SULLIVAN REPUBLICAN. W. M. CHENEY, Publisher. VOL. VIII. SONG OF THE FARMER'S WIFE. Monday is for washing, Tuesday is for ironing, Wednesday is for mending and putting clothes away; Thursday is for churning, Friday is for baking Saturday is always the grand cleaning day. But then there is the breakfast. And the dinner, and the tea to get; Besides, there is the milking to be done each night and morn; The hens to feed, the knitting. The sweeping and the bread to set, And the carding of the wool when the pretty sheep are shorn. There is never any ending But always work beginning, From early Monday morning till Saturday at night; But oftentimes I And, If a merry song I'm singing. My heart is gay and happy, then all my work seems light. —Uodcy's Ladies' Book. MY SINGULAR VISIONS. Early in the winter of 188- I was lodging in a large, old-fashioned house in London. Insomnia, brought on by business troubles, had reduced me to a state of nervous collapse, and I was on the verge of serious illness. Rising one night, after vainly courting sleep for two hours, I determined to take a warn bath. The hour was 2 o'clock, j Having thrown on a dressing-gown, I i entered the bathroom, and turned on the | hot water. While the bath filled I gazed out at the rear of a house, about one j huudrcd yards distant, in C street, j Suddenly, on the illuminated curtain of a room two or three floors above the street, 1 I saw figures of a man and woman in [ silhouette. Stirred by curiosity, I watched the curtain with its tell-tale ; pictures, wondering what movements j they would execute. As I gazed, surprise j and horror seized me, for I saw the man I raise a shadowy arm and pierce the woman's bosom with a dagger. She threw her arms wildly in the air, opened I her mouth, as if to emit a scream, and fell 1 to the floor, whence, of course, her figure cast no shadow on the curtain. | All this had occupied perhaps less than two seconds, but in that time I endured a mental torture such as I had never felt j before. As the dagger descended I in- I voluntarily threw out my arms, as if to shield the victim, and uttered an ex clamation of mingled rage and horror. The absolute silence of the pantomimic murder made it more shocking, and for an instant I felt as if tin? darkness and loneliness of the night had shut me in with the murderer, and made me a participator in his guilt. I turned shud dering from the window just as the ! shadowy criminal stooped toward the spot where his victim lay; and before I could cry out, I reeled and fell heavily to j the floor. My fall roused the whole house, and Philip Holt, whose rooms were on the same floor with mine, carried me to bed. j The vision of that night hastened my long-threatened illness, and ten days passed before my faculties returned sufli- 1 ciently for me to relate what I had seen. ' The doctor smiled at my story and said: "It was a pure hallucination, my dear | fellow. Such things are common to per sons in your condition." "But," said I, "the thing happened when I was wide awake, and in every detail it was as distinct as any genuine occurrence I ever beheld." "Not at all remarkable," was his re ply. "You ought to be satisfied with the knowledge that there lias not been a j word of such a crime in any newspaper. An affair of the kind could not have been concealed for ten days. Don't think of it any more." Two weeks later I was in my usual health, save that my old trouble of in- | somnia hovered near, and recurred with : any imprudence in eating, worry, or ex citement. Not entirely satisfied with the doctor's theory of my vision, I went to the lodg- ! ing house in C street and inquired for rooms. A snuffy old hag, with peer ing, suspicious eyes, and an air of unde- j tected criminality, showed me through the house, and offered to let a furnished i suite, consisting of bedroom, sitting I room, and bathroom. As near as I could guess, the sitting-room was the one where the crime of my vision had been com mitted. "Who occupied these rooms last?" I inquired. "Mr. Carr and his wife," answered the hag, with evident unwillingness. "Do you know Mr. Carl's business?'' "The tenants' business hain't none o' mine," she replied, sharply. "When diil the Carrs move out?" "About three weeks ago." "Did you sec Mrs. Can' on the day j they left the house?" "Now what do you ask nie that for? I don't watch people's doin's in this house. The tenants is respectable fam'- lies, and they don't like no mcddliu'. If you want these rooms you can have 'em, but you won't stay long if you ask too many questions about your neighbors. We don't want no troublesome or worrying people here." It was evidently useless to ask further questions, so I tramped downward j through the ill-smelling, narrow halls, i my suspicions far from lulled. When I again spoke to llolt on the subject, and told him that my suspicions still existed, he frowned and said: "If I your permit yourself togo on in this way ! you'll be in bed again. There is no rea- j sonable doubt of your hallucination. The | books are full of such cases. Further- j more, the woman could not have been ! actually murdered, or the crime would j have come to light before this, and if she was only wounded, it is not