STRICKEN HAMBURG. PESCniPTtOM OK TIIH CUOL-r-tx fcllA-lNKBUTRD POUT. On of ttin Four Great Rnport la Vtha World Klnis Quay nnd Irrrgntitr (timet Ths City' Attract Ion, V' iA nn tiiiii of r llimbutii sT'f vflV HiiTre and Antwerp Sl6i&vXl i ere the gntnwny of vS'vXVIaK i"rnl'B w,llrn l,en SmV outwnrd for the thou inmUoi emigrant to coino to America. It is the purpose of this nr tide, savl the New Vnrlr Wiipltl. rt ntvA Cil ...... , ... r'f!l. Kime Idea of Hnmburii, Commerce tins mndo ITambtirg grunt. Next to London nnd Liverpool it Is the greatest commercial placo of Europe, nnd with New York It in ono of tho four great seaports of the world. It Imports amount to more than I billion, dollars annually. Nine thous and vessels risit it every year. From It are lent thousands upon thousnudj of migrants to America. ; Hamburg liei on the Lower Elbe. It It seventy miles from tho North 8-a nnd 171 miles fiom Berlin, on the Upper Elbe. At Hamburg the Kibe is broad and deep. The harbor is magnificent. There can bo found more vessels than are seen in Now York Harbor. The harbor, until death placed Its hand upon tho people, presents always a busy and picturesque scone. The quays extend nlong tho right bank of the Norder Kibe from Alton to the Ulllwar-der-Neucndelch, a distance of more than three miles, nnd accommodate upward of four hundred sen-going vesels and ns many barges and river craft. The west end of the quay, opposite tit. Paul, is chiefly occupied by tho English colliers ml tho steamers of tho Hamburg American Company. Adjacent is the Ncidcr-hnfcu, intended principally lor the reception of sailing vessels during the season of floating ice, nnd connected with the Kibe with several outlets which nro called Gntts. Further oast are tho Baudtbnr-hnfcn, 1101) yiirls long, nnd 100 to 140 yards wide, with tho Smdthor quay nnd tho Kaiser quay, and the Grasbrook hnfen with the Dalninn quay ml the Ilubeucr quay, both suited for vo'iels of heavy tonuago. The latter nro used principally for the Atlantic liners. kew nnioaK ovRti the ei.hr. Btlll further cast are tho Ober Imfon aud other harbors for river craft nnd finally on the other sido of tho Elbe, on the small Grasnhrook are largo Ho!a bafen, or wood bnrbors, for the storage of timber. Between tho Iirookthor bafen nd the Obcr hafen, to the south, is tho largo Yenlo station of tho Paris lino. Nenr It nro extensive warehouse and custom homo premises. A little nbovo the station is tho hnndsomo Iron railway bridge whose design looks so strange to American eyes. The Stoinwnrder nnd Klclno Orns brook nro little islands npposito tho Neidcr bafen. They nro occupied by extensive wharrei, tho ship-building yards and tho dry-docks of tho Hamburg-American Company. They com mnod n flno view of the Hamburg quays, which are said to be the equal of any in the world, which is saying much, for it was popularly believed that no quays could ever hope to equal thoso of Liver pool. As it Is this harbor which has mado Ilauiburg great, it is good thing to know something about It from tho first.. And it was along this part of tho city that the cholera was first disoovorod aud there it is now raging with such fury. The water is deep in tho Elba and it is o large that the oce.tu steamers can come up Into the city. All the vesssls do come up except the big twin-screw teamen of the Hamburg line. One of THB CITT OF th big twin-screws might make its way np to th olty, but there would be no certainty when it would be able to get out again. Bo now the twin-screw steamers land at Cuxbaveo, on the North Sea, which is three hour' tide by tail from Hamburg. ' Thera are two river about Hamburg. They are small, but they add much to th attraction of the city. They ar the A liter and th Bill. Tb former flowing from th north, forms a large basin out. id th town and a smaller on within it, called th Aussen-Alster and th Bin-Mn-AItr respectively. It I about th Utra which would b called lakat or S3ter-v.l ponds In Oils eonnfry, that the On hotels, the fin house and the An shops are found. Tl:v are benutilully located It Is the fashionable part