A, POLYGLOT CITY. h BOM DAT AMI ITS ritOMINEXT . l'KATUllKS. Teople From All PnrM of tho World . "-A fltmly In Varied Humanity Women Weighed Down With Jowclrjr. OMBAT, writes Winslow Anilcrson in the Pan Frnnclsco Chronicle, is ono of tho chief cities in India, nml for beauty of scenery, as well n commercial ndv An tilles, it is tnmir- '"TpvJ (1 pwl by any otlior 'tid TV- i.i'.nsicrn citv. II Is y . . vY 'iLi.sitiialcJ on one of tho Vt?- " . ,11""-v Minds thnt I! x'k ''vilionnil on tho In- i w -linn const of the An- v. --. - bian rVn, having nn hrcn of nhout twenty-two squnro miles. Tho front of tho city open on n w ide hnrhcr which is studded with'islands nnd jutting promontories, iriving secure shel ter to the fleets of merchantmen. Bombay has n stormy history. It was the earliest settlement uf tho British in India. The island was coded to the English crown in I CM ns part of tho dowry of the infant Catharine of I'orlu trnl on her marriage with Charles II, In 1008 it was granted to tho East India Company, and in l'To" Bombay Island wss placed in a position of qualified de pendence under tho Governor of Bengal snd Calcutta. It is now tho seat of one of the greatest presidencies of tho Kin- ONE OF THE HrSlWO pire of India, Prior to the English oc cupation it wus under Portuguese and Dutch and Dative rules, nnd many a tierce battle has been fought for its possession. Bombay is now a thriving city of nearly one million souls, und ono hears more strange tongues spoken thero than in any other pluco in tho world. Its temperature ranges from scvcnty-livo de grees Furenhcit to 115 degrees, with from seventy to U00 inches of rain yearly, nnd a daily tide of from fourteen to seventeen feet. Tho city is handsomely laid out and has many magniliceiit temples, mosquos, palaces nnd public and private buildings. What interested us most, however, woro tho nativo quarters. Tliu streets are narrow nnd tortuous, although I urn bouud to suy they are cleaner than thoso of Sua Francisco, Tho houses aro picturesque iu tho extreme, with a profusion o( lino sculpturing, project ing stories, curious buy windows und HAITI DIlESStNO OX THE SIDEWALK, cozy, sunny nooks latticed nnd matted, without window glass, where tho fair daughters of Inuiu may be seen basking In tho tropical sun without much more clothing on thorn than a string of pearls (or a waistband. There aro mosques and Hindoo temples grotesquely carved and guudily painted, but of all, the street scenes, i wHh their throngs of pooplo and side shows and by-plays, nro the most inter esting. Hero the tide of Asiatic humanity o'.ibs and flows in ceaseless streams. Nowhore, excepting perhaps In Constantinople, can ono see livolier hues and gnyer displays of humanity or k busier throng of city life. Here they are coming and going in endless crowds, Hindoo, Uuzcrati and Murutba. Hore can be studied the brightest and dark est specimens ol every clime Arabs from Muscat, Persiuns Irom the Gulf, Afghans from the northern frontier, black and shaggy Boluchis, negroes from Zanzibar, islauders lrom too Maldives snd Laccadives, Miilagashos, Muluys and Chinese, Partis, Jews, Linear tishorraon, Rajpoots, Fakirs, Bopoys, Buhlbs and Europeans many of them in gay drossse or clothes of brilliant hues. The Indian lady is loaded down with silver and gold jewelry and precious gems. Hur ear have many rings in them, tome so large that they leach her shoulders. Next aontea the um, vitU riujjt lure I" r enough for a bracolot. Occasionally the lips are also ornamented. Then ahe has several necklaces of costly pearls, armlets, wristlets and anklets and In. numernblo rings on most of the tlngor and toes, Including the thumbs and great toes. An Indian lady's Jewelry was 9 f A WATKIl CAIlHII-.lt. weighed on one occasion and it was found to turn the scales at thirty-livo pounds. The conventional dress for ladies con- nits of a piece of silk or gorgeously colored cotton about hvo yards long and a halt a yard wido. This is wrapped about the lindy. The men have much less cumbrous clothing, bhoes they seldom troublo about. There nro scores of public bathing establishment wheru men nml women perform their ablutions TEMPLES AT BOMBAY. and chango their clothing. After esch bath they rub cocoanut oil into their heads and bodies. This provents the skin from becoming too dry and crack ing, as