Newspaper Page Text
CHURCHES and societies.
•MWPOlil*” B.ptirtChureb, Fifth ave-
Me between Sixteenth and Seven-
I'eenth streets— Sunday School at
aon . m.; preaching at 11 a. m.;
S, : 30p.m.;¥. M. B. U. at
i-00 p. in. Superintendent of Sun-
School, B. S. H. Crumby; Pres-
Zt'ofY. M. B. U.,T. W. Tignor;
p. L. Hutchins, D. D., Pas
tor. tf
C. James A. M. E. Church, Sixth ave
nue, between Tenth and 11th streets.
Sunday school at 9:30 a. m., Prof.
H. Spencer, Superintendent,
preaching at 11:00 a. m., 3:00 and
7.30 p. m. Class every Monday
night at 7:30 o’clock. Official Board
meets every Wednesday night. Love
feasts Friday before the first Sun-
Jav. Sacrament every first Sun
day. Bev. R. R. Downs, D. D.,
Pastor.
pay Leaf Lodge, No. 3482, G. U. O.
q. F., meets every first and third
Thursday nights in each month.
Visiting brothers are invited to meet
with us if in good standing. W.
JI. Carter, N. G.; B. F. Callier,
Secretary. tf
St. Paul Lodge, No. 20, K. of P
50. 1313 First Avenue Regular
meetings the first and third Friday
nights in each month at 7:30 Vis
iting Sirs are cordially invited. J
T, Thornton, C. C.; J. W. Mcßae,
K. of R. * 8.
Shady Grove Baptist Church, corner
of Nineteenth street and Second
avenue, Rev. L. F. O’Bryan, pastor,
No. 1945 First avenue—Sunday
School at 9:30 a. m., J B. Lyles,
superintendent. Preaching at 11:30
A. m., 3:00 and 7:30 p. m. on Sun
day; prayer meeting on Wednesday
night, conference on Wednesday
night before the second Sunday;
communion and covenant meeting
on second Sunday of each month.
Chosen Friends Lodge, No. 1554, G.
U, O. of O. F., No. 1313 First ave
nue—Meets every TuescUy night at
7:30 o’clock. Visiting brothers are
made heartily welcome. H. H.
Williams, N. G.; G. M. Sealey, P
S.;F. P. Hayward, E. S. tf
CULLINGS OF THE PAST WEEK.
Something to Interest Our Towns
people and Country Neighbors.
Miss Maria Green is convalescing
after a severe illness.
Try Turner’s Coughine, 25 cents per
bottle, at the Queen City Drug store.
tf
Mr. Abe Bailey, one of the oldest
'nraymeu in £ lvu xtTj, died. Mondav
night.
The republican county convention
will be held at the courthouse today at
12 o'clock. •
Please send iu your subscriptions,
or leavft the money and addresses at
either of the colored drug stores and
take receipts for the same. tf
There is considerable smallpox in
the city, but it seems to be of a very
mild type.
Mr. William Coar left Monday for
Birmingham, where he will make his
future home.
Please call at either f Uie
drug stores and pay year
lor the Chronicle. Don’t (
dunned for so small an 7O
The news of the death of M*‘
C«bn, of Apalachicola, r u , caoha( j u
city last week.
Mr. Madison Jenkins dj , ,
. i a vi \ topped dea
Saturday night near his 1 L .
T .. . lome on lowe
third avenue. gr
The public is earue ’,
, ~ . . . a stl y solicited ti
furnish us with local n* e . .
, i • „ , „ v ew ® of interest
which we will gladly ... , ,
ebargc. Leave item, ' P "^ ,b ,re ’“
Jrag store. People’s d| “ e6n 01t J
Front street. W ■«<>«. «TOI
Mr. Sidney Woodruff. . , ,
Tuskalooea, Ala., lai "‘T fro °
bedside Ota sickf ’*° ““
M / 80D -
-ur. Jf. aes Waver T. , . „
“'J Sa lv, after I"*"?* ‘° ,be
Kraal the' B< ” er “'
tatber in Macon. °' b ” grBnd -
have arrange i
tab this paper ati^’" 0 “ / “ r " 8 1
•eekiy Journal w ‘ b6 Seat -
Par. Just think .L . ( °“ f Sl ' 26
*eek, for only 81 ‘1 lf - thre e P a P erB a
elsewhere ’ ’ ‘ er yenr * See ad
tf.
