THE PINE KNOT, S OUTHERN PINES. N. O. Francis Murphy, the temperance agi tator, is having great success in the inp texior towns of Ohio." One of the results of the Charleston earthquake is the loss of animals from terror.' Many cf the milch cows' have gone dry since the earthquake n the country about Charleston, and one man lost seven horses from the effects of ter Tor.' . : : :. : '.. Christmas is not celeb-ated in Mexico with a tree, but with a pinata. The lat ter is a large earthen vessel, gaily deco .jated'and filled with toothsome dandies or candies, hung from the ceiling in the middleof the room. The children are blindfolded and armed with sticks to break the jug, whenit is shattered they throw off their masks and scramble for the scattered goodies. Presents are then uistributed. and dancing follows. ! Garrett P. Serviss, the astronomical lecturer and writer, notes in a Recent newspaper letter a curious sensation which he has experieacedjin gazing doubt- through a telescope, and which less has been felt by others.; -He says: 'Lookin iito another world from a safe pevch upon this one--for. that is what the observer with a powerful tele scope seems to himself to be doing is in itself 'an occupation that almost takes one's breath away. I have more than once gazed at the full orb of the "moon through a telescope until the palpable rounding of its globs under the eye made one positively diz y, as if one should be held over the edge of the world with a 4,000-mile drop beneath him." j Baseball magnates have f their i own troubles. Listen, for instance, to Presi dent Yon der Ahe, of St. Louis: "There is an unlimited number of people who think that th?y are cut out for ball play ers, and if only given an opportunity to appear on the diamond would prove ver itable wonders. Iam pestered to death with, such people. There is scarcely a , week but that some one comes to me aud i implores for a trial. He i? positive that j if he is only given a chancp to display his abilities he wi 1 be enaed at once. I never ry any attention to them, unless ! they can give some assurance that; they ! have plaj ed with a pro "essional club. At -j first I used to give them trials, but their utter inability to fili any of the positions for which they claimed they were best suited has caused me to give them no countenance whatever. A good man will not remain long undiscovered, j Ball players are not born. They are made only by experience." j Europe has been described as breaking down under her weight of armor, and when we con ider that the expenditure of the six leading States last year,1 upon their armies alone, was more than $500, 000,000, and that the navies under the came flag were an additional expense of over $100,000,000, we can begin to real ize what the necessity of preparing for war, ai a means of preserving peace, means to the jealous powers of the Old World. Europe may summon more than 10,000,000 men, more than one sixth of ihe population cf the entire United States, to slaughter and be slaughtered. These men, too. are all in the prime of manhood, the bone and sinew of their respective countries, so that the death of - the hundreds ol thousands who must ia witably fall means more even than the sentimental loss td wives, mothers and children. It; is a great question - what these ten millions of men might accom plish if war was a relic of the past, and they might turn their attention to pro ductive labor; but it is, unfortunately, a question that we can scarcely hope! will be solved without delays and bloodshed. WOMAN'S WORLD, PLEASANT LITERATURE FOR FEMININE READERS. Women and Sleeping Car Porters. A New York Central Railroad sleeping-car porter says : 1 ' 'I have been on the road for fifteen years and I know of only two ladies who ever offered to pay the porter for his trouble. They are rrom' Chicago a d are sisters of a young man wh' travels frequently over my run. The family are all alike, and I have yet to find o .e of them who ever carried more than a small gripsack, not too .arge to be easily carried in the hand. There is some pleasure for a porter to meet folks like these, especially when ;he three of them cone in together. I tike their free and independent style, as they never want attendance, and the ro-mg ladies,, before retiring, hand me their bottles of patent polish, so that I ivon't spoil their shoes with a cheap bla: king. In the morning they stand up tj.be brushed and the two girls drop me i quarter apk-c e Taey always consider :he porter for I met the sisters when I eras on the NewiYork run, on an extra. nd they parsed out four bits when hulf :he men in the car who rode through irom Chicago, or ly gave the regular one light tin of a qi artcr. I guess they got ;he habit from their brother, but anyway ! shan't forgjt them, as they are the only wo women in the United States who f er remembered the poor porter." What to Teach Our Daughters. At a social Gathering some one pro- posed this question "What shall I :each my daughter" Th olies were handed : following re- Teach her- that 100 lollar. , ' 5 Teach her to arrange the library. Teach her to sav "X o cents make a the parlor and r "Yes," and stick to it. Te ch her how to wear a calico dress, ind to wear it like a queen. I Teach her how to sw. on buttons, ia-n stocking and mend gloves. Teach her how to dress for health and :omfort as well as