7 " r-, AW B. F. SCHWEIER, THE OOISTITUTIOI THE UH0I-A1D TIE EIP0X0EHT 0? TIE LAYS. Editor and Proprietor.' VOL. XLI. MIFFLINTOWN. JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. MAY IS, 1SS7. NO. 21. X "NkJ. M II I I I 1 III III vl 17 W II 111 IU IV A Fair Florentine. Sbe tath eyes that sham, the night. Deep and mystic, dark with doom. Rich In thought, alii, with light When the passion flowers bloom. And tier lips are scarlet red, Mate, ud motionless, and calm, Till a score of kisses shed Love's elixir on their balm. Soft and downy is her breast, Tranquil as a virgin rose, Sow to rock in wild unrest. Like an ocean in Its throes. Bella, IV! la, Graxiclla, 3ueen where Arno's river flows. She Lath locks of darkest dark, Brow of snow and face of lire ; Tuneless Is the sinking lark When she strikes her hilvc-r lyre ; Arno's speech is not as sweet As lb. music of her voice When she runs to meet and greet 'lhe Lnlgi of her choice. Myrrh and oleander delis Bloom with beauties rare to see ; Yet within their shadows dwells Not a fairer nvmph than she; Beila. Bella; Graziella, Heart and heaven throb for thee. Florence hath more sta'e'y dame. Garbed in siik and decked with lace, But tbey lack the living flames Sweeping o'er her cherub face. Plain-robed lasses often are Each a mora bewitching prize. Than the blue-veined proudest star Gleaming from palatial skies. Viva Baeco 1 Tap the cak 1 We will drink this health of thine With a bate per from a flask Of the ruddy Tuscan wine, fteila, Bella, Graziella, Maid of maidens, Florentine ! MEETING STREAMS. "A gentleman to see you, sir." I was not particularly anxious to see my one at the moment my Martha made this announcement, for I was try ing hard to lini.-h a short story I bad ingagedto write by a certain date for a well-known magazine. For some days past my clerical duties had been usually ueavy and t ine was precious. Besides, I was in the midst ot an animated con versation between the two chief chanc ers in my tale, and this interruption sadly disturbed its course, ttill my vork could wait for a few minutes if it .vas necessarv. "Who is it" Maitha?"' "A stranger, sir." "Show him in," and with a sigh my MS. is laid aside. The person who entered my study was a young fellow of some two and wenty; tall, rather handsome, and with i smile that took me at once. I shook aands with him and offered him a chair. "My name is Davies," he said. "You are not likely to know anything shout me, as I came here yesterday. I need some help, and I have come to ask fou for It."' Mr. Davies spoke shyly, and, indeed it w as easy to see that he was not an ordinary beggar. I could not tell that it was money he wauted, but my expe rience led me to suppose it was. No one knew better than I how often men like him had gone to WTeckand ruin for lack of some timely assistance in this vast northwest, and if I could be of use to him it was my plain duty to be so. "I do not know if I have any ctaim npou you," h continued, "but I was looking through a directory in a store this morning, wondering if I could chance on the name of a friend, when I noticed yours, sir Mr. Stephenson. Some near "relations of mine in the old country are called Stevenson-S-t-e-v-e-n-s-o-n," he ; x-t the word and then went on with a wl-.tful air: "Your name is not spelt quite iu the same way,"" he observed, but ''directo ries are not always correct, and the name is not a common one. Perhaps you are a connection of these friends of mine; they live at Pocklington in Sur rey." .No; I had not even heard of the Ste vensons of Pocklington; but I had watched Mr. Dav;es attentively while he made his statement, and come to the conclusion that it had not been manu factured for the occasion. It had rather the air of something of the kind, but the man's manner made me believe that lie was sincere. Would he say in what way 1 might be of use to him? His hopes ha 1 evidently been a good deal dashed, for he continued in a slower graver tone: "Two years ago I came from Eng land to Canada. I was at Kugby, sir; and my father is a clergyman. When I left school I was articled to a solicitor, but I did not take kindly to desk work. I soon knew that 1 was not cut out for that ssrt of thimj. However, I did not think of anything else until a cousin of mine, w ho "had settled near Toronto his farm is a few miles north of the city wrote for me to come out to him. I jumped at the offer. I didn't know anything about farming which would Le against me, but I could learn. In any case I was sure I should like its free, open-air life a long way better than the atmosphere of a stuffy office." I nodded approval. If Mr. Davies had set about to win my entire sympa thy he could not have hit upon a better plan to gain it I had often pointed out that we Canadians are for the most part an agricultural iople, and had deplored that so many of our young men were not content to stay on their father's farms, but went to the city. I had preached to many a lad, better be a fanner any day than a clerk. Of course, "He that will to Cupar maun to Cu par," as the wise Scotch proverb says, but, in most cases the exchange from the country to the town is not a benefi cial one. "Well," continued Mr. Davies, "I stayed w ith my cousin until a few days ago. I-ast month I received a letter from an old schoolmate called Thomp son, who is ranching beyond Calgary, asking me to go out to join him. It's father a Wild life, but I thought I would like it; so I left Toronto and reached Winnipeg yesterday. I find I have not quite enough money to take me to Calgary; where Jim Thompson is to meet me. I have $-$3 and some cents, but I need a few dollars more. Will you kindly lend me a small sum?" "How much do you require?" I asked. "The fare is about $40," he faid suggestively. "Suppose I lend you f 10; will that do?"' "Yes, sir. I'll send you the money back' as soph as I see Jim Thompson. He told me before I started he would pay my passage out to him if necessary, but I thought I had enough. Of course, I might stay in town and wait till I hear from him, but it would be a waste of time." I agreed with Lim. Then Jwrolfc out a check in favor of Edward Dayies and handed it to him. He thanked me and withdrew. I went back to my MS., and succeeded in picking up the thread of my story. i