,,,1 unless accompanied by the writer's name. &gSo stuhserilKjr's paper will 1? ( coniiiuied until all arrearages are oaM jj-A'lvertisements will be inserted the following rates : $1.00 per inch per mou'h. Business Local?, 10 cents per line for first insertion, and 7J cents for ,,3,1, siiecedhig week. Special rate3 niuile for yearly advertisements. Eiit.-rcl at the Poatofilce at Dunn, jr. M Second-class Mail Matter SLWD YOUii JOB WORK 10 THE CENTRAL TIMES OFFICE. YE AVILh DO YOUR WORK AS CJtEAP AS ANY JOB J10USU. TRY US. J. H. DANIEL, Editor and Proiietor "PROVE ALL THINGS, AND HOLD FAST TO THAT WHICH IS GOOD $1.C0 Pr Yc r la Advance. VOL. IV. DUNN, N. C,, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 31. 1894. NO. 35. m ttt 1 i - ' - iUW1A TPPDnrc rniTn imam nrr,T Mavor A. R. Wilson. ( onuniioners E. F. Younsr, J. H. jvpe. !! ' aioore, u. u. Hood. Marshal M. L. Wade. CIIUKCHES. Methodist Rev. G. T- Simmons, Pas tor. Services at 7 p. m., every first Sun day, mid H a- aJ 7 p. in., every fourth buuuav. i-rayer-meeting every W. ilnesday night at 7 o'clock. Sunday ,-Ol I'U'l) iiuiiillij; sit iy ,,'rlock; G. K. Grantham, buperinten (h-iii. Meeting of Sunday school Jlis- vioimiy Society every fourth Sunday ;if;. i ioon. Young Men's prayer ineet- j;,g every Monday night. rrc?lyteriaii Rev. A. M. Hassell. Patr. Services every first and fifth .Sunday at 11 a. m. and 7 p. in. Sunday scliuf.r every Sunday j evening at o'clock. Ir. J. II. Darnel, Superinten dent. . ' I IU( -iph-'s Rev. J. .1. Harper, Pastor. S-riccs every third Sunday at 11 a. in., ai.i! 7 p. in. Sunday school at 4 o'clock, Mr. Kl Uallanee, Superintendent, prayer meeting every Thursday night :il 7 o'clock. Mi-.-iona:y Baptist Sunday school very Sunday morning at 10 o'clock; K. G. Taylor. Superintendent. Prayer UM eting every Thursday night. Free Will Baptist.-Rev. S. II. Wor ley, Pastor. Services' every Fourth Sunday at 11 a. in. Sunday sclioof every Sunday evening at 3 o'clock, Krasnms Lee,' Superintendent. Primitive Baptit Elder Burnice Wood, Pastor Services every thhiu Sunday at 11 a. m., and Saturdaj' before .the. third Sunday at 11 a. m. LOIXJES. Tiie Lucknbw Lodge No. 115 I. O. O. T .. meets' eveiy Tuesday night at S o....,k. H. G. Taylor, N. G.: J. W. .Ionian. V. G. ; . C. McNeill, Secre tary. Palmyra "Lodge. No. 157. A.F. & A. M. Regular communications every lhird Saturday and every first Friday night. Visiting Masons invited to attend. J. Pkausall, Secretary. Profs sional Cards Leo J Best, Attounky at Law. J)nnn, - - N. C. VrnctsiTs in all tl;o courts, tioii lo liuin-ss. rroii!jt iiltn jaii. 1. W- E- Mtirchisort, Attorney at Law, JnXKsEOKO. - - N. C Fw.ctiot'j in all the surrounding counties. D. H McLean, Attorney at Law. OllW e next tloor to iost Ulco, 1)C N'N, N. C. Jt f-rnl rrrrtiet. Will attend the ronrts of ili-riiett. Cuiuoerlaiui, Johnston aiutSaini K:m couutiea. Dr- J. H. D-ni?l, Dunn, Harnett County, N. C. Cancer a specially No other diseases treated. Positively will not visit patients at atliitnncp. Pamphlet on Cancer, "Its treat ment and Cure, will Le mailed to any address free of charge. J AS. PEARS ALL, COTTON I1UYEK, REPRESENTING MESSRS A11X. - SPRDKT & S0N9 AT DUNN, B3NSON, FOUR OAKS, WADE AND GODWIN, N. C. I nice at, D. II. Hood's Drug Slcre, II DUNN, N.C THE SYMPLEX PRINTER. A uew invention for duplicating copies of writings or drawings. SIMPLE. CHEAP nd EFFCUVE ENDORSED BY OVER 0.000 USERS From an original on ordinary paper .with anv pen, 100 copies can be made. ?0 copies or tjpowritter manuscript produced in 1 ntes. Send for cirenlars and sainida of work. AliENTS WANTED. MlTO A CO. 20 Vesey &t.. N. 1. niTij TO THE DESIRE for Mor ! r, A ill nhhine, Opium, Whisky or Tobacco. Proof free; $5 to cure nioro'nine or whisky habits; $2 lor coring tobacco habit. Address U. WISON, Fleming. T :xas. WANTED AGENTS, Women and m-n. wrmeu preferred, to canvass foi ahai.i.sone lv jiiuntrattd, inexjnsive patriotic leek A liheral pr cent allow-d. Address, w. ,.,. .