I S i i " ESTABLISHED FEBRUARY S, 1S4S. Yok-H 1 0.39. -Entered at Pittsburg l'ostofflce, IvoveuibcrH, l&ST, as second-class matter. Business Offlce-07 and 99 Fifth Avenue. News Booms and Publishing House 75, 77 and 79 Diamond Street. Eastern Advertising office, Boom 45, Tribune liuildlnj, ewYorl. Average net clrcnlitton of tlic dally edition of THE DlSrATCn for tli months ending August 31, as sworn to before City Controller, 30,045 Copies per Issue. Average net circulation or the Sunday edition of Toie DisrATCH for three months ending August 81, 1SSSI 55,643 Copies per issue. . TERMS OF THE DISPATCH. TOSTAGE TREE IN THE UNITED STATES. DAILT DisrATCH, One Year S 8 00 Daily Dispatch, Fer Quarter 2 00 Daily Dispatch. One Month 70 Daily Dispatch. Including Sunday, 1 year. 10 00 DA1LT DISPATCH. Including Sunday.SnTths. 2 SO Daily Dispatch, Including Sunday, l month 90 bCKDAY Dispatch, One Year J SO "ft eeklt Dispatch, One Year 1 55 The Daily Dispatch Is delivered by carriers at 15 cents per week, or Including Sunday edition, at SCcenis per week. PITTSBURG. WEDNESDAY, SEP. 4, 1SS9L v THE EXPOSITION OPENING. The opening of the Exposition to-day trill present to the public the fruition of the efforts in behalf ot that enterprise that have been going on for some years past, The fact that we have an Exposition creditably Loused and capable of indefinite expansion is the first and vital one to Pittsburg in the first opening of the Exhibition. To a large number of our citizens the buildings themselves will furnish a leading, if not the main feature during the first few days. The admirable character of these struc tures for their public purposes and the jrood work in securing their erection will make a visit to them a subject of interest to all Pittsburgers who are inspired by the local pride which this project represents. Beyond that the public will bear in mind that the work against time which has been going on for the past sixty days, must neces sarily leave some features in an incomplete state. There will probably be found for the first fen days a good many unfinished ex hibits and the mechanical department will be likely to require until next week before it can do itself credit. But the main build ing and the art exhibit will of themselves furnish an exhibition well worthy the public attention; while in the course of a few days the entire Exposition will be ready to extend its attractions to visitors. The one leading fact, however, is that our community has an Exposition with well appointed structures, commensurate to the wealth and industrial importance of the city. That is enough to make its opening a great occasion to every true-hearted Pitts burger. THE LONDON STRUGGLE. Although public opinion and the efforts cf the shipping interests most closely con nected with the London dock yards have been thrown in favor of an equitable settle ment of the great strike there, the obstinacy of the officers of the corporation has pre vented any such satisfactory termination of the struggle. The strike is said to be gain ing in bitterness, and the dispatches indi cate the general uneasiness which is felt. The gravity of the affair has its lesson for this country, in its illustration of tne prin ciple that as corporations are able to cen tralize the control of industries and gain exclusive privileges they are certain to be come oppressive to labor, simply because they have more power and less personal responsibility. Great corporations pitted against large masses of ill-paid laborers are sure to produce dangerous strikes. THE CABLE'S BLESSINGS. One of the privileges of life in these the declining days of the nineteenth century, which every American citizen cannot but prize, is the constant supply of information about the Prince of "Wales' lame leg. Queen Victoria's latest fad for mixing whisky and apollinaris, and other matters of supreme importance which the cables bring to us daily. Think of the immense gain of the present generation over its predecessors in the mat ter of polite royal and even imperial intel ligence provided for its edification! If Queen Victoria adopts a new cough lozenge Emperor William discharges a cook, or the baby King of Spain cuts a tooth, we are not kept days, weeks or even months in agoniz ing expense before we learn what happened next. If one of the royal chickens at Wind sor swallows a lozenge dropped by its im perial owner and incontinently turns up its toes, we are informed of it instantly. Be fore Emperor William's cook has secured a Mew place the whole life history of the chef is before us, and so realistic is the descrip tion of the yells of the young monarch of Spain in his tussle with a healthy tooth that it would hardly be more agonizing to have him next door. The trivialities of royal Europe are very serious matters to free American citizens. CONSTABLES AND GRAND JURY. The reports of the constables on illegal liquor selling furn'sb indications that the labors of the Judges in enforcing upon those officials the necessity of discharging their duty has not been without its effect. While the number of places reported is not up to athe rumored abundance of "speak easies," it indicates that the constables generally arc aroused to the necessity of en forcing the Jaw and allows the inference that gossip may have exaggerated the total number of illcit liquor sellers. The Court nlso very clearly indicated to the grand jury its duty in reference to violators of the law. If the same measure of success in making that body do its duty is attained as has been secured with the constables, the idea that the laws can be obeyed or not, as may suit individual interests, is likely to receive a severe shock. HE. GLADSTONE'S NEW ENEMY. Politics in Great Britain is as productive of bitterness and nncharitableness as it well can be. There is nothing to which the partisan there will not stoop to to throw dis credit upon an opponent The sweetest tempered of Englishmen seem to have lost command of themselves, and the political polemics of the day bristle with false argu ments and demagogical appeals. The war fare between the Tories and the Radical party, with whom the Irish Home Rulers are allied, is being carried into America. This month's Forum contains a vicious and vindictive article by Thomas Hughes, better known as Tom Hughes who wrote "Tom Brown's