makes Manhood great. A ghostly troop, in pnle amaze They melted 'neath that living gaze His In whose spirit's gusty blaze Wo seem to hear The crackling of their phantom bays Sapiens and serel For, 'mid an age of dust and dearth, nice more had bloomed immortal worth, There, In the strong, splenetic North, The Spring begun. A mighty mother had brought forth A mlghly man. No mystic torch through Time ho bore. No virgin veil from Life he tore; His soul no bright Insignia wore or starry birth; He saw what all men see-no more . In heaven and earth. But as, when thunder crashes nigh, All darkness opes one flaming eye. And the world leaps Hgulst the sky So llery clear Did the old truths that we pass by To him appear. How could ho 'scape the doom of such As feel the airiest phantom touch Keenlk-r than others feel the clutch Of Iron powers Who die of having lived so much In their large hours? He erred, he sinned; and If there be Who, from his hapless frailties free. Kith In the poorer virtues, see Ills faults alone To such, O Lord of Charity, Be mercy shown! Singly he faced the bigot brood. The meanly wise, the feebly good; Ho pelted them with pearl, with mudj He fought them well But ah, the stupid million stood, And he he fell! All bright and glorious a the start, 'Twos his ignobly to depart. Slain by his own too nfllueht heart, Too generous blood;. And blindly, having Inst Life's chart, , To meet death's flood. So closes the fnnlnstlc fray, Tho duel of spirit nnd clay! ' So come bewildering disarray I And blurring gloom, ' ' The Irredeemable day And final gloom. - So passes all confusedly As lights that hurry, shapes that flee About some brink we dimly see. The trivial, great, Squalid, majestic tragedy Of human' fate. Not ours tn gauge tho more or less, The will's defect, the blood's excess, The earthly humor that oppress That radiant mind. Ills greatness, not his littleness, - Concerns mankind. A dreamer of the common dreams) A fisher In familiar streams, He chased the transitory gleams That all pursue; But on his Hps the eternal themes Again were new. With shattering Ire or withering mirth He smote each worthies claim to worth. The barren fig tree cumbering earth lie would not spare. Through ancient lies of proudest birth Ho drove his share. To him the powers that formed him brave, Yet weak to breast the fatal wave, A mighty craft of hatred gave A gift above All other gift's beneflc, save . ; The gift, of love. He saw 'tis .meet that man possess The will to curse us well as bless, To pity and be pitiless, ' ' ' To make, and mar: : The fierceness that from, tenderness Is never fur, And so his fierce and tender strain Lives, .and his Idlest Words' remain To flout oblivion, that In vain 'Strives to destroy One lightest recdrd, of his pain r : or of his Joy,' ! , And though thrloe statelier names decay, His own rah wither not away While plighted lass and. lad shall stray Among the broom. Where evening touches glen and brae With rosy gloom; While hope and love with youth abide) While age sits at the ingleslde; While yet there have not wholly died The heroic fires. The patriot passion, and the pride . In noble sires; While, with the conquering Saxon breed Whose fair estate of speech nnd deed Heritors north and south of Tweed . Alike may claim, -The dimly mingled Celtic seed Flowers like a flame; , " .' While nations see In 'holy trance -The vision of the world's advance Which glnrlfied his countenance When from afar He hailed the hope that shot o'er France , , Its crimson star;. .... . White, plumed for flight the sou deplores The cage that foils the wing that soars; And while, through admantlns doors In dreams flung wide, ' We hear resound on mortal shore ' The Immortal tide. William Watson In London Spectator. Pacts ; Disclosed by" Psychical Research. Seem Like Fairy Tales but Which Are Said To Be Queer Occurrences Fully Verified. From the Chicago Times-Herald. -Some strange experiments were tried In Kngland a year or two ago. the ob ject of which was to test the possibility or communicating sensations and ideas by other than the usual modes. In the course of these experiments, in which elaborate precautions were taken to preclude collusion, previous knowledge or detection through the recognized senses, it was found that within two or three minutes after one person had tasted salt, vinegar, sugar and other familiar substances a second person also, who was Isolated behind a screen, hud such a perception of the flavor as to be able to identify and' name it before several witnesses. In a like manner it was proved that an intellectual con ception of some simple mathematical design could be transmitted from one mind to another when the usual chan nels of Communication were carefully stopped. In this way it was shown that some people are strangely suscep tible to impressions produced