i 76 TILE OMAHA DAILY fiyi : : SUNDAY , APIUTi 19 , 189th * OJ OJ g 9 of U REVELATION IN CARPETS AND MATTINGS 9 . , . . , + , . , , ' t q r - kiT4 ' tR Ai v'dA Curl " 'k , , i1 ! + ICI ! nn t" l t : + + n y.t" f sr That will surprise you. We have always been col nrectlY termed THE POPULAR HOUSE FURNISHERS AT POPULAR PRICES , " For the next week only , ou r prices o1 CARPETS and MATTINGS will be more than popular-they will be startlingastoundlno" the result of a DARING PURCHASE made by our buyer while in Philadelphia about ten daYs ago.ThePrettiest assortment ofPatterns of the season , - M - INGRAINS , . . .S- 5 ' ! Ingrains. . . . . . . -l Ti , , = , . Ingrains C5 : CC . . . . Ingrains , Ex- -i- tra Su er a AIi Wool , . Extra Super , AIi Wool . . . Extra Super , All Wool. . . . . 1111 Heavy 3-ply. Brussells 1Vlogaettes arussalls. . . . . . 48c er. , = sell = . _ . . 58c a.u = = ells. . . . . 75r Velvets. . . . . . . 90c veivets.$1OO Moquettes . j Moquette $1.251 Mattings Mattings „ . . . . . . MaUings. . . . . 21c Cotton Warp , . . . 24c Cotton Warp. . . 28c Oil Cloth1 Oil Cloth . . . . . . . . 160 Oil Cloth , . . . . . . . Linoleum . . . . . . 43c Linoleum . . . . . . 54c Chenille . . Curtains o AND UPWARD Our Terms Week Month $10 worst- $1.00 $ , $ 4,00 20 ll'orthL25 , 4 50 30 worth 1,00 , & 00 50 worth2,00 , 7.50 75 worth2.50 , 5,00 100 worth250 , 10.00 200 worth- 4,00 , , 15.00 A . p0 E + 7 Baby Carriages In all styles. Wo have the famous 13ey- wood line , and offer this one as a leader , for this week only , . at I , , \ , ; ; I i = w This 6-foot Extension Table Nicely finished in antique and well made- Price for this week only Ve arc sole agents for the Excelsior ' and i1' ator S , This year op ) - ( wo are ( , pushing ' / the f Excelsior { and the I prices are making them go very fast. o Prices range from . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . f [ " Our A . .r e p llas proved to be an immense Success , Why shouldn't it ? We give the &siesl Terms to be had , and the GLADIATOR has already achieved a reputation in Clli- cage anddle east over and above all other wheels , Two models $100.oo and the same for time or cash , o Ioolj ( thorn 1 1111111i xC , + fi ; : ; 1 I lltOO itIi : 1ll FllllCIll1 k ; . X 3,25o feet of oor space devoted exclusively for a free ridin school , with coal etent instructors in attendance , Bo sure and buy No oxclusit o your wheel from an C st a bll 9 had firm that Bic3 clo store can will not be out of a hard to g ivo rho business in a low months limn nmv , the terms that we do Our Ladies' GLADIATOR for $ $5.00 is getting more popular every day , It's the prettiest and ma3t stylish ladies wheel made , We also have the SPARTACUS for $75.00 , i . K . 7 ' t rItLD l or l lLECTRICITY Record of a Year's Dovelopmeat of Niagara Falls' Power , TELEPHONE LINE BUILDING IN LONDON Tlectricnl 'Prn118r11INNior1 of Light-Ed- lsou'e rlcturea on the .VnII-Iiu- portaat Iinprovcuiebts fry the of Electrlclly. It was a year ago , on the 4th Inst. , that Mr. Rudolph Baumann , the Swiss engineer , moved the small hand wheel which controls the first great turbine in the central station of the Niagara Falls Power company. Then the field of the generator revolved quietly , effectively , and the civil , hydraulic and electrical - trical engineers who had bolped build the plant knew that their work was a euccess. The machinery which had the power of transforming - forming the energy was all it was expected to be , and since then tvo others have been successfully erected , All that remained to be done one year ago was the construction of proper conductors to convoy the electrical force to the point of application and use , and since then this has been done , so that today the lands of the power company are enlivened by several factories , the growth of a year. Briefly recalled , says the Philadelphia - phia Record , they are a carborundrum plant , formerly of Monongahela City , Pa. ; an aluminum - inum plant , a branch of the Kensington ( Pa , ) plant ; a caid hf 0 make lene gun and terfal with w t acety , a potash and sodium works. In addition to these the power from these mighty generators - ators , built by the Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing company of Plttsburg , Pa „ is being used for operating the Ihnffalo and Niagara balls Electric railway , and t11e varl- eus Ilnca In the City of Niagara Falla , It la nine being used to Ilght Niagara balls. Other factories are In process of erection , all deni- nnstrating that the first year of the appllca- tion of power from fho largo dynamos has been man unqualified success , and that tine turbines - bines built by lt. D. Wood & Co. of this city are unequalled In the world , These great turbines have withstood the