DO NOT EAT TOO MUCH. p(,0rr5soR ATWATER'3 LECTURE 0N A VERY PRACTICAL TOPIC. ft, Relation of Food to lleellll Ignorance ,( the laws ' Eating Claim Hmij Vie Hour Scientist Are Now biting AtUo lloa to the Subject, The lecture was by Professor W. O. Atwater. on "Food anJ Health." It wal under tlie auspices of the sciciitiflc socio tifof Washington and the Smithsonian Institution. The principal point of the lee ,re was the uiluptatioti of food to the demands of the body, and of the eviU of overeating and iribuificii'iit nutrition. The eating of bread and meat lsasimple matter, but the way in which the dilig ent constituents of the food perform their offices in the maintenance of life are prob leuisas profound as any with which phy. peal science has to deal. The works of nature culminate in man. In his organ tin her operations arc most complex and recondita The laws which regulate our physical being are discovered but slowly, and by the most ingenious and profound research. Those which govern the nutri tion of our bodies have been shrouded in mvstery, which only the Investigation of later time has begun to unveil Hut the crude theories of the past are being grad ually replaced by the more certain knowl edge of the present. But this evil of overeating, be it great or small, is, of course, confined to the classes to whom generous fortune, unchecked by reasonable restraint, al lows It. There are countless auircrcrs from dietary habits into which self in dulgence has not tempted, but relentless fute have forced them. The overfed only pay for pleasure the penulty of pain The greater misery of the underfed, theii hunger, with its inseparable attendants, ignorance, selfishness, crime and degra dation, are things of terrible moment. The lecturer referred to the income and expenditure of the body, as follows: "The body receives food, drink and oxygen, which constitute its income. Part of this material is transformed into flesh, fat, bone and other tissues of the body. The remainder, together with the tissues worn out by use, is transformed into urea, carbonic acid, water, etc These products are given off from the bodv and constitute Us expenditure. Illustrated maps were used to show the dietaries of different people engaged indifferent occupations, and he proved that although people in this country work harder and need to have more and better food than tlnjso of corresponding classes in Europe, yet that many persons of sedentary habits, who really need but little, consume as much as would be re quired if they were engaged in severe muscular labor. A certain amount of food is necessary to keep the machinery moving. A large number of well to do people of this coun try eat much more than is necessary The excess consists of meats and sweet meats. We ransack the four quarters of the earth for materials to excite the ap petite, and thus increase the amount of food consumed. Most people of this country are engaged in occupations which require comparatively little mus cular exercise, and the result is we uu pose upon our bodies the task of getting rid of a large amount of material in ex cess of its needs at fearful cost to health and happiness. The cheapest food is that which sup plies the most nutriment for the least money. The most economical food that which is cheapest and best adapted to the wants of the user. Hut the maxim that "the best is the cheapest" does not anolv to food The best food, in the sense of that which has' the finest ap pearance and flavor and Is sold at the highest price, is not generally the cheap est nor the most economical, nor is it ul ways the most healthful It is iiiiMirtaut that people be taught uImhiI their food but the first requisite is the information to give them. The subject is. however, new In its investigation we stand usm the larders of a eontmnt of which but a email part has yet been explored In the great European universities investi gation is active. In our own country extremly little bus been done, and that little is deH'iuli'nt almost entirely upon private munificence for its support. "What." biiid the speaker, "is to he done about it? In the first place we ought to find what flaws there are. if any, in the conclusions to which the best research of the timo seems to force us. Then we must see how these con clusions are to be supplemented This will require abstruse and costly experi menting. But at the same time the pub lic needs to be educated People need to understand the fundamental princi ples. The laws of a large number of states and territories require that physi ology be taught in the public schools, but unfortunately the teachers them selves are deficient In training, and many of the text books are sadly defective." In referring to the importance of pains taking research, the speaker cited ths experience with the respiration appar atus. This in its best form has been used in a few European universities and ex periment station laboratories, but not in this country. The greatest difficulties attend its management Professor Hen neberg, of the University of Ooettingen, began work of this kind over twenty years ago and has only lately, and after the expenditure of many thousands of dollars, succeeded in getting his respira tion apparatus into condition for experi ments of the desired accuracy But the great problem now before the student of animal nutrition is that of the income and expenditure of energy in the animal body. It will require the keenest, most elaborate and most painstaking efforts of the chemist, the physicist, and the biolo gist, but the effort toward its solution must be made. In speaking of researches in this (ne in the United States it was that we are ery far behind European investigators, that, indeed, we have hardly made a be ginning. What we most need is trained men with high, scholarly ideas, enthusi astic devotion, and abundant means at their command. Thai we shall some time have these there is good ground to hope. Washington Post Georje's Ceasonlng. -You are not as liberal a you we Mj tore we were married, to order two portions of strawberries ana cream, and now It's only one. "Well, that's proper. )$! two,bjt wea-ooenow.aintwe. -v ter. A Family Be-robUM- Batchell (to happy Wberrjff" you, old man, oa the new arrival, dot-s be look Lie? . , . lUUer (remembering tbe a tnentsr-He lart. hi. mil h W both tidss of the UailJ.