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SEVERALPAKISTAN DENS
RARE COMBINATIONS OF LUXURY,COMFORT AND CONVENIENCE.
The Sanctums of Scientists, Critics andLiterary Geniuses of World Wide Rep-utations ?Where the Uright Lights Re-tire to Do Their Chosen Work.
The sanctum of M. Louis Pasteur, forexample, is one of the most simple in thehigh order of trulyphysical comfort. Itis not encumbered with the scientificparaphernalia often met with in thenouses ofmedical men. A large carved
oak table stands by the side of the arm-chair in which the great scientist oftenaits in quiet contemplation of his pastexperience and future hopes. In thathigh stack of green cases at which hecasts un occasional glance stores of vain-able notes are classed in perfect order.They are ready for reference should afresh problem arise in the course of hislabors in bringing about the preventionor cure of that terrible affliction to thestudy ofwhich he has devoted so manyyears of his valuable and successful life.M. Pasteur usually wears a close fittingskull cap when in his sanctum. He isgrand cross of the Legion of Honor, mem-ber of the French academy and perpetualsecretary of the Academy ofScicncea
THE QTJr.»T TOWER BUILDER.
M. Gustave Eiffel, the engineer whosewonderful popularity has grown so rap-idly, is accustomed to ruminate in aquiet looking but very comfortable sort,of library. He is fond of walking aboutwhen in deep calculation, and frequentlymakes a halt in front of his admirablechimney piece, the shelf of which is sur-mounted by a very chaste and beautifulfemale bust. On each side of tbe chim-ney piece is a handsome Venetian mir-ror. Itwas in this sanctum, situated inthe Rue de Prony, that M. Gustave Eiffelsolved the last few serious difficultieswhich at one time threatened the com-pletion of his Champ de Mars triumph;and there it is that he now meditatesover the opposition formed by some ofthe members of the municipal council tohis project for the construction of theMetropolitan railway for Paris. Themain objections to tbe metropolitanscheme are that it would destroy thebeauty of the boulevards and ruin theline of omnibuses running from theMadeleine to the Bastile. It is not atall unlikely that the engineer who tri-umphed so gloriously in the case of histower will achieve another victory withtne railway he proposes to construct.The man of the iron tower is a*officerof the Legion of Honor.
M. Francisqne Sarcey, the well knowntheatrical critic of The Temps, and oneof the brightest of the galaxy of Pari-sian chroniclers, inhabits during his longworking hours a library in which he isalmost surrounded by his books. M.Sarcey is beyond what is usually consid-ered the prime of life, yet he lookswell as, "with spectacles on nose," andwearing a soft and smooth white beard,he poses himself carefully and closelyover his table in front of the copy he iscarefnlly preparing. He is reputed tobe a model of gallantry toward the la-dies; but the case might be reversedwhen it is considered that the lady art-ists whom it is his duty to criticise notinfrequently call at his house to ask afavor or an act of justice for their pro-fessional requirements. There are twoplaces where Sarcey may very often bemet with; one is his library, and theother is his fauteuil d'orchestre, when-over a grand performance or a premiererepresentation is given at any of theprincipal Parisian theatres.
WEAVERS OF ROMANCE.
M. Georges Ohnet, the celebrated ro-mancist and dramatist, still young andhandsome, with his smooth dark haircarefully brushed and parted, usuallysits in pensive attitude in one of thoseInsurious armchairs with which his studyabounds. The sculptured chimney pieceby the side of which he takes his place inwinter is a work of art iv three stories,surmounted by a beautiful clock and alooking glass out of old or young humanreach. The author of the "Maitre deForges" is one of the most amiable ofParisian litterateurs, as all who havevisited him at his charming residence inthe Avenue Trudiane can affirm. M.Georges Ohnet is as young in the Orderof the Legion of Honor as he is in hisage; but with time both may surely beexpected to ripen and advance to a brill-iant maturity.