A few weeks later the loan was repd me. By one of those curious coinciden ces which sometimes happen, the same mail which brought me the money and grateful letter in which Mr. Davies acknowledged my opportune assistance to him also brought me a check for a much larger amount than I had expect ed from the publishers of the magazine for which my story had appeared. Time went by, and soon Mr. Davies and the episode in which he had figured completely passed out of my mind. The evening of the same day that Mr. Davies had called upon me, 1 was pres ent at a bright an 1 delightful jtarty given by my friends, the Dalstoiie. They had been induced to come to Winnipeg from Hamilton during the famous "boom," of which many in the eastern provinces have a sufiicieutly lively recollection. They had beeu in time to share in the phenominal and unnatural prosperity of the period of inflation, but when the terrible reaction set in, aud prices weut down and down every day, they had suffered severely. However they were cheeiy, wholesome minded people, who faced their troub'e bravely. At the same time of which I write two or three years ago the full extent of the collapse was not under stood. Mr. Dalston was telling me how confident he was that a good harvest would cause trade to revive, and lliat the country would speedily recover. I was expressing a similar conviction, though I could not piu my faith to the results of one season, when my atten tion was taken by a remarkable face, w hich I did not remember ever having een before in the society of the city. The face itself was perfectly familiar to me; indeed, it must be known to a great many others, as art has made it live already for more than 100 years, and will go near to making it immortal. In the celebrated gallery of Dresden, there you will see to-day that beautiful face. " The picture has hung there for a century, and it shows no signs of fading out. Of course, the woman who sat for that wonderful portrait has been dead these many long years; she had her lovers; broke some of their hearts, 1 dare say, and had her say like the rest of us; but her face has not perished there it is on the canvas. As long as the colors List it will never cease to be a striking, and to most people, a charm ing picture. I for one, had not forgot ten it, and here, in Winnipeg of all places in the world, was the same face! I do not need t- oil you that it was not quite the same face; for, as I said, the womanjof the Dresden painting died long ago. But it was a face of a rare type; and the girl in my friend's drawing-room reproduced it exactly. Now no words of mine can do as much cer tainly not in a few touches. This is where the painters have the advantage of us. For when a really great artist irives the world a portrait he makes features and expression and soul (if I may use the word) together so as to tell a harmonious tale that the whole man stands before us. So when I say that the girl's face was oval, the forehead of that kind which is best suited by hav ing the hair brushed back from it and then massed above it, with perhaps a tiny curl escaping at either side, the eye brows arched high above the soft hazel eyes, the nose neither Greek nor Ro man, but a happy mixture of both, the mouth small and firm and shaped like the very bow of Cupid, the cheeks rounded and tinted with warm color, 1 cannot but feel that I have given a somewhat lifeless catalogue of certain details, and not a complete presentment. How can I describe the charm of it its grace; its vivacity, the look of wonder, struggling with humor in the eyes? Yet you can see all these and much more at a glance in the Dresden picture. The extraordinary resemblance was helped even by the way in which the girl was dressed. The white column of her neck was exposed save where a row of amber beads partly hid it; the square bodice she wore was of a dark rich material, tlie skirt of the same, but slashed across with a broad band of lace. It was almost impossible to believe she had sterped out of that century-old painting. An elderly gentleman was talking to her perhaps paying her some pretty compliment, for she blushed slightly as she glanced at him with a smile. I asked to be introduced, and found she was interesting and agreeable as could 1 wished. She was enthusiastic about Canada. She told me she was a new comer to Winnipeg indeed, to the Do minion, l'erhaps I might laugh at her, but she felt she must come out to the northwest. She did not know what it was, but she was sure she had a mission out here. There w ere plenty of flue young fellows at the Dalston's that evening, and I wondered if her "mis sion" was in the room. She looked forward with pleasure to the winter. Of course it was cold, very cold; but the skating and the tobogganing and the snow-shoeing. The sleighing how splendid it must be to glide along oyer mils upon mile of smooth snow, with the bells tinkling in the keen, clear air. She was delighted with her Canadian friends; the girls were so bright and jolly, the men such good fun. And on she prattled .in a way that was alto gether very winning. I was compelled to leave the party early, and though I did not see my Dresden face iu At inni peg again, I did not forget it, Two years later I was meditating a holiday trip. It was the middle of sum mer, and I had been hard at work for many a month and needed some change. The question was, where to go? Should I betake myself to Ontario the charm ing voyage across the lakes in one of t he delightful C. T. R. boats was very tempting. There was the United States, a tremendously wide field; what point should I make for? While I thus hesi tated events took the trouble of coming to a decision out of my hands. One morning a letter came witlj the Calgary stamp on tlie envelope, and the handwriting was quite unknown to me. This was what was said in it: "Dear Mr. Stephenson: Perhaps you have forgotten me, but I shall always remember your kindness to me on a certain occasion. You were good enough to lend me $10, though I was a complete stranger without any claim upon you. I can't forget that. I have tried to keep up some sort of acquaint ance with you, for I havp read every thing you have written since I saw you. Xow I am about to be married and I am very anxious tliat you should