it othcrwho would in tho tropical sun. All their burdens are carried on their hends, whilo their babies arc carried nstrido their sides, as mo a Orientals do. All kinds of work nrc per formed in tho simplest pnssihlo manner. Uice and corn are ground between two stones; tho upper one, with a handle near tho edge, is revolved on the lower one. which is stationary. A small hole in the centro admits tho grain. Ono or two women turn this original grist mill for hours nnd so mako Hour. Tho bak ing is equally crude. The flour is mixed into a batter with water and put on hot ashes to bako. This is tho wholo process. A fermented liquor is mudo from the juico of tho palm treo. It is mixed with water and allowed to stand in tho sun; fermentation takes place, and alcohol and carbonic acid gas is the product. Tlusdilutod with wator is the National drink, and is known as "toddy," from the nanio of tho palm tho palmyra and can easily produce in toxication. It is a sweetened alcohol, water and curbonic acid gas inixturo of rather a pleasant taste. As a rule tho Hindoos ure a tomporutc peoplo. Ono might travel in India for a mouth and never see an intoxicated person, for tod dy if prohibited by their scriptures. Tho bather shops in India aro ex tremely simple A mat is spread on the road anywhere under a treo or in a shady nook. Tho barber always curries his razor and a puir of scissors with him. A small jug of water is obtuiued from tho nearest pool, and this with a littlo palm oil constitutes tho barber's nnuaiucn turium. Tho person to be shaved sits down on his haunches on ono side of tho mat and tho harbor on tho other. Oil is HIGH CAST BRAtllfltC Oinf, rubbed into the hair and besrU, aud the nuor a pplicd. Priests are sbarjd clean. heart and beard, one or more timet eacb week. The wster-carrier is another curious person in India, tie fills a goat or pig skin at tho nearest pool or river, slings it across hi shoulder and supplies wator for drinking and cooking, for watering the garden and for sprinkling the streets. Crude as this method may seem, the streets are better sprinkled than those of Ban Francisco. The picture shows a wntcr-cnrrlor glv. Ingaman a drink. Cups are not used for drinking, as ono caste could not drink out of the samo cup thnt another casto drank from, so tho hand is hold the mouth and wator allowed to run in to it and tho mouth by tho very siiuots process of gravitation. ' Tho people of India r.re ns simple minded and ns trusting as children, pro viding one knows how tJ tako them. Let them onco bo deceived nnd thoy never trust thnt individual again. In many ways tho Knglish have accom plished wonders in India in railroading, t umerco nn l government, but they have also taught the peoplo not to plneo too much trust in their fellow men. Tho white man has robbed nnd swindled these poor simple minded children of tho cmsniNO nicE. tropics to such nn extent that tho Indian is now fully equipped with falsehoods nnd deceit, nnd can nover bo relied upon in a commercial transaction. They ask ninny, many times tho valuo of their wares, show you one samplo and soli you n much cheaper one. Tho rulo now in India is to olter one-tifth or one-quarter what they ask for everything, and yet tho moment an Indian is made to under stand that you nre his friend nnd want to pay him tho correct prico for an ar tide nnd that you do not want to swin dle him, that moment he becomes as eon tiding and gcntlo minded as a child. Tho peoplo of India nro very rclig ious. They will die, if need be, for their nneicnt beliefs. Their domestic life is simplo, loviugnnd virtuous. Many of them piictice polygamy becamo it is their religion. Many of them marry a plurality of wives until they nro blessed with a malo heir, becauso he is tho only one that can sccuro them a proper burial. They nro exceedingly kind to their children and their household. Their uniform gentleness nnd kindness to all animals and living beings excitod our highest admiration and praise. They never cat animal food, becauso does it not necessituto the taking of life? And who is there in nil India thnt dnro tako nwny that which ho cannot givel To tako away ono holy, precious lifo that only Lord Brahma tho Great Creator of nil things can bestow? Tho Modem Thumb-Kin?. One of tho rcprcscntntivo women or tho day read a vory clover papar in New York