-i i-.i,iiitnn Book Affeuey, wasa- "gt)ii, D. C. O"! DR. SHADE'S DISCOVERY FOR CONSUMPTION. Just Given To The Public writ at once for particulars of the news pai er Investigation going on at this tim in Washington. Doctors and other Citixena Cured. What physicians and medical journals sav about"Th9 Oreat Discovery of the fonn try." Sv.ntoia blank, etc. Send 2-eent stauin. A.Jdress Ir. hade,12S2 lith Street, wasliin-r-Iod.d.C " O 10 Apr U3i 6m uu nuiltULd LU , " 1 . nf This is to certify that Dr. J II. Danie ifciBuiiaiiy appear before me this day and make oath that he clippo. the following article from the Wil mington Htrald, published at the city of Wilmington, N. C bearing date Oct. 25, 1894, ThU Oct. 29th, 1894. L. S. J. K. Graktham. Notary Public. "It is not surprising that sucl self-respecting colored men a3 Prot E. A. Johnson, of Raleigh, refuse to support the fusion ticket. It is sur prising that any Negro who has any tic scnoois ror both racs.? Have they ever helped any of our race a d treatsd us in a friendly spirit ? The Democratic governor, Vance, J.irvis. Scales, Fowle. Holt 'And Carr. and many other Democrafcof promi nence have been helping the Negro in his educational and material ad vuncement, but what Ims our Repub lican friend (?) Russell and his Dem ocratic and Popnltst associates, Buck Kitchin. JIarion Butler and S. Otis Wilson, been doing ? Living in the strong Democratic county of Samp?on, Mr. Butler em pha"ized his virulent hostility to the Negro by printing a paper called the "Caucasian." and having as his mot o: "Pure Democracv: "Whits Sn. remacy." Nobody ever heard, uns til he wanted our votes, of his saying a frieadly word to or of the Negroes f the Slate. For twenty year3 the sonorous iopa for the future of our race should lend himself to the support of a set of men who h ive been our worst ene mies Tt:e four leaders of fusion m North Carolina, who are the brains, lie month and the energy of tL 'onibiiiaiion :re : ' Danif.l L, TIusell, Makion BUTLE'.t, W. H. Kircnix. S O rno ilson We gi ve them . in the onler in whic! they come. Butler and Rus eil are the nrains; Kitchin' the raou'h. ard Wilson the hustler of the sochlle 1 Repuhlican-Populi: t part). Did arn body ever he ir until re cently that either of these men were especial f. ienda of the negro ? Have thoj" heen noted as ndvocatas of pub vice of Buck Kitchin has been hundering through, the Sta'e. Did anv body ever hear him refer to the colored men except in terms of the harshest and most bitter and rantan kcrous abu e ? Has any epithet been t-o denunciatory for him to employ in speaking of us? He has even exs celled Judge Russell in vilification of our whole race. Russell called us only '-savages.' Kit chin "stinking savages. As to S- Otis Wilson, he . is mt worth mentioning except that he is the head of the combine," and is the hustler for the gang. He has never done an thing to help the Naro in the years of his sordid and deceitful pilgrimage. And as for Judge Russell, no thinking, respectable colored man entertains the idea for an instant that he has any kindly feeling for our peo.de. As we have said he calls us "savage i," treats us as s tch, only taking an interest in our wellfate when he desires to use us for his own personal advantages. The colored paoj U of this county all know that all Judge Russell bs ever amounted to in life is due to the support given him by our race, and yet he denounces our race on all oc casions as being a -'set of ignorant savages, who do not know enough to hold an office, and should uot tbei fore be allowed to. fill one. For gratitude, he gives us ingratitude; for kindness, he gives us abuse. "We ask him for bread and he gives us a stone., And now at this very mo ment, while we are writing these lines, we are informed that ha is con spiring wth o' hers of his few -white followers to make up a ticket for us colore i people to vyte. upon which he and Siacy Tananuge (another fu sionUt. wuo expressly authorized Populist Mason to put hi name on the" fusion ticket for clerk of lhe court, and then denied ii) have