be associated with that very important step in my life. To come out here to me means a good deal of expense and takes up some time. But if you can get away from your duties iu the city for a fortnight pr three weeks, you will per haps allow me to make the money all rirrlit Tf mil haVA tlPVflf bflMl OUt herd you will be pleased to see the country; and, if you like, you can go on to tluj mountains. I can assure you, at any rate, of a royal time when you are with me. I can hardly say bow disappointed I will be if you are unable to come. Please telegraph if you will come. Very gratefully yours, Edwakd Davies. nere was a holiday, but it was even more delightful to be remembere I in this kind of way. What a pleasant feeling this unexpected letter gave me! Of course I telegraphed my acceptance of Mr. Davies' offer. Two or three weeks later I took the western train from Winnipeg, sped past Portage la Prairie, lying amid its yellow ing wheat fields; on across the long, green levels of the plains, with settlers' huts rising here and there, through the sandhill country, with its stunted trees ar.d marshy hollows; along tlie valleys of Assinldolne, where Brandon stands; on to Regina, and on and on westward for a couple of days, till we come to the land of streams and mighty pastures, and could almost persuade ourselves that we could see the far-off blue of the Rockies, and Calgary was reached. Here Davies, his frieud Jim Thomp son and two other young ranchmen met me, all determined to show every atten tion possible to the "parson." We spent a night in Calgary, a stirring town of the true western type, with its own local coloring in cowboys and miners and railroad men. Early next morning we set out for Man's ranch, as Thomp son called his place, a drive of some seventy miles. Davies and I had a buckboard, and the others were on horselack. During the day and a half we were traveling, Davies gave me an account of what had happened since I had seen him last. He was in high spirits, as was natural. How he enjoyed life! He spoke of the freedom and healthfuluess of the plains; then of the money that was being made out of the great herds. He was now a partner of Thompson's; an uncle had left him some money, and he had "chipped in with Jim," as lie expressed it. Yes, they were doing very well. He had built a house in the spring ah, yes, he was engaged before that, he said, with a happy look on his sun-tanned face. Then the young lady he was going to many w hat a wonderful and gracious, little woman she was! English, like himself, he said; but devoted to Canada. He slid so many pretty things about this sweetheart of his! If the conversa tion was inclined to flag about the cat tle and the country, a word about the girl and off he went like a sky-rocket. Next day the marriage took place in Jim Thompson's house; there was a table for an altar, and a couple of cush ions for the bride and bridegroom to kneel on, and a few chairs for the others in a big room which certainly had never been used for sur'i a purpose before. The Iride had arrived Lite the previous evening, and so I did not see her until sbe came up to the improvised altar. Lo, it was my Dresden picture! I recognized her at once, but I think she had forgotten me. After the ser vices was over ana i naa maae me pair my congratulations, I whispered to her that I was glad to see that she had found her "mission." She smiled and said that she knew me now. Had she not met me in Winnipeg two years ago! shortly afterward, she told me, she had gone out to Fort Macleod. What a scene to be remembered was the bridal feast! The whole-soul enjoy ment, the genuine, light-hearted laugh ter of these young fellows there were troojis of them from many a distant ranch, who had come to "see Ned through." JIow attentively they wait ed on the young ladies that were pres ent! What a bright spot in one's memo ries is all this! When I proposed the bride's health how they manage to get champagne iu these northwestern territories, notwith standing the prohibitory legislation, it is not for me to say I alluded, but very slightly, to the chain of curious coinci dences I have recorded under the name of Meeting Streams. The Trade of SfarrUgo. TiiA iwn.'ii rpinrt. when women com plain of want of remunerative employ ment, is that they snouia not worK, out, FinH inpn tn snnnoi t them. As there are 500,000 more women than men in England, it is obviously impossible mat every woman should have a husband. This state of things is as bad in Ger many also. The preponderance of the women over the meu is the greatest in the professional and upper middle classes. Among the richer aristocracy of England, and the absolutely working people, the sexes are still equal in num ber, and women can still marry. But the sons of clergymen, officers, civil servants, lawyers, doctors, and some of iI,p ennntrv irentrv find the struggle for existence too great io t lis kingdom; they emigrate, or leave tue country uy joining the military or naval service. 1 heir sisters all remain at home, unable to find husbands, and uneducated for work, even domestic work. These "superfluous women" most undoubt edly, is a body, perform the first duty of their sex that of being charmingly, they ari often handsome, are generally well-mannered, and well-dressed. They are "charmers," but there is no one to charm. They know very well that their chances of marriage are almost nil; therefore, shoul4 a solitary suitor with even a modest competency apiear, they feel driven to accept the first man who asks them, whether they care for him or not, and most generally they do not. Theii parents w ish to get rid of them, so they marry without love. An evil arises out of this, more ghastly than can be described. The marriage of conrewanoe is a recognized social in stitution abroad. In England, in this nineteenth century, the woman of the upper middle classes adopt it without acknowledging it. However we may affect to deny it, there is a vast amount or married unhappiness in all classes. The fault is sometimes ascribed to the present degeneracy of women and some times to the deterioration of men. The fault really lies in our social system, which gives a woman neither work noi money and obliges her to sell herself, before she has lost her only salable