by the physical sensations of others. This phenomenon Is known as telepathy, al though the term as commonly used Is comprehensive enough to include the same sort of discernment of emotion as well. .Persons who can be thus Influenced while in their normal condition and not In a hypnotic trance, and who manifest In other ways about to be mentioned this strange supernormal perceptive power, are sometimes called "sensa tlves" or "physics." And to many ex perts In psychology the phenomena themselves render credible and par tially explain many perplexlnjg and wonderful stories which a few years ngo would have been disbelieved altogether. Thus, a man on a ship nt sea receives a sudden and inexplicable Intimation that something dreadful and unex pected hus Just happened; weeks later, he learns that at that very hour his wife or sweetheart, thousands of miles away, expired. Perhaps, at the mo ment of the premonition, he sees the face of the dear one, wearing an ex pression of profound love and sorrow. Or, a woman wakes in the night, hear ing, us she thinks,' a cry of distress from her now grown-up brother, whom, In his childhood, she had tenderly cared for. At this time his home is 300 miles away. Next morning she writes him a letter, describing the Incident, nnd asking If all is well with lilm. This missive, on the road, crosses one from him, in which he mentions that nt that very hour he had a vivid dream, in which he was a little boy again and In some painful plight, and appealed to her for help. Scores, even hundreds, of such Incidents may be re lated. Once they would have been sneered nt or treated merely as coinci dences. Sow, however, it is believed that in some of these cases there have occurred unintentional, but real, com munication. The scientific demonstra tion of the genuineness of telepathy and thought transference In special cases impnrts a new Importance to well attested stories of the kind alluded to. Kxperiments are being made In volun tary communication by the strange methods here described. 'And an addi tional theory Is offered to assist people In explaining whatever may be genuine In clairvoyance, clalraudlence and psy chometry. Kntltlcd to Respect. Reports of still another set of once discredited phenomena, phjr.tnsms of people who reside or sojourn nt a dis tance. If, Indeed, they have rJ departed this life, are now thought to Ibe en titled to respect and perhaps credence, and nut necessarily the product of su perstition of diseased Imagination. Thus, In a paper read at Columbia col lege a few evenings ago by J)r. Rich ard Hodgson, of Boston, the chief American representative of the Society for Physical 'Research, an English lady made some statements which would once have been regarded as pure fabri cations, but nre now accepted as worthy of careful attention, If not of unre served belief. 'Mrs. X. is well known among literary and scientific people In her own country jfis an Intellectual, conscientious, .Pi-nslble and ruggedly healthy woman, who, in addition to feeling a deep Interest In psychical re search, is herself possessed of what seem to be exceptional faculties. Dur ing the last few years, she says In this paper, she has had many experiences like those mentioned here. Whllo look ing earnestly at a person whom she meets for tho .first time, and about whom she has had no Information, shy perceives an attendant human fig ure, which Is visible to no one else, nnd which proves, upon subsequent In qt'Iry, to have been symbolic or repre sentative of the principal's character nnd attainments, or of some Incident In his career. Thus, on meeting for the first time the husbnnd of a dear friend, she ODterved continually for hours an lnagi, quite unlike him In Its youthful appearnnce and other aspects, always haunting him. It bore a horror-strldc-en face nnd maintained an attitude of fear and pain. Eventually she d'.fcov ered thai, ns a boy at school, he had been PiU'lty of some offense for which he had been compelled to run the gaunt let among his schoolmates. In like manner beside a stranger whom she had a chance to observe for several minutes before being Introduced, and as to whose Identity she had no clew, she discerned a figure suggestive of a Hindoo monk. The man really had lived in India, and was well versed in the philosophies and religion of that "country. Experience of a Travoter. There Is quite a different kind of a story told by r. Hodgson during his recent visit to the metropolis. A law yer whose homo is 1n New York elate was on a railway itraln one- Saturday, bound for a certain New England vil lage whilch he was particularly deRlrous of reaching that might. The conductor informed him, howevor, -that the second train, to wthleh ho would be transferred nt Schenectady, was due In Troy at' 11:05 p. im., or five minutes after a third train, the last