ACTORS BY NATURE. | MAYRULEIN NIRELAND HASHEESH SMOKING. ' ———— rn oi ton : ALL ARE SUCH, ACCORDING TO AN | IT IS SAID THAT ABERDEEN WiLL BE | A PREVAILING HABIT AMONG THE INSTRUCTOR iN STAGECRAFT. Byers child, Ho Says, 1s Born an Aitor, birt po Is In Most Cases Soon Marred by . Consciousness — Early Teainjeg and | Its Powerfal Effect. : *“The ability to express, in voice and _fa0e and mation, the ideal which the | mind conceives is tho actor's talisman of suocess, '* said awell known instruct. - or in one of the dramatic schools when asked to define the essential qualifica tion of an aspirant for dramatio honors ‘Not to represent a character, bat to be it, is what wins the audience. Great earnestness counts, of course, and deli- cacy of conception, careful training, perience, and all that, but comp ro to ‘abandcn to the emotions of the wamornit ‘is what sways men's minds That is genius! ~ “Every child is a born actor, went on, ‘‘and to prove that we have only to watch the expiession and move ments of a little child when itis ina room by itself and is ungiware of spaeta- tors. Itxwill ba imitating in pantomime alternately the porsovs and animals it knows ar bas seen Eater the rooin and ask the little one to do that ever for ‘auntie or uncle, or whoever it may be, and immediately there is achange, Self consciousness has come in with tha looker on, nad the child is constrained and shy The grace of movement, the " ho bright, animated gesture and inimitable. expression are gone. Asthe child grows older this constraint, this repression, in- creases, particularly in America, where, # wn babyhood, she is taught to disguise ber real feelings. ‘You must not lanih aloud, i¥ isn't refined; you mast walk ~ quietly and sedately- and not attract st- tention. ’ “This is a sample of the lesson of self repression; itculeated line upon liue, upon precept, day after day, un- til the real nature becomes walled in within the artificial one. When. that girl gets to be 20 or more, she has a yearning for the stage. © She feels that she ¢éan portray some of the charactors ~ ‘which so interest and appeal to her. She enters a dramatic school; but, slay, it is too Inte. The desire to act is there, and the accurate conception, bat the ar- tificial routine so instilled by precept and practice has become inextricably interwoven with the natural instinct, and it cannot be eradicated. She is in the shackles of self consciousness. “My greatest find in the last year or #wo," continued the speaker, '‘is a young Pennsylvania girl who came to with ber mother last season. ‘My tor has been educated in Paris, she is most anxious to go on the _ Bbhe feels that she can do some- in that line and will not be con- ted until she tries,’ said the mother 1 looked at the girl, who sat quietly by, th rather an indifferent expression on fac, and was not prepared to find in her anything very promising She x about 17, very dark and quite good king 1I asked her to recite something. foster mother to a king's son, had nurs- od him at ber breast along with her own ‘child of the same age. In a revolution the mob came to kill the king's son, and the nurse, in loyalty to her sov- ereign, substituted her baby for the heir to the throne. Before the girl was half through with the story I had to stop her. The tears were running down her cheeks, and | realized that my own eyes were moist. That girl is going to make a ‘name for herself. She seemed to acquire by intuition what other pupils would take months to learn. I attribute her ex- traordivary power of expression to her ‘having been brought up in Paris, free and nnconstrained in an atmosphere where every one is enthusiastic and is not ashamed of it, aud where emotion is expressed naturally. “After a brief interval of instruction 1 placed her on the road wheres sho -srould come directly in contact with the technicalities of the business aud have “the advantage of being with a good ‘company. It will not be long before the public hears from her. “Jt has bean my experience that the French, Italian, Spanish, Mexican, Ha- brew-—any of tho southern races— possess {this nameless abandonment, this per- sonal mugnetism, as it were, in excess of any other nation,’’ continued the . **And where it is found in an eminent degree in Americans they gen ‘erally have some strain of foreign blood Americans make unsurpassed character ‘actors-—~that is, when we wish to per- i | roiners, westerners, New Eng- Im farmers, darkies, any of the oi phases of typical American life, swe find ampls material right at haud however, we wish to depict a draw- ‘ing room