com moditiesyouth and beauty. As then exists four "superfluous women" to one man, the female has no choice, while the lordly male has the greater num ber from 'whom to pick and choice. Therefore, in this country, many women have not Only no chance or marrying at all, but no freedom of selection what ever. Tho Begs1 of Romp. It is estimated that the beggars d Rome receive $2,000,000, a year to almi and that 600 of them are worth fron fl5,000 to $25,000 each. A Bomar wbo can make money by begging Js not going to work. OX THK CONGO. Land Reported to be Flowing With Milk and Honey. The hundreds of beautiful islands of lhe Congo, some of them tea to twenty nines long, are as rich if not richer than the main hind, says Lieutenant Taunt m his report concerning his recent expe Jition to Africa. As a rule, both main land and islands are covered with dense forests, in w hich are to be found the rubber, gum copal, palm and other val uable trees. On the the mainland are occasional stretches of immense pla teaus, w hich the elephant, buffalo and other game use for feeding grounds. The islands above Baugala are covered with thousands of the valuable oil palm trees. The Congo abounds in most excellent rood fish, which form a staple article of food on the upper river. The natives seldom eat the fish when fresh, but smoke or dry theiu. The man-eating rocodile is met with throughout the iiver, aud in the region of the islands tnd sandbanks the hippopotami are found. I have frequently met herds of lateen or twenty of these beasts playing in the river. It disturbed in their breed' ing season they will attack passing ;inoe,s and sometimes steamers. One jf the state launches has been badly mimed by the tusks of a hippo. Of the mineral wealth of the Congo valley there can be no question. The natives of all sections possess iron and :opner in large quantities. The knives mil spears are made of the iron and lecorated with copper. Their brass ornaments are made from the matakus that they purchase in trade from the whites. I saw no gold ir silver; the natives lo not place any value on these metals. It has been reiorted that the Arabs liave found gold in small quantities in lhe interior above, Stanley i alls. The natives of the lower Congo are trnied with fimt-lock muskets, but they ire almost harmless. They have no idea of marksmanship, and it is the ex .'eptiou when a man is killed in their tribal wars. In October, lNs, between M'Bauza Mateke ami Vlvi, I was iu sunp with nearly COO of Makito's eopIe lone of the most powerful duels on tue lower river); these people were return ing from the coast with rum, gin, etc., but with my native caravau and one other white man. I camped as peacefully imong these 000 natives as I could have lone at Yivi. And again, one of the Eughsh mission is living alone at Lutete, and has been so for montlis, the nearest white man being utty miles from him. The agents of the state icver travel with a guard In the lower .ountry. and the state limits its cara vans to enough people lor the transpor tation of their camp equiiwge only. As far as I could leain, there is no case on iccord during the List two years where i white man's caravan has been molest- jd on the lower river, Tho Baskuugas are suierstitious to the hist decree; they rely for protection 3U the fetich charms, aud the medicine men of the tnws have great influence. On tho death of any person of note in the village the poison test is used. The medicine mail designates the man or woman susjiecte l of causing the death by charm or witchcraft. The poison is idmistered, and if it acts as an emitic that signifies innocence; if on the con taarv, it kills, the guilty one is punish ed. In some instances the laws of the Boskungas are very stringent. Stealing from each other is punished by death. Fighting or disorder in the market places is seriously punished, and if a lire inn is used the punishment is death. Te market place, which usually cov ers some acres of ground, is used as the place of execution, and it is not- an unusual sight to meet a skeleton hang ing and bleaching in the sun on the outskirts of the market, or to find a broken musket driven into the ground, which marks the spot where a man has beeu buried alive to his throat, his brains dashed out, then covered, and the musket driven into his body. "AH this to serve as a warning to others pot to use firearms in the market place. The native food of the lower Congo valley is principally peanuts and chi quango (made from the manioc root.) On market days fowl, eggs, goat and pork may be bought, and (in small quan tities) sweet jiotatoes, peas, beans, onions and banana. As a rule I did not rind the lower Congo people Intemperate; the native drink is malafu or palm wine, which, when fresh, is not at all intoxicating. Thev are fond of rum and gin, and these articles will go much faitliec iu trade than either cloth or beads. The native caravans demand rum or giu as a por tion of their pay. The woman are slaves, there being no marriage laws. Above Stanley Pool, and more par ticularly above the mouth of the Has- sai river the natives are an entirely different race, both physically and intel lectually. The greater part of these people are traders, and rich; they own many slaves; in fact, a chief populates his villages with slaves, the freemen of the village being the members of his own family. A singular fact is tliat slaves can in turn own slaves; ip fact, the men are more like retainers than blaves; the women bear that burden. TWO VGtiY REf TILES. A Monser Rattlesnake and a Great lleO LizarU at Mral-llmo. A great black rattlesnake was moving leisurely about in his cage in a shop window in Denver, when a reporter paused to look at the reptile for a few minutes. A bright patch of sunlight was (loodine the window, and In this the snake seemed to. be reveling; taking his holiday, as it were for it takes a considerable incentive fo make a snake move on a cloudy day. i Dp rattlesnake had his house all to himself (at least there were no other snakes present at the entertainment), but away in one corner of the cage, cowering and quiver ing in the most agonizing rear, sat a half-grown rat, with his feet curled up under him, his long slender tail fairly lashed into an interrogation point with