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YOL- XXVIII-■ >>0 64
COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, TUESDAY MORNING, MARCH 16, 18S6
PRICE FIVE CENTS
FORTY-NINTH CONGRESS
lie Peath of B'prpserlHliTB
of Lou 8la«-,
H?hr,
<<1 li» ill.- Itiip'nr* sf h M oo*
roil— * *• W CUi. plain lor I lie M-u
'* Imjoiu l k r<ipu»ei mm iw utliu nt
• be Cnnatl.il lun
8p*C!ttl EnQUlrfcr'Snn.
Washington, Marob 15 — Aftu
ih* leading of the j urna! Mi 8. Mar
liij, of L -uisiana, bri fly aunounceu
the death of Lie colit, g-ie, Michael
Halm, ai.d . fit-red a resolution n
passive of the regret with which the
In-use has beurd ibe iutelliguuce of
Hibb’b death, providing for appoint
ing of a select j dnt committee con-
yit-ting of seven members and three
senators to tske the ord. r for con
duedrg Ibe luneral ceremonies and
to escort the reuiaiCB to theplucj of
burial, and i dj -urning the bouse as
a further mu.'kof respect to the mem
ory of the deceased
Feuding this, Bland, of Missouri,
asked unanimous consent that to
morrow be devoted to the consideru
lion of the same clast
of businoees that wru’d have
been in order to-day, There were
some indications if objections t- ibis
order, tut unanimous consent wat
11 ally given, St Martin’s resolu
tions wt e .ten adopted unanimous*
ly. and be hoi se accordingly at 12;20
ad urntd
• BN STB
In the senate Eumnnds rflered a
resolution to uppolnt Riv J G But
ler. D D, rector of Lutheran Memo,
rial ebureb, ot Washb gton, to be
chaplain of the senate In place of
Rt-v I)- Hu'itJey, whose resignation
takes tfleet to-day. In rfleriug the
resolutior Edmunds said he was sure
he expressed the feeling of all the
senators in givit g voice to their beet
wishes for the retiring chaplain and
espreesirg the hope that b s future
might be as successful as his past had
been. The resolution > a? egreed to
It galls submitted a proposed
amendment to the constilution, pro
viding that the pre ept presidential
term and the second session of tbi
fiftieth corgress shall terminate on
April 30 1S89, and lira’ the succeed
ing presidential and congressional
terms shall begin on that t'ae, the
one hundredth anniversary of the
ii autturation of the first p:e3ldent of
the Uoited BtateB,
Hour called up the electoral count
bill, but yielded to V-.n Wyck, who
desired the widows’ pension increase
bill taken up.
A f;er a brief discussion the widows’
pension bill weut over till to morrow
A messegs from the hous 3 notified
the Semite of the death of Representa
tive Hahn, of L uisiana, and or. mo*
tion ut Ensue, out of respect to the
memory of the dece.sd, the Henat*.
a j -urned.
DEATH OF CONGRESSMAN HAHN
Ex Gjv Hahn, representative
to congress from the second distriot
of L uisiana, died suddenly this
moruing at Willaru’s hetel of hem
orrhage of the iungs.
An autopsy showed that death re
sulted from the rupture of a blood
vessel near the heart, produced, it 1b
believed, by excessive coughing.
The remains will leave here at 5
o’clock to morrow afternoon for New
0,leans Representatives B( Martin,
Irion, Ellsberry, Snyder, Dorsey and
McCombs have bean selected to at
tend the tuueral.