-Haryar s a"- WOMEN BEHIND THE DESK. " Mm; r..l..t of Tl.w-How Oe Woman Treat Auuili.r, It paint OIH to learn ll,,.t i office isaomewbatof a failure; at least in 1 . 1 k,-U ,k,'l", ,1,ut into h.-r official life certain trait that are characteristic of her sex, but which re not in harmony with business affair. in uie nrst place, the woman nill.-lul i. severely offensive to women, from whom she exacts more than the legal pound of esh and for whom she huw . con tempt and lofty toleration that are out side the limits of law. The cauof this attitude of woman agaitist woman has M yet eluded the -urch of scIi-iicm ami Confounld the theories of philoaophv; and, to conclude, even I have no solu tion to offer. And yet. If we consider the matter clos. lv, we shall find a rea- son, if not a cai:o. A man appear be- fore a woman in office already crushed; it has absorU-d all his courage to face official femininity, and if he does not receive oil the snub and the contempt that he I prepared for he is more disap pointed than surprised. The woman behind the desk is an awe Inspiring object to the bravest man; she is her sex plus authorilv, Chailotle Cor- day and .Minerva combined. She is not the more imposing by reason of her office, but the office is impMing because she fills it, because the office is herself. Such a woman may insist on any thing unhinder ed of man. He is even content, at her command, to concede that the earth is flat for the time being, lie appears be fore so much maji-sty in a commanding attitude; he waits her pleasure patiently before receiving, the H)stage stamp for which he applies, cash in hand; he sti fles his haste to obtain his letters until she sees lit to give them to him. For these reasons the official woman does not go out of her way to annoy or to torture man; she accepts him as a worm, and be cause ho is weak she refrains from tread ing on him, and goes no further than to turn a deaf ear to his application for let ters or stamps, and to gorgonizo hhu with herTennysonian "stony stare." A woman approaches the official wo man guarded window in a different atti tude, in fact in a belligerent attitude, and the monarch of all she surveys re ceives her in an equally belligerent spirit Two hungry dogs approaching the same bone will give a fair idea of the situa tion. The passive indifference shown to that humble creature., man, no longer exists; the adversaries both have their lances in rest, and each is looking for the weakest spot in the armor of the other. There is an ominous silence, during which the fashion of garments and fashion of features are criticised; there is an ominous sniff, a snapping of eyes, an elaborate exhibition of a chip on the shoulder for opponents to remove violently, a lofty staring at tops of heads Instead of into eyes, an aggressiveness of excessive overpoliteness, the lino malice of preventing to the utmost the consum mation of the object that both have at heart, the overzealous desire to make a fault and find it, to imagine an insult and resent it, to com pel insolence that breeds the Insult. Naturally, tho women who are not officials complain of the women who are officials, and the woman behind tho window complains of the j woman in front of it Tl.iu la tlm cnrtntia ilnnrvnr thnt rnn- I .1 ...i,.-. .L f,.r nni.iin ' -m.. ..:;!,. tl.nf iiP!,. her down ' m.." ti. r .nir u i.r ln.ii. . ., ... ..... . t..:: 1 .1... viuuauv. oiu it is ii.u I'lmi's ui - cenoral'lv-the impossibility of a woman rating a woman in any other way than I."". ,.....iut. Tl, nn f 9 " " " " ' Vdil ence be wcen'a free, if tax paying, pub- , . . r ki.o n .r. PC ailU lier own ......... w.v.v. ... ries her homo characteristics into public affairs, regarding men as the possessors of obnoxious latch keys, and women as the victims of them. Her clients are punished for her toothaches and respon sible for her dvspepsia. That she is com pelled to hold lowly office is tho fault of the world, and the world must suffer for it. She know s that she is better than other women, and demonstrates her su periority to anticipate their doubt, or the .i....i.t f'lmt hI.p has invented for them. """". ., ....1. This is not gaiiam. nut, ft lu trim. T iur rnn u no OUCSlloil tl,.,t u'iili time, tho faults indicated will be remedied; but. until they are, woman in office will be a constant exaqieration to woman out of offke. It is true that woman out of office is equally exasper miii" to woman in office, and the pro verbial mans inhumanity to man is thus furnished with a parallel in woman s antagonism to woiuan.