excitement, and his bright little black eyes snapping as if they would pop out ot his head with horror. The ' rattle snake moved leisurely along. Erst to one s.de of the cage then to the other, some times turning his body slowly around near the corner where the rat, was, and sometimes crawling to the opposite end of the cage, put always keeping his glit tering eyes on the nit, which poor little animal seemed utterly transfixed with horror. Sometimes the snake would crawl up to the very front pf the cage, rubbing the length, of liis body along the bars, sticking put his tongue, and evidently drinking in the aunsMne which fl directly unon m, Jn. (tie meantime a crowd had congregated out side the window and were curiously watching the movements of tlie rattle snake, whom they expected any moment to pounce upon the terrified rat and devour it, but the snake took his own time. It was evidently no common rattlesnake, but a genuine monarch of its kind, who took life on an easy plan and never hurried about any thing. In an adjoining cage lay a great red lizard dozing in tlie sun on Ilia gravely bed prepared for his comfort. This creature was fat, and broad and torpid. It was also red and black alternately in the most artistic fashion, as if the deft fingers of some young lady skilled in the art of fancy work had beaded him to the queen's taste. But this has little to do with the story in question, save that the lizard was soon roused from its slumbers by being sharply prodded with a stick, inasmuch as it was time for him to dine. Having, therefore, the vision of a feast in its mind, it lifted Its fat, red body, opened its eyes, and awited developments. In the mean time the rattlesnake was moving slowly about his cage, and the timorous rat was crouching closer and closer to the bars. When the lizard awoke the people turned their attention to it, and the rattlesnake, attracted by the sound of footsteps, took its eye3 off the rat, for the time being, and fastened them in tently upon its next door neighbor. At that juncture the door of the lizard '3 cage was quickly opened and an egg was rolled upon the gravel'y carpet of his habitation. It rested there but a moment. The fat, lazy red, creature became possessed of momentary energy. Moving quickly to where the egg lay it seized upon it like some rapacious monster devouring his prey, and, taking it in its mouth attempted to swallow it down with a gulp. But the task was too great. The lizard's mouth was not large enough. The creature gsped and gurgled, and finally spat the egg out again upon the gravel. Theu rage seemed to inspire the lizard. He rolled his fat body angrily upon the egg, broke it in two pieces, and quickly devoured it one piece at a time. This operation beirg completed, his lizardship laid down to rest again, and the attentiwn of the crowd was at once turned agaiu to the neighboring cage, where the rattle snake was beginning to move rapidly in the direction of its prey. It was a plain case. The snake had tormented and tantalized the rat until, tiring of the sport, it had turned for a moment to watch the uxard feeding ou the egg. and the sight had evidently Increased its own greedy hunger. Making one swift advance upon the rat, he swallow ed it so quickly that not one of the sjiectators couid explain how it was done. As the snake swallowed the rat the animal could be seen slipping aloug the length of the reptile's body wilh un-1 mistable distinctness. A few more gulps and all was over. His siiakeship then, surfeited with the rat on which it had dined, soon flung itself on the cloth lining of the stage wh:cli composes its couch and sank away into sleep. Doubt less sleep brought t j it many visions of feasting time, many fields fairly paved with gigantic rats which it possessed the privilege to fall upon and devour. It was the first time the lizard had par taken of food for six weeks. The proprietor of the establishment said that thev uever eat oftener, and that caged rattlesnakes could never be Induced to eat frogs. If the rat had been thrown into tlie cage dead the rat tlesnake would have crawled over its body for the spaee of a year's time with out eating it; but it is the appearance of life in these smaller an 1 more helpless animals which seem to provoke the cruel desire of the rattlosnake. It is said that the rattles are designed by nature for the purpose of imitating the sound of insects, thereby luring the hap less birds into the toils of the snakes. A bird singing on the branch of a tree hears a chirping sound which it imag ines emanates from the throat of some juicy bug, quickly descends among a thick growlli of grasses ud never knows more, for it is at once seized upon and devoured by the reptile which has been lying in wait for it, perhajis for a day. This is one of the rattle snakes sly tricks not usually known to the public It is said, also, tliat there is no such thing as snake charming. Anybody may be a snake charmer who has sufficient courage to keep his eye fixed on the bright orbs of the reptile, aud to rrod it vigorously with a stick. In this way the snake may be irritated almost to death, and will never attempt to bite anything except the stick. It has long since been ascertained by those who deal in snakes that a professional snake-charmer never buys a snake until he has (earned that it is absolutely free from poison. I he rattlesnakes they use have their po.son-fangs extracted, and other varieties of snakes are many of them harmless. In this way wonderful feats are p rformed by so-called snake- charmers in public. It is a curious scientific fact that all elements of the poison found in a rattlesnake are inhe rent in the common Irish potato. A teaspoon upon being farced into a rat tlesnake's mouth comes out brimful of the poison so much dreaded by man. Chinese Dishe. There are some dishes that to Ameri cans and Europeans, seem disgusting, others that are merely odd. Walking through the Chinese market in San Francisco, one sees some very queer ar ticles of food for sale; small pats of soft cheese, varnished amber brown and stamped with Chinese characters; well peeled chestnuts, with tiny slices of white cocoanut wrapped in neat little cornucopias of glossy cabbage leaf ; forty kinds of dried nuts, fruits, (whole or Eliced) ropts