early hour this morning the people
were ar- u-ed by a tremendous explo
sion, awakening everybody in the
cite. M,.ny rushed into the streets
■ o find the cause, diree'ed bv the light
of an enormous cm narration Tire
linseed oil mills ol Varney, Taylet &
C , on he middle grounds alot’g 'le
river, above the union depr-i, was on
fl’“. Toe mill- consisted of an eleva-
'or used for storing llax seed, a large
building containing tho maeiiii ery
(or giindii g, :tud a large two story
brick building UBed for a rill..ery
Tht tire was discovered in the latter,
au.i an alarm turned In. Before the
firemen re'achtd (he scene, a large
■ ron taLb of gasoline exploded wilti a
tremendous retort, eu inly demol
ishing tire building containing it, and
throwing the burning oil it a'l dlrec
lions, and firing olher build-
i' gs Tire windows of res'dences
on top of the blufl were smashed for
two : quart 8 away, aid those of a
three-story brick hotel over a squire
away were utterly demolished ou the
side next to the ixploeion. even the
sashes being blown in, Suueflfiy
'eet away from the buruirg building
was a two-story frame structure used
as theofticeef the D.ytonand Mich
igan road. This was entirely wreck
ed, and two employers sleepiigln
'he upper story hod a narrow escape.
One huudred yards south, in anotl ei
railroad efflee near the round house,
the windows were blown in and u
telephone operator was ktucked
down and elangerously cut by flying
pieces of glass, A number of other
persons were knocked down and
stunned, but no serious accident has
Deen rq-nrtad as yet. The loss will
reach $100,000
LABOR TROUBLES.
ACCIDENT ON WATER.
A 8 e mar and a Pchoonr r Doth
Down.
do
Tti« Entire C'rw of the lihoontr
Li)i|- The Hleiini'a** i'rt w and Phi*
••oitrt Have d-i'uwnrtf ly t unduei ml
*:«rr»BC PatirciKrra
The Sdtuatiou on the Ballioadi and in
tho mince
On ’ditto**.
Bpeoial to EuQuirar-Bm:
New York, March 15.-S: Paul
furnished to;day the leading feature
of the stock market, Ihe total sal s
amounting to 185 100 rut of a total ot
440 000 shares. Tue activity grows
cut of reports that the company was
to bsue bonds to the extent of$5C0,
1100, convertible into stock a: 80, and
not on the Kansas GVy tx ension,
the presumption being that ihe com
pany is in need of money for other
purposes than theconstructiou of tnat
ex'ension, and that it in turn is to be
bunded. The stick after a strong
opening closed § lower. The market
opined generally a shade higher and
was very feverish for the fiist hour,
and irregular. After some weakness
between 11 and 12 Ibe market was
firm until late in the afternoon,
when it again yielded a fraction, but
rallied and elostd firm, generally i *o
i igher, but Erie preferred ii up f
aud L ike Snore and Pacific Mail
each ^
Thu Chen tonlvai,
9f>ioial to Enquiror'Bun.
New Orleans, March 15 —Thp
fifteenth game of chtss for the world’s
championship between Z ikertort aud
Bteialtz and the six h game of the
aeries in this oity came oil this after
noon at the rooms of the chess,
checker aud whist club and ended in
? draw after forty-nine moves by
Z ikertort, who played with the
while, and forty-eight by S.elnitz,
Another Cal of JRttle*.
Special to Erqulrer‘8an,
8t Louis, March 15 —Another in
road was made yesterday upon the
Trans-Cmtiuental railway passenger
fares by the Union Pacific company
announcing an open rate for first-
class tickets between the Missouri
rl?er and C ilifornia points ol $23, and
of $12 forsecoDd-clsss It is .xpected
tire other lines engaged in the rate
war will m e. this additional reduc
tion.
A Terr; Os Explosion.
8p°olal to EaqulrersSnn.
Toledo O March 15—At an
Special in E-qnlr«r»8UB.
Et Louis, March 15 —The first
fieri, us ict of violence by the strikers
occurred this moruing, when a party
ot five men approached W 8 antou, a
watchman hired by the Missouri
P c-fic, who was attending arwitcb
in the company’s yard, and asked
him why he was occupying the place
of one of ibe strikeis He replied
that be was being paid the W'ges d* s
manded by the strikers, aud that
when the man whose position he was
then filling should return he would
surrender the piece to him. This
served to ai ger the men, and one of
them stru k Stanton on the temple
with a pair of br&.a knuckles and
another buried a rook at him, which
also struck him on the head and
knocked him leuselcss. The assail
anls then dispersed, but not before
one of them was arrested. Stanton,
it is thought, is not dangerously
wounded.
