BIG BRAZIL A WOSDKRFUfj COUNTRY, TjARG Ett THAN TI1K INITED STATES. Strange Custom of the People Wo man Nothing 31 ore Than Drudge Primitive Meth od In Agriculture. "TNthe Atlanta (Oa.) Journal P.ov. I Dr. II. C. Morrison, the SecM I tary of the Methodist Board o( Missions, tclli of some queer things to be seen in Brazil, that won derful Kepnblio in South America. "Brazil," aid the doctor, "la a wonderful country larger than the United State, and Rio, the old aeat of monarchy, now the seat of Govern ment, is a splendid city of 000,000 in habitants. This is not tho only city of importance, for there are many other, among them Sin Paula, with a population of 130,000. Back from the coast, in the centre of Brazil there are about two million Indian, wild and fierce, and dangerous men they are. ' Brazil is the only one of the Cen tral American States in which Portu guese is speken. When the country was first taken possession of it was di vided between Portugal and Spain, Portngal taking Brazil and Spain tak ing the other thirteen countries. "The average Brazilian home," paid Dr. Morrison, "is but a dwelling place. I do not mean, of course, the homes in the populous centres, but in the rural districts. There is no word in the language for home. It is al ways spoken of as 'my house.' The .house is generally a latticework af fair, the interstices daubed with mnd. A window is cut in the end and a plank shutter is attached, making the interior of the bonne as dark as night. No flowers bloom about the door, no ornaroental trees are seen, nothing at tractive. A grunting pig, a few chickens and ducks and sometimes a mulo are all that adds life to the place. If it happens to be convenient the man will not hesitate to drive the 'pig or lead the mule through the house. i "The wife is only a woman who cooks the beans and pie for the man, Waits on the children and feeds the pigs and chiokeus. Every man in Brazil smokes cigarettes. They smoke only once a day and that ia all day long, for they carry boxes filled with cigarettes, and as fast as one burns out a fresh one is lit from the stump. It is a mystery to me how the women stand the smoke, for it is everywhere, specially on the railroad trains, for In every coaoh the men smoke cigar ettes regardless of the women. The average woman in Brazil is never seen to amile, for she has nothing to brighten np her life. She may be described in the words, sallow and sad. "The country is mountainous, and while it is cooler than it is here, an TITES OP American always wants his umbrella, for there is a siokly heat from the sun, bowing that you are nearer to it than here. The soil is sponge-like and eeems to hold the moisture and dis tribute it as it is needed. The rains do not overflow the rivers there as they do here, and little stream that would be called wet weather streams here flow there all the year. It is one of the best natural oountriea on the globe. The trees grow in great luxu rianoe and vines cling to them, so that it ia well nigh impossible tor a oat to go through a Brazilian forest. Such a network of vines is found on the tree tops that monkey ran aoros it a if it was a floor. "When a man gets ready to culti vate a new field he outs down the tree and vines aud leaves them on the ground until they are dry, when he BBAZIL's SOLS INVENTION. tmrni them. It never ooour to him Vto plow the land, for there are no plows. The ground is soft and the farmer generally atiok hole in the earth with bis bare toe, drop in the corn and leave it to make itself. Oth ers use atiok for this purpose and some of the more progressive nse hoes. Coffee grows on the mountain aide and this i one of the ohief pur suit of the people. One peculiarity of the soil is that it will not wash as does our. Where embankment are on the railroad the print of the picks and grubbing hoe can be seen, al though the road was made twenty-five year ago. t "Brazil i a oountry where the most rrkaiUr method for eyery thing are Jr!a. v. via, . employed, The only Brazilian Inven tion ia one for crushing Toorn. A seo- tion of a log is sunk in the ground end op. The end ia hollowed ont'like bowl. A big log ia suspended from an upright pole, on one end being a heavy wooden chunk like a mallet while on the other end is a trough. The mallet end is the heaviest and fits in the bowl. When it is in use the bowl is filled with corn and a mill race is opened. The water running down the hill fills the trough, making that end of the pole the heaviest. It falls, elevating the mallet end. ' "As soon as it strikes the ground the water is lot out and down goes the mallot end striking in the bowl and crashing the corn. The water begins AVENUE OP to pour in the trough and the beating is kept up until the corn is rednoed to meal. This rude implement is known as the mongola. When a man is ready to use it he puts his corn in the bowls, starts the water in the trough and goes on about his busineu, feeling confident that the mongola will keep np its monotonous lick until he stops it. ABORIGINES. "In Brazil a hog is never scalded. They are rolled np in grass, after be ing butohered. and the grass i fired, thus burning the hair off. v "When butter is wanted cream ii put into a bottle and shaken until but ter comes. The milkmen do not run wcjons, but they drive cows from house to house and milk them at the door. Eaoh cow has a bell on her neck and her calf is tied to her tail. When a stop is made the bell is rung, calling the customer to the door, and and a pint or a quart of nuwatered milk is drawn from the cow and poured in the vessol waiting to receive it. In Rio the principal conveyance ore Tilbury. A Tilbury is nothing less than the body of a light buggy mounted on the hind wheel of an ox oart. Each oommunity has a