re peatedly announced that no colored man's name s'all appear. In spite of these things, the other night when Kitchin 84oke at Wades boro the Negro band serenaded him. And wherever these four conspires tors go, crowds of negroes flock to hoar them and applaud their utter ance3. And we fear that many soUj ored men in our midst will forget that 1 Kussell is driving them, just as he used to drive bis slaves before the war, will vote for Bussell s white man's ticket simply because he has placed it before them, regardless of whether it is a Republican or Mongrel Fusion ticket. We may well ask, is it necessary io devote years to the villificadon and i . . iuuse oi the negro to gain his ap plause and support? If we colored men at this election vote for the fusionists it will seem so, ' But my friends and brethren, for once let us show our independence; et us show our manhood. Lit us show that we are not like dumb driven cattle, to follow tlui man rhat beats us. to kiss the hand thvt smite3 us, to obey the dictation of the mouih which calls us "ignorant savs ages." We do not ask you to vote the Democratic ticket,' by no means; but we do ask tuat if a 'ticket com, posed only of white men is. j.ut fors ward by so-called Republirans that you will nominate a - ticket of our own; a ticket composed of intelli gent colored meu: a ticket unon which no fusioniss name shall aps pear. It is said that Stacy Vanamrige and Hewlett authorized Populist Ma con to put their names upon his fu sioiiist ticket, thus making thenm selves as much fusionists as he (the white Democrat, that was) an.l ihen they backed out from the ticker when Kussell told them that they should not run for the offices of their selec tion which was that of clerk for Van miige, and of treasurer for Hew- ett. And then they put Populist Mason on the so called Republican ticket for the Legislature, in order to keep their bargain to preserve for themselves the lew Popu:ist votes in this county. Fellow colored Republicans, will we support such a transaction as this? Will we vote for populist Hewlett, or Populist Vanamrige, or Populist Mason? It" we must vote for a Democrat, vote for one who h:3 the honesty to declare himself to be one, aud upon whom we can count to do what L jromises you to do or one who i as, and whom therefore we know will, look after om interests as well as thd interests oi the white men of this count', but do not vote lor one who for otlleesake has quir the Democrat ic party but has-not the manhood ani courage to join the Republican party, nor for any Republicans who will al ow themselves to fuse with dissatis fied Democrats. You know that the dissatisfied Democrats who are now calling themselves Populists will not vote for one of our color. And wc know that that is why the so-called white Republicans, Vans amrige aBd Hewlett and Russell will not allow any of our color to be placed upon the Republican ticket in this countv; Will you thus stultify yourselves by voting for them, or for any one of them? The Republican vote in this county is about 3,000 in number. Of this number there arc not more than fifty white men. yet these hfty white men say that they shall fill all the offices n this county, and that we shall fill not one, or Lave the chance to secure one. Decause we nve not sense eaough to discharge the duties there of. They declare that not only stiutt the tail wag the dog's head but also the whole body of the dog, with a Populist put into the d.g's belly. ellow colored Republicans, we know that colored men have sense enough to be school teachers, lawyers, doc j tors and editors, and that it is a lie when it is slated that we have not t senre enough to fill and hold pu'diu ; olice3. W ill we then support this! siauder by supporting a ticket; corn- posed of white Rcpubl.caus entirely, j and our xace enti ely ignored there- j on? Or a tieket composed of white Republicans aud a white Democrat' calling himself a Populist? If so,.; thpn trulw mnt thft niio-tinn with! which ibis editorial is heailed le anS ul .4 tl.A - m.. .. f irn iln swcicu tu mo oimmams, ; fir.A m.wt ti.