PERSUADED TO JOIN THE STRIKE
Pittsburg, Pa., March 15—Sve-
rai hundred of the striking miners of
the Irwin district, assembled at Ir
win, Pa , at 1 o’clock this morning,
and beaded by a brass band, marcheo
to tbe Manor Valley mines operati d
by Coulter, Hufl & C j , and persuaded
the working colliers to j >in the strike
The men have been working right
along since tbe strike was inaugu
rated Thiy made no resistance and
nothing serious occurred. A 1 the
mines are now idle and everything >b
quiet,
THEY ASK FOB AN INJUNCTION.
Liitle Rock, Ark, Maicb 15 —
To day a bill was filed by tbe attor
neys of tbe Si Louis aud Iron Moun
tain railroad against J Delay and
others representing the knights . f
lab -r, alleging tbe seizure and muti
lation of their property and the cb-
stiuction of the busireas of the rail
road company, and asking 'for an
order restraining all parties from
trespassing on thelrproperty and in
lerfering with the business of the
company, Chancellor Carroll grant
ed a temporary res r lining order.
ASKING FOR AN ARBITRATION
New Orleans, March 15 -Shortly
aftei 9 ,’oic-ck this morning Receiver
Sheldon, of the Texas and Pacific
railway, reoeived a dispatch from
G uldsboro, signed "CLmmittee ot
Louisiam, No 377,” saying, "We,
'lie New Orleans employes of the
Texas aud Pacific railway, being
called upon to assist our brothers now
on a strike on the Texas and Pacific
railway, r spectfully r*qu°st you will
consent to arbitrate thed.flficulty now
existing. O herwise, we will be in
honor bound to quit work until you
do.” B fore Sneldon had time to
consider the matter, he ric.-ived a
notice that some of the shop-men at
Glouldsboro had struck work. Sheldon
said : "There never has been a com -
plaint or grievance laid before the re«
ceivers by any person in the em
p oy of the Texas Pacific
There is, therefore, nothing to
arbitrate. If there is anything the
law has fixed a common arbitrator,
the Uoited Sta'es circuit court, to
which all the employes have a perfect
right to appeal fur the redress of any
grievance or the correction of any
errors. They, as well as the receiv
ers, or any quasi offlolals of the court
anu all are under its orders and pro
tection.” Inquiry at tbe shops show
that thirty five men have gone out*
They have been notified of their
discharge. The master mechanic,
foreman, storekeeper, two clerks and
three wipers remain at their posts A
deputy marshal has bsen sent to
Giuldeboro to protect the property
and workmen who may be employed
to take tbe plaoasof the strikers.
John L Sullivan sava he would like
to fight in I eland. If all the men of
his kind would go there and fight they
ac'ght free Ireland
Sufold to Ei-qtil*er.»uu
New York, March 15 -Tin
sch -oner whieu ran into the steam
ship O.egon sank almost immediate
ly. All of her unfortuua e crew
perished.
CVpiain Ct’ur,ol the e'eamshlp
0 <g)D, repoi s 186 eabiD, GO inter
mediate aud *239 steerage passenger-
on irard. The weather was clear
a> 4:30 Sunday morning with a fnvb
bre z , wnen suddenly a sailing vts-
fill h omed up. Sue showed no Ugh'
until too eicse. to steer off, when
site thowed a white light. When
the schooner was looked for shor'lv
alter tbe collision she was not ii
sight. She had gone down so quietly
that lo person and no wreckage
could De found to give a olue
to her idenli y. One of the
Nati nal line steamers passed close
at hand soon after the accident. i (1
did not stop The Ortgou 11 .aieo
about eight hours af.tr being struck.
Tue trar s’rr of her passengc s 'opl
boat No 11 and the schoouei Fannie
A Gurhem was made by the stiaui-
er'o boats. All Ihe passengers were
out of the steamer by II o’clock. Au
hi ur later tbe steamer Fuida came
alot g and took the wrecked people
from the smaller vcsiels Some of
the passengers say the schooner was
visible ten miles away, and la ' been
»eeu long beforr she struck No one
attempts to account for the accident
except on theories The steamer men
1 flfer neither theory nor explanation.