for appearanc e. j Teach her how to cultivate flowers and :o keep the kitchen garden. I Teach her how to make the neatest oom in the house. , h Teach her to have nothing to do with intemperate or dissolute young men. Teach her that tight lacing is un :omely as well as injurious to health. ; i each her to regard the morals and aabits, and not money, in selecting her issociates. Teach her to .observe the old rule: UA place for eve ythiug, and everything .n its p'ace." '. ' '- Teach her that rrusicT d aw'ng and painting are real arcomphshm ntsin the jiorne, and are not to bj neglcltei if ;here be time a r.d mo icy for their use. Teach her the important truism: "That the more she lives wiihln her ini jome the more she will sive, and the further she will get away from the poor house." " . ! Teach her that a giod, steady, church a;oing mechanic, f aimer, clerk or teacher without a cent is worth more than forty loafers or non-producers in broadcloth. ; Teach her to embrace every 'oportu nlty for , reading, and to s.lect such hboks as will give- h?r the most useful and practical information, in order to make the best progress in earlier as well is later home an 1 school life. Charles 'oh (S. C.) Diyatc'i. : : .. A. Last Century Fashion Revived. The remarkable discovery has recently been made that "white h-nds are com ing into fashion again." It would seem that hands have been growing less white than they used to be, and have suffered from to j great attachment in ladies to lawn tennis and boating, and other mas culine accomplishments. "Chapped and Yre hands are never pretty, and these, of course, invariably follow on outdoor ex ercise. The evil js, happily, not beyond remedy, and to effect this purpose 'the daughters of f:-ishioa, as many of them will learn with surpris.now have dishes of hot water shaped like a flower leaf o:i their toilet tables in which they steep their hands for a while before po'n- to bed, then anoint them with vaselidc r-id put on gloves lined with a preparation of cold crtam. These gloves should be of washleather and several kizes too lare for the hand." Before this paragraph has gone its tar dy round in print these night glove will Barely be made an instance of the amaz ing luxury of oar 4e.en"ratc days, and point, wc m:iy be sure, a very "doleful moral. In the absence of any general knowledge on this : point, the ladies of fashion will be looked upon as having originated a pernicious practice, which, taken together with the toilet masks o! which we recently heard so much and saw so lirtle, might indicate a lamentable degree of over-re fmement, has invarably preceded the decay of empires, i One old receipt for perfuming gloves runs: Take amber grease a drain, civet the like quantity, orange flower butter a quarter of an ounce, and, with these well mixed and odored, daub them over gen tly with fine cotton wool.and so press the perfume into them. Other devices for making then "richly redolent" point generally to the use of oil or fats s be ing the best available and most large y employed means to secure a good and lasting perfume.' As for such gloves be ing considered excellent for night use,; we have the lines in Swift's poem on 4The Lady's Dressing-room," showing on the table: There night glovesjmade of Tripseys hide, Bequeathed by Tripsay when she died. i London Queen. Fashion Fancies. Paris dressmakers mike the sleeves of dresses full over the shoulders. Imitation coral necklaces, bracelets, and brooches are worn with tulle toilets. Hojts are correctly worn with tailor- mnde suits, whether the wearer is young or nq It W with lit'. corduroy is popularly combined white wool stuffs for dressy tea and morning house gowns . Evening dresses are again made of tulle or gauze and richly embroidered with cut jet or crystal b?ads and bugles. Cloth polonaises are worn over velvet or .plu h; skirts of contrasting color, wThether plain, striped or plaid. A gray velvet princess gown over a pale pink petticoat was one of the most admired tea gowns lately imported. Bodices of plain as well as striped ma terials are made on the bias. Dressmakers declare that a better fit is attained in this manner. j Jersey cloth suits of fine quality are in all darK colors, and are the most durable garments which can be found for little b(.y' suits. ; There are many natty little shoulder capes in many varieties of fur which will prove one of the popular fashions for young g rls. ' White fur is the fashion in Pari, where a long, .white, fluffy boa and inulf are considered the most "chic" thing in out ward aiornment. , . Leopard and tiger skin plush is much used for trimming cloth circuses. The new imitation monkey fur is also em ployed for trimming. A pretty novelty for evening wear, pnrticui.irly for" young girls, is "colored fulle on wh ch sire ?ewn: tiny blossoms covering the entire surface. The skirts of wool dresses are made plain, even the foot plaiting is dispensed with, a band of the material pinked at the edge being used in its p'ace. The prettiest little knitted hoods for babies ate in white zephyr wool in shape of a Xormandy Cap with ribbon strings and a full bow iii front of satin. Sashei of widi soutache braid a quarter of a yard wide are finished by. a large tasfel, and are very pretty with almost any woolen costume for little girls. Some,pf the favorite Tartans are made up with velvet