- flhnw m St. 1 Goil grant that this is not true. and that we colored men of New ! Hanover county" may show to the world at the coming election that we at least do not admit it tu be true. Now: is the proper time to sub ! sere for lhe Ccstbax. Times. Every familydn the county ougat lo have H j A BREEDER-OF STRIFE. The following, which we clip from the Wilmington Star, goes f show the strife that has been brought to bear, brotner against brother, in the introduction of the infernal 3rd ites pajtj : A lady living near Washington, Beaufort county, remarked that she did not know much about politics but ebe knew that before the Popu list party came upon the stage there was a friendly feeling among the people, but since "then there was strifa and brother was arrayed against brother and friends sgainst friend. This is true not only in Beaufort county but all over the State all over the South and also in the West, where the Popuhst party has gained any foothold. In this State the leaders of tha party, who are men of small mcnta' calibre, have done more to sow the seeds of 'discord, and to create strife and estrangement among meu who weie friends than the leaders of the Radical party did during all the years in which that party contested for supremacy, and there were some very bad and unccrupulous men among the leaders. Not since 1868. when these Radical leaders had tneir pliant followers banded in secret, oath-bound organizations, and filled tnem with devilment, and with hat red of their political opponents, and inflamed their passions and encour aged them to lawlessness by incendi ary speeches have such ir flu minatory speeches been made and articles cir culated among the people as there have been since the entry of the Populist party on the field. The leaders seem to think lhat the' way j to build up the party and to make it strong is to create the impression on the minds of those who listen to them that the' ere a persecuted and op pressed people, that all who are not with them are banded against thcra and that the persecution and oppres sion will continue until they get the reins of government and can pass laws that will give them an equal showing with otl;ers. It is not an uncommon thing to hear one of one of these mouthing orators diiats ing on the persuasive and salutary effect of shot guns to achieve the rights of which they are deprived by a "fraudulent election." and when ever the' are beaten the eleotions art 'fraudulent." The' havn't ye t gone so far as to hint J as to hint at and thus indirectly counsel the torch and the dagger, a3 was done in that mem orable address issued by the Radical managers in 1869, but they have learned so much from theii Radical associates since they have formed the partnership with them that there is lo telling what they will stop at. Convince people that they are the victims of ostracism, proscription, persecution and oppression and it will not be hard to put them in a frame of mind to seek vengeance in some way, and this is precisely what the incendiary .leaders of that party are trying to do. 'I hey tried "Gideon's Bsnd" two years ago but they found that in' or ganizing an order like that they subs jected themselves to puniehment pro video by law and they prudently dis continued the work thev had enter ed upon. But they are doing much of their" discord sowing iu secret now, and have so poisoned the minds of many of their followers that lhe' will not listen to any one who does not subscribe to their views, nor will they listen to any speaker who does not make the kind, of a speech the like to hea . In the days of Radicalism whcn the party was strong and hehi the negroes solid with ii, their minds were so prejudiced against Democrats toat thev cou.d not bo eutice i to a Deuaoeraiic meeting without a big ba becue or something of lhat aori.jby Senator Ransini in and then they sometimes hesiuted about eating for four of being prison td by the Ueipocrais. ii is a mt,e remarkable that after the