Tue passengers say the flremeu and
coal passers made a great deal o’
trouble when the passengers were
heing transferred from the vessel
They endeavored to get off first, and
one was knocked down by the steam
er’s i file* r to get him out o( the way
of a *omaD. It was only by the
hard fightiDg and great nerve of the
oflfi ere that these men were prevent
ed from runniDg away with the
boais and leaving the passengers to
fate. Sume of the boats with imui
bers ol the steamei’s crew we e
picked up by vessels some distance
lrom ihe wreck O ie boat c ontain
ing the first effl.-er aud four men
canoe to the city to-day. Tney had
beeu pickel up to day after beirg
twen'y-four hours in the boat. An-
otl er pilot boat was reported oil
Sandy Hook this aiterroou having
in tow five or six large ooats sup
posed to be a part of the Oregon’s
boats, of which the ste mer hod ten.
The passengers were driven lrom
their beds and some nr them were
taken on board the Fulda scarcely
half clad All ol them lost every
thing they possessed exc-pt wha-
was on their back-. Tue steaiuei
was vA'ued at a million and a quar
ter aud ibe cargo at a q' artei ot s
million. AU tbe insurance upon the
vesie! or cargo whs placed onthe
oiher side of the Atlantic. The vee
spI lirs upright in twenty- wo
fathoms of water and her topmasts
are visible above the water. Not
much hope exists of her being ra s d
Several of the O gin’s passengers
have beeu interviewed. Tnere is a
concurrence of opinion among them,
that the Oregon’s equipment o’ boats
would not have saved omsbalf the
people on boird if the acoldent had
■ ccurred in mid-ocean, or anywhere
ehe that they would have been the
sole dependence Captain Collier has
stated on tbe other band that bi-
boats would have saved everybody
Tbe fact remains tnat the pilot boa'
and schooner were both so crowded
that it was next to impossible for th'm
to take more on board had it been
n-cesiary, and bad not the 6teumer
Fulda happened along, tb*
On gnu’s poople would ba - e
been obliged to rema'U on the open
decks of iwnsailirg vessels with r
scanty allowance of food and i iotb-
ing till they reached Sandy H >ok
Tire pssieti gers award high praise lu
the i fficeis and crew of the steamer
for their courage and coolness, and
they concur iD describing the cow
ardly conduct of some of tbe stokers
aud a few steerege passengers. Home
of the latter jumped lrom tbe dtek ol
the vessel upon the heads of women
and children, who crowded one boat,
just as it was about to push out.
Superintendent Wright’s secretary.
The secretary s'arted from the hotel
where the examination was held to
the express r ffl *e, to write out his
uotes, and has untBlnce beeu seen oi
heard of No person ennmo ed with
he examination will ialk, but the
disappearance of the s 'nograpaer
aud the manner of the < fil ial-', leads
to the belief that some hing definite
lias been discovered.
Critically 10.
itteimi lo Smoniror-dun.
Annapolis. Md, M. rch 15 Capt
J is J Waddell, commander of the
siate flsheiy feireee, whs this moruing
stricken with corgestion of u e brain
aud is in a critical condition. He
was captain of ihe confederate cruiser
Shenandoah, and is well known
ihrougliout the soutii.
FOREIGN FLASHtS.
Reported Rfs'gnaMou ot Two Mem
bers ol tilttdstont-.’i4 fabluet.
to
O |»po
Kihrll qit Ii
Farm 11-4
Etc.
■Ilf* Irish
4 hotk-Atl
[*<>■>« ltcfotu
Fillpy-An
rl-’o Fro mi
11 m*■ cin nf.
wm run Dots’! Mari*j.