your business to ferret the matter out. If j you're not careful you'll get into the ] newspapers and be made ridiculous." This last argument was enough. I gradually came to accept the theory of my friends. I passed through the winter without further illness, but gained strength slowly, and when spring ap peared my sleeplessness returned. With j it came an irresistible attraction toward the bathroom window, whence my vision of a few months before had been seen. Whenever I lay awake, I went some time ; during the night, and stared out toward j that uncanny lodging house. Night after . night I saw nothing, and turned away, J relieved at the assurance that one symp- | torn of my former illness was wanting. Finally, at 1 o'clock on a cool April j morning, after three hours of vain toss ing in bed, I entered the bathroom, with my eyes directed toward the house. For an instant I could not credit the vision j that met my gaze. On the luminous cur- , tain where 1 had seen the shadow panto- { mime before, the same tragedy was being enacted. This time I had arrived a little later in the progress of the scene, for all j 1 saw was the falling woman and the withdrawn dagger in the hand of her j companion. The man stooped, as before, j toward his victim, and I waited to see | him rise, in hopes of obtaining some as- | suranee that what I had seen was real. I saw nothing further. If the shadowy slayer had stooped to a real victim, he must have risen in such a spot that his figure was not brought again before the | light and the curtain. Filled with forebodings of a new ill ness, I awoke llolt and told my vision. We went to the window, looked toward the lodging house, and saw only the faint ! gleam of unlighted panes. Holt gave me an opiate, and next morning the doc- j tor had me removed to the country. I remained out of town all summer, j bathing, fishing and boating. For three | months I went to bed tired every night, and slept ten hours. Then I took a long sea voyage, and arrived back in about j the middle of September, more robust than I had ever been before. Holt and I j laughed at the old hallucination, and tlic ! doctor rallied me considerably upon my ! detective spirit of the winter before. On the first night in my lodgings I forgot the fateful window, and slept without di«' «rbance. The next night, however, I caine in late, and yielded to a sudden | whim that led me to the bathroom win dow. As I entered the bathroom I looked over toward the lodging-house, and gave a little start at seeing a light in the very . apartment that had so long possessed for me a fascinating interest. The night was warm, and the window whence the light shone was hoisted. The curtains ( were drawn also, and I could see pretty clearly a man and a woman sitting oppo site each other near the center of the ! room. I shivered a little on discovering that the couple were very like those of pantomimes. As I gazed I saw the woman suddenly start toward her compauion with some | gleaming weapon in her upraised hand. I felt my heart quicken and my breath j come thick. The man rose to receive i the attack, and I saw a shining dagger , plunged into her bosom. Trembling I with horror, I was about to cry out,when a hearty,natural laugh burst upon my ear ' i from the hall. On looking round I saw my friend | Holt in the doorway. "Merciful powers, man, did you see that?" 1 gasped. I "Certainly," he said, with another laugh. "Then how can you stand there laugh LA PORTE, PA., FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1889. ing? If we both saw it there can be no doubt of its reality." "It was real and unreal, old man. Your sight is vindicated and the doctor and I arc put to shame, but there is no cause for horror. See, the light has been turned out and there is nothing more to be learned. Take something to steady your nerves and I'lMexplain the mystery." Wondering at his language, but con siderably reassured,>l followed him to his room, and sat down. "Now," said Holt,<"the thing you saw to-niglit" (I shudderediagain as he spoke) "and on two other occasions is easily ex plained. James Carr and his wife, who have lived in that apartment off and on for eight months, are known to many theatre-goers here and elsewhere as Arthur Leroy and Mile. Picard. What you saw to-night was a rehearsal of an incident in a play which is to be pro duced at the X Theatre early next week. You'll find the very scene on a dozen boardings in the streets. It's a quarrel. The woman attacks the man with a pair of scissors, and he responds with a dagger. The play was produced in the provinces last winter, and at one or two watering places in the summer. You've seen three rehearsals." "Holt, I don't believe you," I cried, as it flashed upon me that my old illness was returning, and that. Holt had taken this method of diverting my mind from the threatened calamity. Holt promptly went over the whole occurrence and his description differed in no important feature from my own vision. On the next day I went round to my doctor, laughed at his learning, and ne cepted liis apologies for the discredit lie had cast upon my visual sanity. That evening at dinner while reading an afternoon paper I came upon a con spicuous heading in these words. "Slain at Keliearsal." 