12 o'clock.
. All persons are ‘, .. . ,
ln K for cei lifted d against trad-
C1 .tyßeal Estate! of Queen
hiuing three sb a 8 B f° c k» con
tf jaid up stock.
, V E. Weeks.
CALL FOiA . :
Th , T SCHERS.
Aue teachers J 1 -
requited tot 4 ' C ° UDty BCh °° lB
ffibruary 31W ’ he CoUrt ho UBe,
alß orequesiL J a.\ ,,1 1 (,:3Oa - We
•hciise. i not aB,£ f° r an
12 m. t e *° adjourn at
. 4 ttan or vouuA , .
ID B‘O spe».looe UI , 18 not ’*“■
arnrrtb ' o,>e - h «lf hour.,
''"“a- tewberi on ' '° g Wilh his
«honld not l 6 ° f ‘ he b6Bt
school t , OWi / ,ve 8 P lace '»
S L ‘ S?ectful,y
Pr «>. Co. ’e Mh ‘r
association.
GEORGIA NEWS ITEMS
Brief Summary of Interesting
Happenings Culled at Random.
Committee Exonerated Lawyers.
Attorneys Lee J. Langley and S. C.
Tapp were completely exonerated by
the Atlanta Bar association of the
charge of unprofessional conduct pre
ferred against them by T. H. Austin,
of the Snook & Austin Furniture Com
pany. The finding of the investigat
ing committee briefly stated, was as
follows:
“The committee having fully con
sidered in detail all the charges and
specifications, reports to the associa
tion that in its opinion there is noth
ing submitted to it, either in the
charges, the specifications, the evi
dence or the argument which would
justify this association in taking any
action to disbar or otherwise punish
Mr. Tapper Mr. Langley.”
Thomas H. Austin has written a
card giving what he says are instances
of inaccuracies in the report of the
special bar committee in the barratry
matter. He concludes the card with
the statement that he will carry the
matter to the courts.
* ♦ •
Good fo~ Union Point.
The Union Manufacturing Company
of Union Point has decided upon the
erection of a $2,500-spindle yarn plant,
using mules for the production of
high grade hosiery and underwear
yarns. This company already has an
extensive plant for the production of
knit goods and the product is known
all over the southern states.
♦ ♦ *
Half a Vote Allowed.
The Fulton county Republicans, who
met in Atlanta to select delegates to
the district and state conventions, re
tained Jackson McHenry as chairman
of the county executive committee,
and A. A. Blake as secretary. A.
somewhat unique and unusual pro
ceeding was the election of twelve del
egates to the state convention, which
meets in Atlanta in March. Fulton
county is only entitled to six dele
gates, but so many were anxious to
represent the county at the state con
vention that it was decided to elect
twice the number needed and allow
each delegate half a vote.
* * *
Nine-Hour Day Wanted.
Unions Nos. 246 and 318, of the
United Brotherhood of Carpenters and
Joiners, at Savannah, the former of
white men and the latter of negroes,
have formally notified all contractors
and other employes that, on and after
May 1, next, they would demand an
increase of pay from 82 to $2.50 per
day of ten hours to $2 to $3.50 per
day of nine hours. TTfe’ whiteyind
colored unions are working toother,
i as is shown in the identical fling
t of their notifications.
♦ ♦ *
Will Recount fit? Vote.
Judge Reagan nas appointed three
justices of th/' court to recount the
vote in the roent local option election
in Spalding county, and in so doing
states tha'the case of the contestants
will be Ivard in August next. There
is no pout made by either side as to
the correctness of the count; but un
der tie act it seems that nothing can
be dme until this recount is made.