^ortaigh ly H jview,
The great nn-j >rity of E gliab
medical women undoubtedly marry
either bt fore or soon after they ciui-
plete tl e r curriculum; in fact onr
aimcst fancies that men cither per
versely seek as wives t! e very type
ofwimen whose iutellec ua! tastes
they pretend to debs , or prudently
apply matrimony as a solvent of s- x-
ual competition. B that es It may,
the result is usually tbe -ame to a
oiever girl when she asks leave to
quit her home anil s udy medicine
Her family not w sbing to lose her
pleasant companionship, plausibly
object on the ground that os she will
most likely marry soon the cost of
her medical education will be 8*
rnuoh money wasted
But wby should a medical woman
always be expected to retire from
practice after she marrie*? I can
even conceive of cases where, through
the misfor u te or ill health o'her
husband, it might be her duty to
Chr< w herself into her profession wi'h
increased ardor and energy A" resses
and musicians do not deem it nec.s
nary to retire from professional Ilf*
because they marry, audeure’ylhe
work of a me ileal woman is not
more incompatible with domesticity
than theirs. It will, in truth, always
rest with the woman physician,
whether married or single, to adjust
ner work to her family claim ■, ami if
she toils after marriage it must be re
aiembered that her professional
income will erable her to supply u
larger staff of servants for household
duty. Her case will then be anala-
gous to that of many artistic, lltetu y
and political ladles, who devote u
great deal of their time to other than
purely domestic interes s; indeed,
those who have had some xptrienoe
of both classes will, I think, ac
knowledge that the married woman
physician, as a rule, pays much more I Importance uow
attention to her family than your
lady of quality who opens a salon, ut.
ihai, like the B-rengarias ami Z no-
bias of D sraelitish romance, sht
may push on ber favorites in public
life.
liy .nelo Ame toin um> es.
London, Mareli 15 — The Git be
this afternoon states that at it cabinet
meeting h* id Saturday, Mr Treva-
lyn, secretary f it Sootlaud, aud for
merly chief. eerttary for l r n d,ui d
E iwurd Heueage, chancellor of tire
Ducbv of La ca ter, bo-h tendered
> heir resignations Tin reason given
by both gentb men /or itu-ir acton,
Buys the Globe, was their disit cllua'*
tion to support the Irish policy out
lined at the meeting by G adaiore us
that which he had decided to pur-ue,
an kx vooeration.
The Pull M >il G v.y.'e professes to
tiave authority for saying flie state
ment of the Times and the S aneiard
that Gladstone’s Irish expropriation
s-chome contemplates an outlay of
two hundred million pounds i-
ridiculous urn) tin>l lire sum winch
Gladstone os culated uec- ssury to buy
out uil the present lundioidu of Ire
land is much uiarer one huudred
milii >u than two hundred million
pounds.
THE STATEMENT DENIED.
Toe Exchange telegraph company
iienies ihe Globe’s statement, that
Mr Trevylan aud Mr Heneage have
resigned from ihe cabinet.
Raul i.
A LAND REFORM MOVEMENT.
London, Maicn 15.— L-mi nform
nos invaded the kin^uom oi P Hand.
Many if ihe landlords in Rossian
Poland have expropriated large por
tions of their estates. The provinces
ip distributing their laid as gifts
-moug the people, crea'iog an aimy
of email holders. This movement is
very popular with thepeople aud it is
“xpee’ed that they will be rapidly
R issian z d
Ireland
ADVICE FROM PARNELL
Dublin, Maicb 15 —P o ueil pub
licly urges the members of ths
national party in Ulster to rtfrain
lrom celebrating Rt Patrick's day by
demonHiralio„*,'Ucu us parades, like
ly to anger the Oraigemeu. In hie
circular advising this course the
Irish leadersays: "D not irritate the
Orangemen, howevtr mieguidedy iu
may deem them. T.ds is of vital
Nloaf wall JickaoD's Old Cburger
Dead.
Special to Ecqnlrer»sua.