1 started, read on, and discovered that James Carr, alias Arthur Leroy, had killed his wife the night be fore in their rooms in C street. Then I knew that Holt and I had ac tually seen the crime committed. According to the newspaper's account, Carr, on being arrested, had confessed the homicide and pleaded self-defense, lit? had been married five years, but lie and his wife had always lived a cat-aud dog life. After their rehearsal of the night before, she had called up an old grievance, and finally, in a fit of auger attacked him with a pair of scissors, the very weapon she was to have used in the mimic scene on the approaching "first night." He had defended himself with the dagger just employed at rehearsal, and was horrified to find that he had slain her. Nobody quite believed Carr's story first, but the testimony of Holt and raj self saved his neck. Mummified Bodies on a Battlefield. Captain Thompson of the schoone: Challenger has just returned to .San Francisco, from a long cruise in tin South Sea and along the South American coast. He had in his possession a little black earthenware jar which was taken, with valuable jewelry, from the tomb <>l one of the Peruvian Incas, near Pisagun. No tinted pottery is made by modern Peruvians, and it is estimated that tlii s jar was made in the time of Cortcz. The captain also secured one of the Inca's teeth. He visited the battlefield of Tarapaca, where the Chilians and Peru vians met November 17, 1879, and the Peruvians, after losing 4000 men, were forced to retreat, leaving their dead un buried. "In any other country," said the cap tain, "these unburied corpses would have been reduced in a few weeks to skeletons by wild animals or the ele phants, but for over 100 miles on either side of the battleground there is not a spear of grass. There are, consequently, no wild animals, and the bodies remained undisturbed by them. The soil, too, is strongly impregnated with nitrate of soda, and this, in connection with the hot, dry atmosphere, has converted men and horses into perfect mummies. Seen on a bright moonlight night, as I first saw it, the battle appears as if fought but a day or two ago, the colors of the uni forms being still bright anil the steel ol their weapons untarnished. Inspection by daylight, and a curious phenomenon is observed. The hair of the bodies of the men has grown since death to a length of from two to four feet, and the tails of the cavalry horses are now long that, if alive, tliey would trail far behind on the ground."— Globe-Democrat- Mrs. Prank Leslie wears black leather boots with tips and laces of silver. HYPNOTISM. A POWER WHOSE MANIFEST A- j TIONS SEEM INCREDIBLE. Practically the Same an Mesmerism— Value in the Treatment ol'Dis ease— Capable of In jury Wlien Abused. The term hypnotism is nearly synony mous with mesmerism, animal magnetism, braidism and syggignoscism. Hypnotism | is believed to have been practiced many centuries ago; but little, however, is; known of its history previous to the time of Mesmer (1778). Since then hynotism has been much studied by many eminent men in the professions of medicine, science, religion and the arts. There came a time when the interest in it flagged very greatly, but a few years ago a revival took place in France, and since then it has been generally recognized as a therapeutic agent an pro duce a state of insensibility, so that, surgical operations could be performed without pain. But it has been applied for many other purposes, and some men, very skillful in its application, use it in the treatment of a long list of diseases both acute and chronic. Nervous affections sometimes yield very readily to its influence. To produce hypnotism, operators have methods which vary somewhat in detail, but the principle is the same. Most all use passes, although some depend almost entirely, if not entirely, upon the fixation of gaze. For reasons which will appear anon, none of the methods employed to produce the hypnotic state will be de scribed in this communication. As to the force generated or liberated in hyp notism, no one pretends to know, but many believe it to be electric, or perhaps magnetic. According to one observer, the description the subjects give of their sensations is that they first feel their fingers tingle and their hands and feet get cold; then they become sleepy, and when told that they can not open their eyes, they say they hoar and know all, but can not open them; then comes sleep, unless it is desired to extract a tooth or do some such work when the subject is not entirely unconscious. Then they know and do as bidden but suffer no pain. They say if the skin is cut it. feels as if something were being gently drawn over it, and they feel the forceps applied to the tooth, but that pulling the tooth feels like pulling a peg out of a hole. As to the value of hypnotism as a remedial agent, there is necessarily much difference of opinion. Some physicians consider its range a very limited one, while others think it applicable to a long list of affections. The majority of those who ought to know best appear to agree that it will undoubtly prove of very great service in properly selected