M. Emile Zola dwells in the artisticquarter Clichy, where, in the Rue Hallo,he possesses a sumptuously furnishedsanctum, provided with sofas, peacockpictures of the greatest beauty, stat-uettes, evergreens and objects of art inevery variety. All these strikingly ap-parent comforts and delights combine toencourage that inclination for the dolcefar niente to which the indefatigablepretender to academical honors does notfor one moment yield. With his limpidhair falling in a loose style on each sideof his head, after the manner of manypopular knights of the palette, he con-tinues to wear the same binocle as whenhe wrote "L'Assommoir" and "LaTerre."In fact Zola, by his free and easy ap-pearance, looks more like an artistepeintre than a literary man. He may beconsidered a painter also, since he writespictures with his pen almost as vividlyas those who paint them with theirbrushes. M. Emile Zola is a chevalierof the Legion of Honor, and the red rib-bon is well placed and well merited asthe reward of his profound thought,bold imagination and vigorous expres-sion that are sometimes severely criti-cised but invariably admired. ?Galig-
nani's Messenger.
iThe Phoenicians are amongst the earli-est nations which are supposed to haveused the saw. The scholar is not sur-prised to find a very pretty story ac-counting for the discovery of the saw ir,
Grecian mythology. Here theinvento;is said to have found the jawbone of bsnake, which he imitated by jagging v:;
iron plate.
A itfuhnch I'ix.utatlon.
The work of gathering and drying thebuhash blossoms is in full blast at thebuhach plantation. About one hundredmen are scattered through the fieldspicking the blossoms. As fast as theyare picked they are stowed away abouttwo inches deep in wooden boxes, the.boxes being 2_ feet square. Wagons are
employed in hauling the boxes to thedrying house. Probably it is called adrying honse because it is alongside ofthe spot where the drying is done. Cer-jtainly no artificial heat is needed at thebuhach plantation to dry anythingat thistime of the year.
The sun's rays come down within theinclosure of big poplar trees with a forcethat makes it pleasant to stand from
| under. The trays are allowed to lieIthere, the blossoms being stirred up by:a force of men until they (the blossoms)
:are fairly cured. Afterward they areplaced on a large platform about sixtyfeet square, where they remain until
;dry, and then are sent to the reductioniworks, where they are ground into dust.!This is done by men who are proof;against sneezing, otherwise itcould notbe done at all. Whether or not itmakes.flies and mosquitoes sneeze we don't
\ know, but it is certainly the best pre-;ventive in use to keep those insects at a
distance.?Merced (Cal.) Star.
A l iving Skeleton.A livingskeleton, who rivals some of
! those who figure in the museums, wasfound by the police in a garret in Alle-
-1 gheny. He is six feet high and weighsbut forty-five pounds. He can't accountfor his loss of flesh. He declares he feelsall right, though very weak, and has hadno serious illness. He is a foreigner andunable to speak English. About twoyears ago, he says, he first noticed that
;he was getting thin, but as he felt wellhe paid no attention to it. He continued,however, to lose flesh, and the pastspring, finding himself nothingbut "skinand bone," he went to the country, but
; neither the change nor doctors did himany good, and about a week ago he re-turned to Allegheny. Being without
jrelatives, he went to the garret to awaitdeath, but neighbors hearing of the case
1directed the attention of the police to it.and the man was removed to the stationhouse and subsequently to the city
!home.?Philadelphia Ledger.
A New Kind of Cotton.
I A new variety of cotton plant, pre-;ducing a much larger proportion of cot-ton to seed than any other known kind,
iand having the additional advantage ofbeing earlier and less susceptible to at-mospheric influences, sounds like goodnews for the Lancashire mills. Thenewcomer is known as the mitafife. It
| was discovered a few seasons ago atBenha, in Egypt, though it has onlylately been planted on anything like alarge scale. Mitafifeisadmitted to haveits faults. It is shorter in the stapleand not quite so good in quality as theashmouni plant, but for all that it ap-pears to be driving the ashmouni plantout of the field. Vice Consul Alban re-ports that last year's experience was soencouraging that in some provinces oflower Egypt it has this year been almostexclusively sown.?London News.
A Mermaid in the Orkneys.An interesting spectacle has recently
beeYi seen in the Orkneys. It is proba-bly the first of its kind ever authenti-cated in living memory. Acorrespond-ent writes: "What is said to be amermaid has been seen for some weeksat stated times at Southside, Deerness.Itis about six to seven feet in length,with a little black bead, white neck andsnow white body and two arms. Inswimming it appears just like a humanbeing. At times it will come very closeinshore and appear to be sitting on asunken rock, and will wave and workits hands. It has never been seen en-tirely out of water. Many persons whodoubted its genuineness now suppose itto be a deformed seal."?Table.