scene with setting complate . and entable fact that, so far as the stags is ‘concerned, wo must go to England for our gentlemen. For some reason the oe class in America, the men of ‘breeding and culture, when choosing a _ profession, do not sclect tho stage. It may be that the calling of an actor is mot looked upon, on this side of the wa- ter, as sufficiently dignified; but, bo chat as it may, of all the applicants for histrioniz honors in this country only a few of them are recruited from the ranks of recognized gentlemen's eons. In England it is differont. There are ‘mambers of younger sons there who ‘have no money, who are debarred from ‘going into trade on account of tha fam- Aly escutcheon, who have not the men. tal ability to become doctors and law- ers, and to whom the stage offers a practical and interesting solution of the dilemma. ‘They make first vlass actors r the parts we need, hecanse thay pos- ‘sess the one indispensable qualification of having coma straight Yrom tho draw- inh oro, bringing their faultless man. pers with them. "—New York San. to the life, we must cgll on a for-. eign country for the actors. Itisa lar-. NEXT LORD LIEUTENANT. Tle Was Viceroy of Ireland Beofore Being | pointment Will tion In the Green ale. It leave Canna tion to become ford land. This last is indeed exci Enprececer ed. The Canada is ! the Eirl of Aberdoen has two. Moreover, he cannot and his gubernatorial pes hentenant ! of hE £5] ~ npg served leave the —not even to cross the border and enter the United States. Thus, if Lord Aberdeen goes to Ire- for some good reason and a transfer to other office. It is said that Lord Heounghton, pres- ent lontapant goverpor of lre- land, is to enter the cabinet, and thero is no douht that Lord Aber o% deen would be!’ amazingly pleas- ing to the people as his successor. The Aberdeens iy have been always ATLRDEEN. more or less identified with Ireland. . Lindy Aberdeen is openly proud of hav: ing had the great OQ’ Neills, kings of an- cient Hibernia, for her apcestors, and, EAKL OF . the Irish Industries association and bas prabahly done more to popularize Irish work than has any other living being. Lord Aberdeen, is used. to Ireland and the Irish people In brief biography Right Hon, John Campbell Hamilton Gordon, seventh earl, son of the Earl of Aberdeen, prime ton, was educated at the University collegs, | Oxford, where he graduated in 1871. He sncoseded to the title on the death of his brother in 1870. He entered the house of lords, but in 1876 ho disagreed with some of tho principul measures of his party. In the debate on the Afghan war ha voted against the government of Lord Beaconsfield. In 1586, having by this time becorne a member of the Liberal party, ha was appointed by Mr. Gladstone lord lieu- tenant of Ireland, with the mission of carrying out the home rule policy. In this capacity he was immensely popular in Ireland, and the scene in [Jublin on his ‘‘leave taking, '’ after the fall of the Gladstone eabinet, is said to have been such as has never been witnessed since the days of O'Connell. Lord Aterdeen is a member of many Protestant reli- gious gocieties, at whose meetings be frequently presides When be was viceror of Ireland, hé occupied Dublin castle and bad all the state. and splendor of a court. This seemed the natural atmosphers of the Aberdeens, a thing which chilly Canada never quite granted. ~~ hicago Post. The Canadian Problem. and Newfoundland hooting Dominio the Canadian parliament most be full ‘of interesting problems. — Chicago Post. Is the Dominion government, which bas staggered along in safety to long, about to fall over tho Manitoba school question’— Buffalo Express, If the quistion of the annexation of Canada ever became a burning one, the intolerance of Quebec would probably be foumd the great obstacle to union. — Philade iphia Press. Can He Yoretell the * Campulgs of 18967 Professor E. C. Getsinger, who bails from Detroit, hut is now located in San Francisco and dabbles ig astronomy, has hit upon a schemes of reading the future by sound waves. He # Kpects to be dead gome time before it is under. stood by the Yulgar herd. : - Hard Times For tie Rustler. Indian reservation merely because the white men have no business there. — Chicago Times- Herald. As Good as a Circon. If Carl Browne is determined to be married on the capitol steps, the Wash- ington police can be counted on to do the “belling. "*—Cleveland Plain Dealer. rr A Splendid Triumvirate. to hold a * convention. — Washington Star Chang ought man’ The International Sitaation. ined they're talking of tr sup faces at Yinoa France: : to be ugly tone a dance; 3 up a placard — pti th An grass!’ Tho Fr- neh Lave 3 iid dads fe And England may not Lo] ti 1b P ws, Japan wants a vio for hor navy, While China is willing to rest— 11 retrugele, 6 Tekdm chances ul land, And when hive atter mipts 10 seoure it There's apt to be trouble on hand. In Cabs there's fig They 're wi i And Spain ix decades Thong? ) “LY biing aircady — hats in sight fare less, hoolirin arts to do right The reichstag is fly! ith Bisma Bo Germany 's having some fun, And Italy 'H bo tn the serine If ever the (ight ting = begun ting at all Canadinne, too Theve's till Armenia's fh Hawaii ise Then south of In every And wink You tint ! dh are quarrels koa Oh : : et Linicago Post rnor general of | todd for five years, and | bm ad every one knows, she is president of minister in 1854; was born in 1847 and annexationists the life of a member of i 1 i } § Governor General of Canada His Ap- | Cavie General Satisfac- | is sta ol that Lord Abardeen 8 HI DewR and TURKS AND PERSIANS. It Prodoces Vivid Dreams, Sometimes | The Cape Voyage, Which Thackeray Tok, | freight wreck Causes Terrible Suffering and Is Always ; Dangerous Liiiektly Sold In the Bazaars of Constantinople: A travelerr turned from an extensive | gojorurn in Tiwkey has this to say of the | como in making his final visit home famous drag Among bazaar at Constantinople was Lasheesh, It is strictly illegal to buy or sell this, my purchases at the drags! A \ JOURNEY T0 INDIA. | OF THE OLD AND NEW | ) . ! CONTRA 5 WAYS OF MAKING THE TRIP. the So Called Overland. Route snd the Swez Canali Way =Antiewting Features of | the Latter. “You recall perhaps,’’ said the re torned East Indian, ‘that Colonel New- from Indin came by the so called over- | land route, across the desert from the | | bead of the Red sea to Cairo? and the vender made a great show of | & | mystery abowt. tha transaction; i charging me ten times tho right price country. withont especial and specific | permission from her majesty the queen | | BCDCOR land, it mast be looked upon as a recall | | ferring It is a soft black stick or cdil, made with indian aemnp and sandry sweet es- It may cither be drunk with | water, eaten as it is, smoked in hubbla bubbles or smoked in little terra cotia | pipes It is said io have the power of comn- 2 a dual personality upon wha take it. Their dreams are extraor- | dinarily vivid, and every detail of them i | have a k |. particularly agresable, ya i PERSON i monest ef {diffe rent people | 80 soma get remembered for a long tins after They do ind of ward. fit, w hig h dees not gonnd iT Soma thar thoagi f is evidently pops ara said to be tha e Gr ther ‘Those at least 0 in different ways, and no further than a bad hoad- i. ache. lamp, in which all the “Then, "had twisted it ronghly.”’ | the determination to penetrate hey | the grave and find cut all about the fu It bas been used by magicians oc #ince the middloages. I remember dur ing tha esoteric Buddhism craze sime FOATS ago a wl of mine who wus bitten by it jot some hashicesh and ate it, in th able to project his soul seross ths den. The basheosh was badly in i¥ed, and a heavy dose of it had no effect what: evar. : : ‘He remaining whore it bold and helped fri hold of persisted in Sa ha grew to another streng tho of the hemp happened to be concentrated, The result was that two doctors had to waik bim up and down the garden all night to prevent his falling into a Sleep that would know no waking. Though its use is forbidden in Con: stantinople, basheosh is said to be exten sively smoked there, especially among the Persians. I told roy guide that I must seo this sight, and after a great deal of trouble I managed to get taken to a real hasheesh den. It was a fairly large equare room, with a divan ran- ring all around it The walls were whitewashed, and the carpets on. the floor were cheap and shabby. One com- mon oil lamp hung from the ceiling, with a big green shade. The center of the room was empty, and there were no tables or looking glasses in it Two men were squatting Turkish fashion on the divan. For a long time they scemed to be. in ® kind of trance, slabbering at the cor- ners of their lips and muttering like madmen. After a short time one of them became livelier and more excited. found that his. soul, vas. himself Ho burst into a wild laugh which shook | his whole body. He placed his hand to | his nose, and beginning to stroke it at the top passed his hand down into the air as if his nose had reached an inordi- nate length. An attendant parsed by with a crite basides | | came by way of the cape of Good Tope | i § | { | { any other one thing oot go off to sleep, but! | of the exiled Napoleon. Thacke- ray, himself -an East Indian by birth, | was sent to England as a child, but he and St. Helena and oasoght a glimpse | There must be | yot a few persons living who recall the | time when Thackeray's voyage was the | one everybody made in going from In- | dia to England, and there are, of course, | thousands that have made the carava:n | those | journey, as it is only a quarter of a cen- | | tary since the opening of the Suez ca- | last even has done more than | to make life in| iritish India endarable, for the cutting | nal. That 1 of the canal bas reduced the journey | home to a fortnight less and bronght | { the round trip ticket down to £835. rots of the drng, but it affects | | around the world in our day. | ray's journey was a matter of moni i Colonel Newecome Fi The prices ous way by tho caravan route was £1206, ‘just about the cost of a trip Thacke- 's a matter of that of the East Indian now a mattér of 3 ui | OaYR i to | : route, a expectation of boing | ar- i cap, and the smoker made a wild e¥ort | With Manitoba talking of rebellion; to tarn aside his bead, angrily telling | the attendant to be off, aa he was trend. | canal. Then came another | ing cn his noun wild burst of laughter, and tha fit vas at an end His reason gradually seemed to the upper bawd, asd be proceeded express his wonder that Le could have fancied that his nose had rdw so long putting his hand up to it, he reo marked, “All the same, it is Iuition me confoundedly—iukt as if some cone And, sure enough, the ncse was anpaturally rec It is said that ander the influence ¢ basheesh yom know neither. time ro place, and that if you fix your thonghts on some place, however distant, that yon é¢ 3 it | have never seen you obtain a clear and accurate image of it. I was told a story of a man who had taken hasheesh with rad | tare life : . He soon exclaimed ¢! hat ho was fool It is hard times for the rustler when | a paleface judge drives white wen off an | Bismarck, Gladstone and Li Hung | i grand old | o . i B 1 ole { Juice and made him sit vp. { preseritly o pened hig eyes i Somipletely, h i as h It nn a; i speakers of ths L000 during the last | they will nuinbior 121 i of the creme, | —8t. ing very cold, then that he was guing to die. He grow vory pale, his feet te- came numb, and the cold be gan to got conaplete possession of him. of hearing became indistinct. Every: thing seemead to grow dark on his face. Then the attendant thought it wis time to come to the rescue, and he rul- bed his face and nostrils with lemon The man and absently © that was brought in ho recovered his senses 4 Was YOry angry with thse attendant {or interfiring with him just ¢ bad been on the point of penotrat Ing the snknovn > sipped a cop of cof to him. Whe tioned that the word i from “hasheosh Universal. tho habitoul { M1 sage to 103, English Will: Soon Io Gladstone comput h 5 € fr EILILE » th fi) Ina io increased \ 08 by theend year 1064 At that rate of which is sevenfold each century, such speakers will include not less t 540,000,000 by the ¢ ™ of the year Ui Louis S Republi i in. 13as to Talk Through It. Flapjack-—Gilibley 1s quite a talk isn't he? ; . Treacle—Yes, but his hat will get down over hiss mouth. —Springfici] Union. : { the most wonderful waterway in the 1 world. get | Lie i possess i a of the I roundiuags “Lieutenant Waghorn was tho man down and establish the caravan It soon becaria a regular freight It was from Suez to Cairo, a distances of 70 miles, usaally made in aboat three days. The freight was carried on the backs of camels, and the passengers rode in a rods diligence! drawn by males. There wera caravan. | saries every five miles, where the mules werd changed, and at some of thess there was food fo be had. The great standby was ‘spatcheock.’ When the na- tives in charge of a curavansary spied an approaching caravan, they instantly rushed out, caught sone fowls, wrung! their necks, and an hour later served | therm, scarce dead, to the travelers; hence the name spatchoock. That jour- | ney across the desert was most trying | to women and children, and the railroad | from Suez to Cairo in 1859 was hailed | a8 a vast improvement over the caravan | method of travel ‘“Ten yoars later camo the saunl The | nw i and passenger line digging of the canal practically de- stroyed Suez, for the port is some dis- tance from the city, and a busy town with » large hotel and many small ones | has been transformed into a dust heap | in the