of the oltv . The little nvera, the Alstor and the mil, are discharged by look Into tit canals, which nr oal!ed fleotes. The ennnts make a network of tho lower taH of the city. They run off from thafclb. There nre many of thorn nnd o nil merchandise Is transported. Thar I no trucking In Hamburg to talk about, TVs cargoes of vessels and other merchandise Is pinned on largo, flat bottomed boat, which nre poled about the canals In manner curious and strange to the visitor. Down among these rsnals Is Bt. PauM. fit. raiill Is tho flowery of Hnmburg. The concert hnll and the boer garden flourish amid irav and furious fun with the hawker and Zukir. The city I the most tnmilod up placo Imaginable. Tho streets wander about in the most Imp lint nrd way and everywhere tho visitor comes upon water. Pt. I'null is cnllat a suburb. A right-angle trinnglo, with tho Elbe as the base nnd tho apex be yond Altona will glvo nn Idea of the general shape of the town. Hut Alton is not a part of Hamburg, it Is suburb. No ono can till where Hamburg be gins and Altona leaves off any more than ono ran tell where Yorkvllle leaves of! and Harlam begins. It I big suburb. a - a- tttr pont of According to pcnplo who know all about these things, the oity of Hamburg con sists of Allstadt nnd Noustndt, formerly surrounded by fortifications, and Bt. Pnull, together with sovcral ndja:ant villages. But Altona has bcon loft out In tho cold. Tho greatest attraction of Hamburg Is the Binen-Alstor, which Is usually called the Alster-Basslu by th people of Ham burg. It is a beautiful sheet of water of an Irregular form nnd nor than a mile in circumference. It ks boundod on three sides with quays, planted with trees and flanked with palatial hotels and hnndsomo private dwellings. These quays nre called the Alte, th Neuo Jungsornstcig and the Alsterdamm. Tho fourth aide, towards the Aussen-Alstor, is laid out in promenades counoctad by tho Lombnrdsbrucho. Tho water is covered with launches and rowbonts on summer evenings, and the swans hnvo nn uncomfortable timo amid the ploasuro seekers. The banks nre tho favorlto promenade of the city. Adjoining tho Alto Jung fcrstulg on the southeast nro tho Alstor Arcndes, where nre found tho fashion ablo shops. Tho ramparts ucar Lorn bnrsbruche overlook the Uinnen-Alster, which is three or four tlmos ns largo ns tho o tli or basin. Tho banks nro studded with villas. The housot of the rich pcoplo nro modorn and attractive. Tho houses of tho poor have tho appearance of great ajio aud look rlckotv. Tho poorer quar ters suggest great difllculty in maintaining good sanitary conditions. Kvery parson in Amorlca who has ever had anything to do with tho royal Ban- gal tiger or the fierce Numldian lion knows that Hamburg is the world great nnimul market. Every wild animal or bird or beast or rentila that is placed upon exhibition is bought through the dealers of Hamburg. It naturally fol lows that the xoologicsl gardons of Him burg aro the finest to bo found anywhere. They aro over in tho northwostora part of thu city. There is a sarcophagus in one of the cemeteries commemorating tho death of 1138 citixuus of Hamburg who, having been banished by Marshal Davoust, to gether with many thousauds of their fol low-citizens, during the wmtor of 1313 14, fell victims to grief, starvation and disease. Tho streets of namburg aro well HAMBOIIO. Saved, and it strikes tb visitor fom ew York as being n particularly cleanly city. In foot, tb street seom a most delightful contrast to Broadway. There it never any dust in the city. This Is accounted for by the faot that it rain in Hamburg nearly all tho time. Th of ficial records abow that rain falls 850 day in tb year. Sometimes it sprinkles for only a few minute nnd then it pour for dnyi and days. During the first week in August last four dsya passed without any rain falling, and it almost created a panic. No ono could remem ber of such a thing happening before. Th city 1 to old that no oat knows I I . a a- .U JU1 1 iCi 9 IVI It II I - " f when It began to be. Hut tt I certain that a early a 811 the big and strong