Washington, March 15. —A dis
patch from Rchmond announce?
that Stonewall Jackson’s old clrarger
died at the Confederate Siidieru’
H me, at R’ohmond, this morning
of old age. It is the Intention of ihe
governors of the home to have a cast
made of tbe horse, and have his skin
stufied and the skeleton mounted
Special to Rnqnirer-HQiL
Chicago, March 15 —Baggageman
Watts, who occupied the car next to
the one in which Express Messenger
Nichols wa® killed, is under arrest on
the sui piciou of being the murderer
He professes to have been covered by
a gun, in the bauds ol a man who
tbieitened his life if he made any
demonstration whatever while the
murder and robbery was in progress.
Another mystery has developed iu
this case. W.it.’a was closely cross-
examined yesterday by tbe express
i ffliials aud detectives, and notes of
this -aiiDa'ion were !ak._i ly
I* ihfriufib’a Kind 4\*tH«»r ?
Tbe me Hal Condition of uualbei
puoiic cbaructer—G luerul W T Sher
man—is giving bis friends much un
easiness. He baB shown an irasel
hili'y and pe ulauce of late that
revive all the old stories of bis moods
during certain periods of tbe war I
kuow from their own lips that some
of his relatives in tbe east ate alarmed
for him He has wri ter) such tetters
to persons east aud west in such
tenor and character as to leave no
doubt that he is seriously unsettled
in his mind. It may be merely tbe
elf ct of the sharp controversy with
General Fry and the constquent
irritation, but, whatever it is, it
causes much anxiety among his
friends There is just a trace of in
sanity in the general’s family. His
father, Judge Bbrrman, of Oaio,
married a Hoyt. She was a sis er, I
nelieve, of the gra d'a'her of M >r>
Irene Hoyt, who has b :en lighting
.u the courts here for tl e possession
of a fortune that her father put oui
of her hands ut his death because hi
believed ber to be insane Hne wts
uce incarcerated for months in a
P nnsylvanta mad house, a priva”
saylum,— Chicago Trinuue
Buiintgi FftlluruB
There were 211 failures in tht
United States reported to Bra i.-treet’e
during the past week, ag, insl ‘S27 in
Hie preceding wtek, and 250, 186
-33 ami .77 in the corresponding
weeks of 1885 1884, 1883 and lS-)2,
reej.ectively
About 81 per cent were those of
small traders whote oapital was less
than $5600
Iu the principal trades the failures
were as follows : Grocers, 40; gen
eral stores, 39; liquors, 17; Clothing,
16; hardware anu agricultural imple
ments, 16; hotels aud restaurants, II:
lumber aud builders’ materials, 11;
drugs and chemicals, 9; dry goods, 9;
boots ard shots 7; varieties and no
tions, 7; Jewelry, 6; bakers anil con
fectioners, 5; iron and steel, 4; to-
bacci and cigars 4; hats, 3; paper,
s ationery, etc, 3; produce aud pro
visions, 3
"la. Im.i Me Par. Ibe Freigui ”
‘‘The Jones family” have this year
loomed up. Early in the year it was
one Aqullla down to Iudianapolis.
Then came a lady by the name of
Jones, who crea’td large interest in
'he churches iu various places in
Indiana. Then came R-v Sam J rnea,
whose like baa not before been seen
Lastly, there is a senator of the sume
name who leives “the il iwers tbai
bloom in tbe spring” in tbe suuny
south, and lives on bash, and endures
tbe blizzards of Michigan, aud all to
make one convert. If such au array
don’t bring the name of Jones to the
front—what will ?—Chicago Juttr-
O-'t-an,
Fi.d..
T IN FLICT HERSELF UPON AMERICA
Paris, Marcn 15 — L iumt- Micnaei
annuuiK.e-i tl a' -he Intends to make
a lour i f America Sue i? mobbed
everywhere she attemplu to f-p-uk iu
public in F ince.
AN EARTHQUAKE SHOCK
Berlin Marcn 15. — A violent
shook of eartt quake dix'urhed Wies
baden, a celebrated German wattr
ing place, at midnight.
■puts.
AN EARTHQUAKE shock.