great strain on them for a year withun damage. Never before have turbines been subjected to such a strain. The specuficn Lions furnished to the builders of the ma- clliLJ ry tor the Niagara power development named pilysical tests so high as to deter seine manufacturers from bidding. Where any doubt existed as to the kind of material - terial to employ , preference was given to that which would put the durability beyond - yond any doubt. This Is particularly the case In regard to the wheels themselves , Hronzo was adopted at a very great increase - crease of cost to render failure from any cause hnpaso a l sused concealed , Te tests of the material in the construction were followed by the tepcclore it m making tuning eatabllehments wheels and other machinery with fho Sliest careful precelon on rig o a of aspecifi c qulremenla of t1 p tion. 1 ch wheel fho tPit Ionnaist of 11two Fourneyrau ' 11tun theca , the oo eutrallzeeCWeigh ov the other , see as to t on the bearlag , Each of lileeo t vin wheels the 1s , moreover speed gate , made h ree t rie hnigh w rim , moving up and down on the outside of each wheel , To further neutralize weight on the upper bearings of the ebaftlo ilewater inch the penstock is allosu Pa the vertically disk at rte upw ard u P end tlle disk of m the l lower guldn wheel is , on the other hand , solid , The weight of the water upon ib is supported by three lelinod rods passing through it and the Wheel casing. There wheels will eachl discharge 430 cubic feet per second , and , Acing under shout I36 teat fall from rur face of the upper water to trio center between - tween the lowe thecissll r m ake I sent them a Iet pYfr e 250 revolutions ptr minute , end at 76 per cent emciency will give 6,000.1rorse power. The guide wheel has thirty-six buckets , and the turbine wheel thirty-two , These buckets are thickened In the middle , this being the most approved form of bucket , said to be especially useful when the wheel is acting at part gate , The shaft wheel leading from the wheels to the generator Is a steel tube , thirty-eight Inches in diameter , except at points where It passes the journal bearings or guides , at which point it Is eleven inches la diameter and solid , They are warranted by the makers to keep the speed constant within 2 per cent under ordinary conditions of operation , and not allow 1t to vary more than 4 per cent , should the work -done be suddenly increased or diminished by 25 per cent. The entire weight of the shafts and all revolving parts aggregating 1CO,000 pounds , Is supported and float , as ln' were , in the wheel case , TELEPHONE LINES IN LONDON. Obtaining the rights from property owners for the running of telephone exchange lines in London is a very troublesome and expensive - pensive business , says a writer In Electricity. A large number of the buildings nra built on gromsd which is leased far a long term of years , and aluco these are often sublet It In necessary to get the written permission of all to place the fixtures on the roofs. Generally orally , as a consideration for this privilege , the telephone company has to agree to keep the roofs In repair. In laying out the route for trunk lines , often the particular building you require is very dlmcult to secure , and mcro especially so if the janitor should by accident ascertain this fact , In 1852 fho London and Glebe Telephone and Maintenance company was engaged in eetabllaldng a telephone service in London in opposition to the United Telephone company - pany , which controlled the Bell and Edison patents for London. Concocts arose frequently - quently between the employes of the two companies and especially- reference to hoijeotop Ales. , ti . In ono Instance where the London and Globe company had secured rights for a long trunk line and had inn wires out from the central omco about a mile , the men quit work , as was the custom , at noon on a Saturday - urday , On Monday when they started to continua - tinua their work tlloy found that the United company had placed high fixtures directly at right angles to their line , mud placed thereon wires In such a manner that lboy could not continue the extonslon of the trunk line , and a largo portion of the work had to be abandoned - doned and a now rune secured , Within a few days the United cmnpany leased po roof of one of time btdidings in which we had a small office , and served a written notice upon me to have a fixture we had upon the building - ing removed by noon the next day or they would take it down tlrmnselves. The fixture was taken away , and weof course , had to abandon the once. Previous to this I had written to the United company several times , advising them that we should take steps to protect ourselves if they continued Ills kind of