Charlemagne founded a castle at Ham burg, to which he soon added a ehurcb, presided ovor by a bishop, whose bust nnss It wan to propagate Christianity in those northern regions. The Counts of Holstoln, within whose Jurisdiction Hnmburg was situated, par ticularly Adolph Hf. and IV., became great benefactors ot the town and - so cured for Its privllogot ami Immunities which formed the Inundation of Its sub sequent independence. Hamburg joined the llansnntlc League at an early period and plnyel a prom. Inont part In Its contest with the Danish kings In the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. The city was also honorably distinguished In tho good work of swcoplng tho sea of pirates. Kven In thoso early days It began to have Importance ns a nommer rial point. The discovery of America nnd tho sea routo to India had its effort upon Hamburg, but at that time it did not make much of a showlmr with England anil Holland. In 1521) tho cltlxona adopted the Re. formed faith and established a free political constitution. The Thirty Years war didn't a licet It particularly. It was so strongly fortiflo 1 that it wasn't considered wise to troublo it. These fortification are now converted Into promenades. The.1 tho Council nnd the citizens bogan to have trouble with each .U JU1 1 iCi 9 IVI nAvnrnff. other nnd Hamburg became atagnnnt. It wns not until the end of that last con tury that sho begnn to mnke nny progress aaln It was then that direct communication, with America was established, and to this day that is the mnln-ipring ot hor commercial impor tance. Iu 1610 n imlmrg was annexed to the French Empiro. Hbe rebelled in 1813, and then it wns that Marshall Uavoust wrcckod vengeance upoq thoso to whom tho sarcophagus is oroctcd in tho cemo tory. Aftor tho pcano of Vienna Hnm burg got along comfortably until IS 12, when tho city was almost destroyed by flro. It rocoverod from that nnd grow npneo. Hut its real "boom," ns they say iu this country, bogau with tho for mation of tho empire in 1870. Since that time tho bulk of the foreign com merce of Germany has passod through Hamburg. Its population has Increased almost with tho rapidity of the cities of tho West, nnd its increase in wealth has been oven greater. In 188(1 Its popula tion was about three hundred thousand. According to tho Gorman census last year, Hamburg had a population of 820,000. This docs not includo a num ber of its suburb, liko Altona. Altona has 200,000 pooplo. Hamburg Is thero fore about tho same siaa us Glasgow and Liverpool. Uutil four or flvo years ago, Hamburg was a froo city. That Is, it was on of tho States of the Gorman Federation, and'inoludod a small tract of contiguous territory. Bismarck mado an effort to in corporate it into Prussia, and finally suo coeded in overcoming tho opposition of the pooplo, who joalously guarded thulr freedom and Independence. Ono of tho chiof factors in Hamburg's development has bean tho Hamburg American Steamship Company. It has built up tremendous trudo and an en ormous emigrant tralllo. Many railroads run into Hamburg from tho interior, and bring thousands of emigrants. It has be come tho chiof embarking point for emigrants from Russia and Poland. It wo some of the Russia emigrants who are supposed to have brought the disease into Hamburg. Botwoon thirty nnd forty thousand emigrants leave UumUurj for America ovory day. Cnettmbor Urown In a D ittl. A full-grown cu cumber in a small necked bottle it a euriosity cosily ob tained; you limply select n healthy looking small cu cumber, placo it in the bottle which is laid by the tide of the grawing vine, and when grown to as to nearly fill the bottle cut the item. Fill thn bottle with alcohol, firmly cork and teal, and you have something to tbow to your friends for many years, as seen In th illustra tion. Two red pep pers may aUo b lully grown in a bottle. In this cat you bave to tie tho bottle to a stake drivon dote to the pepper plant, plac ing bit of cloth over the mouth of tb bottle to keep out as much rain as pos sible. It it best to remove nearly all th remaining pepper and cuoumbers