Madrid, Maum 16-The city of
Granada, the capital of tbe province
of tbe same name, was shaken yes
terday by an earthquake. The shock
war 1 t seven secotxi’a duration. The
people were terrified and 11 cl in all
directions. No lives were lost.
How lo Aoalo • < old.
Hall’s Journal of Health has this:
‘‘Pnvsiologists have said that 1 a
f*w drops i t the blar desi fluid In na
ture are i Jectud into a blood-vessel
against the cu.rt.-ijl, death is au in
stantaneous result. Millions of canals
or lubes from tbe inner portion of
:tie i> liy open their lltt'e mouths at
tue surface, and through heee chan
uels, us ceaselfs? as tbe flow of time,
a fluid containing the wtshs and im
pur.tits oi me ay .em i= passing oua
ward, and is emplled out on tile skin
This fluid must liavt exit or we die
mi a few hours. If it dues not hav*
vent at tl.e sui/ace of the body ii
must have some internal outlet.
Nature abhors shocks as she d-es a
vacuum. Heal distends ttie mouths
of these due s, arid promotes a larger
and more rapid il w of ttie eontaimd
fluid; on the other hard, cold com
'racts tiiem, and (the 11 iis ut fiist
arrested, dams up an i rebounds. If
the purest warm milk, ii j j c eu
against the current of the blood,
kills in a moment, not from any
chemical quality, bnt from the
fores against the na’ur'ii curren',
there need lie no surprise at the
ill t fleets of suddenly closing
the mouths of millio: s ,t tubes at
the samo instant, causit g a violence
at every pin head surface of the body.
If these mouths are gradually doted,
nature hau time to adapt herself to
ihe circumstances by opening her
channels into the great internal
•waterways’ ol the body, at.d no harm
follows. Hence the safety of cooling
oil slowly after tx-rciseor being in
a btaDd apartmem, and ihe danger
of cooling iff rapidly, under the
same circumstances, familiarly
! nown by tiie tx ression, ‘checking
perspiration.’
"The result of closing the pores of
the skin Is various according to the
direction the st ock tukes, and this :s
always to the weakest part; iu the
little child It is to ttie throat, and
there is croup orgdiphtberi.i; in the
adult it is to tbe head, giving catarrh
in ttie head or running of the nose;
to th» iungs, giving a bad c dd, or if
vciy vioie»i, _r
it 11 immation of the lungs themselves;
or pleurisy. It fl-train a'ion of the cov
ering of the lung-; to thebowe’s,
causing profuse and sudden
diarr! cet. or tc the cov
ering f the bowels, inducing
ttiat rapiil and of.en fatal mala ’y
known as peritoneal it 1! mtnation ;
if tiie current 9 determined to the
liver, there is obstinate constipation,
or blllou“ lever, or sick headache,
Hence, a ‘cold’ Is known by a cough,
when perspiration is drive 1 inward
and is directed to tiie lungs; by pleu
risy. when in tiie lining of tbe lung-;
by a sick Headache or bilicu? fever,
wlteu to the ii' er, etc ; diarr) on . or
constipation when to tiie bowels ami
liver.
“To avoid bad colds, then, it Is
only necessary to avi lil cl s i gtiie
pores of the skin, idtlier rapidly, by
clieckirg pe:sj ‘ration, or slowly, by
remaining still until tho body is
thoroughly chilled, dial is, until tbe
pores are nearly or entirely closed by
Inaction in a cold atmosphere or
room. In ’lie tna'ler of health these
suggestions are of Incalculable im-
Impor'ance ”
nteti Kill, a, Hill at* Bill*.
L-mdoi, Letter
English women are Ihe worst
dieased won en on tiie globe. Ex
pensive laces, velvet gowns, tl-sbing
diamonds, etc, itt plenty, bi t no
gracefulness in wearing them, ro
well fl’.tlr g garments, no "chic”—or
to apply at) American term, no
"style ” Why. I’ve been astonished
at the awkward motions, die dreary
gossip, tbe hum-drum conversation
carried on among society people here
in tlio drt.wlng room-old stsgsra.
some of them, who ought to
know better. And then, English
girls can’t dunoe They especially
can not wakz I w s stated
to me on goni authority that the
prince of Wales doesn’t know how
to rever. e, and dial it, therefor- 3 , w s
considered ‘ bad form” to wal z ; rop»
eily. But it’s my belief • founded on
individual observation—that ev n if
the prince of Wabs knew how to
wal z tfie r*st of Em Had would not.