and barks. Then there are living mrucs anu frogs; fowls and fish, alive, freshly dressed, and smoked or dried; meats, haf cooked in the carcass; wreaths of dried oysters strung on bamboo splints; abalones, like black models for dolls hats; shreds of white cuttle-fish, and a host of other edible curiosities. A straneer might suppose that they were simply curiosities, like the ancient sticks of barber-pole candy exhibited in the dingy window of a country grocery; or like the ham, elaborately decorated with geometrical puzzles in jelly, tp be admired," but on no account to be carved. Not at all. They are regarded as eatable, and they are eaten. In fact, the Chinese and Japanese eats everything that comes out of the sea. All the fishes are good to their taste, and are caught wi'J great skill. Seaweeds pf several sorts are sent far into the interior, to be used m thicken ing soups, gravies and pudding, and are highly prized rjecause uiey give a rerisu ing flavor pf salt, which in a luxury beyond the reach of most Chinese C03TLY AXCIGXT BLADE. Cnriosities Worth Noticing. Alongside the modern life-guard's sword, foity inches long, and the lighter infantry sword, thirty-three inches in length, Messrs. Wilkinson dis play many antique weapons, says the Pall Mall Gazette. There are genuine specimens of the famous Andrea Fer rari, which were so prized in Scotland in the old Gghting days, aud which are uow used to some extent by f e officeis in the British army. The quality of these swords show how little effect time has upon good metal and sound workmanship. Claymores hang on the walls beside the formidable l.ochaler ax. A huge Swiss two-handed sword, which it must have taken a giant to wield, did service Iu the fourteenth century against the Austrians. Even one of the famous Damascus blade3 is in the catalogue. When Timur Lung conquered Syria in the beginning of the fifteenth century he carried off all the manufacturers of steel into Persia, and their successors, having been dispersed all over the east, art; said to have lost the secret of making blades of more than ordinary quality, since w hich time the manufacture of genuine Damascus blades has declined, although there are many imitations. With respect to the genuine blades it umst be remembered that a good deal of exaggeration has beeu uidulged in. At the time when the natives of the east were well acquainted with the art of workiug in iron and steel wo, aud indeed all Europe, were in a 6tate of perfect ignorance. When the old Damascus blades were therefore opposed to those or other countries they were found to be infinitely superior iu temper and quality, and tlie extraor dinary prices that were offered ami paid for them (often as much as X'.IOO) sufficiently attest the estimation in which they were held. In the present day swords of equal or superior quality are manufactured at one-hundredth part of the cost. In some respects the b st even of our present light regulation blades a:e at a disatvantage wt:cn op posed to tbe heavy curved eastern cimeter, but they have the advantage that they can be used for thrusting, which, although unknown in eastern swordsmanship, is by far the most deadly form ot attack. A European cuts only or mainly from the writ, knowing tliat if he lifts the arm too far from its position of guard ho exposes himself to a thrust that would probably be fatal. On the other liaml, au east era swordsman, wlw seldom guar himself with his sword, but is provided with a shield and gauntlets to resL-t ; cut, has his sword ground as sharp as i razor and cuts from the shoulder only bringing into action all tlie strong muscles of the forearm and back, the small hilt of his sword allowing no play whatever to the wrist. As to the jowher or water of the genuine I hi mas- cus. blade this u attributabla to the na ture of the iron ore used and the method of oonvertin!! it into steeL The late Mr. Henry Wilkinson went thoroughly into the question, and obtained speci mens of Indian wcotz or cake steel, ant proved bv making blades from it that the figure so sought after existed in the steel itself, and to be developed required only the action of liirht and a chemical called kusees. Among other curiosities worth noting is a fierce Mahratta weniioii called wakdah, or tiger-claw, wh.cu the user holds in his hand, athxed by two rings to his Cngers. With a traitorous em brace he clasps his victim and tears him open. A knife penetrating a dollar is a reminder of the old swinish I uc- caneer's test of the soundness of hi blade, and a proof of the quality of the steel of the dav. Tunneling tlie Thames. Probably few even of those Londoners who daily pass across the Ixmdon bridge are aware that a few yards further west and deep down iu the bed of the river a tunnel is approachim! completion, if it has not by this time already reached tho Surrey side of tho river. This is one of the tunnels which the city of Iondon and Southwark Subway Com pany are cnijwwered to drive under the Thames, and extend as far as the Ele phant and Castle, for the purpise cf conveying passengers froi that city to that centre of tho industrial population. Tho total distance from the shaft on the Middlesex side to the Hibemia wharf, wall is nearly six hundred and seventy feet, and that ha baen ac complished in something like fifteen weeks, The work ha? been done on a very different plan to that adopted by by Sir I. Brunei in his famous but un fortunate Thames Tunnel, for the new tunnel more closely resembles the Tower Subwav, which wa3 the first txecuted example of a system of boring under rivers, which, in a slightly dif ferent shape, was suggested some time before Brunei obtained power to carry out his design. The new tunnel or sub way is not adapted for ordinary vehicular tratlic; but the ease with which it has been driven lciid3 support to the schemes of those who hoi 1 that, gi'-ert the wilL there will be no real difficulty in making one or more road wavs beneath the Thames to connect the busy and populous districts lying east of the Tower, In these days of cheap iron aud appliances which were unknown at the beginning of the cen tury, tunneling under rivers is com paratively easy to what it was in Brunei's days, and there are mary eu. gineerswho would ccngdmtiy under take the work and