from th plant, that a well developed (peel men may grow in the bottle. American Agriculturist. Bartholdi'i atudio in Psrls it crowded with new works in villous stages of completion. Hit latest production it group for a monument that is to consti tut th offering of a wealthy oitlcen of Btrasbuig to tb Rapublio of Swltzer- JmL mm li AIR SHIPS. tHE TttdM A!l HltOOfiriSS OP AUIIlAb NAVIGATION. Various Invention lor Ralllnst In Ihn Clouds The Vaonuiu JJollosvs Other forms ot Mavlgatil llnlloon. HE recent rxperl-m-nt with balloons intended for us in war, and the prepa rations of many in ventors to exhibit their airships at the world l Fair, show that the myriad fail ures nnd mnny fa'al- Itlcs which bave marked the history of nerlnl navigation have not diacournged ambitious men, who see n fortune or fame In the solution of this problem. It has been full of fascina tion, and Its record teems with Interest ing adventure, says tho Now Yorlc Re sordnr. Boon after the publication of Torrl sell's dlscovory that air was weight, it occurred to another Italitn Francesco Lana that It would bo possible for a body to rlso in nlr, provided it weighed fcss thnn the air it displaced. He no sordiugly proposod to make nn nerinl vessel to bo raised by means of globes from which tho nlr was exhausted. In bis design the wicker-work car is at tached to four large spheres of copper, snd n sail is fixed n tho ccntor. We have no record of the appnratus having been constructed, and it Is quite certain (hat It was not successful. Theoreti cally, thero is no reason why a balloon should bo constructed on tho vacuum principle, though it is doubtlul if even it the picscnt day a vessel could bo built sulliclcntly strong to withstand the pressure of the atmosphoro and nt the "'i' timo sufllciently light to rlso. fsvvcrthcloss, a patent wns granted last year to an luvontor, who stated in his specification tlmt a vacuum balloon is not nn impossibility. Ho gives calcula tions which if thore bo no (law In them, show that a vessel can bo constructed woighlng 185 tons and cnpablo of rais ing fifty tons more than its own weight when tbrco-quurtcrs of tho air Is pumped out of it. A VACOOK BA7.T.OOT. As is well known, tho first balloon ascent was that of SI. Pilatr do Rozior, In Montgolflor's flro balloon, which took place on October 15, 1783. Tho nlr in tho balloon wns rnrillod by n flro boneath It, nnd tho aeronaut stood In a gallory formail round tho mouth. Tho ascent on this occasion wns limited to a height of about eighty fcot by ro;ios, but a month later, on November 21, tho samo gcntloman ascended with a companion in a lire balloon nnd descended in safety tnmo flvo miles from the piece he started. Bovernl ascents wero afterwards mado in fire balloons, but before long they were ibandonod, owing to accidents having occurred through their becoming Ignited. Though tho use of hydrogen gas nt a means for raising balloons was proposed as eorly as 17C7 by Dr. William Black of Edinburgh, no attempt was made to utilize it except for toy balloons until August 1783, when MM. Charles and Robert sent upa large balloon from Paris. The balloon roso to a height of 3000 feet, and foil fifteen miles away In the country, where it caused great conster nation nmocg tho inhabitants, who Im agined it to be of supernatural origin. On December 1st of the same year the maker of the balloirn ascended in it from the Tullcries, and descended safely after journey of about three miles. Bofore the end of the last century it was known that a gas could be obtained from coal which was lighter than air, and Its use for aeronautical purposes was proposed at early as 17S5 by Tiberius Cnvallo. It was not, however, employed, except on a small icale, till much later, owing to the difficulty of making it in sufficient quantity. When coal gas came Into uso as an illumlnaut at the begin ning oi this century, it was available for aeronautical purposes, and wot toon mado use of. At the present day It it almost Invariably used instead of hydro gen gat, though it it much heavier, and it it cheaper and 1 easier to procure in