-"Chatterer in Boston Courier. New Jerwr's Sflmul Fond. New Jersey has a school fund of $t OD0.00O, und docs not know what to do with it. It can not be used for anything h..t the rjublic schools, and not very uub m f- , . much of it is allowed to go there, only a rrtnf the annual income being avail- able, so jealously has the state constitu- m,.r.l..il its sacreduess. Meantime, it is piling up every year, and the com miJoners are at their ',U' end to find an investment for it. The original idea was to have a fund large euous tiroly support the public schools turough- out the state, but that, it s aa.l. would take $70,000,000; and, besides, it s gen- Ai-nllv believed that it is better tor me school system to have the local scnoois rfirectlv provided for by local taxes. People take more interest in somettuoig Oiev have to pay for.-Exchange. nw lea Cottar itwna Uoik. The danger of cutting ice before it has attained a thickness of eight Inches or more is great, and numbers of horses have been lost by their Drcasoi8 .1.- i.. a-bile working the plows. icemen say, however, that by putting a lipnooM around the animal neck bo 7 L ;. .mder the ice. the work of getting it out is not great The act on of the noose stops the animal, breath i and soon causes the body to become inflated with wind so that it will floe, .on .nrfnee. when it is easily hauled out upon the ice.-Boston Record. ,ol W'H Posted. "What tone is that band playing?" asked tha fidgety man on the ouukunaof the "Sphere Did You Get That Hat?" replied 'XryoTntind where I got It!" retorv ed the otLr fiercely. "U joa can't an Swer a clvU question I'll find .cms one who en."-Cnicaso Tribune. A ! nallom. Tom's little cousia. Mabel, ft" araphically her nensation ou H"" " Sn?)liJeIaOD tae bed earring. "Ob m?" she sisbeJ; "mamma, I'vestrucked S .rm wnerei.m?k.surstnr WHERE FLOWERS GROW. ASTORIA, LOSQ ISLAND, A LAND 0 BEAUTIFUL FLOWERS. What Owa On lit Una of Ilia Great (irxa boum Wnlt'h ftuoply Nw lark with Ploirart uj riant Tha Prvblanaa Forcing; and H)brlUltatlan. To one lu search of ej or anything ibove the dull level of Uie commonplace, probably the tast spot which would sug gest its. If as likely t yield it would be the typical, proiaio Long Island town. Vet one of these, and one of the moat prosaic at that, is paradoxical a it may ap-ar a veritable land of flower. As toria teem witli lovely, though hidden blooms. If the flowers which the florist' jealous care cover from the inclement weather were left exposed, they would spread over thousand of acres, and make of ths little town a garden of loveliness. Fur eight months in the year the daily supply of (lowers to this city amounts to (15,000 worth, while on sjKvial occasion, such as Mister and other holidays, the amount is nearly doubled, and the greater part of this supply come from Long Inl.md. The largest of the Astoria nurseries stands just within the limits of the vil lage. The wide expanse of turf around it is dotted with no less than thirty-one greenhouses, whose glistening roof com prise some 73,000 square feet of glass. The hybridization of plants to form new specimens is In no small measure dependent 011 chance. The method em ployed is in itself simple, and consists of dusting the pollen from theblooiu of one plant UNn the stigma of the other, the result lieing a (lower partaking of tho characters of both. The incidental cir cumstances, however, are almost impos sible to regulate, save by scientific ap plication and the minutest care. The selection of two plants which are liable to join, is. in itself, a test of the floricult urist's skill, and this U'ing achieved, the temH'rature must be regulated to the convenience of the plants, and the dry ness or moisture of the atmosphere care fully watched, let, in spito of all pro- cautions, and for no apparent reason, tho attempted hvbridizalion is often a fail tire. Some of the best discoveries ever made in this branch of horticulture have been brought about accidentally, tha lieautiful chrysanthemum called Mrs. Alpheus Hardy being the result of one ol these fortunate blunders. FOKC1NO DLOSSOM9 AND FRUIT. Another problem which has from time immemorial busied the nurserymen is the question of producing blooms or fruit at stated periods by forcing, in defiance of natural laws, and although this has not yet been reduced to a certain law, important improvements have been made. A skillful gardener can, by the regulation of heat, moisture and fcrti lizers, considerably advance or retard the production of any plant. In Japan, where, floriculture has attained to scien title heights as yet unknown in America, the precise day can bo fixed for the blos soming or fruition. Only a vast exerlence can foretell the degree of heat necessary toa plant, and in all nurseries the greatest precautions are utilized to insure success. In the nurser ies referred to, more than. 40,000 feet of oino aro used for heating, while a wind- mill pumps 20,000 gallons of water daily for use in the hothouses. The regulation of heat varies with tho nature of the . . plant. The difference of temperature be tween Individual noinouses for. while in one thero will bo 100 degs. or more of dry. parching heat, the next will bcalmostcoLUndtheairof another u.ay be heavy with a moist heat which turns it into a vniair bath. ,..,.:., nr. rnrl.w-ilh different siecies of plants, some thriving under it and displaying marvelous ueau tin which thev never attain in their native state, while others, like the slen der Dendrobium Thyrsillorum, refuse to depart from ordinary laws and die when artificial means are applied. The plants are watered every day, and in some cases twice or three times a day. This alone takes up a considerable amount of tho workmen's time, but it is not the only ftttenton clatuieu oy tneiu. n u;my - . . h erCenhouse . - , . and each one of tho growths investigat ed, certain plants clipped or grafted and weeds and