lapse of & many years men should be endeavor. .... inn in rraotP S.imt dliitrntit Rllllina "o o , mm ith men that the uecro then felt! for the white man who differed from the party lo which he belonged. It there were no other objection to 'oiiulist party this one should be enough to condemn it in the exlN " " " 5 icop:e, wuo uei iu Kuui.m auu fratcrnyl feeling am jDg neighbors. The men who sow discord, create dis trust and breed hatred and strife do the State infinitely more harm than they atone for by a life of effort, if they should ever realize the enormity of their crime. Across our Southern border e have an illustration and a warning of the the baneful effects of this kmd of teaching, where incendiary! and reckless men have S2cured a controll ing influence over many of their feK low-citizens, and have wielded it wiekedly to promote their own schemes, as the Populist leaders are doing in this Slate. In our sister. State the feeling haa long been such between the opposing factions that blood has been shed, lives taken, and ciyil war narrowly averted. The triumph of Populism or of the corns bination between Populism and Rad icalism would put North Ca.olina m about the same condition South Caro lina has been in for several years. and that is surely that no truly pt riotic, or really sensible North Curo iinian wants to see. Only four more days and the great State catnpa'n will be numbered with things of the past. It will go down into history as the most re, markahle 'political campaign ever witnessed by the people of North Carolina. It is an old saying, but true, that politics makes strange hedfeilows. Neighbors aie array ed against neighbors, and it is a cam paign of crimination and re-crimination. Men baye said hard things of each other that will probably never be forgotten. One of the blackest and most diabolical conspiracies now witnessed by the people of a civilized land has been consummated within the borders of our grand old cornv nionweallh. It rivals many of the conspiracies connected with some of the most powerful emp'res of past ages. Seemingly good and well meaning men have become parties to a scheme to deliver our State govern ment the most, perfect and economi cal government in this great Union into tho hands of a set of cut throats and conspirators whose sole purpose is to plunder and make mis chief. If i his UepPop combination should happen to succeed fare well to good government in North Caro lina. Prosperity and progress would be paralyzed, and outside capital would give us a wide birth. It would be a blow given which our State would not recover in many long years. The good people of the Slate have during tbis campaign, witnessed some strange sights. Men who boast of Anlo-Saxon blood that course throw their veins have entered the star chamber at the still hour of the night and conferred with some who are not by env means law-abiding citizens, and pledged them their support if they would become candi dates some 'who do not even stand so well as J. , H. Young, of Wake, whom the Pops nominated for Rep resentalive This J. H. Young it charged with attempting to kill a most respectable colored man in the city of Raleigh not so long ago, but which the citizens of North Carolina well remember; and, besides, led to ruin one of hi3 own colored daugh ters. Would not they blush with sltame were their purer whc3 and daughters to see them cast their votes for such sct!awas and torn coats to control the future destiny of our fair land ? Neighbors, friends, countrymen, patriots ' We &p. e :l to you tpsus. and reflect an 1 sf.e' if it is not your duty to go to the p'll nexu Tuesday, and with your votes pdr.ic illy bury forever tie men who wotdJ destroy the peace a d prosperity of your g:od Slate. The following appaal vras made a recent speech to the "Citizens of the Old North Stae to stand by Democracy : j I have walked down the Potoma ! hv th3 tmb of VVasdiiniSion t the ? i i i sea. I have looked toward t:.e Norai I ....1 ff a nrnnract -itl.Lit i-nvV Tl.Pll ! ;m i.t . I turned