ujr quantity, ' A itcont.Ait Antsim. It was obvious from the first (hat bnl. loons would not be of any great pne tical uti unlet mean could b deviata) 61 for psooelllng and teertng them, and Inventors, therefore, toon turned tneir at tentlon to the subject. In tb Illustra tion of an airship designed In 1784 bl M. B , of Paris, ll wilt bs noticed that th ship It fitted with tall, which eould hav na affect on vessel dotting In the air. Many attempts have bf en made to us wingless oars or paddles for rowing bal loons through the atr. The Dolphin was to bar been worked In this way. Th propellers were set like Bns near the head of the flsb-shaped balloon, and were to be worked by lovers extending down to the car. The construction of the Dol phin was commenced In 1817 by a Mr. 8. Paully, the money required, which amounted to 150,000, being found by Mr. Dars Eg, a gunmaknr, well known at tho time. The envelopo was msde of gold-heater's skin, and the flu and rudder of silk tad whalebone. Tb completion of the apparatus was pro. traded by dissensions butweon the pro. prlotors, nnd eventually both died with out the machine biting finished. Boms considerable progress must, howover, have been made, as tickets entitling thu holders to view tho machine went printed; on them wns a picture, of which tho Illustration is a copy. Smte Inventors have recently pro posed to us wings or pvldlos, worol tncchniiienlly. In the specification of a patent applied for last yetr, for Instance, fa described a canoe-shaped balloon with sclf-fenthering paddles, drivon by steam or electricity. Though It Is quite pos sible that wings nr paddles might suc cessfully be used, the machinery for operating them is necessarily more com plicated than that required lor turning a screw propeller, nnd, therefore, the latter Is almost Invariably now em ployed. TIIR MOD It t, OF A FISIT. The first successfully propelled balloon scorns to have bcon that of Rufus Porter, an American, who, In 1S33, constructed a model somo twonty feet long, which was worked by a small steam engine. The apparatus was exhibited In Now Yoik and worked successfully, but no attempt seems to have been mado by this inventor to construct I balloon large enough to carry a human being. An other model was made by a Frenchman, M. Jullien, in 1850, which worked suc cessfully, und was exhibited in Paris at tho Hippodrome. Two years later a balloon was made by OlfTard, which could be propelled through the air on a calm day, nnd could be stcerod satisfac torily in a strong wind, though it could not be propelled directly against it. During the siego of Paris ordinary bnl loous were much usud for carrying lottcrs, etc, nnd before tho siego was raisod M. Dupuy do Lorno wns intrusted by the Government with the construction of navigable one. Tba war terminated, however, before it was completed. It was afterwards finished, end tried with eight men in it working tho screw pro peilor, the experiment proved fairly suc cessful, though tho strength ot the iaen was insufficient to cause it to travel at any great pace. Another successful French balloon was that invented by the brothers Tissandier. The balloon was driven by an electric motor of one and one half horso powor worked by a bat tery. Tho btlloon steered woil, nnd a speed of nino or ten miles an hour was obtained. In 1881 a balloon named "La France" was built by Captain Reuaud and M. h'tebs, ngsln Frenchmen. Out of sovon trials ttvo wero completely successful, toe balloon, after covering a considerable distance at a speed of ton to fifteen milos por hour, being brought back to its CIOAR-SnAPED BALLOON. starting point. On one of the remaining trials something went wrong with the electrical apparatus, und on another oc casion the wind was excessively high, and the balloon could not make headway against it. In 1890 a navigable balloon was suc cessfully constructed by Professor Carl Meyer. Tho balloon itself was some what the shape of a cocked hat, why, it Is bard to lay, as this shape does not ap pear to have any advantages over the cigar shape, usually adopted for navig able