withered leaves removed from 11 To tho floriculturist flowers have no romance. Tlitir cultivation to him Is a mere matter of commercial value, and the sight of a florist and his apprentices seizing delicate plants by the handful and pulling them hither and tinnier ai ways fills the layman wmi aiuriu. a MILLION PLANTS UNDER GLASS. Each of tho spacious hothouse la de voted to a single plant and its varieties. and the whole number aggregates near ly 1,000,000 plants. This ilrm handles ...... il.nn 1111 bouse in the conn- mure i.i". ....... j anJ ,t g(!nJlJ QUt ovtr mm ferng .,. am uirla anj conditions of Rre p,,, ailj fr0m the well known Adiautiuin, or maidenhair, to the Dixona, or tree fern, wliicli ireijueuiiy aells for toO. The other hothouses contain a pris matic gradation of colors, from the pale . th bu J , . ft ,u rld uurning urungu from the duz- hest deep red course, roses are plentifully ej. the well known La France , , majestic American BmJ t,ie newer varieties wbicli ,nerseded these in popular favor, M the Bride, Puritan, William Francis Burnett and Mine. Uolstie. The fashion TgK Vlkg every ot,ert j tubject to faJgi ftnd their pri.Mw are greatly affected (n OTMequ,.nc, When a rose is "the rage- the smallest platl. as 11 sprouw m ti,. tine oota known as "thumb pots, rorth from tl to $2; while later, when its popularity is on the wane, the same p ant fetches barely oe or wu iuu ' . .. . . 1 : New York uommerciai Aurawa. On an Oeean Grejbonnd. V,rm Officer Capt. RLsquett, there is fn riirht abend, and the ai has grown ten deg.'ws cower in ina is five minutes. We are now running at three-quarter speed. What shall 1 dor r.r.t Kiannett Goabead at full speed. If we bit anything it all over with ns, but if we scrape through with onlv a bump or two it will be a great advertisement fo the line, and I'll be presented with a nand aome testimonial by the paeners as a mark of their regard for my skill and cool ness. LH her go for all she's worth. Jester. A Wall Street lUn. Mr. Diicata-I beard that you took a flyer In Wall street Utely. Wbt did you clear? .. ilr. 6irapped-My baa aooount.-i.ew York Uarald. QUESTIONING BUNCO MSN. How P'twflr Met Them AfWr Lon Hoarrh of Twalva Yrar. "Pardon me, p-litlemen," he said, taking ol bis hat and bowing to the four men whe stood uear an entrance to the pmtolliee, "I ould like to ask you a qiiotiou," and tit lookud cautiously around him. ,r you bunco incur La added, lu mystified voice. " hat do you mean" asi:eu one of th four sharply, pushing back his ailk bat and looking daii'erouk. "Now, pl.Msa don t get mini. I don t watit to hurt any one's feelings. But you uve been pointed out to mo a thousand time as bunco muu. Arayuu real bunco men?" hero, my man, you'll iret Into trou ble if you waste mijeh time around here," ouaauswured, toying with hit cuffs a it eager to take them oil for action. 'I asked you not to get mud," pleaded the stranger, reproachfully, and Hipped a bit of thread o;T his shining sleeve. "I'm lu earliest nlxuit it. Are you huueo men f" 'Are we bunco men?" was tho stem an swer. "We arc gentlemen, and "Well, are you bunco intleaien, then? ain't particular about that." "I any wo aro gentlemen, and if you In sult us ugidn I'll smash every bone In your ugly little body." "Don t get mail, gentlemen; for heaven sake don't get excited." berried, patheti cally. "I would lihe to know. They say oil lire, he ml.lid, in a tone or iiMlcv,-y. "What do yon want to know for?" "1 want to know." "Why?" "Well," he said, lowering his mild vole toatnijpc whisper mm looiiiiiij at them with np;-e.ilin eyes, "I am a detective." "Oh:" f.mr voice replied cheerfully. "If you are a detective tlmt s ilmcrent. How do we know you are a detective, though?" "Oh. I nm." "Have vnu vour badge?" "Here it Is." "Well, well, my dear man, why didn't 011 ary so I efore? As long 11s you are a detective we don't n.iud telling you that we i;re bunco men. "Ileal bunco men?" "Yes." "Why?" he mild, and an envious sigh lipped from his li a. '1011 see, he explained, "I have lieen on the force twelve years and I have never ar rested a bunco man. I don't suppose," esltatlngly, "that you would let 1110 arrest you? "ot to any great extent." "It would Is. a great favor to me; would make a great reputation for mo." "Couliln t think of It." "Not even one?" "Nary .1 one." "Think of it," ho urged In a mild voice, I have not even seen or heard of one be ing arrested In twelve year." "Sorry, but we can t accommodate you. Time's too precious. Kxect a train In any minute." Well." said the detective, sorrowfully, if you won't, I suppose you won't," Hiid he started to go away. He suddenly turned and asked: "Well, look here, If you won't let mo arrest you will you take me In with you and make me a bunco man?" detective a bunco man! shouted a derisive chorus. "You would ruin the pro fession!" and the veteran detective sadly turned away. New York Tribune, Poor Utile Alphonmi XIII. I often siiv that pimr peoplo must be fonder of their children than the wealthy are of theira. Thero is snch a poignant interest In a child who will have to face a sea of troubles. Poor little Alphonso XIII must bo invested in his mothers eyes witli an interest 01 tiinr kioii, oeio . ... . 1 ... 