before that intellectual body of women known to tho world as Sorosis. There was no newspaper report of her intellectual cllon given for too benefit of tho great world of women oulsido of Sorosis, but wo aro told with minuto detail that 'a jeweled thumb-ring flashed on the hand that held tho manu script, and that tho jewels were set thickly in the band and were of largo size nnd groat brilliancy." tioxAX TnrjtiB-niNo. It is a fact thnt a practice which origiuated with kings of the Orient is being monopolized by the queens of American society. Mrs. Charles II. Collis wears a beautiful thumb-ring sot with supphiios and diamonds. Ella Wheeler Wilcox who writes so pathet ically of the "narrow aisles of pain," wears a thumb-ring act with diamonds. So also does tho queen of the comic op era stage, Lillian llusscll. Ella Proctor Otis has threo thumb-rings, one set with big diamonds, and another set with rubios and diamonds, and the third, a quaint old ring of Persian origin. A few men among them Edmund ltussell, the Dclsartean apostle, and others who ought to know better wear thumb rings. The custom originated with tho signet ring of a king. Tho thumb, be ing tho strongest of the Augers, was used to seal documents of royal signifi cance. As it is worn now tbo thumb ring is merely a bauble. Detroit Free Press. Baseball At Sea. A bint as to bow basoball might be played at sea is given in tho Pall Mall Budget's note on a trip to Norwry, in which a game of cricket on the packet is this described : The ball was tied to about twenty yards of stout line; Whenever it was knocked cut to tea the fielders had to haul in tho line, which generally became entangled at tnis criti cut moment, and dotted the excited ef forts to release it ere the batsmau had piled up the runs. At other times the oatsman wculd be lassoei by the Hue studied to the ball, and time bad to b called to uuravvl tho hau MARS' MYSTERY ls TUB FtiANKT THE HOMI2 OF AXOTHKK HACK ? There Are Raid to tn Signs nn lit Bnrfnue ot Work That Could Have Hern Dunn Only by Human llclngs. P to within the past few weeks very few people had anything but an indistinct idea of tho planet Stars. But within the post few weeks this planet was ia what tho as. tronomirs call apposi tion. Thnt is vrry liko saying to the avcrngo mind that peas and bean multi plied by cabbage makes roast beef. Ho to find out exactly what tho meaning of apposition is one must first learn some thing about tho history of the planet Mars. Mars is tho fourth planet in order of distance from the sun. It is nearest to the world on which wo livo of all the great superior planets that make the solar system. Mars travels nround the sun in a mean sidereal period of 0SO.D7O7 days, on nn orbit inclined ono degree nnd lifly-ono minutes to tho plane nf the ecliptic, nt mean dint mice of 10,311,1)00 miles from thn sun. This orbit is considered eccentric, in somuch that its' greatest distance, 152, :)04,()00 miles, exceeds its least, 120, aiN.OUO, by more than 25,O0U,CU0 milo. When it is nearest to tho earth it is iu apposition. Now tho foregoing statoment is tech nical, nnd to the layman's mind tells little. What the average man can sec when looking throu jh a teleseopu nt Mnrs is n great big star. It doesn't seem to bo anything else, but it is. People who have mado n study of tho planet believe that it in really a good deal like tho world, and whilo they do not go so far as to actually say so, they think it possible that it is inhabi- mo 270 C!MA"AHEI.T.l"n rllART ted. It was somo fifteen years ago that Mars first beennio a planet thnt had any earthly interest to tho people that livo ou this globe. A very wise man that ucd to sit. up nights snd look nt tho sky through n telescope first inndo known tho fact that Mnrs was a good deal liko tho earth in its shape, nnd also uttered the startling theory that ho thought it possible that tho planet was inhabited. Peoplo laughed nt him just then, nnd ho faded into tho oblivion that comes to peoplu who nro in tho habit of discover ing tacts ahead of time. But after him came a nun who told the enmo thing again lu a now way, nnd who now has got to a point where the world is beginning to bclievo that ho is right. The mnn is Professor Schiapurolli, of Milan, Italy. He says that in his opinion the planet Mars is not simply u nebulous quantity of