warfare , The central emcee of both companies were located on the Paine street and 1n the Caine block , but 501110 distance apart , Tine Lan- don and Globe company bad their offices in time Wool exchange , an immense building - ing , fronting on two streets , the entire roof of which we had leased , and tllo United company - pany , without any permit from us , had placed a large number of wires with fixtures on lute building. I secured for the London and Globe company the lease of the root of too building on three sides of that occupied by the United company-too fourth side being the street. There was also a place near the Dank of England , where it was very dimcult to secure a bulijUng high enough to carry the trunk Ilnae is one section of the clty- in tact , there was only one , and that was occupied 1'y a firm with widch our company had consldervble business. The United company - pany had appropriated tine root of this build. Ing without any lease , and had a large num. ben of wino and cables thereon , The lease of this root having been secured for tie Lonclpn and Glebe company , I constructed an apparatus - paratus which would send over a line a very strong current of electricity that would ring magnetic belle , and wheq the telephone was taken off the hook to answer a supposed call would cause the induction fn the receiving telephone to be sa strong that no conversa- thou could be heard , This Instrument , connected - nected to a largo battery , was placed In the 1Vopl exchange oltice ready tor use , A few days after the United company had entered our pole removed from our building r ordered all their fixtures and wires removed from the buildings we had secured leases on by noon the next day. EXTENDING TIIE POWER OP TILE EYE , Dr , Frank M. Close of Oakland , Cal „ has discovered a new application for the X or Roentgen ray , by which he expects to develop - velop an apparatus for the electrical tram- mission of light , so that In the future it will bo possible to ace long distances through the medium of electric wires. "Telectro- scope" is the name Dr. Close applies to this apparatus , which In Its present crude state is little more In appearance than two cigar boxes connected with 10 feet of wire , one of which is called by its inventor the transmitter - mitter and the other the receiver , In front of the receiver a piece of tourmaline or Iceland - land spar Is placed , and to this the eye of the person testing the apparatus is placed. In front of the opening of the transmitter is placed a lighted candle , and immediately the eye perceives the flame of the candle , though ten feet distant and In an adjoining room , For the purpose of the experiment the tourmaline of the receiver Is removed , and , though the lighted candle remains at the transmitter , no light is seen , The explanation of this phenomenon Dr , Clo1d demonstratee to be very simple and analogous to the transmission of sound by electricity , 'I was first led into these experiments - periments by the discovery some years ago of the thermal ray , a hitherto unknown property of light. Dy passing a thermometer - ter back and forth along the'solar spectrum It was found that neither of the suven color rays had a perceptible influence upon the' mercury , but that at a certain distance Beyond - yond the red rays there occurred a remarkable - ble effect , the mercury rising rapidly , Repeated - peated experiments demonstrated that the effect was a result of a peculiar invisible heat property of ligbL Afterwards Dr. Vogel - gel , the eminent photographic scientist , die- covered the existence of the invisible ac tinic ray , "Proceeding along this line of experiment , I passed a magnetic needle back and forth along the , pectrum and discovered at a certain distance beyond the violet ray the existence of an electric ray , or , more properly - erly , an electric division of the ray , Proceeding - ceeding further wllh the experiment , I found that an ordinary machine needle suspended - pended by a cobweb passed back and forth along the apectrum was at a certain point between the electric and actinic division plainly influenced by an invisible force , and that therefore light had a magnetic us well as an electric property , "I made no attempt to utlize ! these properties - erties of light In any other manner than to make the discovery of the means of transmitting light electrically after the manner of sound by the telephone , Sound In the telephone is transformed 'into electricity In the transmitter and is conducted by wire to tine receiver , where the electricity Is transformed Into sound , So it Is with my apparatus , It is simply a soft Iron magnet Incloa > od la a box , connected by ton feet of wire with a similar soft Iron magnet at the other