1 I. : the posthumous son of a vivcur ot a nau constitution, who, having used himsell up at the age of 20, died of a galloping consumption. A Spanish deputy told ui( last October that tho poor little boy Had no chance of a long life and that it would be rather a misfortune if he grew up. The nervous system was so bad that the doctors were afraid of having linn bathed In the sea. A shock of any kind miuht knock it to pieces. His mother comes of the most epileptic branch ot the imperial family of Austria. Poor little Alphonso has, Enid the uep uty I quote, llesliless litllo legs, wmi bones no thicker than a chicken's. They bend under the wei-ht of an ubnormal Iv biir head, which points to hydroco phalus. Altogether the conformation ol the little monarch is a thing rather for an anatomical museum than to bear the weighty trappings of regal state. Ill mother is always in ear shot of him and the doctor handy to her. A corkscrew sta r communicates with ins aim nui bedrooms, and there is a speaking tulif close to bis bed, so that were anything the matter with him the nurse could at once tell her and the doctor. The king 1 two sisters promise to lie winsome, and have fairly good constitutions, though their flesh U slow to heal. Mercedes, to whom I told you so early as November Snanhmls hero were bc"inninir to make ud as shown in "homages or rrenci toys, Btiir nurses dolls. They noticed on tho sands of San Sebastian what a weak limr tho uoor brother was, and jumped to the conclusion that the crown would soon drop down on the head of his eldest sister. She and Theresa are very pretty and cheery. Mercedes is very like the queen of the Belgians, who was never either one or the other. Her majesty is an aunt of Queen Christiana. Mrs. Crawford's Letter in London Truth. Preaelrlne Aft-alnat Fortune Teller. The nc. Father Wall, rector of St. Paul's cathedral, scored the people of hi narish vesterdav, particularly tho mar ried women, on the practice of patroniz ing fortune tellers and wizards who read the past, present and luture. "When a person visits a fortune tcllei to ascertain his fortune, he goes to find out what Uod alone, and no one else, knows. When you give to a fortune teller your presence, and make him or her believe that they have a foreknowl edge of seeing the inside view of the future, you adore him and make him be lieve he has power not given to the dcviL If you think he can peer into the future vou make him the equal or uoo. Therefore you have strange gods before Him. and violate the nrst commanumenu "We find youths, young girls, and es- DfciallT married women, making a prac tice of tliis sin. If you deliberately visit a fortune teller you are indulging in mortal sin. If you go out of pure thoughtlessness It is not so bad, but it is a sin nevertheless. It is the same thing as going to an idol and giving your heart to 1l This is idolatry of the worst kind. I would like to impress on your mind that fortune tellers compose the worst characters In the community. One class of the business Is fortune telling and the other is the seduction and ruin of youth. To my own personal knowledge I know of Demons who have been ruined by consul tlnz these people. I warn all per sons of the congregation, and hope you will extend this knowledge, that It I mortal sin against the first command menL Avoid them and their nefarious hnsinpasL for the designs they have on the morality of youth." Pittsburg Dis patch. A DESPERATE FIGHT. MODERN STORY VERSION OF AN OLD ABOUT COLUMBUS. Aa Account of the Day When Christo pher Colniubua riayed the Itole of a Pirate llow Ue Came to Dattle la Lis bon A garage Ilatllo at Kea. It is one of those tales that illustrate the manner of this cruel ago. The rlrotcs Lad long boeu tho scourgo of Uie oncst Venetian, traders. Sometime they would disguise themselves as inur- chautiueu trading peacef ully to Candia for wine, and then throwing off their disguises, would prey upon ull around them. No mercy was shown in tlteso arful contests. Between tho sea rob- rs mid tho merchants thero was a listing and deadly hostility. It was to 10 pirate class that the Columbi be longed, and of all tho corsair, of the ay they were tho inobt renowned. The elder Columbus had apparently lain in wait in vain for tho rich licet that sailed yearly to tho north. But ho had a son, uown ns Columbus Junior, who fol lowed t'.ia famo profession und whose truo name was Nicolo Uriego, or Nich olas the Creek. Ho at last succeeded iu tho project which his father hud so long essaved in vain. Tho prizo was a tempt- one to tho bold buccaneers. Tho landers cullers with their freight were valuedatW0,0O0ducats-perhaisi',0O0,- 000 and would haro proved nn immeipo fortune to tho captors could they buvo tained tho pihuI. In l lSj the galley wero equipped with unusual caro. Wo have tho decree of tho senate under which they set sail. Tho Dogo Giovanni Moncenigo appoint the noblo Bartolomeo Miuio raptaiu. ith a salary of 000 ducats. Four gioa; galleys aro provided, mid to each cap tain a bounty of 3,500 golden ducats is promised upon their safe return to Ven ice. This money was to bo jiaid out of tho tax on tho Jews, and calls up anew Shakespeare's unreal picture; it is plain that the merchants of Venice wero tho truo Shylocks of tho timo. A medical man was assigned to thotloot; bis salary as only nine ducats a month. Jlinuto rules are given for tho con duct of tho expedition. Tho freight Is to be paid to tho Btato. No dcckloads of till or pewter ware aro allowed, no currants nor molasses aro to bo stored in tho hold. Two galleys were to go to London or tho English porta, tho rest to Sluys or Bruges. On their passage they miuht touch at Malaga ami otuer port in Spain; on their return a ship was de tached to trado with tho Molmmmortan along tho Barbary shore. The Vene tians wore too keen twiders not to flud profitable markets oven in tho land of tho infidel. The Columbi or the Grtegos were at last to seizo their prize. They watched with soven