toward the Sonth dur- ! snts" of brightness and hg i s m menl darkness. Whit las b ought its ty. I The ' Ie: ratio party. jml that is whv I s and by it. The oemocrsuc party iaw ami w wm he, the time f iend of the Southern . i l i II people. Neither calamities nor injus- lice has ever shaken in it the faith of the South. ' Listen, u U me, if I am mil ri'Lt! Come and reason, an" revere home and wives and the graves of your fathers." Oxonr JT. Niecr ut Jam City. We clip the following from last Sunday's Wilmington Messenger, which says : "Oscar J. Speers. of Hornrtt, Ro- i iiihlirfin rnn!n1rit.i fur Conorrcsft from this district, spoke at James City last night to a very large crowd, nominally colorel, though a few whites were mixed in. lie made a, hot, straigbtout Republican speech - no fusion for him at all and de clared his emphatic determination to remain in tho field, and for no one else to 'otherwise beievc, no matter what reports were circulated to the contrary about his withdrawal. He went so far as to tell his friend to vote for hito even if they heard he was dead, to vote for him as a com pliment to his remains. He declared that it the Republicans voted lor i.isa he would be elected. This is to certify hat Dr. J, II Daniel, editor of the Central Times. did appear before me and m.-tde oath that he clipped the following from the Wilmington Herald, a.newspapcr published in the city of Wilmington, N. C and edited and published by J, Sam "Sharpe. L L. I)., colored. Thu Oct., 20th. TS04. ShAL It, Iv. (jRANTTTAM, v-v-w Notary Public "The nvtnhood of every colored voter is at stake. The whhe-washed Republicans of the South have bar gained away their rights and ballot without consulting the negro, and it yet remains for us to say whether we will sit still, be silent and allow a handful of whitewashed Republi can traitors to sell one hundred thou sand voters and tliii wives and chil dren to the Pnpulistfused party, whose leader- aud founders are such mp n as Messrs Butler and company, who bare always been the bitterest kind of Jelfersoniau Democrats and preached gremacy. The Populist fused, negroshating ticket must and shall be defeated. MIS CELLA. SCO UH IOTKS. After many .years delay the spire of the cathedral at Ulm has been fin. ished recently. It is suid to be the highest in Europe, Maurus Jokui the Hungarian novelist, expi esses his indignation at the report that he had attempted suicide which was recently iu circula tion. Dr. James R. Cooke, a successful Boston physician, is, perhaps, the only man in tie country who, through blind from -infancy, took up the study of mepiciuc and excelled in it3 practice. In Italy there are mere theaters in proportion to th e population than in any other European country, there being in Catanta one to every 9.800 inhabitants. In Loudon there is one theater for every 145,000 inhabitants. Dr. Charlotte E. Benton hns held the responsible position of dental surgeon at the New York institution for the Deaf ond Dumb for over a ear, where she has had charge of nearly 350 patient's of all ages and both sexes. B arn Albeit de .Rothschild has just given $250,000 equip a paviliiou in to 'build- and the Empress ! Elizabeth - Hospital - at Vienna for J women 'tutting from cancer. "1 he money constitutes a "lleUioa: fu:v, j called after the Unm's late wife.) i.l.fi.flfil ntti-r snfiVi nu frmn u.n ! disease. Kevork ArJzrouni w!i wai ors tembir. 1DSS, nd whose influence in the Armenian Church in nop'.e has been thorough for many ..... . 7 - vear. aitu Miteiy m tue aie a iu s vears. Ii is lust sermon km preach ed EasUx. 062t when he was carried into the church Tri a chair. ! "--Since the death of Dr. Holmes' there are oniv lour surviving mcmsj of the class of 1820 of Harvard, ! Der3 nirflplv. Dr. Mward L. Cunoinr, Jm - . , ham of Newport. R. I.; Rev. Samuel , May (the class secret). fWK. ! ter ; Rv. Samuel F. Smith, of 1 ton. the author of ''America " ! ton. the author of America ; at.di ; Charles S. Svorrow, of liosVm. i . f. nrmall umAffliigrw ' i j ..