end. A lighted candle placed In front of the opening in one box by means of those invisible properties excites a current - rent of electricity , which is transmitted to the other magnet and there reconverted into its original form. By Interposition of a prism the light Is reproduced , I make no claim for tills discovery beyond the opening of a new field of possibilities and experi- ment. The Roentgen ray is denoted X ray because its properties are unknown. I believe - lieve the X ray and the ray I have utilized is the same , It seems to me possible to develop - velop this discovery of mine into a means of enabling a man to see great distances. "In my present apparatus only about ten feet of wire Is used , but the result would be the same with ten miles , It Is crude , but eo was the first telephone , It was long after sound was- first transmitted before articulate speech could be hoard at great distances , It may be years before the perfected 'lelectro- seope' Is a peutect realization , but I be- Ilevo tbal , whether I succeed la pertocting It or not , some one will solve all the dim. culties that stand In the way , and that It will be potelblo some tine to stand at an Instrument In San Francisco and not only hear , but see the man with whom we talk In Oakland , That is why I have called It telectroscopo. By a perfect 'teleetroscope' photographs niay Borne day be made 1n San Francisco of a subject In Sacramento , or even farther away , and tile tranamio3lon of photographs around the world In as short a time as a cablegram is sow sent becomes a possibility. " Dr. Close Is also the inventor and builder of the electrical automobile submarine - marine torpedo. EDISON'S LATEST , ' A new inventlop by Thomas A Edison was shown to a few favored persons at the West Orange laboratory one evening last week. The new machine is really a grown up kinetoscope , and it is a success , in the opinion of the New York Herald. Mr , Edison calls bin latest invention the vitascope , which be says means a machine showing lifo , and that is exactly what the new apparatus does , The vitascope , which has been in process of perfection at the Llewellyn laboratory for tire last seven or eight months , under Mr. Edisn's direction , Is the ideal ha had in mind , he says , when he began work on the kinetoscopo machine , with which he has never been satisfied. The vitascope is an improvement of the kinetoscope , by which moving life size figures - ures of men , women and animals are thrown upon a screen by means of bright lights and powerful lenses. The trial of the new machine - chine was made in a cold corner o1 the big foundry at the works , and Mr. Edison , with Richard N. Dyer , William J Gilmour , manager - ager of the phonograph works ; Rap & Cam- men of New York , and a few invited guests huddled around a red hot stove and gazed at and admired the marvelous figures thrown upon a big white screen at coo end of the room , The first picture shown was a colored pano- ranma of a serpentine dance by Anabelle , svho went out to West Orange to pose one day last summer , The film roll on which the photographs were attached was arranged over a half dozen spools apd pulleys , and the machine - chino was sot in motion , Even the inventor himself was surprised at the result , although with ills usual critical - ical eye ho discovered flaws in the com which lie declared must be disposed o1 before the vitascope would come up to his ideal , Anabelle danced for five minutes , and then a panorama of the latest English Derby was thrown upon the screen , The feature of the new maehino which as- toniehed all who saw the views was the almost - most entire absence of vibration In the plc- tures as they appeared on the screen , and which had been the hardest obstacles to surmount - mount 1n perfecting the apparatus , The original photographs as by time kineto- scope and developed on the film roll are about the size of a special delivery postage stamp , and to produce a life size picture they are magnified about abc hundred times. Of course each vibration of the com or the apparatus - paratus which rovaives It Is magnified l } like proportion , and every previous do away with this vibration lad been unsuccessful - ful , Mr. Edison expects to be able soon to improve - prove time pilonograph so ho will bo able to take records double the length of these which the present'cyllnders will contain , and the vitascope and phonograph will then hose so combined that It will be possible for an audl011ce to watch a photograpldo repfodue- tion of a grand opera and hear the singers and see the acting with as much distinctness of sound and vision as if they were in the opera house , ANNEAL1Ntt WIRE RODS. The bending ofra hire rod heated to red , ness causes