Mauda Chuva, or rain god, whose authority is absolute and who is supposed to have the power to command the rain. The men often cram rice and bean into their mouth from a spoon. They are very dexterous at this and never make a mistake, although the apoon never touches the month. "The most beautiful sight 1 saw wa the avenue of royal palms in the Botanioal Garden at Bio. There are two of these avenues made in the form of a cross. They are smooth, slender and graceful, rising one hundred feet in the air, each having onty a tuft of feathery leave at the top. There are eighty-six of these tree on either tide of the avenue and they are 80 feet apart. The avenues are 24 feet wide. So straight are these trees that, when viewed on a dead line they have the appearance of an unbroken wall the whole distance of about half a mile. The view down the avenue, the blue mountain in the distnnoe, is one of the most beautiful my eye have ever looked upon. "One very notioable thing to a stranger in Brazil is the different varieties of tree, none of them being like our. The people there pay no attention to the tree and hardly man known the name of them. It a 2i2j .-ossaW&V, wonderful oountry, but still it not np to the South, and I'm truly glad to be at home again." Dr. Morrison brought back with him some specimens of Brazilian loaves and some other queer products of the trees, in addition to some pictures, one showing the lip and ear orna ments of the aborigines. Some of the leaves gathered from vines are ex actly like olive colored plush and would be taken anywhere for artifical leaves. The doctor had aome vegetables poppies, flbrouslooking objects coming from a pulpy ball growing on a tree. Tbey present the appearance of a sleeping dog and are real curiosities. Then he has aome monkey churns, ROYAL PALMS. vegetable growth, very mnoh like a churn in shape to the top of which, when detached, is fastened something like tho dasher that reaches to the bottom of the churn. Dr. Morrison gives a grapbio de scription of the ants of Brazil, the white ones often eating houses away and causing them to fall. When the red ants take possession of a field it has to be given np to them, as they throw np large, oiroular piles of dirt from one to five feet high, and they become hard as a adamant. No way lias been discovered by which they can be driven away from a place, once they have taken hold. The Advantage of Short Sight. Short sighted people are the best spellers, for they have to hold the print close under their eyes to see dearly and thus every letter is made to stand out distinct, the word being read not as a whole, but letter by let ter. Those with a long sight, on the con trary, hold the type far from thorn, and so see the print as an indosoriable and confused mass. It is now admitted that spelling is largely a matter of the eye, and so it doe not follow that the good spellers are the olever ones, although this very often turns out to be the case. It has also been stated that in land scape painting it is more of an advan tage than otherwise to have a short sight, for every detail does not thus protrude, as in the case of spelling. Pearson's Weekly. ENGLAND'S HOST FAMOUS CLERUYMAX. .i i r 1 BEY. W. B. KABBAH, WHO RECENTLY PBIACHED IK WE8TMIN3TEB ABBEY AND 13 NOW IN CHABQE OF CANTEBBVBY CATHEDBAL. A Spool Ten Feet Thtclu A spool holding about eight to ilea of wire cable, welshing about seventy tone, which is intended for the Lex ington avenue cable road, reoently arrived in ew lorn from Wilkes barre, Penn. It was taken to the A BIO STOOL. Lexington avenue power house, on Twenty-fifth street. The cable is one and a quarter inches in diameter. Contractor McLarnon said it was the largest ever taken through the city, and required fifty horses to re move it. The truck was especially built for its transportation to New York the wheels being of cast iron, four feet in diameter and eight inches broad. Perlnme Added to Flower.' Few people know, perhaps, that some flower dealers, with the aid of the chemists, have devised a means of increasing and fixing the odor of flower before they ship them or offer them for sale. The flowers are put into a wooden box, previously cooled with ice. In the bottom of the box is a tube pro vided with perforations, and into and through this tube is sent a current of carbonic add ga oharged with the characteristic odor of the flower. Af ter a certain length . of time the flowers beoome impregnated with the transferred odor, and that odor be comes fixed. Sometimes in order to facilitate the fixing of tho odor the flowers are impregnated with a littlo glycerine. New York Telogram. A Woman Town I'rlcr. Mr. Millor, who resides in the lit tie Scottish town of Dunning, is prob ably the only woman in the world who carries on the duties of a town crior. Mrs. Miller is seventy years old, and has adorned her profession for a great many years. Tbirty-threo times has the "bull wife," as she is locally THE TOWN CRIER. called, proclaimed the birthday of the Queen, and for sixteen years she has been janitor of the publio eohool of Dunning, as well as its town crier. Although no longer young, Mrs, Mil ler ia still hale aud vigoroua. WEARING TIIE IUIR. A KRVOMJTIOX SAH TO T1W IM- PENDING IS COItrrURES. fcf Simplicity and More Crimp Than Ever Change In Autum nal Costumes Styles la Fall Millinery. IT is elated by one who know, that we aro to have a revolution in the stylos of wearing the hair. The disadvantage of the incom ing styles is that they are apt to in augurate an era cf false hair, as the component parts of whioh the new coiffure is composed may all be bought individually and adjusted. The implements are a toothed orimp- ing iron, a wire frame and some extra hair, it a woman has an insufficient