corsage si and are very f tylixh. These basque are adorned silver or gilt buttons pf small sLe. by The three-tuttcth cutaway coat worn by gentlemen for morning dress this sea son looks better than than it did, as it is cut lower down, and a little longer than it was last winter. ; The prettiest hats for little girls are those cf velvet felt, which has a smooth close pile. These are in brown, dirk green and black, and have wide brims which can be bent into any shape. The Californian Sheep. , Californian wool always ' reminds me of the time when the gold diggings were fi;t discovered in California. At Ox ford it.used to be the custom at Christ mas time for the butchers to exhibit the prize sheep which they h d bred a-nd purchased. One butcher, procured a yry fine sheep, dyed its. wool purple, gilaed its hoofs, and exhibited it as a California sheep. It seems hardly credi ble, but numbers of persons went away in the firm : belief that all California sheep had purple wool and golden hoofs. Lorigmattj Magxiiue. POPULAR SCIENCE. Careful observations by $chroder, in Germany,. how that one part of sid phuricacid in 54.000 parts of air will cause a serious damage to ip ants in a very short time. Coniferous trees are more nnsitive than decidttous. Fiuit trees arc very sensitive. In a British Association pap-r. Mr. W. II. Prc3cc has recorded an experiment by which he loeali.'.ecl a fragment of a needle in his da ighter's hand. Ai'finc magne tized ne;dlc was su pended by a delicate fiber over the hand, and on cutting at the point indicated by this) needle the troublesome bit of tteei was found and, extracted. . , - " j - It is very unsafe to paper a room, an is too often done, over another paper. Sometimes severallajcrs are pkced on th3 walls.,- Tiiese layers, together with, the paste, become . breeders of disease. The only proper way, when the paper needs renewing, is to remove the old paper entirely "and clean the wall. For sleeping-rooms it is better to have no paper at all. A new use; for the tobacco plant has been discovered. Its stems and waste, it is claimed, are equal to linen rags irT the manufacture of paper. Tobacco wra-te costs less than $10 a ton, linea rags $70 t j $80. There is no expense in. assorting the former and very little shrink age, as against a loss of j one-third of lags. The yearly tobacco waste is es timated by the census reports at from 3,000,000 to 4,000,000 pounds.; While the sub'ect of earthquakes is under discussion it might! not be inap propriate to mention that one notable feature in connection with the New Madrid eaithjUakc was its ellects on. forest trees. Gigantic oaks that, from, their exterior, appeared to be solid, were discovered, upon being cut for sawmill purposed, to be much impaired and in jured internally, and as' a rule presented rotten hearts of splintered bodies. This fact was noted and has been commented upon. The world's blind are computed to number about 1,00J,00J, about one eight ies person to every 1,400 inhabitants. In Austria, one person in! evcrv 1.785 is blind; in Swedeu, one in every 1,418; in France, one every 1,1'Jl; in Prussia, one in every 1.111; mEngland, one . in every itvat. xne proportion is greatest in Egypt, where, in Cairo, there is one blind person to every twenty inhabi tants; while in New Zealand it falls to one in every 3,550 inhabitants. Germany has the greattst number of institutes for the blind, thirty-five; England has six teen; Franco, thirteen;! Austria-Hungary, ten; Italy, nine Belgium, six; Australia, two; while America, Asia and AfiLa together are said to possess only S'lX. j; It is well understood that Great Brit ain and bthcr parts of Northern Europe owe much to the warming influence of the gulf stream. The extent of the ef fect has been given in the calculations of , Dr. James Croll, who has found that the amount of heat conveyed j northward in the Atlantic by this, stream is equivalent to 77,47i, 550, 000, 000,00 3,000 foot p'unds of energy a day, which is equal tO .ill thr Vioof ra-n'.xrnA 1 1 P.O U'iC :t. 'A. il. i 1 ' auu.uc iuul's ai me equator, ana more heat than U conveyed by all the air cur rents. The lieat qf the Antic seas and north Atlantic would be diminished that much by the stoppage or division of the great pecan river. . Nevada's Salt Fields. The abundance of the salt formation in Nevada is illustrated by the fact that in Lincoln County there is a deposit of pure rock salt which is exposed for a length of two miles, a width of half a miie, and isof unknown depth; in places canons are cut through it to a depth o! sixty feet, and not only has the deposit been traced on the surface for a distance of nine miles, .but it is so golid in places av to require blasfng like rock, and so pure and transpircnt that print can be read through blocks of it some inches thick. In Churchill County there is said to b3 a deposit of rock salt some fourteen feet in depth, free from any particla oi foreign substance, and which can be quarried at the rate of five tons a day to the man. What, is know as the prea Humboldt salt field is c.-timated to b some fifteen miles long by six wide.! Ac cording to the description, when thf summer heats have evaporated the sur. fno trfn coif t r 4Via i4v4V rt r-nirwnl inches may be scraped up, and under, neath there is a stratum of rock fait oi the purest description, rnd of a depti unknown. .