slag' scale , and oxidated particles - cles adhering to'tt + wlll drop pt or near the bend. Tins has + baen remedied by the use of electric heating. The rod Is reeled oft the coil withoutnprevous , subjection to an acid bath , A current of electricity then passes through It and brings it at once to red heat. I'assing on Its way , lime red-hot rod Is fed lo a set of rollers , by means of which every portion of It Is bent , and the scale is loosened , The rod is then passed through wire bruahea and other cleaning apparatus , from whlclr It comes out a pure soft wire ready for drawing. When neces sary , the rod after being heated by the current may be passed through rollers to reduce its diameter , and thus labor and expense penso will be saved , This process can , of course , be repeated whenever through the application of the drawing block the rod bas become too brittle. Th's ' method of preparing - paring the rod offers many palpable ad. vantages , espeoally : the eilm'nation of kilns , baths -and baker , and the drying , beating and shaking of the rod coils , It also no- moves one of the great trrublea of the wire industry , the objectionable drainage and opal water , and the unhealthy fumes o1 the sulpbur a ac d , All danger of over or' under heating the rod is avoided by the uniform - form application of the electrical heat to all parts of the rod. This secures not only thorough cleaning and annealing , but , as the heating is from the core to the surface , Instead of from the surface to the core , as in the application of external heat , the scale is not burned in , but drops naturally , and the oxidation is slight , and in tube form of an easily removed soft powder. Since it abolishes the acid bath with Its ( mown deteriorating - teriorating effect on the rod , the process is especially valuable for the production of wire for cables , This preparation of wire rod for drawing not only effects economy In time , labor , expense and space , but gives a greatly improved product. ELECTRIC IiAND LAMPS. The attempt of the manufacturers to turn out an electric hand lamp has not hitherto been attended with much success. The lamp , while fairly serviceable , has generally been unwieldly A Vienna electrical engineer enema to have overcome the dimculty. Ills lamps are constructed in the shape of bottles - tles , clocks , opera glasses , or In imitation of any object whatever , but they all embody the same principle , In the bottle-shaped lamps , the bottle neck contains a small battery - tery , in which three pairs of platinum and zinc elements of the smallest possible size are concealed , This battery is said to furnish - nish a current of from four to five amperes at six volts. A minute incandescent lamp 1s connected to the poles of , the battery , and protected by a knob of cut glass , the lower part of widch is silvered , and acts as a reflector. The body of the bottle contains the reservoir , in which the battery solution is kept , As soon as the bottle is inclined so that the fluid reaches th .battery the current - rent Is generated , and the lamp glows with , a brilliant light. No sooner is the bottle replaced In a vertlcal position than fho light Id extinguished. When the lamp is not in use there Ie no waste of material , and-the smallest-sized bottle will fundsh a continuous - tinuous light for about half an hour. POPLAR TREES AS LIGHTNING RODS. There has been an investigation In Germany - many on the subject of the tendency of trees in geeral to be struck by lightning , with special reference to the poplar , The conductivity - ductivity of different kinds of woods was determined - termined by placing pieces between the poles of a Holtz machine , and noting the quantity of electricity which wan accumulated before a spark passed , The woods contahdng fats were In all cases poorer conductors , while those contaiping starch were better , Among the latter the beet were poplar , oak and svll- low , and it was decided-'that the poplar tree was an exceptionally goal lightning con- ductar , Various authorities were cited in support of the conclusion that where protection - tion from lightning was specially desired the planting of poplar trees near the buildings to be protected was advisable , At the same time the trees need not be too numerous , and they must not be too near the buildings , A number of casen were cited to show that by increasing tune number of trees the protection - tection is not increased , and that absolute safety was not obtained even by a circle of trees , In many cases the lightning had jumped from tire trees to the house , It was found that tine danger of time current jumping from the trees to the roof of a building Is very great when the distance between them Is lees than six and