vapor, but it is u solid sub stance on which animals nnd men exist. Ho found that tho planet has a diame ter of about 4000 miles. Hy careful cal culation ho is confident that its year con sisted of US7 days, uud that each day in time was forty minutes longer than our day. Ho also found that tho planot whs made up of water and land, just liko our world. It has, ho says, sous uud conti nents und rivers. As to its deusity, it differs very littlo from the earth. Gravitation at its sur face must be much less than it is in this world. A man who weighs 150 pounds upon this mundane sphere would weigh utiout sixty pounds oa Mars. Iu fact, all substances would he reduced in weight by trnnslcr from our world to Mars. pfiMOS PATHS OF THE MOONS OP MARB. Upon that planet our oak would become as light as cork. Our gold would bo us light as tin. The question just now is: Is Mars in habited No one knows, nf course, whether it is or not. The only thing to judge by is in the diameter of tbo planet gathered by careful inspection through telescopes. Astronomers uro co.indout that thoy have seen tbo eternal snows nf tho two polar regions of our neighbor world. They are confident that its eontonts are red, and that its teas aro greou, aud thoy ure equally ture that its seas do not cover more than one-fourth of its sur face. The seas on our continent cover tbree-fourths of the world, which points the comparison. Tills scarcity of water iu Mars it its most remarkable feature. The theory that people really do in habit the planet is born out by tbo fact that Professor Schiarparelli it coulident that be bat discovered that Mart bat been traversed by gigaotio canals. It it easy to see that if there are canals on the planet, it it a turety that people rautt have built them. Thit idet, too, it strengthened by tho discovered fact that there it a scarcity of water in the planet. Necessarily the pUnet mutt be i 180 70 O VP 1.1 I I i K t-l I I ) I I I I p I . ' ,i ' 1 -,.'T ' ' ,' ' i ; ' 1 ' ; CO 1 .... V ' ' . '. ' I -f- CO '', i ' 1 1 i i i j n irrigated in thnt manner, nnd a there are canals, the conclusion is thnt there must be people there. . The cnnnls on the planet Mnrs are bo- " W M V ; I ' . 1. 1 1 f-o TUB ntC.ANTIC I.ICK TMI.ESCOI'E. lieved to have been cut for thousands ol miles across tho land to cornice; with the seas. They nre green in color, liko tho water, and, in order to bo visible through our telescopes, they must bo irom 10U to 400 miles in len-'tli. Thev must also be about 200 milos wide. They run mostly from north to south, for tliu seas divide; thn land from c ist to won. It is diflionlt to oincnivj of su-h enor mous public works, Imi, nothing dsn will answer. Our little citwls would dry up in crossing u thomvid miles of desert. If a people can omstrii!!'. such enor mous works as canals of tliu dimensions told in the forlorn;, it would bo im possible to tell where tho limit of their skill would reanii. They must be far ahead of America us en 'ineers and me chanics. Wha'. other astonishing tri umphs ns mechanic il originators they havu achieved must bo left to the future to discover. "Ono cirntimstano?,'' says Professor Proctor, thnt may at tint cicitu surprise is the fact that in a planet so much farther from tliu sun than the world 0 iO 'SO SHOWINO) riOI'lll.K CANALS. there should exist so close a reseniblancu to tho earth in respect to climatic rela tions. "Hut if wo consider tho results of Tyndal's researches on the radiation of heat, nnd ruinember that a very mo lerato increase in tho quantity of certain va pors present in our ittiiinsphcm would sulllco to render tho dim ite of thn curt i intolerablo through the exesss of Ii.m: just ns glass walls cause 11 hothouse to bo warm long after the sun has set a-u shall not tail to see that .Mars may readi ly bo compensated bv a corresponding iimiiigouicnt for his iticrcasod disttiico from the vivifying cuntru of his solar system." Professor S vift says that theio is cer tainly something that is mysterious in tliu typography of tliu plunet as vioivcd Irom tho earth. "Some of its markings," ho adds, "aro changeable', and appear ns clouds, whilo others seem stable and are indica tive of solidity. As, however. Mars rotates upon his axis so slowly no belts liko those environing Jupiter und Sa turn nro visible. "That Mars is inhabited is not nn un derstood