bring it to a satis factory conclusion, probably for a con siderably smaller sum than the new Tower Bridge Will cost, and with less than a tithe of the contij;n expenses which that construction will involve. The City and Southwark Company are so satisfied with the outlook of their scheme that they have deposited a bill in Parliament asking for powers to ex tend their lines from the Elephant and Cistle to the Swan at Stockwell, and if they obtain them, we may expect be fore the close of the century a rapid development of the new system e( un derground railways o which tlie smoky locomotive W''' V unknown. How Kissing was Introduced The story runs that kissing was in troduced into England by Howena, the daughter of Uenglst, the Saxon. At a banquet which was &iven by the British monarch in honor of his allies, the princess, after pressing the brim ming beaker to her Hps, saluted the astonished and delighted Vortigen with a little kiss, alter the manner of hei own people. Brandt, an alchemist, discovered phosphorus in 1677. Tbey kali claim jumpers in th western part of Kansas. GOLD LEAF. How, Where and by Whom Manufactured. It I Gold leaf is manufactured in about 20 shops in New York city and its sub urbs. It is e.timated that 20,800 ounces of gold are consumed here annually in making gold leaf. Gold can be beaten so thin that it will take 1,200 leaves to equal the thickness of the sheet upon which this paper is printed. An ounce can be beaten down to 2,500 leaves, 3J inches square. i A reporter was told that the gold isi bought of brokers in small ingots which J are melted into bars about a quarter of an inch thick. These are rolled into a ribbon as thick as note paper. After passing through the hands of tbe beaters it Is put in books, interleaved with manilla tissue, and 20 books are put iu a package. The ordinary sells for 7 a package, and the best $7.50 to $7.75. No dross comes from the gold as it is beaten, but there are ragged edges that drop eft. The leaf is used by gliders, bookbinders, dentists and sign painters. The wages of gold beaters are $11 a week. A piece hand gets S3 a beating. A good one can possibly do two a week, aud as many as nine in a month have been done. Extra is paid to a workman who beats the gold below five grains to a book. Some can go to 4 J and even four grains per book." "How thin can you get it?" a beater was asked. "It is beaten to one three-hundred-thousandth of an inch thick at five grains to the book. If it gets down to four grains it is only three huudred-and-sixty-thousandth of an inch. The New York system emplovs men only, with girls to do the cutting. The German system employs children of 8 or 'J, which system Hastings of Philadelphia tried to Introduce, but his workmen struck, and he lost his lead. On that system men do the beating and girls do the priming and filling." "Howls the gold beaten?" "It is beaten in moulds made in Lon don from the intestines of cows cleaned and varnished with a secret preparation. Tlie skins are put in packages of 900 skins each, and three of these moulds go to a beating." "How much gold is there in a beat ing?" "Fifty pennyweight in a beating. The ribbon of solid gold is divided into 170 or ISO pieces, each about an inch square. These are put into a cutch made of French paper four inches square. That is beaten until we get the gold to the edges. It is handled with pincers at that time. It is beaten half an hour. The pieces are then piled 20 on top of each other. They are then cut in four and doubled over, making 720. They are then put in a 'schoder,' or finer mould cut down. We fill the 'scheder,' with those leaves in the middle, ami break it out to the edges. We beat it about two hours, until we draw about 10 pennyweights off the schoder." "Does it have to be kept dry?" "We have to keep the windows shut; but the cutches, schoders, and mould take up so much moisture that they have to be put in a hut mould to press the moisture out." Does that finish it?" "Oh, no. The leaves are cut airain into four with a tool called a wagon. making 2.8S0, but the raou'ds hold on!y 2,700. The moulds are beaten four hours, at the end of each hour there being what is called a close, when thev are heated. Then the beater is through with it and the cutter takes it. This is the only work done by the girls In New lork. lhey can cut from M to 1 books a day at 21 cents a book. Tho ieaf when it gets in a look is so thin that it is handled only with the breath." "How is tho work tested? "Only with the eve. There is no rule about the business, but it is purely a matter of skill and judgment, lhe best is the kind used on glass, which shows all imperfections." 1 notice goldbeaters usually work i: basements Why is that; "A firmer blow can be given. If on the first story, there is a jar, which de teriorates the quality." Is there any adulteration in tho business?" "The Germans beat what u called a metal leaf with an alley. It is sold very cheap. It is the olemargarine of gold fit, aud will tarnish, iluch of it is used by bookbinders." "W hen did the trade start?" "It is very ancient. It is mentioned in the Bible. Gold leaf was used on Solomon's temple. The Chinese beat gold loaf, but it doe) not compare in niality with American leaf. N)iue of the Chinamen had trouble with their employers, but they soon ended it. They got the employer in o th.-ir lotlire room, and then one after another took a big bite out of his flesh." T'e Opal as a Popular Gem. The opal, which, ever siuce the days when Sir Walter Soott wrote lib romantic- story in which this stone figures so extensively, aud which, in these later days, is supposed to bring ill luck to the wearer, is growing to be one of the most highly favored and most caet'y of the precious jewels. The ban under which it has rested for so long a time has been removed, and where a few yjars ago they could be bought for comparatively low prices, are now bringing fabulous sums, A well known jeweler showed &e a necklace ot pals, which, be said, was cheap for S30.0C& This necklace is now the property of the wife of a Brooklyn mil lionaire. The central opal in the pen dant is alone worth $2,000. 