one that night, left the latter city on the Hooslc Tunnel lime for the man's destination. There was, therefore, apparently no chance of get ting through. Soon nfter the coruvwui. tlon which developed thl'S annoying sit uation itermlnatal, and while the law yer sait wrapped in contemplation, he felt a mysterious impulse to write, J-,e knew nolt what, on a piece of pew Upon examination he discovered these words, or words of the eame import "Tou .will fcure-ly -reach B tonight ' When he boarded Wie olhr train at Schieotady he tried to- get some con firmation of the hope thue held out though keejlng the strange incident to- tuimself. But broke-mem nnd w,i tor gave fhfm ithe eome replies he had- receiveu wierr, neventneicss the cu rknr agency that previously guided hfrs hand impelled him Ito write ones more, and his message simply corrob orated the other. At Vep-yth the eectmd conductor hunted Hilar, up, rtrW R flla. 8TalIL the tttac3 entering and leav ing Troy and Showed him how a nimble ma,rf might Irap from the Central train while K .was etowily approaching the statlon:Tun thirowgh a certain conve nient crews sxreet and Intercept the outgoing Hoomo tunnel tram before It had aoojulred iroudh- speed. Thin the man did, and he com-nrehmli hi !,.. ilhat evening. The lawyer's own exnla naitlon of the affair was- thatt the epirlt of some oeceaeedi friend nniMiu vj. hand and conveyed the comforting aa- ' U.i ' "rTT"' thinks n. "" W'' lo exhamrt, before adortteff rart tfwory. all other posalble explanations that hatm awun4iaVTl haps the mysterious messages were tel- epaitmoa-uy but unconsciously sent by the second conductor, who bad doubt less had occasion- before this to give such Information intentionally, but probably was not -thinking of it at the time when the traveler experienced his first blind IncltrvaiUon, to write. Hypnotism Key to Automatic Writing. The phenomena of hypnot&m may be quoted further in Illustration of this Idea of "multiplex personality," which Is offered as a key to -the puxzle of auto mat lo writing. In many cases the pa tient shows quite a different' mental or moral character (n or after the trance. A certain tYenoh peasant, Mme. B., while in her normal state wis stolid In .temperament and of an humble disposition; -but In a hypnotic condi tion, without any suggestions from others, pJie was the emfbodimcnt of childish glee and un. On the other hand, a paltlent of Dr. -ltlchet before taring hypnotized was lively, and after ward serious and dignified, with a per ceptfblo nccese of natural Intelligence. Jeanne Sch , a criminal lunatic -in the Salpe-triere, Paris, was for a time so violent that it man necessary to confine her in a strait-Jacket, and her vicious propensities) were simply shocking. After placing her in a hypnotic state and giving hr soothing suggestions several -times, HI. Auguste Voislm ren dered her s 'tiractablo that she amiably obeyed orders and became industrious. What Is mure, she evinced voluntary ropenltaince for her sins, and thereafter led a correct life. The remarkable case of Ansel Bourne, the Rhode Inland clergyman, who mys teriously di-sapiM-ared and then turned up as a retail merchant In, Norrlstown, Pa., may possibly strengthen the theory of "multiple ceniters of conBclousnwss." As A. J. Brown. In V.ye latter city, -he had no recollection of his 'former life or Ulentilty. It was clearly an honest change In the man, "however explain able. He wart as oomph-tely oblivious of his old friends and pursuits as a main who has been under rhe influence of ether for a surgical operation is, afteir regaining consciousness, of the pain Indicted during the ordeal, al though he may have cried out while fully controlled by anesthetics. , Or, to use another comjiarlson, he m as for getful as a somnambulist is, em awak ening, of bis conddctt during the trance. Bourne had, bo far as is known, only What is xvsgwaSr, Castoria la Dr. Samuel Pitcher's prescription for Infants)1, and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor . jnlher Narcotic substance. It Is a harmless substitute for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing; Syrups, and Castor Oil. It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years use by, Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting; Sour Curd, , cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic Castoria relieves teething troubles, cures constipation and flatulency. Castoria assimilates the food, regulates the stomach and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Case toria is the Children's Panacea the Mother's Friend -v- ' Castoria. "Ctstoria Is an exccllantmedldss for chil dren. Mothers have repeatedly told me of Its good effect upon their obi Idrea." Da. 0, 0. Osoood, Lowell, " Castorl is ths best remedy for children of hich 1 am acquainted. I hope tho day is