--., ; says a writer in Kate Field's Wsu j ington. that the late Geueral Bakn ( 1 had quite a thrisi lor 'bo stage in yo ' H.im i !eut inherited by one of bis daughters and that be made single appearance on the pro fes. toaal slac. Una was at the National Theater, in Boston, ft'.d its record is sl.li preserved in some of the old play bills. Eccentric no doubt, but a woman with au extraordinary ainoo.it of sympathy for those who are suffering around her, is the French Duchesa D'Uzes. the wealthiest woman m . France, who every Friday puts on a 'cicsi of an ordinary nurse and visits j a ceiluiu cancer hospital, where she lakes the place of one regular 1 attendants all day, putting herself eutlreljrtnider the direction jof the.,, supcrtutendants. , . Without egotism, we think lhat the women in medicine as a class are , superior to men as a .class; because it is the picked woman, the ambitions wo'jian, whose desires arc alwve the common leve', who enters the prof, ession. It takes grit and gumption to be a woman physician even today for the woman in the profession must, have a double motive for success; s!.e must succeed for her own take as well as for the repuUtion of cap ability all women desire. This may uot seem fair, but it U nevertheless true. Woman's Medical Journal. SCIENTIFIC NOYtSL Chicago has 22 general and 16 special hospitals, with 8,4 O'J beds. A leproduction ir. a lasting mater ial of the brain ot the late Professor von Ilelmboliz has been made by l-r. Bcrliuer, oflkilin. The physicians who examined the brain considered It one of the most remar kable they had ever seen or heard of. - A Hungarian chemist. Johann An tal, ha3 discovered a new mineral, the nitrate of cobalt, which is be lieved to be an effective antidote in case of poisoning by cyanide of pot assium or prussic acid. 'Iried upon a number ef animals, it has been used in this way successfully in over 40 cases, must of them of accidental poisoning. A special mouthpiece for public telephones has been introduced in Germany with the object of avoiding the ppread of diseases carried by the : condensed moisture of the breath. A pad or a large number of disks of paper, with a hole in lhe middle, is inserted in the mouthpiece, and the upper disk of paper is torn off after every conversation. Electricity. Statistics of the Imperial German Health Department show Berlin as the healthiest city In the world. Here the death rate is 16.3 per 1.000, Compared with Alexandria, a city fanned by the sea breez, and cons stantly under the Influence of sun shine, Berlin shows to no small ad vantage. In this latter city statis tics give the death-rate at 52.9 per !,000. London Herald. The laciest hygienic crze in Paris is the use of porous' glass for win. dows. This is declared to possess all tho advantages of the ordinary window framing, and, while light is as fieely admitted as through the m-dium of common glass, the "por ous" further admits air, too, the min ute boles with which thi' is inter sected being too fine to permit - of an' draught, while they provide a healthy continuous ventilation through the apartment. iThe geography of Mars U mapped oU aImo?t as completely as that of the moon ;nnd new discoveries are located es bearing such and such a position to' Tfmpe. or Nyachh. or Hefcris, or to the river Deuteron It is a pity that, owing to tho inn uvri lous proper-lea oi tuminiier our ether, we ure debarred from opo.v ing up these temptingly named re- The Martian Alps would f Jave UKCU " ' ' - J-" Constant-UaMiupfer. fter e Ilimalayw a.s exhausted, a .d when the Caucasians r.nf. VAX .!!! UiiZrfttO. ' - In a pap.r recently re: d before the Scientific Congress at Paris, M, da Lspparent, the wclbknown writer on geology, expressed the opinion that i all mountain nt.ki vuuia off the face f lLc carlh ,D c,,,r8 of time' Ue declared thar, km actual natural f unon our lobe retrain' i0fces l P - r l'rent nsily. in 4.5J.00O " . Jr 1 , ... . "v" Alps, b it which bad already thrunk to lher present dimensions at thi ouisvt of iht Tertiary," eoca.