Swung a Scythe for Eighty Years.Horace Skinner, who is nearly 90 years
old, mowed two tons of hay recentlywith a scythe. He afterward spent aweek at Hyannis, and is now feelingfresh and vigorous. Mr. Skinner hasmowed more or less every season forover eighty years.?Mansfield (Mass.)News.
The Big Sunflower of Brockton.Isaac P. Osborne, ofBrockton Heights,
has a sunflower ten feet fiveinches high,which has thirty-five blossoms on it. Hesays he thinks this takes the cake forsunflowers. ? Brockton (Mass.) Enter-prise.
A pair ofbelligerent bulls engaged ina fierce battle on the track of the Astoriaand South Coast railroad the other day,and for nearly half an hour the trainmenwere unable to drive them away in orderto get the train through. Huge clubswere worn out over the heads and backsof the animals, but without avail, untilat last they grew weary and sullenlyscrambled away.
Death has an odd way of picking outits victims. Atraveler went quietly tobed in a Pennsylvania town recently,and before morning a locomotive off thetrack ran into the house and killed himas he slept. "Railroad" hotels are usu-ally uucomfortable enough at the best,but itrhas been supposed that they weresafer sleeping places than the track.
M. do Brazza, the French African ex-plorer, has achieved great success amongthe negroes of the Gaboon region by or-ganizing among them fairs of tbe Euro-
[ pean, and especially the Gallic, kind.During the fete of the Fourteenth ofJuly The London Telegraph's Paris cor-respondent says the blackamoors and
: their dusky wives or sweethearts danced.to the music of a hurdy-gurdy and pat-ronized eagerly the merry-go-rounds.Shooting galleries were also erected, the
I negroes using their spears instead ofrifles.
Mr. W. H. Ames, son of ex-Governor1 Ames, of Massachusetts, ii soon to bemarried to Miss Daisy Hodges. It issaid that the ex-governor has alwaysmade his son live at North Easton, andwork as hard there as one of the factory
! hands. Young Ames has been obligedto turn up at his post by 7 o'clock, even, if he had been at a ball in Boston till
: after midnight. On such occasions hehas traveled down in a freight train, andarrived in time to change his clothes and
I go to work.! Hearing a tremendous noise in the en-: gine room, an Auburn, Me., engineerrushed below to find the governor belt
the engine running wild and thoyroom full of steam. He immediately ap-! predated the situation and did what few! men would?groped about tillhe found| the stop valve and slowed the engine.
A Winged Lizard.
One of thsasetrantrest of the manystrange ereatufls that inhabit the wildsof southern Asia and India is the "flyingflowers," a small, brilliant hued lizardofthe order bracovolans. On the wingbracovolans resembles a richly tinted in-sect; when at rest it compares favorablywith others of the lizard tribe, with theexception that it has an extraordinaryprotuberance on both sides of the body.These are the wings, which are formedby a cutaneous flap, winglike in shape,supported by a series of false ribs. Incolor these flying lizards are blue andgray, with intermediate tints of variouskinds and shades.
The tail is long, slender and verysnaky in appearance. A large doublepouch extending below the head adds tothe ferocious aspect of the little rainbowcolored brute. The wings are not truewings, strictly so called, but are usedmerely as parachutes. When the lizardleaps from the limb of a tree into the airthe upper current brings them out, andenables the possessor to soar away at anangle to a greater or lesser distance, ac-cording to the height of the startingpoint.
The lizard can change its directionwhile in the air, a power not possessedby our "flying squirrels." Hence thecasual observer might readily believethat they had the power of moving thewinglike appendages, which would, *inthat case, be true flight. Soaring is,however, the limit of their power, theheight of the starting point regulatingthe distance traveled in the soaringflight,*which is quite frequently severalhundred yards, an aerial exhibitionwhich strikes terror to the heart of astranger wandering for the first time inthe jungles of the antipodean wilds.?St. Louis Republic.
Cactus and Camel.The cactuses are very peculiar plants
?as peculiar structurally as they arebizarre and grotesque in outer appear-ance. They have spared no pains andshrunk from no sacrifice in accommodat-ing themselves to their niche in nature.In the first place, they have no trueleaves. What look like leaves in certainjointed cactuses are really flattened andextended stems. If this seems at firsthearing a hard saying the analogy ofthe common stonecrops, where stem andleaf are hardly distinguishable, willhelpto make it a little less incredible. Inother ways, too, the stonecrops (or se-dums, as the gardeners call them) throwmuch light upon the nature of the cac-tuses.