desert. The canal, in destroying | one town, built up the others, for Port! Said and Ismailia are creatures of the | canal. The former used to be one of the: worst places on earth, and at ordinary | times one of the dullest. The vicious Levantines, of all eastern races, and the equally vicious Europeans from ev- | ery part of the continent seemed to wake into activity only at the approach’ of a ship. Then dancehousen, gambling | hells and every sort of evil resort opened | wide their doors to the delayed traveler. Perhaps it is better now, or possibly | worse, for in these days a single com-| pany pays more than 1,000,000 a year iz tolls, and there is an almost contin- | nons procession of ships through the “The Sonex canal is in some respects As soon as the traveler enters it he realizes that He is in the hands of the. French.© A Frenchr-spaaking pilot takes ship, and all officers of the canal ars Frenchmen, The gares, or turno there a slilp waits to let an-~ | othey pase, are in the charge of old Frinch soldiers, and it is charming to seo how they beautify their arid sur. Wi nen the sane io of the dese It almost bursts with how- ats, % is watered, is i ers, and at every gare aro a neatly paint: days was to ses ona | bandXxerchiels, 1 from the outward bound as the ed little bonse anid a blooming garden, while grass édges’ the canal, and the dreariest region on earth 13 transfonaed by French thrift. One of the most in- terest thie canal in early sip meet another. The passengers on each crowded for- ward with greetings and the waving of and there were tears - § thoaght ing sights to | of what the homeward brand Were soon § tendy « with d { - irs, and that [| prossive, the shorn a nose ti Lt see His sense arouhd bi { the Khedive Tewfik's yacht, with J ny, 1] on board, as wo passed through | and be called for ligh®. Then he stretelicd : Phi Li ne out his limbs and remained: fixed acd | wl aS immovable. A cold thick sweat was Ii glimpee of the ladies, 49 a8 3 » wb sesens, who was his guest, caine over him, and the pallor of death wis | De. Lesser ens, ome 300 1 The mesting of ships is now no I once encountered his | longer a novelty. Of course we caogat no vat Tewtik and out on the sponson beam to greet us, anil we manned the yards with native sailors in honor of the two “The canal passage is made in from 17 to 41 hours, and since the of powerful electric lights has made night navigation in the canal possible the journey from Epglaud to India 1s made with few serious delays. It used to be hw all the coal for ships traversing the Raed sea was carried across the sth mus on the urls, Ships now COMING Curio u=a backs of can at Port Satd. One of the Bay Lgation in the tily coal featurys of canal and thy Red sea as Iarge sailing craft. The hemmed in with mountains coast that tho progress of ship would te extremely slow and at- anger from sadd nalls. uch a passage of the Read sea would be almost intolerable, {ur tho heat is op nd the 1 manotony of the arid is tod bevoud ex- ars lighthouses along 8 18 To drearier lot ghthouse keeper on rsons on this side Hf tho sea i Red sea is so gn either a sq sand hills ashore us pression. There 3, aiud ther than that of the Rh the Red sea. Few p of thew Tid I alize t gs ’ i 18 1,-1 yi rir iin for the lower of the {ad Th wv reached from the y the w in Italy and France we Hla | widows were by law o mpeiled to wear | ¢ them. | aver in,’ | pened on the Short Line between Pewee and leard’s somo years ago. It was a | I had oharge of the La! (coming in our direction. i peoted]l to make up tho | sohedaln ! trouble. about was just behind and ander a hill. | Train No. 14 had just backed on to the | gineer saw the danger. 8 Waeks, | | throttles | lata | ble skill. i- bo could not havs heen an, whosa | eidedly plain. the absence of : ho a large sailing | pear - arate REVERSED BY A colLuision. An Old Brakeman Tells of a Queer Rati. ‘road Accident He Witnessed. "The most remarkable wreck ‘I was * said an old brakeman, *‘hap- Grange accommodation -and was bound in te Louisville { hard npon the trail of train No. 32, also. Train No. 14 was | bound for Louisviile It. had been delayad some minutes at Pawee, but ex- time and side Pewee and De wrd’s on tant t¥ain wonld have the right of way. C “Tae delay was what cansed th Tae side track I am telling you track between time, : y+ £4) sok a side track, and before the switchman could shift the switch train No. 32 came dashing around the hill. The en Ho turd down the throttle with a hard shove Pl whis. tied ‘down brakes’ His efforts w no use, however, Tr: in 32 rarned in on