cases in medical practice. As for its use in surgical operations as a substitute for gas, ether or chloroform, it can never displace them to more than a slight extent, except, per haps, it be with children. Very many who are about to have an operation per formed must necessarily be so nervous that hypnotism will be quite out of the question. And there will doubtless always exist persons who will be insensible to the ef forts of operators. Some subjects are easy to hyptonize, while with others it is the reverse; to which of these classes a person belongs cannot be known until an effort to put him into the hypnotic state is made. And in the •susceptible eases not infrequently several seances are necessary before the power of the opera tor is sufficiently felt. One very important point that the study of hypnotism has brought out and emphasized, says an obsever, is the po tency of suggestion. Doubtless most of the slight aches and pains that the gen eral practitioner is called upon to treat are ] tartly imaginary, and all that is nec essary for cure is a certain amount of faith on the part of the patient, begotten by judicious suggestion by the medical man. At first sight this seems to be a sort of chicanery, but it is impossible to deny it, efficacy, and it is much safer for the doctor to acknowledge, to himself at least, that it is not his simple remedy which has wrought the cure, but his sug gestion to the patient. We now come to the reason why none of the methods employed to produce hypnotism have been herein describe)!. It is an agent which only should lie used by reputable physicians, for, like others which they employ, it will do much harm if injudiciously applied. Were tin methods known there would natural!* In Terms—sl.2s in Advance; $1.50 after Three Months, a tendency on the part of some to try it is a means of amusement, while, without doubt, there are not a few who would use it for no good purpose. That hypno tism may be rightly applied and without injury it must be exclusively confined to physicians, who alone are capable of dis tinguishing between these subjects upon whom it is likely to do good and those likely to be injured by it. It is a well-known fact that persons who are of ten hypnotized finally become so suscep tible that the act is accomplished with the greatest ease. And, in not a few in stances of subjects so treated for a long time, it requires scarcely more tlnm a single glance for the operator to throw them into a hypnotic sleep. So it will be seen that hypnotism might prove a menace to society unless steps were taken to guard against it. The first precaution to suggest itself is the prohibition of all public exhibitions of hypnotism or mesmerism. This re markable power should, if possible, be ; limited by law to the treatment of dis : ease. And the operator should be per mitted to influence his subject only as ! health may be improved.— Buxton Uercild. An Engagement Recalls a Tragedy. The Ilatzfeldt-Huntington engagement recalls a romantic story of about ten years ago, in which Miss Clara Huntington, then in the very first loveliness of maid enhood, was innocently involved in a i tragedy that shocked the entire commu nity of San Francisco. Miss Huntington was at that time a beautiful girl, with all I the simple coquetry of her ftge and her recent emancipation from the school-room. She was surrounded by numbers of ad mirers, among whom were a certain Mr. Daly, of, if I am not mistaken, New Haven—a blond, tall.distinguished-look ing, frank and direct in manner, and a man most attractive in society; and a Mr. Hanks, who was said to be h mining ex pert who had made his money in Peru. He. too, was very handsonie, although of lan entirely different type from Daly. Both men were infatuated with Miss Huntington, and in justice- to every one, I may say that Miss Huntington's money was not by any means an important in fluence with either of them. One night the two men called upon Miss Huntington in the Palace Hotel, and on leaving quarreled hotly about the iiucstiou of precedence in wooing the heiress. In the excitement of the argu ment Daly struck Hanks, knocking him down on the marble flooring, just in front of the hotel dining-room. Hanks swore vengeance for the blow, and men who witnessed the altercation, and knew llanks's disposition, warned Daly togo armed. Daly, however, scoffed at the proposition, and asserted that he never had gone armed and never would. On the following morning the city was elec trified by the story of a tragic shooting affair, involving the two men whose quarrel had already become known. There were a dozen eye-witnesses to re late the dreadful story of llanks's shot from behind a sign-board, of Daly's fall, and his dying words: "You coward! and there were murmurs loud and deep of Lynch law. Hanks was immediately imprisoned, and all the facilities for making his exit from this world being left within his reach by the curious legerete, which was manifest at that time in the prison regu lations,he secured a Springfield rifle from a stack standing in the corridor where he was allowed to exercise, seated himself, placed the muzzle in his mouth, pulled the trigger with his toe, and entered into mystery. The newspaper accounts of the affair were most curiously worded, and it is scarcely necessary to say Miss Hunt ington's name did not. figure in them. Utterly blameless as she was in the affair, the sensitive girl was overwhelmed by the event, and it was long before she re i covered from its shock.