„* * *
Company Is Held Up.
K Comptroller General W. A. Wriorht
Rfiag held up the Southern Mutual Aid
oiAssociation of Birmingham,Ala.,which
b e eeks to do business in this state, for
e reason that the concern does not
eet the requirements of the law. The
er estions at issue between the comp
be 'ller general and Judge W. R. Ham-
attorney for the company, have
, referred by the former to the at
td b< e y general and an opinion on the
0r to ect is expected in a short time.
su.
.-• • •
O Hale Talks of Fruit Crop.
t, >nel Hale, of South Glastonbury,
jl Cc w ho is as largely interested as
Conifcn i n the fruit business in Geor
y any n<t^ veB the present indications
1 for a great fruit year.
are proi ...
q h. Kucker’ii Will Filed.
e B °i W - Rucker »
The wWi died last week in Flor-
Atlanta, 'ed in the ordinary’s office
3 ida, w’as Aturday morning, and will
I at Atlanta Win due time. While the
be probatelet forth the exact amount
will fails tclit is estimated that it is
of the estatl
$200,000. I* * *
fiun Battery Changed.
Machin*jne Gun battery of the
Tb° Macl a t, of Atlanta, has been
Fift regime^ r der of Governor Can
conv rted by mpany of infantry, with
dler. mto a co however, of retaining
the privilege, nj n the possession of
the GaftHng gu
the c mmand. itry command has been
Th new infar. m p a ny Mof the Fifth
designated as co-gia volunteers,
regiment of Geon * «
• klnaucurated.
Dor War \and jury of Sumter
Now that the gAiended the adoption
county has reconnected dog law, the
of the recently enk county will begin
constabulary of a gaiu B t
waging a war of e: tLrthless curs upon
the thousands of w 4he price has not
the heads of which
been paid. k *
* • V Retained.
Byrd and Ob -uT ) aa announced
Governor C n»'lwv ! onel Phill G.
his decision to ia ' a A office of Adju-
Byrd, of Rome, in thelpsh Kell, as the
tant General J. MclntStment, and the
chief clerk of the deparlthe most inter
decision settles one of ’lce the first of
esting appointments siiAam J. Obear,
the year. Colonel Wiling
the present inspector general of the
state, has also been retained by the
chief executive in his place in the
office of the adjutant general and the
commissions of both Colonel Byrd and
Inspector General Obear will be issued
with the rest of the military commis
sions in the state.
* * «
Wil! Fight Inside the Party.
The state executive committee of the
Georgia Prohibition Association met
at Macon the past week and adopted
the following resolutions, covering the
work they propose to do in the coming
Democratic primary:
•‘Resolved, That the friends of pro
hibition throughout the state be, and
they are, hereby urged to proceed at
once to the inauguration and mainten
ance of an active and thorough cam
paign in order to secure, in every in
stance, the nomination and election of
a competent and worthy man who can
be relied on to assist in good faith and
to the utmost of his ability to give ef
fect to their views on the enactment
and enforcement of a law accomplish
ing state prohibition.”
It was decided to do ail their fight
ing inside the Democratic party, and
no separate nominations will be made-
DO YOU WANT TO MAKE 8300!
XV e want a local manager, lady or
gentleman, in own town or county; no
canvassing required. You can devote
full or spare time, or evenings only,
in connection with your regular voca
tion. $2OO to $3OO can be made before
Christmas, and it will require very
little time. It is not necessary to have
had experience. Send stamp for full
particulars. Address, The Bell Com
pany, Dept 8., Philadelphia, Pa. tf
Science is bringing strange revela
tions to the moralist, observes the
San Francisco Chronicle. Since the
day when the discovery was made that
insanity was a disease, in many cases
amenable to intelligent treatment, and
the chains and shackles were stricken
from the limbs of the inmates of a
madhouse, the world has learned that
drunkenness is a disease, that crimi
nal propensities in some cases indicate
uncorrected heredity, and in others
may be accounted for by actual degen
eration of the substance of the brain.