balloon. The propeller was driven from cranks worked by the foot of tho operator like those of a bicycle. The speed attained was about ten miles an hour. Though th problem ot navigating balloons has not as yet been completely solved, great advances hav been made In th last few years, and it it certain tbat in tb future navigabla balloons will be employed in war, even if no other us it found for them. Tb Most Anolent Temple.' In th temple ot Mecca thera is square stone edifice which, by tradition, It said to hav been built by Abraham and hit ton Itmaol. It it this part of th temple, known nt the Caaba, which it piinclpally reverenced by tb Moham medan, and to which they alwayt direct their prayers. Philadelphia Record. According to very good authority the middl O it declared to be th not moat frequently used in vocalum, as it earn to b the not which bast avoids tb extremes and it most wilkim th ausyd eompajt. in Almoit Unknown Animal. speaking of th arrival at th Zoologt al Park in Washington of herd of eight llamas, th Star of thnt city says I The llama it nn almost nnknown ani mal in thlt country, although found more or less numerously In the high alti tudes of South America. The animal It th representative of the camel family on th western hemisphere. In South America they are a very valuable animal, being used for carrying burdens ovet the high mountains, while their wool I MAMA. used for clothing and their flosh for food. Without the cnmols' hump, they, although much smaller, reiomblo the camel around the head and mouth. When In a wild ttngo they live high up on tho mountains nnd descend for food. One of their peculiarities, ar.d a disa greeable one, too, is thoir power to ejnot, when irritated, a most horrible mixture from their mouths tun or twelve feet, blinding an opponent. The animals were secured nt an iltl tude of ftOOO feet on tho sterile plains ot litohamba. Living almost in an nrctlo climate the llama is especially suscepti ble to heat, aud it was thought best to bring them down to the se by easy ' stages. One month was therefore spent in going from Riobamba to the coast, which admitted of several stops to ac cllmato tho animals to tho great heat. Tho her 1 which loft Riobamba consistod of ten animals, all of wiiicb reached th const In apparently good condition. Tb herd was drivon by two Indians, nnd on reaching Guayaquil, on tho coast, were corslled in tho gardens of the hippo drome, whore they romalnel a weok. Larjrst Steer In thn World. William M. Slngerty, President of thn Record Publishing Company, of Phila delphia, will take his big steer, th largest in tho world, to tho Columbian Exposition. The stcor was sired by I ure bred Holstcin, and its dam is a pur red Durham cow. The animal is sis years old nnd weighs 3800 pounds. It height Is flvo fcot ton inches, Its girth over loin ton feet ton inches, nnd it length from root of enr to tall nino feet ten inches. Mr. Singerly will ex hibit his stocr in tho livo stock depart moat of tho Exposition. Science nnd Millionaire. At the top of the list it Alexander Graham Boll, whoso profit on th tole- phono are represented by eight figures. Next comes Edison with a seven figure fortune Brush, of electric light fame, Ehhu Thomson and Edwjird Weston am more than millionaires. Frank J. Spragun was a junior officer in the United State Navy. Ho Is now living in tho mansion which was built for the Grants. HI company sold nut to the Edison com- a pany for $1,500,000. and half of it went to the inventor. Boston Globe. Mnsculur Jtollanks. A wrltor in Nature states that th limpet, deprived of its shell, putlt in the air 1981 times it own weight, and about double when immersed in water, lie adds that the pulling power of th cocklcsholl (Venus verucosa) of tb Mediterranean, when deprived of its t'nll, it 2071 timet the weight of it body. The force required to open an oyster appears to bo 1319.5 timet th weight of the shell-loss oyster. Why Mama Had to Get New Cat Aft . I Too bad dat nobody's watered daw tiatt famsl Diu I Aa it mln Amnu' St. 1 '- - . V - y V mr - - isji nv - h m l1 j . - - WW ) M