1 miLt hardly be believed when 1 say its mag nificent color and luster dimmed the magnificent diamonds that were set with it. I saw at this same place an opal that was to be set iu an engage ment ring, which was valued at $1,000. The Suwauee River Song. An Augusta paper, in the course of an article on the Suwanej river "the 'enobscot of Florida" says: "This dark river has, too, its romance, as be ing the place which gave rise to a melody which, like 'Home Sweet Home, ' he affection of the heart will never let go. ior it was uere mat a t rench family, in the time ol .Louis AI, came over and settled upon the Suwanee and made a plaotation. After a while the father and mother and all died save one daughter, who, disheartened and desolate, returned to France, and there wrote, adopting in part that nesro dialect which she bad been familiar with on the plantation in her girlltood, a feeling tribute to the old folks at hon.e' in their graves in the far-off country." . NEWS IX BRIEF. The Ucited States colleges coitaln 18,000 female students. There are in the Unit d States 15,210,141 church members. New England in 1642 contained but fifty towns and villages. The first printing press in North America was set up at Cambridge. A car load of ostriches from Africa arrived at Los Angeles the other day. Oliver Optic has published 113 volumes. II is first book appeared in 1853. Nathaniel Bowditc'i, tbe eminent mathematician, v.as a cooper's appren tice. William Sturgeon, the able and famous electrician, rose from a cobbler's bench. Los Angeles County, California, is larger than Rhode Island and Delaware combined. The Yale law school is the only one in tbe country that has a four years' course. Twelve thousand people followed the body of Robert Burns to Its renting place in the grave. George M. Pullman, of palace car fame, has been knighted by the King of Italy, it is stated. There are said to be more beggars in Birmingham, Alabama, than in any otter city in the Sjuth. In one week recently 70.000 aoarta of strawberries were shiDoed north from Jacksonville, Florida. Iu the Spring of 1776 New Tork was supplied with water conveyed through pipes in the streets. Ninety per cent, of the travelers to eauern points from Butte, M. T.. purchase second class tickets. Button's "Studies of Nature" cost him fifty years of writing and rewriting before the work was published. It is quite the fashionable thing now to run down from Washington t O d Point Comfort for a few days. The first public library in Penn sylvania was instituted through the exertions of Benjamin Franklin in 1742. Correra, afterward president of Guatemala, was born in poverty, and for years was a drummer boy in the army. In England at the time of King Edward, lo27, there were three written languages in use, Latin, French and English. A resident of Eatonton, Georgia, has prepared and furnished a large and costly cyclone pit near the back dor of his residence. The oldest library in the world Is that of Kwotozo-Kien. which was es tablished during the Chow dynasfiy in China (B. C. 1122). Tlie Hawaiian government has just annexed Ocean Island, wh!Ci- S described as a sand-tank 1,200 miles from the Hawaiian group. The Mexican army, when on a war I footmg, has 100.903 men. divided as follows: Infantry, 131,522; cavalry, 1 2.3,790, and artillery, 3,600. I -A ciamond of good quality and un usual size has been found at Pcnca, Nebraska, it is reported, by a man who was sinking a shaft for coal. The latest ad vices from the volcano of Mauna L ja are that the flow of lava which was recently upheaved from that mid-oceau furnace had ceased. The river Thames is said to have ebbed aud flowed in a very decided manner three times in one hour and a quarter one morning recently. A resident of Strahave, Fenna., posse-ses a set of double teeth with which he cart bite a noil in two, crack a walnut and lift a keg of beer. Bulls for fighting purposes are worth from J20O to fciuG now l&Hexlco, an increase of nearly double, onac-" ' coutt of the rage for bull fighting. George Jeffers, a Merced County, (Cal.) farmer, lecame despondent over the prospect of a dry season and hanged himseir. The next day the rains began. The water uied in the White House for driuking purposes is con- veyel to the mansion by pines from a spring in Fraklin park, several sauares distant. The Bachelor's Club of Philadel phia asks all men to resign when they marry, except those who take widows f r life companions. These V ex pelled. The Chinese are said to manufac ture an anaesthetic not unlike cocaine ' in its action, and claim that the anaes thetic property is the juice of the eye of the frog. Manuel Barriant and his wife Maria have celebrated the eightieth anniversary ot their marriage at Mata nioras, Mexico. Tbe husband is 102 and the wife 0u. A Virginia justice of the peace has fined a fisherman seven dollars for con tending In open court that tbe moon had any thing to do with the ebb and Ujw of the tides. The cave animals of North Amer ica, according to Profesaor A. S. Packard, comprise a total of 172 species of blind creatures, nearly all of which are mostly white in color. A bald eagle killed recently near Santa Kosa, California, measured seventy-eight inches from tip to tip of his wings, and its talons, when opened, measured seven and a quarter inches. A Lake Michigan captain says that a long course of observation has con vinced him that vessels named after women are remarkably unlucky, as compared with those bearing the names of men. A Senator in the New Jersey Le? mature in opposing a marriage li cense bill for that State, said the other day in debate that if the bill passed Camden clergymen would lose $10,000 a year, as they had united 2700 Phihv delphians during tbe past twelve months. A studyof pension statistics moves tbe Washington Post to assure its female readers that the most health? business there is for their sex is to be a soldier's widow. There are now on tbe pension roll of the war of 1S12 only 2043 surviving pensioners, while there are 17,212 soldiers' widows. The contract for the supplying of coal (about 15,000 tons) to the Jersey City (N. J.) Water Works is to be thrown oiea hereafter to all collieries desinr-s to compete. ' Heretofore, it is stated, bids were sent out only to cer tain owLers, and it has been developed -that, with the exception of one of couise, got the contract), the'- have teen closed for year J,