Any one wishing to subscribe and
receive both the Chronicle and Atlan
ta Journal—the journal twice a week—
can get sample copies by furnishing
us with their names and address. Both
papers for only $1.25 cents per year.
Judging from the facility which
some wee nursery tots have for scrawl
njgpton any surfaces exposed to their
ravages with the lead pencil, one
would suppose that every child is de
sirous of making its mark in the world.
The self-activity of a child is marvel
lous. And if its infant efforts after artis
tic expression are only guiledaright,
there is no telling what legends of
beauty, what lessons of truth, it may
inscribe upon the face of society and
the world, reflects the Christian Reg
ister.
If the ministers and presiding offi
cers of the different churches and so
cieties of the city will encourage their
members to subscribe for this paper,
we will publish every weak free of
charge, the location of their church or
hall, names of officers and their ser
vices and regular meetings. All we
ask in return is to secure for us as
many as five subscribers from each.
The pastors or pres.ding officers will
receive the paper free. tf
The Berlin papers assert that Ger
many meat have more colonies, and
and say it is nonsense to maintain
that the earth is divided up, as a new
division is impending iu colonial pos
sessions. The colonies of the Neth
erlands are pointed to as among those
tliat cannot much longer ba kept from
a new division. It is declared that
the candidates for these rich colonies
are Great Britain and Germany, and
that the latter has the better chance.
The Deutsche Zietung thinks the in
heritance is ripe, as the Netherlands
is unable to fructify its colonies.
$0 A WEEK TO START.
We want intelligent ladies, or gen
tlemen, to accept permanent position
in own town; salary to start $6 a week,
guaranteed, and commission. Many
make from $l2 to $24 a week. You
can devote all or your spare time.
Send stamp for full particulars. Ad
dress, The Bell Company, Dept. C.,
Philadelphia, Pa. tf
At present it looks as if the horsa
shoe superstition would outlast the
horse.
GET A PIANO COPY
Of “Queen of the Carnival” waltz and
“Casino March.” Former price for
these compositions was 25 cents each.
Send 30 cents to Louis H. Wolfson,
music publisher, 1121 Broad street,
Columbus, Ga., and secure both these
copies by return mail. tf
The Luther gas light burner gives a
brilliant gas light; no chimneys, no
trimming; no smoking, and no danger.
Fluid costs less than kerosene. Burn
ers fit any lamp. Call and see them
burn. J. T. Coleman, agent, 701
Front street. tf
NOTES AND COMMENTS.
Mrs. Amelia E. Barr says men are
supplanting women as household
servants.
On the whole, it isn’t strange that
the famous Tichborne claimant should
have been discovered again. He is
so numerous that he simply can’t
avoid being discovered.
An Indiana man is charged with
insanity because he burned up $3,000
in currency. If he bad lost it in a
bucket-shop his friends would have
regarded it simply as a case of hard
luck.
A New York woman routed a burg
lar with her trusty hnt pin. The
right to carry hat pins and at the
same time avoid complications with
laws against concealed weapons is
another of the immunities very prop
erly enjoyed by the gentler sex.
Our miscellaneous manufactures,
comprising manufactured goods of all
descriptions, are finding markets in
almost every civil Led country, foreign
buyers preferring the products of the
United States, and when these are
properiy introduced they find a pre
manent foothold.
Admiral Montojo again explains the
destruction of his fleet in Manila Bay
by stating that Dewey got beyond the
range of his guns, thereby “retreat
ing. ” If a “retreat” was so annihilat
ing to the Spanish ships it would be
interesting to know what effect an
advance would have had.
One of the most notable changes
in our common school system is the
tendency toward compulsory educa
tion. Thirty-two of the forty-five
states have enacted laws for compul
sory school attendance and such
statutes will probably be adopted
soon in most of the other states.
Forty thousand more immigrants
have come into the country since
July 1 than came during the corre
sponding period of the previous year.
As a statement of fact, this is brief
and unpretentious, but it nevertheless
possesses a significance of great
breadth and many shades of mean
ing.