not for distant when mothers willoonslder the real Interest of their children, and use Castoria in stead of theTariousquack nostrumswhlch are destroying their loved ones, by forcingoplum, morphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful agents down their throats, thereby sending them to premature grSTes." Da. J. F. KmcazLOB, Conway, Ark. The Ceatasr Company, TT IRON AND STEEL Bolts, Nuts, Bolt Ends, Turnbuckles, Washers, Rh ets, Horse Nails, Files, Taps, Dies, Tools and Sop plies. Sail Duck for mine use in stock. SOFT - STEEL - HORSE SHOES, And a full' stock of Wagon Makers' Supplies, Wheels, Hubs, Rims, Spokes, Shafts, Poles, Bows, eto, TTEUEID SCR ANTON, LUMBER, PROPS AND TIES THE COMMONWEALTH LUMBER CO TEUtPMONE '488. tu, lmpmiiif, Atraphy, huh run. Liraint IroukM Ml.ll ftnliy. miTMSDtcJNB CO, 1 weeks. Ff sals by JOHN H. (HtUPS, PhBrmislSU Wysmlna Avsntf aS CVMMStraatSaraiitMf1! v thro definite parsonaHttea; bat cases are on record that reveal three or four belonging to a single individual. When Dr. Richard Hodvsun (whose address Is 5 Boylston place, iBuston, Mess.) gets hold of a story like any of these, from an American source, he proceeds to in vestigate it. a goou many euch nar ratives, of course, are the result of hallucinations or .trickery; and often inere is aintcuity tn securing corrob orative -testimony from other perrons, because, tn the nature of things, no one else could -be aware of the facts. But It is the object of his society to secure, so far as possible, euch con firmations from independent and trusty stories as a lawyer would seek In mak ing up a case for court. Whoever will recount incidents of this sort or aid him, In getting particulars will be prom. .ting a new, in tores ting and most important science. WELSH JOTTINGS. St. Nicholas and St. TTIlnry in the Vale were towns when In 1I2S they were bu.nt by Hywel Mcredydd and his followers. Tallesln, the klnir of all rhe Welsh bards, died and was burled near Uyn Gelrioiiydd. J. Bury Thomas, of the Baptist college, Aberystwyth, has been invited to the pas torate of Talgarth Baptist church. Stone circles are still to be seen In Wales, thouich many of them are partially de stroyed. They Include the M.-lneU Hirion, near Penmoenmawr; the Buarth Arthur at fulanboldy, in Carmarthen,; two ciTclea near Trecastle.Brecon; one at Nant-y-nod. near Aberystwyth; one at Aber in Car narvonshire; one near Brymcoch: and one at Nevern, in Pembrokeshire. There are also circles at Marcross, In the Vale; near St Crynach's Well, Pembroke; at Clenen ney; two near Snowdon-; one at Drumaa Hill, Neath; and two in Merionethshire. Mr. Warmlnuton, whose Monmouthshire renunciation hus made him more famous than a seat in parliament would have made hrm. Is a barrister with a big prac tice and a delightful house in Sussex. One. of the Murrletm houses, close by Wad hurst, he bought (says the New Budget) for a sum ridiculously lower than its for mer munificent owner bod spent upon rt. Its stables were splendidly stocked in ths old days, but they are nearly empty now. Mr. Warmington's tastes are not towards horses. Mrs. Warmlngton who has mads some speeches during the Welsh campaign. Is the gentlest of her sex. Mr. David Jones, of CUfynydd, is fast making a record for himself at the royal Academy of Music Out of twenty-thre, candidates this promising young vocalist was last week numbered among the three successful in winning the bronze medal. nO Tuesday noght he was given a promi nent position! in the programme of an or chestral concert.held under the conductor ship of Sir A. C. Mackenzie, in St. Jtunes Hall, and the Morning critic writes tn flattering terms of his re-ndertng of Verdi's "O, Tu Palermo" (I Vesprl Sicilian!). Mr. David Jones It the son of Mr. Philip Jones, manager of the Albion colliery, Fonty priild, and his success! la all the more gratifying from the fact that his entrance Into the academy, dates back toi only, etch teen months. Castoria. - "Cattetia Is sowell adapted tochfjdren thai I recommend It a superior toany pnscriptloa known to Da" H. A. Abcbib, M. D., Ul So. Oxford St,, Brooklyn, N. T. "Our physicians tn the children's depart ment have spokea highly of their experi ence in their outside practice with Cutorla, and' although we only have among out medical supplies what Is known ss tegular products, yet we are free to confess that tht merits of Castoria baa won ns to look wtlk favor upon ILn Uird HospiTjli tn Dtsrsmiar, Boston, Kmb Alls 0. Surra, Asa, If array Street, New Tark Otty. cM m (Mon PA. MIN 22 Commonwealth . ,. Bldg, Scranton, Pi RE8T0RB LOST VIGOR Atrapn,, vuicocw ma wmr wcmimmm, mm mmy w iHm chBckrd ud full vlror .ulcklr nuorad. U flti, tuck Vukonte Mid lw wetkiuaM, from ay cum, m cnBcu ana iuii vir Milld knyvAitn, ii mr"t it.led, to bnMtoMK hh Otratasd, Obto. I, ..v.- ' :'" ." ' f. : .