— Town Topic*. Making a Nose From a Wish Bone. Dr. L. F. 11. Tetamorc, of Brooklyn, has performed an experiment in the way ol providing a new nose for Mrs. E. Hoffman. lie substituted for the natu ral cartilage, eaten away by disease, the cartilage from the breast bone of a chicken with a portion of the bone attached, lb' divided the skin of the sunken nose of the woman, ami cutting the bone anil cartilage from the breast of a live chicken, placed them under the skin of the woman's nose, and adjusted it to the proper shape, covering it with skin drawn down from the forehead. It will take two months to determine whether the experiment is a success or not. Henry Labour-here, editor of London Truth , was for years a rover iu the wilds ot the far We*t. NO. 9. FUN. The pig who gets into clover thinks the sward is mightier than the pen. Water differs from a good many things 111 that it is highest wheu there is most of it. It is when a man is in the iron grip of poverty that his clothes begin to get rusty. Poverty may bring ill-health in its train; but it ensures quick treatment by the doctor.— Puck. A river is one of the queerest things out—its head isn't near as big as its mouth.— Kentucky State Journal. The man who married his pretty type writer operator found that she refused to be dictated to afterward.— New York Journal. A hen-pecked husband said in extenu ation of his wife's raiil upon his scalp: "You see, she takes her own hair off so easily she doesn't know how it hurts to have mine pulled out. ' Sol Tingle—"l was told to-day that that lovely Miss Perkins was worth more than fifty thousand in her own right." Fidus Achates —"Hump! That's noth ing to her pa value."— Judge. "Yes," said the dentist, as he yanked away at a tooth regardless of his patient's yells, "a man is bound to succeed at his "work, provided it is done with sufficient pains."— Merchant Traveler. First Anarchist—"The time is nearly ripe for another uprising, I think. Are you ready togo through tire 'or the ijood of the cause?" Second Anarchist — "Go through tire? Why, I'll even go through water if it is necessary."— Terre Iluute KjjurM. "Papa, can't a human being move the upper jaw?" "No, ray son, and it's a irreat question in the minds of the court, if some of the under jaws ought not to have been hoppled in some way." and he looked hard at the maternal partner in the concern.— Dannille Breeze. A Cure for Obesity. 4 Professor Schti'eniger, the German doctor who gave Prince Bismarck a new lease of life by curing him of his obesity, is now one of the most influential men in Berlin. His list of lady patients is as long as the Unter den Linden drivtj, and he asks and gets fees that turn the other doctors green with envy. His system consists principally of doing without liquids. No beer at all, and the strain of doing without this is very nearly suf ficient to reduce a German to a skeleton, no coffee, except once a day a small cup ful, very hot, and with no milk and one lump of sugar, uo tea and no water. If the patient suffers from thirst she may eat fruit, suck the juice of an orange or mix the juice of a lemon with a few table spoonfuls of water and drink it. When the thirst becomes difficult to bear any longer a cupful of boiling water, as hot as it tfan be drunk, is allowed. It is surprising to find, however, with what a very small quantity of liquid one can ac custom one's self to live. At tirst Pro fessor Schweuiger's patients protest loud ly their inability to do without liquid of some sort, but his invariable reply is: "Very well, madam; you can do as you like, but don't expect, to get thin." That always reduces them to terms, and though they find it difficult, at first they soon learn to live very comfortably on a few tablespoonsfuls of liquid in twenty four hours and joy to find their too, too solid flesh beginning to decrease "visi bly." The German women are all prone to flesh, and hardly arc they out of their teens before they begin to thicken alarmingly and grow ponderous and un wieldy. One of the leading actresses in Berlin lies every afternoon for an hour with cracked ice in a cloth wrapped around her body to numb it so that she can bear the laciutr for the mifht's per formance, which is done by two muscu lar maids.—JY etc York World. Good Noses Are Scarce. Of all the features of the human face the nasal organ, being the most promi neift, stands supreme as a revealer of character. Its form gives the greatest expression and individuality to the facial ineaments, and even tiie voice is affected and toned by this important member. The individual whom nature has blessed with a really well formed and perfect nose should indeed be grateful,and on an average barely two per cent, of the ordinary population can claim to possess a perfectly shaped nasal organ. We should never make enemies, if for no other reason, because it is so hard to behave toward th«'in us we oujht