A grim story is told of Lord Salis
bury in connection with the service
of his son under Badeu-Powell nt
Mafeking. He was offered at the
opening of the war special facilities
for getting early copies of dispatches
from Mafeking, but replied that he
could take bis turn and wait for the
newspapers like other people.
Chicago has 3,750 policemen and
the average number of arrests in a
year amounts to 75,000, though dur
ing the period of the World’s Fair
it was considerably higher. Boston
has 1,200 policemen; Baltimore, 900;
St. Louis, 1,100; Philadelphia, 2,600;
Cincinnati, 600; Cleveland, 450; De
troit, 550; Washington, 600; San
Francisco, 300; Pittsburg, 500 and
New Orleans, 320.
There can be little doubt that iu
time to come electricity will be so
merged with mechanics that the two
sister sciences and industries w ill no
longer be separable. Electricity will
uo doubt permeate every large en
gineering enterprise, and in fact will
be so far merged iu general engineer
ing that no great engineering ac
hievement will be possible without
electrical application and assistance.
One important mistake made by the
British was their refusal to buy
wagons in the United States. The
war office thought it patriotic to pa
tronize home industries, with the re
sult that the lack of wagons is now
severely felt. The London Chronicle
says it had been better had the au
thorities followed the example of
Kitchener in the matter of the Atbara
bridge, which was bought outright in
the United States.
The Government recognizes the im
portance of affording agricultural in
struction to the inhabitants of our
new island territories, and will at
once proceed to establish stations in
Puerto Rico, Cuba and the Philip
pines, where the natives can receive
education in farm work and obtain all
the industrial information th* y are
found capab'e of assimilating.
Whether the plan succeeds or not, it
demonstrates the helpful disposition
of the Government, willing to take up
the white man’s Irarden to the fullest
extent wherever its authority reaches.
Australian won.en are not spared
perplexity over the servant-girl prob
lem. They are agitating the advisa
bility of calling the class “household
employees,” it may be interesting to
local societies given to the solution
of the question to learn. There are
to be two “shifts” of employees, one
to work from 6 a. m. to 2 p. m. and
the other from 2 p. m. to 8 cr 9 p. m.,
so that they may have the afternoons
and evenings of every alt- mate week.
It is stated that the expenses of the
household would not be increased by
adopting this course, as domestic
service under this new condition of
affairs would be rendered so attractive
that servants could be readily ob
tained at half the present wages.
Acting under the authority of the
law passed in March last, the Naval
Board of Construction has adopted
designs for three new battleships
which, when completed, will mark
the beginning of a new period iu the
development of our sea power and
equal the most formidable vessels iu
the navies of the world. These ships
ill have a displacement of 14,000
tons each; they are expected todeveh p
a speed of at least nineteen knots an
hour and to have bunker capacity for
2,000 tons of coal, or enough for a
cruise of 7,000 miles. The cost of
these ships, when fully equipped and
ready for sen, will be more than $7,-
(00,000 each, and they will possess a
fighti: g power not surpassed by that
of any naval vessels afloat.
The Sing Sing Star of Hope, which
has a more vital interest in prisons
and prison reform than any mere lay
paper, publishes startling statistics
of the percentage of reformed con
victs in different states. Under the
parole system in ten states, the num
ber of those reforming taries from 85
to 100 per cent. The New York re
formatory for young men redeems 85
per cent, of its inmates, but under the
New Fork law governing state prisons
the percentage of reformed convicts
is declared to be only 15. If these
figures are true they induce interest
ing reflection. That convicts advo
cate a certain system of prison
managem nt does not prove its worth
necessarily; but in this, as in every
thing else, the testimony of the in
siders is at least worth the consider
ation of those making deductions
from the outside.
One of the strangest stories pub
lished lately was that in the New York
Herald wherein the Paris special
cable told of the locomotive that lost
itself. A charming writer of fact and
fiction, who was once an American
locomotive engineer, has told of the
locomotive that fell into a Colorado
stream and was forever buried in the
quicksand. This author felt that his
narrative would not be credited on
his wn representations and fortified
it with letters from the railway au
thorities, who vouched for all he said.