Allthese rock haunting or desert plantsnaturally get very little water except atlong intervals after occasional showers..Hence onlythose can survive which formthemselves, us it were, into livingreser-voirs to retain all the moisture they onceabsorb. As soon as the rain falls in theirarid haunts the roots and rootlets eager-ly drink it up in a great hurry and storeIt away in the soft and spongy cellulartissue of which the main part of theplant is whollyformed. For this pur-pose, both in stonecrops and cactuses,the stems have become fleshy and succu-lent, and being also green and learlikethey closely resemble true leaves. Butthey are covered externally with a thickBkin, which resists evaporation and keepsthe moisture, once collected, at theplant's disposal for an unlimited period.In short, the cactus does as a plant justwhat a camel does as an animal.?GrantAllen in North American Review.
Foolish. Consistency.
Emerson tells us that there is no par-ticular virtue in consistency. How stu-pid a man must be, he says in effect,who is not wiser today than yesterday,and who does not accordingly have tochange some of his opinions.
"A man will never change his mindwho has no mind to change," says Arch-bishop Whately, and Faraday expressesthe same idea when he charges us to re-member that, "Inknowledge that manonly is to be despised whois not in astateof transition."
There io a medium between what aworthy old gentleman calls "whifflin'about like a weathercock" and remain-ing rigidly in one rut ofbelief. Most ofus know instances of men who cannotbring themselves to say anything whichwould contradict what they uttered lastweek or last year.
Acertain Irishman onco declared thathe had owned a horse which was fifteenfeet high. A few days after he referredto the samo animal as being fifteen handshigh.
"But," said a listener, "you gave ittheother day as fifteen feet."
"Did I, thin?" said Patrick. "Well,I'llstick to it. He was fifteen feet high."?Youths Companion.
A Remarkable Canal.The mo3t remarkable canal in the
world is tie one between Worsley ami| St. Helens, in north England. It is| sixteen miles long and underground fromIend to end. In Lancashire the coal minesiare vory extensive, half the country beingIundermined. Many years ago the man-jagers of the Duke of ""Bridgewater's es-Itates thought they could save money byj transporting the coal underground in-! stead of on the surface; therefore thejcanal was constructed, and the mines
' connected and drained at the tame time.I Ordinary canal boats are used, the power
\u25a0 being furnished by men. The tunnel! arch over the canal is provided with cross
pieces, and the men who do the work of
' propulsion lie on their backs on the loads, of coal, and push with their feet against| the cross bars of the roof.?St. Louis Re-
public. .The craze for passing floral tributes
over the footlights to stage favoritesseems to have reached its height in Bos-ton a few evenings ago. A minstrel per-former received a life size floral image
iof himself seated in a chair and playingthe banjo.
The balloon proposed forpolar explora-tion is 99 feet in diameter and 500,000
I cubic feet in volrano. The journey is to!be begun from Spitzbergen, and with a| favorable wind is expected to last fourjor five days.
Inour time the third finger is usuallythe one on which the engagement ringis placed, also the wedding ring, somebelief possibly existing in the old super-stition that a vein ran directly from thispart ofthe left hand to the heart.
The daily mileage made in cities ofthe United States by cars supplied withelectric motors is now more than onehundred thousand and is growingnnidlv.
THE LOS ANGELES HERALD: MONDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 6, 1890.6
CREAMBaking Powder
MOST PERFECT MADE.UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA.
COLLEGE OF AQKICL'LTUKE.
An analysis of Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder made by me showsthat it is composed of tlie best materials, free from Ammonia, Lime,
Alum and all deleterious ingredients. Many Baking Powderscontain Ammonia and Alum, which should never be ad-
mitted into our daily bread. Biscuits made With Dr.Price's are readily digested and wholesome.
E. W. HILLGARD.Professor of Chemistry,Berkeley, California.
Lan ;tlst, '85.
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ILLUSTRATED HERALD.Forty-eight Pages of Information about
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Fifty Elegant Illustrations of LocalScenes.
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Annual Illustrated Herald.Sketch of the City of Los Angeles, its past history and present condition, includ-
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? LIST OF
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