one-half feet , JIlC1 It iOUS , Luther's bible , which he used in his study , is in the possession of a Porlin museum , Its margins are covered with notes In Luther's handwriting , Dr. Alexander , fho new primate of all Ireland - land , is over 70 , and of late ho has lost something of tile fire of his eloquence ; but lie is , with the possible exception of Dr , Sal- mend , by far tune greatest preacher 1n the church In Irelaud , Holman Hunt Is father of a scheme for forming a Jewlab nation in Palestine. . He wishes to raise $100,000OC0 and buy out all Turkish rights' in the holy land , lie would have tuba same boundarica as indicated by Moses. "Rev , Austin Willey , " says the Springfield Republican , "who died at Northfield , Minn „ at time ago of 89 , had the distinction of being the first editor of , tbe earliest antislavery paper In the country. This was the of Freedom , wbich was started in 1889 , at Bangor , by the dame abolitionists , " The new Protestant Episcopal dloceaq of Washington , D. C. , includes in Its territory the District of Columbia and the four couu- ties of the southern tier of Maryland-Prince George's St. Mary's , Charles and Calvert , It was formerly a part of the Maryland diocese , and the division was made not only with the consent , but with the recommendation - tion of the bishop of Maryland , Rev. John D Dcvins , pastor of Hope chapel , Now York , and an expert In city mission work , in a recmt number of the Independent gives it as his opinion after extended personal - sonal contact with omcers and men of the Satvntion army that the army , as an institution - tion , Is a dangerous rival of the church of Christ , Instead of being the helpful ally that it has been uniformly considered to be. A Cripple Creek correspondent of line Cld- cage Evening Post says : "Amcng the celebrities - rities of Cripple Creek is Rev. C. Y , Grimes , an Episcopal clergyman , educated at the Chicago - cage Theological seminary , whose early career - roer embraced life on the frontier among 'cow-punchers , ' He is a man of unusual force , of dlguity and are , Ills church Is crowded to overflowing , File eloquence and presence would grace the foremost churches in tire east , where $10,000 salaries are paid , but Ire modestly prefers to stand Ills ground hero at the very gates of hades , lcnowing his fitness to fearlessly cope with the old red rustler , Some day bo may be chosen bishop , His guild house floats the American flag , surmounted by tine cross , for which he has been criticised , but hia reply came that God was first , country afterward , and that no man could be Intrusted with the latter unless a firm believer in his Creator. That flag floats in spite of croakers , and assures the incoming stranger of the existence of righteousness and patriotism. " 1MI'IETna. Rev , Dr , X , occupying a charge in a New England church , announced some time ago that the regular weekly prayer meeting would be devoted to discussion of a certain question of general interest to the congrcga tion. Many members of the church wished to take part in the discussion ; It was tllere- fore decided to limit each member's remarks to five minutes , When the speaker's time expired , the clergyman was to notify him by rapping with a pencil on the desk , Deacon A , a notoriously long-winded speaker and exhorter - horter , was coo of the members at whom time restriction was specially directed. As everybody - body anticipated , the deacon was one of the first to address the meeting , and he had not fairly started on his remarks when the rap of the pencil was heard. "Am I to understand , " asked the deacon , turning to Dr. X , "that my five minutes have expired 7" "Yes , deacon ; I am sorry , but your timne 1e up. up."And all general remarks nra limited to five minutes ? " "Yes ; that was the understanding. " The deacon turned very deliberately to ills fellow mnomnbers , "Then , brethren ; le proceeded - ceeded , "I shall throw the remnalnder of my remarks Into the form of a prayer , " The deacon kept the Boor. The late Archdeacon Denison of England was always violently opposed to the goverp mont school inspectora. "My dear Ilellalra , " he said to one of them , "I love you very much , but If you ever come here again to Inspect I will lock the door of the school and tell the boys to put you in the pond , " Mr. Bellairs did not go again , Some years later another Inspector , his "dear friend Thning , proposed to came and inspect time school. "Oh , come by all means , " he said ; "I 5111111 never ask a sixpence of their money , and I think them quite as mischievous as I ever did ; but pray crone if you like ; always very glad to see you. " On the day of Inspection , when the archdeacon suppcsed that the work was nearly over , ho and his wife went to see "how they were getting on , " lien ma jesty's inspector said ho wouid like to hear them sing , whereupon tom children struck up "Gooney , gooney gander , " going on to "Old Vather Longlege wouhln"t Bay his prayers ; ending witui "Take him by the left leg and throw 11011 downstalrs , ' _ A clergyman in an eastern lawn warned ids hearers lately "not to wane In a slippery path , lest they be sucked , Maelstrom-like , Into Its nlealear" This metaphor suggests that of another clergyman who prayed "that the word might be as a nail driven la a sure r place , sending its roots downward and its branches upwards" This story Is told of Archdeacon Denison : A perplexed parisldoner went to tlho vicar's study one day and blurted out : "Why , I hear , Mr. Archdeacon , as how you refuse. to bury dlssenlors" "No , " replied the archdeacon - ' deacon , "you have been wrongfully Informed , my man , I should really like to bury tlmem all , " , An English preacher was speaking of the transitorlness of earthly things. "Look at the great cities of antlqultyl"ho exclaimed , "where are they now ? Why , some of them have perished ao utterly that It is doubtful If they ever existed , " oU'I' Oh TEll ORDINARY , Of the 40,000 species of beetles widely diffused over the earth's surface not ono is known to be venomous or armed with a sang , A young lady In Now Jersey beard a man In her wardrobe and after neatly turning the key sent for a policeman. The first Greek to explain the too character - acter of the sun , and to hoot the idea of it being a God was Anaxagoras , born In Ionia In the year 500 D , C , For this great heresy Io was punished as an atheist , The "Breeches" bible Is so called because of a peculiar error it contains. It was printed at Geneva by English exiles , and has this curious rendering of Genesis III , 7 : "Making themselves breeches out of fig leaves : During tine past year Sandow has become a confirmed bicyclist , IIo did not at first give his approval to this form of exercise , thicking it would develop the leg manacles only. He has increased ills single finger lift from 600 pounds to 750 , wine the dumbbell that ho raises with ono hand weighs 215 pounds , an Increase of fifty pounds over that of last year. llis harness lift has Increased fromm 5,800 to 11,100 pounds. One of tine most remarkable freaks of nature - ture over seen In the vicinity is the four- legged Plymouth hock rooster owned by Tilomas Flannigan , n l'amhaudlo section fore- rnnn , who lives In Elwood , Ind , The rooster is 2 years old and , although otherwise n common - mon looking chicken , it has two well de- velcped pairs of legs , The Idnd legs branch , r Lilo behind the out from hips Immediately ordinary Jogs , and when It walks time hind legs go through lire motions of walking. The chicken Is a great pet and attracts wido- splead attention. A Chicago woman found a man under her bed , As silo had been anticipating lids event since the age of maturity , she was p'eparocl for the emergency. True to tune program which hart been mapped out in i1er mind for many years , alto seized the intruder by ills shoulders and yellei for tine police. The scheme succeeded end the burglar is now In jail , There are over a thousand men In New York and Brooklyn , according to thq latest returns , who coo worth between $1,000,000 and $1,500,000 each , and the most of them are entirely milcnown to tie general public , Only two citizens of New York-John D , Rockefeller and W. W. Astor-are supposed to be wroth more thnn $100,000,000 apiece ! but there are line who are each'wnrllm $50 ; 000,000 and over , as well as two estates of like amount , The total number of mllllon- aires In these two cities Is greater than in all thin rest of the ciuntry , Ville time frinnda of Clara lfeppenstall wore gathered in her home at Freehold , N. J „ en the night of the 4th inst „ talking of her life and of her death on tine day before - fore , they were startled by a shriek coming train the room wlmero the body had been laid out , Seversl of lime men present rushed to the roam , but instantly raq back with blanched faces. Sitting upright Ih I1er white robes was the supposed corpse , with wide open eyes , Her lips began jo move as It she would speak , Then the young woman tell back into the comn , Charles Nprtan , a n > Ighbor , fainted , Tile frightened amen finally plucked up courage enough to ge to the assistance - sistance of Burton , and a doctor was hastily 1 vunlmoned , When the physician arrived Burton hind recovcred _ his senses and time doe. t tor examined Misa lieppenatall , He announced s that there was life , and that the case was one of suspended animation , lie applied reins. s dies , and soon the woman was resting quietly. w a