amount to produce the necessary abundant effeot. American womon wear less false bair, proportionately, than the women of any other country. English women of all olasses load their heads with false "fringes," switches and bangs. The hair problem is a very serious NEW STYLES IN one to tho average British woman. In the arrangement of her hair she is al most as helplosa as her Japanese sis ters. If her maid cannot dress her hair she calls in a professional hair dresser. On all festal occasions her hair must be elaborately drtssed. Mrs. Baysrd, wife of our American Minbter, tells the most pathetio story of how she had to arise one morning at 0 to moot an engagement with a hair-dresser, as it was the only hour that he could give her during the day. The function was her presentation to the Queen of England, and naturally her looks had to be arranged accord ing to the oanons of the oountry. Tho day of severely simplo ooillures is past. The new order of things has its advantages, as well as its disad vantages. At least we will be relieved from seeing the round faced girl with parted hair drawn down over her ears aftor the Madonna mode. Pretty girls have disfigured themselves trying to carry out a classical arrangement of the hair when it was diametrioally op posed to the contour of their faces and head. The hair will be crimped, if possi ble, more than ever ; and it will be loosoly drawn back from the temples, not down over tho ears, as it was last season. The top of the ear is no longer covered ; the hair must be placed baok of it. Doubtloss a great many false waves will be worn. They are cleverly attached to a small comb, which is put in back of the front hair, which is worn in soft curls on the brow. The hair continues to be dressed on the crown of the head, but the arrangement is more eluborate. Soft, natural looking waves of hair are made by rolling it over large aoft kid curler, rolling from the top of the curl toward tho end. The hair should be wet and left on the rolls over night. If that is not done, pinch the curls with a hot iron. CHAXOES IN AUTUMNAL COSTUMES. Elaborateness in skirts seem to be the coming order of things. Many acoounts to the contrary, akirts are unmistakably growing more and more in the direotiou of puffs and raffles and garniture of various sorts. A fa vorite fashion is to open the seam NEWEST 8TYL1 OF A FALL COSTCMR. and set in either folds, puffings or contrasting material, in qualities that suggest elaborateness by their rioh neas. The skirt and waist are trimmed to matob, and for street costume this giyes one the idea of unity, all of whioh mean the decadence of thf shirt-waist for cold weather. The full ekirt ha fought it way to) popularity, where it is likely to bold its own for a time yet at least, and the) pouohed front bndioe waa found to be) so generally becoming as to be trans ferred from the filmy gown of sum mer to the wool fabric of fall. While some of the new dresses show long shoulder seams, it is safe to say that more of them do not. It is diffi cult, indeed, to force upon the women of the present day a fashion so uncom fortable and so annoying. And even though it may obtain for a time a foothold, it certainly cannot last, and it is folly to make dresses in that way.' Besides, all of the straight-shouldered effect is very easily produced by the flat trimmings that are applied and that project over the sleeve tops. The fancy for the full-fronted waists seems to be growing, but in rather conservative way. The style is unbecoming to many people, and must, for this reason, be used with caution. One idea is to have the sides and back of the waist close-tfit ting and sew the material into the second dart, then leave the rest loose from the neok. Properly managed, HAIItDnEBSINO. this gives the best efloct of any of the styles where the full fros is mado with the material. Of course, in the) extra pieces that are applied, the al lowance for the fall from the collar to the belt and the overlay is something like three or four inohos. There will be a revival of the tailor- made costume in hon.espun, tweed or covert cloth, perfectly fitted, with handsome buttons as the ole trim ming. STYLES IX millineht. Fall styles in millinery are pleasing from the brightness of color displayed. Some of the pattern hats, say the ' New York Press, are made almost en tirely of flowers, great poppies, pan sies, orohids or roses. Foliage iit largely used for trimming. In the illustration on this page the crown of A FALL HAT. the hat is of dark green velvet, slightly puffed with a band of the velvet. The flower are very striking. They are roses, made with a ruohing of green taffeta, shot with rose color for the petals. The centre ones are yellow flowers, which resemble sunflowers lightly. On the left ido of the orown in front ia yellow feather aigrette and two blaok ostrich feathers, fastened by a brass buokle. On the opposite aide, at the baok, are two more ostrich feathers. Another "fetching" hat shown by a Fifth avenue milliner ia of fine black: straw, with wide brim and low orown,. surrounded by a thick wreath of colored dahlias, from which spring another wreath or orown of blaok feather tips whioh entirely surrounds the crown, somewhat in wild Indian fashion. Underneath the brim at the baok another dahlia is plaoed.whiob. falls over the hair. Hat are larger this season than in the summer, but for faoe whioh can not itand a wide brim come pretty toque are made. One which is especially effeotive forsuoU a faoe this month is of yellow straw whioh is made into ruohes to form the brim ; on either side are arranged three oorn flower of two shade of blue, together with a pair of brown Meroury wings. On either aide at the baok is a rosetti of brown and blue ehot eilk ribbon. v