Y mig Dudley Winston came home
quite disguBled from t* at hall a L dy
Waterlow's and rc-gls e;ed a sacred
vow by a'l the hourls in the shah’s
harem never to wa' z with a British
maiden again if he could help it.
Apropos, that reminds me that
L ) ly Waterlow is au American by
birth, and that, so fat as I know aud
have learned, a 11lie real pr* t; g r's
and women Id L mdon are Americans
by birth. Si c? beauty's glory has
departed from Langtry (here is not
considered lo be a more naidsomeand
stylish w 'man In die U died King
dom than L .dy R'-udolph C luic iill,
nee J -route, wiin L-dyJercms, nee
Lawrence, < f N w Y >rfe ; Lady
Waterlow aud Mr- f P O Gounor, a,
Texas glr), wife of on* of the Irish
invincihles iu parliament, closely
I'ollowlug.
A vt VIII . ||* « 1>U 7.
Now Yor t Bur
Many won e - have no politics at
all When ask'd especially about
election time, If they have r a-1 Ihe
papers, they reply that they have
not, and give bh a reason that the [a-
iters are so fuii of politic< that no
Hdy wants to read them. These
women consider politics a matter for
men only. Tney are willing that the
men shall read politics to their heart’s
content. Bu as fot themselves, give
them something more interesting.
These women make a great mis-
take in eschewing political reading.
They may say it is uulnterejlihg, but
if so it is to a great tx-.euL because
they have uot acquainted themselves
with it. Ahhougn woman is not as
yet a voter, she 1ish much to do with
it flueuciog the vote of hu.band,
father and brother. To keep in
formed on politics is to tie a< qminted
with the h's • ry of the ciumry as it
is being maile I is to learn History
iu its Iresbes! and most sparkling
condition. It is to grow up »U the
country i: s ead of beii g kept to the
rear in a dwarfed condition ami wait-,
it g un-il hltiloiy btoomes s, urUe y
dial it finds tli way into the history
hooks.
Tbn Court,.if Colon.
Thors :s do duUol wha.over about
the on'ora 't die -v-r/ji g season — fhey
*re the oorors ol hist, ry as won its the
colors that bus' rdapt 'hetn'io'ves to
wraiever type ot woman may wear
diem And -h-iy Hr- 1 11 ck and yel
low. It stems slto'S' strai go to call
black a color, ntui yet it !h dons tc oon •
tradlot Its being "th- Light m- uroing.
All black get ape arc qnite the smartest
subs shown Womankind wears her
coquettish black lace bom ot, with Us
dash oi yellow coloring, while tbe aoft,
lulling folds oi her gown seem to drape
ihcinsetves about her, apparently oal!«
big for no volition on her part and
making the world conscious of a well-
dressed woman, one < f whom no de
scription oan be glvon, ' ut who ban
abou; her tho air that stamps the oast
of the women who have aavotr fBire,—
Fashlnn letter.
1 hv Jainbo of Cuts.
There was a commotion In tbe oat
show a’ Bunnell’s oimeum, in New
Haven, Tuesday. Tbe king of the
cat kingdom arrived. Hi- name la
Diamond, and he i? d o property of
Mrs L T Hlgby, of N -w Britain. Ha
weighs 32 pounds, is 8 years old, ha*
white whickers, 'n .f the tiger varie
ty, and is ?uid to bo* the largest tame
cat in die United S.ates. He is a
wonderful specimen of the feline
rsce, and when the other b'g cats iu
;h*. show saw him they muow d dies
contentedly and hid ihemselves in
the back pare of their cages.—New
Haven L - ter.
March at the north did uot come in
like a lamb. I: saw a t-i'zz rd an4 re-
1.,