ships powerful, no doubt, and well equipped off the Spanish coast to intercept tho fleet or Bartolomeo Miuio. Tho commander of tho pirates was Nicolo Oriego, tho son, wo aro told, of tho elder Columbus. Ilia father had disappeared from eight. But with him iu the pirate ships was another Colum bus, tho future discovorer and admiral of tho Indies. In bis "Life" Fernando Columbus bousta of his father a shaxo in this famous engagement famous be cause it led to tho settlement of Colum bus at Lisbon, his uiarriago and hi fu ture oxploila. Ho was now a man of at least City. hardenod by thirty-six year of coasolosi adventure. What potation ho held in the pirate fleet, whether as commander or seaman, his son doe not toll. We only know that ho servod undor hi relativo, Columbus or Uriego, ana mat ho fought with despernto energy in the famous sea fight of Capo ht. V inccnt. The corsairs, or Columbi, approached their prey in the evening. Thoy wailed all night on the still Atlantic, and in the morning rushed upon tuo Venetians. It was sevon, perhaps eight, ships against four. Tho galley woro heavy lauon and nnmamigoablo compared to their swift assailants. Tho Columbi had evi dently resolved to niako uro of thoir nrov. They sailed under the l' roncn flag, and may have boon fitted out in Genoa, It was tho custom ot tue piratos. it Booms, to assume false colors. But dreadful wa the contest and florce the fight that ragod all day, as Columbu had told hi Bon, on the tranquil ca tho scene, nearly four centuries later, of the battlo of St. Vlncont and hi narra tive is confirmed by the Venetian ar chives. The four great galley undor Bartolomeo Minlo defended thcniselvo with unfailing courage. From the first to tho twentieth hour they beat off their savage assailants. Tho shins irrapplod with each other and fought hand to hand. Thoy naod, we are told, artificial fire, and the pirate fastened their ships to the galley by hook and iron chain. Then, no doubt, they boarded and were at laat success ful. And then Fernando Colon rolatc the romantic incidont that lod, he thinks, to the discovery of a now world. Tho ship in which hi father fought was lashed by chains and hook to a great Venetian galloy. The Venetian seem to have ct Columbus' ship on fire. The flames consumed both vessels. The only resource left to the survivor waa to leap Into the sea. Columbus, an excellent awlmmor, seized an oar that floated near him, and nartlv resting on it and partly swimming, sustained himself in the water. He knew that he was about six miles from the land, the coast of Portugal, and made hi way toward it Wearied, half Inanimate, he wts dashed upon the shore. lie had lunch difflculty in reviving himself. p-Jt be waa near Lutbon and made in way, a hipwreckod, pcnniles aeaman to the Portuguese capital, Eugeue Law rence In Harper . A Waterpruuf Itopa. A ronemaklna firm In Kngland Is manu facturina a new type of rope called the antimrrosiveand self lubricating wire rope. The core and all the wires In tlie strands are said to be coated with a composition called elbeantolinc. wbicb tills up tne in trstices of the rope and makes it Imper vious to corrosion. The lubricant also makes tbe rope more flexible. New York Tunes. A Daring Method of Attack. The natives In some part of South America are bold and retkle enough to them aoine chance of fighting tbe alli gator in tbe water. They dive under it and plunife a long dagger into lu belly, and aftr a few struggle tb hated monster tnrns over on iu back and dies. New Yerk Tribune. T Care Sore Tar. A towel, wet at on end aod pinned round tbe neck, will cur aor threat. , New Yerk JeanaL A UNIQUE CEREMONY, in Attempt le He Ma.le lo Caileo Us Dlarorilluuuurt. A crusade has been Inaugurated In Spain to wipe out the last vestige of the gpaaiab carnival. The movement, baa revealed a iicer custom which 1 observed iu tb huvllle cathedral. The ceremony a de scribed by The Audulucla, of Seville, I very unique. During the carnival tb choir boy dance before the host every veulug at & o'clock. After the regular ceremonies of vexr lu the presence of the archbishop and the canons "ten llttl choir boy take their stand iu two ranks of five facing each other before the altar. They are dress.nl like page of the Seven teenth ceutury with Jacket of red and white In air I pes, while kuee breeches. stockings and sailn slims; la their hand they bold w hile hats, broad brimmed and rich uilu.s beyond, aud the "key" tothestlll blub crowned, with drooping plume of . debatable territory. Notwithstanding Its red and white feather. mole, steamer must anchiir away out In "After 'Tantum Krito' lis been ung, to the bay ami passengers be rowed ashore In the accompaniment of a full orchestra, the canoe. However, they no longer have to boy beijlu a hymn In Sinih to a bright 00 carried through the surf cm tbe back and charming air. When this Is ended of men, a during the Peruvian regime, they geuutleet, put their hat on their for the port baa quite clumped her coin heads, and liegin their dance, still singing plciion since claimed by Chill, to the accompaniment of the orchestra, But that which brought us here baa The dance is slow and stately, like the old nothing to do wltb the fitful Koveminents minuet, with a pause between each step; of these burlesque republics, aud has ro th u boys wind In and out, form various malurd unchanged through many ceutu ' lluures, and end with a plrouelto. At ths rlrs. Ut-hlnd the town a great windrow of completion of the hymn the orchestra coo. yellow sand sweeps back from the Morro, tinue the air, aud the boys accompany It forming a kind