The Paris story, however, throws the
American nan ative into the shade.
Here was not only a locomotive but a
whole train that unaccountably got
off on to the wrong track and went
many miles before the error was dis
covered. This is not the tale of a
Parisian feuilletonist, but a record of
fact.
There is one homely old motto that
is going thundering down the corri
dors of time and which will continue
to echo while all things are, and that
is, “Shoemaker, stick to your last.”
Mistaken application is probably re
sponsible for more misfortune than
any other know n agency. The good
actor who makes a poor manager, the
successful merchant who achieves dis
aster in the speculative channel, the
man with the qualifications necessary
to fit him for an enviable mercantile
life and the mistaken ambition to
grace one of the professions, these
are a few instances of such everyday
occurrence as to attract little passing
comment. Jhe pursuit that is founded
on a fallacy sometimes succeeds, be
cause all things are possible, but it
more often fails. As an earLer scan
ner of men and things so tersely put
it, “Be sure you're right, then go
ahead,” and he might have added,
“And don’t stray into any side path
on the way.”
Here is the idea of a comprehensive
course of study on business methods
as formulated by the head master of
a school attended by the sons of the
middle classes in Bradford, J ngland;
In the first year will be taught office
organization, buying mid selling,
media of exchange, comnn rcial organ
izations, business correspondence and
shorthand; in the second, home and
export trade, exchanges, foreign cur
rencies, weights and measures, ship
ments and shipping documents and
shorthand; in the third, marine in
surance, customs and excise, ad
vanced busim ss correspondence and
shorthand. This curri- ulum goes
away ahead of that of the so-called
business college with w hich we are
familiar, and if adopted by schools
and colleges in this country would
fill a long felt need observes the Dry
Goods Economist. It, of course, goes
hand in hand with other studies, in
cluding French, German, mathematics
geography, history, etc.
Queer Chinese Bedrooms.
Chinese ideas of comfort are noth
ing short of startling to luxury loving
Americans. The Chinese bedrooms,
even in the homes of the well-to-do,
present many features which would
be unendurable to an American or Eu
ropean.
A Chinese bedchamber has no win
dows, is poorly ventilated and dark in
consequence, and is usually no larger
than a cupboard. The wooden bed
stead has no springs, nor does a mat
tress soften the hard boards. Usually
a wadded quilt suffices.
For pillows there are hollow square
frames of bamboo or rattan, or often
just a block of w’ood of the right shape
to fit into the nape of the neck and
give support to the head.
The furniture of the bedroom is of
the simplest. It usually includes, how
ever. an opium-smoking outfit, even if
the occupant be not a confirmed smo
ker. Any apparatus designed to facil
itate washing is considered superflu
ous. The Chinaman does not wash
any more than he can help. If he
has bathed his face in a cloth which
has been wrung out in hot water he
considers himself ready for the first
and most important act of the day,
which is attendance at the family
shrine.
The average shad produces about
30,000.060 <‘gg- s annually. Nearly 100,-
000,000 have been taken from a single
female.
SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL.
A blue grotto like that of th® island
of Capri has been discovered on the
shore of the promontory of Skinari on
the lonian island Zante. The entrance
is from the sea, and is larger than in
the Capri grotto, but the interior is
smaller. Fishing boats can make
their way in when the water is calm.
Recent investigations prove that
eighty-three per cent, of all the ocean
floor lies further down than one thou
sand fathoms, or one mile below the
surface; twenty-one per cent, lies be
tween one and. two miles; fifty-five
per cent, lies between two and three
miles, and seven per. cent, is known
to lie further down than three miles.
It is said that silkworms are very
sensitive to the action of light of dif
ferent colors, and according to experi
ments recently described by Flam
marion, before the French Academy
of Science, silkworms were kept in
boxes covered with glass of different
shades. The silkworms all received
the same food, but they gave different
results as to the quantity of silk and
eggs, and also in the proportionality
of the sexes.