the side track and rive into No. 14. All the ears of the train, 14, wura stripped off the track as clean as if they had Looh peas in a pod. Ti Na went ¢ The whole of train No the locometive, toppled terrifle, including tho track. geom, only the cars of thrown off the track. “When the two trains st gineer of 14 had his hand tle, about to &ton his train OUTS, 3 i, off Xo 14 wer ack, the en verséd tne engine. When been stripped off the track, the locomo- tive went ‘wild’ down the track tow ard | La Grange. We of the La Grange accom modation TUrve, and signaled tha en- n toreverss his engine tive approaching gineer of our trai Ho bad: hardiy time to whet tho wild crashed into us. I was thrown, 50 feut and came out of it with broker; Nao one alsa was hort, legs. the La Grange accommodation was a day | per No, I don't railroad any more — Louisville Conrier-Journal. Boulanger's Horse, ~The 14th of July was tho great day of Boulanger's life, so far as popular | admiration and oxterior manifestations “It was the date of the of the black bhorse—the | horse that became for the time a party symbacl, a political finger post, a featurs were conogrned, appearance in the history of Frauce Heo was a prodigicusly showy horse, as gorgeons as ho was famous. He was compnsed principally of a brandishing | tail, a new moon neck, a looking glass | #kin and the action of Demosthenes. He seemed to possess two paces only— a frotting walk and a windmill canter. He was a thorough specimen of what the Spaniards call ‘‘an arrogant horse. Ho wns gaudy, yet solemn; strutting, yet stately; flaunting, yot majestic; mag niloquent, yet eloquent. He was drilled with the most admira His manners were so super- lative that with all his firework display | either difficult! | to handle or tiring to sit. Never was a horse so emphatically suited to his rider The two were identical in their ways | Each was as gilded as the other. As the! ! horse bounded ‘the general, who had a weak grip; rocked on him. saddles and © ly, like a stage sovereign bowing to his! assembled peor le, — Blackwood 's Maz CZ21ne, on the Promenade, When taking his walk abroad, von Pump i comipuny of a plain looking heiress, His eredizors are thas del Figs o ary but weal! tween the pair and longer respite Saftle, the stnde companion, prefers to |} rm in arin with Sanftmed dato for the ministry heard tyremark; 'Satlle grow steady, it appears.” nt and Joyous er, a candi GEhrhaber, the mannfacturer, likes to trot along with Krieger, the old veter breast is all medals and ribbons. splendar,” LEhrhnber thinks, shine upon my empty buttonholes, *’ Aina, not particularly good looking, always goes out with Bertha, who is de Then folks will say, ‘Anna is not bad, after all '— Humor istische Bl att 7. Appreciation. Tho Ilmira Advertiser ti a clergyman about to le: who had endeared hiss nit by his self denying Among the why calle say goodly were WT glarly pastoral worl 4d upon him to apd TE He an parti tmseif), sand Brother iaers yon £ the St gis uot TR 20 taeation of a cle ¥ Wrole Their Books, is needed to wovel than to great nos ms when ung Beott was more than 40 when be pub. | lished the first of the Waverley novels { Thackeray was not far from 40 when George - “Vanity Fair’’ was finished, Eliot was almost 40 when ‘Adam Jade’" appeared, and Hawthorne ‘was 16 when ho sent forth ‘“The Scarlet Let- £% in 1850. —Brander Matthews in Nicholas Wa were following | 32 | core of a? , y ! Ang Hy shock of the two trains meeting w as, of Remarkab!o as ‘it. may! un the thrht- | The shock | thraw him ont of the eal, and the wrench threw onen the. throttle again and re- tho cars had | jump to the locomative I reckon, two | but At every stride he swung harmoniously in the | wnt right and left alternate. | Herr s generally to be seen in tho! hd ail d into the expectation of a marriage be give him a littie! boon § Ue BOER Waxing People are then | is beginning to covered ‘with *A little borrowed “will | i. | nates of W THE CHIMNEY. | With Moy» Especial Reference to Drala I Pipe and Tomato Can Chimneys. “Speaking of chimneys,’ said an old soldier, ‘‘the chimney such as one not | infrequently sces made of glaged drain pipe always interests me groatly. We've | seen such chimneys ron vp outside of | shanties, and we'va seen them carried i from the tops of chimneys over to the | side wall of some much higher building erected next-door and thence on upward above the top of it. © There is one thing | about these drain pipe chimneys that al- | ways surprises md very much, and that is that they stack 'ém up with the flange end of the