of ampitheater, unrelievrd with castanets, "till dancing. The cere- by tree or shrub or blado of firiiH. This mony is then reHald, wltb auother hymn ridge, and all the desert for miles beyond, and dilTerent music, aud the whole per, I a vnst burial ground, which must once formance lasts twenty minutes. have been of much greater extent, for It is "At ItscoueluNion 'Tantum Krgo'l again known that during the last hundred year sung, while every one kneel. The arch- theoceau baa made considerable Inroiul. bishop gives hi benediction and depart A few year ago, when workmen were dig with hi attendant, the people crowding glug up the aund to till Africa's pier, and around, as bo gov down tho church, to kiss opening a track for the railroad that leads his episcopal ring. A former pope scut a toTacn(tbe lmortantiityol thedisirict, commission to Inquire Into this ceremony, forty miles inland), they found niummie unknown except at the cathedral or bo vllle, and there only practiced at the car nival, the festival of the Conception In IX-cember, and that of Corpus Chrlstl In the summer. The papal commis sioner, however, reported that the whol thing was decently and reverently per formed, and that the covering of tin head wa simply the ancient Suinisli custom; and so tho supreme authority of the church could only give Its ap proval to a harmless and charming cere mony, which perhaps form a useful coun tcrattractlou to tho masked bulls and oth er spectacles of tho streets and theaters. "The origin of the dancing is not attested by any documentary evidence, but I Im lieved to date from the conquest of Pevllll bv St. Ferdinand from the Moors. It I survival, In fact, of the autos acranien tales, or miracle play, accompanied by music aud dancing, In honor of the sacra- ment, w hlch are chielly known to humpeaa reader outside Spain through the compo lilons of Cahleron. Hot only hoys, bul also women used to dance liefore the boat. until till part of the ceremony wa sup pressed by nuthorlty. The enisle employed at tho church dam i' i 1 ooville Is the prop erty of the chapter, and strangers ara not, as a rule, allowed to sec the scores. It ii rumored that, In deference to modern sen timent, tho dances will bedlscontlnued lie fore long, but If this la to Iwthecaao.man) will certainly regret the disappearance ol one more picturesque scene aud cue mors survival of mediaeval life." Mradivarlua. We are always glad to pick up any Items relating to tho eminent Stradiva rius and bis fiddles. There is a dispute ponding In the court of sessions, Edin burgh, upon the merits or wnicn we would not breatheasyllablo.even though we had an opinion to breathe; but, In the courso of a prolonged Inquiry, some In teresting details liavo come out. The plnintUT I a wholesale fish salesman. Muslo ha always been associated wun the sea and often with fish. The story Of Amphion recurs to every mind. The lalntitl bought a "Stradivarlus" seven years ago, wnicn lie now rcpmiiaica - a OiKin the ground that several lucno 01 the rim are not genuine. In support of his grievance various ex perts have been called, who enlightened the Edinburgh jury upon things in gen end connected with Stradivarlus. They have learned In particular that ho was an eccentric genius who never made lid- dies "one after another all alike this Information, we should think, must have been rather embarrassing than Sustain ing to the good men in their responsible position. A for the particular Instru ment in question, its belly was made by 8tradlvarlus, and the varnish on the back was imparted by the same Immortal hand. About the other parts or limbs we are not informed, excepting "the left side top," which emphatically "was not that of Strad." Another export de nounced the liliertles so often taken with this grand name. It must lie a very poor specimen and badly "doctored that sells for loss than 100. The population of Edinburgh have already picked up a great deal of miscellaneous information about fiddles in the course of the trial. London Standard. Mr. Vanderbllt's Picture. There seem a certnin confusion as to the Venetian picture by Turner which Mr. Cornelius Vanderbllt ha purcnaaeu. That helms bought It and paid the splen did price of a hundred thousand dollars for it there is no doubt, but we may re ceive with a very large grain of salt the rumor that the millionaire was ambitious of acoulring Meissonier "Itixe," which is one of tlie ornament 01 v inusor, nnu . . . . ii-i-.. . that he actuully offered tbe queen half a million dollars for it. The fact that the rumor came around by way of Paris is sufficient reason for fighting thy or IU The art of "faking" originated hi Paris, where it had already attained colossal grandeur before the first American jour nal had been printed at Boston. Whichever of the Grand canal picture by Turner Mr. Vanderbllt has bought he has cot a good one. Turner understood Venetian color, and had a peculiar pro cess of bis own, taken from tl early Flemish school, and made hi own by the extraordinary manner In which he annlled it for rendering tho exquisitely luminous atmospheres of the "Queen of the Adriatic. And he was true aa true a any mortal can be in the ever vary bag. evanescent glories or sea ana iky Buskin hit it when he said of Turner, after accusing him of "exaggerating all be saw," that the foundation ot all he did was truth. The vivid and warm colorings of nature be painted with the deepest red and yellows; the gray b attempted to Imitate with blue of too strong a tint; yet the whole wa true in principle, both in general and In particu lar. Cor. Boston Journal. Knowing a Reap. "Hello, Uncle Mose," said a colored boy on Pennsylvania avenue, "readin da pa- pah r Yes, sab; dat's what I la," said the Ten arable ne a. a be adjusted his spectacle and shook a fold out of the Journal thai beheld. "He yob notoased dat yob be it npslrt lis It" "II um er TaaMndeed; yer he ter know er bean 'bout readin' fob yo kin da U." Washington Post. MIXES OF MUMMIES. 