A British investigator has found
that in a suburban locality the dust
particles number 20,000 per cubic
centimeter in the open air an I 44,000
in a quiet room, while in the city the
totals were 500,000 when taken from
a roof, 300,000 in a court and about
400,000 in a room. Yet though tho
dust is the great carrier of micro
organisms, the danger from the germs
inhaled seems to have been exag
gerated. It is proved that there is
but one microbe to each 38,000,000
dust atoms, and it is calculated that
in seventy years of life in tho
metropolis a man would absorb from
the air only some 75,000,000 microbes,
or about the number he drinks in half
a pint of unboiled milk.
Professor J. A. Brashear has de
veloped some of the curved plates on
which he photographed the sky one
night recently when the meteors were
expected to appear. While the night
was very bad for photographic pur
poses, the pictures of the stars which
he obtained were excellent. He said
they covered ten times the area that
w-as possible w-ith ordinary plates,
and the pictures of the stars wero
well defined aud continued clear to
the edges of the plates. The time
and labor which were expended iu
preparing to photograph the meteors
was not wasted, because it was shown
that curved plates are the proper
thing for astronomical photography
and have opened up new possibilities
in this field.
Glass paving-blocks were laid in
the streets of Lyons, France, several
months ago, and it is reported that
they have proved very successful,
neither showing wear nor becoming
chipped. The blocks have a surface
area of about sixty-four square inches
which is crossed by a, series of
grooves, dividing it into squares and
affording a better foothold for horses.
In setting, the blocks are placed very
close together, so as to obviate per
colation, and are cleaner than blocks
of wood or asphalt, while they are
more durable than granite. A large
factory has been built near Lyons for
the manufacture" of these paving
blocks, aud they will be produced iu
ornamental forms for building pur
poses as well as for pavements.
Fish Know Their Keepers.
Many of the fish in the Aquarium
in New York City have learned to
know their keepers and will crowd to
the rail when they pass. Some of
them will take food from no other
persons. A few of them eat from one
of the keeper’s hands. Among these
are the trunk fish, so called because
they are inside. The animal swims
about incased in a stout, bony box, as
impervious to attacks as the skin of a
politician. It has no neck and no dis
tinct backbone. The fish lies inside
its bony armor and a glance up its
bugle-like snout into its interior is
the basis for the statement that its
flesh is a delicate pink. The natives
of Bermuda like it very much, and
they make no bones of its cousin, tho
cowfish. They roast them both on
hot stones in their own dripping pans,,
so to speak, and serve them with a
mallet. The trunk fish is really more
the shape of a satchel. His tail pro
jects like a rudder, and he merely
steers with it, sculling along with his
stubby fins and big, bony sides like a
man-of-war propelled by paddles. Tho
cowfish has tho same peculiarities,
but is equipped also with a set Qf
horns. The unwary monster of the
deep that engulfs either animal is as
sured of a bad quarter of au hour,
speaking gastronomically.—New York
Mail and Express. 4
A Beautiful Fiah.
The parrotfish is a gorgeous object
in a somewhat coarser mold, with the
portly and uncompromising beauty of
a well-preserved dowager. He gets
his name from his beak and his green
tunic. His appearance suggests a rich
dish of emerald porcelain. There are
two specimens, both males, in the
Aquarium in New York City, and every
day they enact a tank drama depicting
the universal struggle of nature. The
smaller of the two lives iu perpetual
fear of his bullying companion. The
latter keeps him in hiding in a coral
grotto, while he promenades inso
lently around him, the terror of the
tank. His victim has protuberant
eyes with which he is constantly glan
cing behind him. His appearance
would indicate that he was growing
tired of life. Each male will eat out
of the hand of one of the keepers.
Their diet is soft-shell clams, which
they mnsb, shell and all, in their jaws.
Fragile as their parrot-like bills ap
pear, they are able to snap off a finger
in a trice.