fuct. Thac it w.is created to that end is a verity, but whether it is or not is only a quostion that wo can judgo by understanding its availability for tho giving of lifo to human beings. No telescope has yet been discovered ibul truly tells that I act." Professor Sciaparelli is Ihe only aitrouo mcr that has managed to draw a chart of Mars that us a planet exists only in the minds of others not quite so famous astronomers. Aside from tho discoveries of tho Ital ian professor tho credit of finding that Professor Schinparelli is correct must bu awarded to tho famous Lick Observatory ak. Sun Franciscc. Tho monuy to build this magnificent observatory was fur nished by Mr. Lick and it bus well dem onstrated his fuith that it wus ucedod by thu fact that it has told the world that Murs is probably another contiueut like ours. New Yurk Journal. Not Pond of Freaks. 'Tou are th sidy girl I ever loved.n "Then wo wculd bettor part -I don't want niarrv a freak." Life. fill A Herse That Breathe Through tf Sliver Tube. Minnie is the most remarkable horM in New York City. Minnio has lungs like other ho'rsrt and the uses them to brenthe, too; but the airis brought to thorn neither through the mouth nor nostrils, as in other horses, but through a silver tube. Minnio has been very asthmatic, and with the ordinary modo of breathing, the doctor said, her death was a question of but weeks or days. To savo her, for Minnie was a good, powerful and gentle ninre, her owners, F. A. Seagrist fs Co., consented thnt an operation be performed on her throat. Accordingly Votlnary Burgeon James Qnmil was called in about a year ago and mado a seriei of incisions into thn throat nnd tracheal tube, and Minnio at onco began to breathe quite freely. But how to keep open these sluices of respiration was tlst next question. For although in cour of tiiuo tho apertures would heal ami cause no pain, tho danger lay in their becoming clogged by impurities of the atmosphere, ns well ns by the ohlcgin from the horse's lungs. V";' ' y 1. Tnn AppyiATt's in rnsmox. After nn unsuccessful trial of sever il weeks Dr. llamil hit upon tho idea to in sert nn irtihcial tracheal tube of silvel into the horse's gaping wound. This was done, and Minnie has since ex perienced no moro inconvenience in breathing than it she hail never beet nlllictcil with asthma. The tubo is a curiosity. Two crescent limped tubes, scooped out liko 11 shoe, horn, nre fitted into cadi otlior in sucli a way that ono tube passes into tho up per part ot tho trachea, while tho other hangs down into thu lower part. Tin parts of the instrument that uro visible) nro tho shank of the lager horn (the) shank of the other being insido of this) nnd the Hat round disks nt tho outer ends of thu horns, snugly fitting against each other so that they look liko ot '. PnONT VIEW OP TfTE TinEATWISO AF 1U HATCH. 3. SIDE V1KW UV noTII SECTIONS 1'I.ACEO TOIIKTHKIl. disk threo inches i.i diameter, witn an npeituie as big us a nicad, throUj.i which the uir is carrie I. This instrument is t-iken out by tin stableman twicu a day and cloano I. If this precaution were oiuitlcik for only u day the accumulations would be so grea". that Minnie would bu compelled to hnvo recourse) for breathiug to time sir er iiiiinerary oruu, ber uoie. Nuw Yorj World. An Kver Itcudy Momo-Trap. An JC11 glisli journal eille 1 Invention, illustrated an ever-rea ly mouse-trap. Or) the iiiiuu.ui'oi wnicu is -m. siuytinui, ol Jsoutlucs. The littlo apparatus, whlca ran 1)0 readily constructed at ho no, lias t.v. frames, to which a movable platfor.n is pivoted. Above this platform is sus pended a tmall stick, to tho point of which is attached the bait that is to ex cite the appetite of thu little rodent. Tlut platform, being horizontal, is supported at one end and held iu place by a book or box, but accessible to the mice. The bait is suspeudud above thu loosj end. As soon us tho mouso bus traversed thu pivotod center its weight is sullbiuu1'. to rock the board and tue nuiiuttl tumble into the pail ot water at that ojd. It cries of distress before it drowns uttraut tho other mice, und thoy come to su4 whut is goiug oil. They alio tip. til board aud meet with a similar fate. Successive gent rations ol tho Alllm family of llarrodsburg, K., have neon iu ofiice continuously at Circuit or County Clerk since 17$:). ' CR