0ICG1NG FOM THE EMDALMED DEAD 13 AN INDUSTRY IN PERU. The Pry lull of tbe raclflo Coast ef Muiitli America eeiut to Have Preserved la s neiuarkable Dcf ree tbe Bemala of luliablluirta Hurled Many Year Age. Ju-I north of the Morro la a low line of verdure, mcsleru built house clustered la rowtarouud a rather baudsonia church, and a luni mole, the latttT piled up with bHCA lulc and box. , and crowded with soldiers, merchant and carifadorus. This Is Arica, a port of considerable consequence, because of being the outlet to Tucna and everywnere; not oniy nuinuie usneruien ; wrapped in tneir net, ami lowiy iiiiers 01 wrapped I the soil In shrouds of braided rushes, but the shriveled bodii-sof cblefsand other per sonage of consequence, enveloped in lias cloth aud thin layers of beaten gold These aristocrats of a bygone age fared worse than their brother plctx-ians, for, while the latter were left comparatively uudlsturbed, lo lticos, now grim and ghastly as the poorest, were stripped by rude hands and their crumbling bones tossed uncovered by the waysldu. Our party went mummy hunting on horseback, striking straight across the desert to a point alsiut live mile south of Africa. We were accompanied by several peone (labor ers) and a suitable escort, for it 1 con sidered unsafe for strangers to go out un attended, a highwaymen are abroad In the laud and the pconc might be tempted to make new mummies if anything of value were unearthed. However, people bent on such blood curdling errands as disturbing the dead are not likely to bunt alone, but naturallly prefer company to keep thoir spirits up. Dig anywhere and you cannot go amis of a grave. The spades of other inquisi tive persons have scratched the desert here and there, but the great bulk ot It Is en tirely undisturbed except by fitful winds that whirl the sand Into crescent shaped mounds, and doubtless it will renmin so un til, In the lapse of ars, the slowly encroach ing Pacific, shall swallow It all. Nothing can decay protected by the magnetic, dust of this rainless region, and the content of the tombs look aa If they were put there yesterday. There is no consuming worm or Insect. Flesh drle without decompo sition; wood and vegetablo matter petrify from the alisence ot moisture, while fabric anil article lu stone and clay "keep" for ever. Our workmen dug In several different place to the depth of llvo or six feet, and brought up a dozen well conditioned "an clenU" two of which I have shlpiied to tbe United State with their wrappings In tact. Tbe most curious things we found that day wero not the rings ot beaten gold or silver encircling bony lingers, uor clay water Jars molded in quaint designs, nor bone spindles, wltb a thread still in them, just aa the weaver laid down his work some centuries ago, but the petrified eye balls, which a careful digger may always find, seldom Inserted in the face of tb mummy, but fallen out among the wrap pings. Modern science cannot comprenona now these eyes were preserved; the commonly accepted theory is that they were never the visual organs of human beluga, but those of cuttlefish, with which the mora perish able optics of tbe subjects to be mummi fied were replaced. JJut tuey are not lea curious, and ara really beautiful things- flat on one side, round and smooth on the other, amberlike yellow In color, holding light aa an opal, and varying In size Irom tbe tip of your smallest linger to the end of a man's thumb. They are eagerly sought tor the setting of plus, sleeve button, etc., and areas durable as most jewels. The early Peruvians preserved their dead something after the maimer of the Egyptians, except that the mummies or P'-ru ara always lu a sitting posture, with knee drawn up to the chin and bands clasped in front of the knees. The head and all Is first envelojied In dyed cotton cloth, bound with roies of braided llama wool (similar to the ropes made today by Andean Indians); the whole uncanny bun dle Inclosed within another netting of ropes, or a basketlike case ot braided rushes. Remove the cloth, aud tbe hair, always long, black and glossy, will be found elaborately braided, perbaps guiu or silver earrings In the ears and a necklace of tbe same metal depending upon the breast. The feature are well preserved, even to their expression, which is usually one of extreme terror and meutal agony con- Arming the assertion of historians that those about to die were placed by their obliging relatives in what wa considered the correct position lor a mummy, aim firmly bound with ropes before the breath bad left the body and death stiffened the muscles. Cor. Pittsburg Dispatch. Two Kind. Guest (not at the bier stubs) This Wie nerwurst smells, landlord. Landlord-Of course It does. The violet smell also. Fliegend Bbnur. Too Suiplcluua. Mr. Ferguson Mr. Slumshy Is such a good manl Don't you think so, my dearf Miss Sharps Yes; too good to be true. Boston Post. Overmatched. Giles-What did Terwilllger say about tbe twins? Merritt-Sald it waa on too many for blm.-Llfe. Dtda't Waa to Olve tl Away. Mr. Knwed Crosau (gallaDtlyl-Bettah like my arm. Miaaea Croraruv Mr. Citua Keep yo' arm to yo'scl, y" bawn Idjotl S'pna I want to publish i tee dat we's newly Buurriadrlexu tiUv- r.r. -v J