Schooldays," upon the political course of Mr. Gladstone. It is worth read ing, perhaps, because it shows how desper ate the condition of the Tory party is to-day. -Mr. Hughes, with ingenious malice, ex-j plores the utterances of Mr. Gladstone in the past. To the surprise of no one who has any acquaintance with Mr. Gladstone's career he finds that the great Liberal states man has not always been consistent, "With a very apparent object he lays sties upon Mr. Gladstone's attitude toward the United States during the Civil war. In these days of extreme darkness Mr. Gladstone un doubtedly erred in his judgment of the principles ot the combatants. He did not grasp fully the real meaning of the contest, and he said things then for which he has openly acknowledged since his sorrow. But Mr. Hughes' only object is plainly to discredit Mr. Gladstone with Americans generally. He is successful in making clear Mr. Gladstone's mistakes of a quarter of a century ago, but his statements of his tory and his arguments based thereupon will not suffice, we think, to avert the sym pathy of the bulk of the American people from Mr. Gladstone in his efforts to procure home rule for Ireland. HOT A TRUST. The report of a trust to be organized among the building and loan associations of the city, which appears in our local col umns, refers to a combination which may hare a little likeness to the monopolistic ap plications of tLe trust device, but is entirely distinct from them, both in its intent and eflects. The characteristic features of the trusts which have aroused the public protests are that they are formed to suppress competition and to array the strength of the combination either against consumers or producers, or both together. The nature of the building and loan associations is that they comprise their own loaners and borrowers of money, and the rhirpose of the combination is to ad vance the interests of both. The favorite device of the trust is to suppress cim peti tion by artificially diminishing the supply; that of the building and loan organization or clearing house is to increase the supply of money for borrowers, and to expand the field for the loaners to their mutual advant age. In short, the trust is for the sake of enabling the middleman to impose aroitrary profits on the masses; a combination of this sort is for the sake of giving the masses the fullest benefit of its business organization. The success of such an organization is likely to depend mainly upon its manage ment Under careful and conservative con trol it would necessarily impose the best standard of conduct upon all associations which make up its membership, and thus enhance the solvency of the building and loan associations generally. Loosely and improvidently managed, it might have ex actly the opposite effect. Whether the close supervision and careful accountability that have made the separate associations success ful, will be as thoroughly attainable in a centralized organization, is a matter that the members of the different associations will do well to carefully consider. But in the interest of correctness it is well to bear in mind that a combination of this sort has nothins in common with the mod ern trusts except the surface resemblance. A GRAVE MISTAKE. The determination of the Navy Depart ment to get over the difficulty presented by the fact that the bids for the new war vessels exceed the limit of the appropriation by reducing the requirements of speed in the original specifications bears the aspect of a very grave mistake. The naval need of this country is not a large supply of vessels, with the qualities of mediocrity as to speed and fighting abil ity. This Government never. will have any justification for establishing a navy of the magnitude and expense of the European powers. What it wants is the adherence to its steadfast policy of few vessels, but those the fastest and most heavily armed of their class. We do not want cruisers that can neither run away from nor overtake the enemy; but we want, on the contrary, those which can always rival, if not surpass, the best vessels owned by other powers. For that reason tne obvious course was, if vessels of the speed and size required could not be obtained within the limits of the Con gressional appropriation, to secure an en largement of the appropriation by Congress. The other course, that of lowering the qual ity of the vessels and degrading oux naval standard in order to keep within the limits of the appropriation, is very nearly tanta mount to making tne expenditure a dead loss. This country can afford to spend any amount of monev that is necessary to make its naval vessels the best that can be built and sailed; but no country can afford to throw away money in building vessels which are inferior in speed and serviceability to those possessed by other powers. A COSTLY JOKE, PERHAPS. The Dispatch has already humbly un dertaken to bring into the prominence it deserves the humorous side of the warfare the United States revenue cutter Rush is waging upon the Canadian sealing vessels in Behring Sea. There has been no pause to the fun. Confiding Lieutenant Tuttle of the Rush, keeps on overhauling the pirati cal craft, keeps on putting prize crews of one upon them, and keeps on -bidding them proceed to Sitka. The Canadian pirates cheerfully continue to sail with their prize crews to Victoria, B. C. As long as pirates and the crew of the Rush hold out, the roar ing farce will continue. But is there not in this laughable exhi bition of Uncle Sam's vigilance a very positive danger of serious trouble, real war perhaps? In the latest capture reported the danger looms up very large and plain. As usual, a prize crew, consisting of one able American seaman, was put on board the captured sealer with orders to take the vessel to Sitka. Again, as usual, the Cana dians preferred to go to their home port, Victoria, and when the prize crew protested the Indian hunters on board were with difficulty kept from throwing him over board. If he had been thrown into the sea this country would have had a very serious question to face. Smaller excuses for war have often been found. There seems to be a disposition on the part of the State Department at Washing ton to let matters slide along, drifting in no particular direction. England acquiesces apparently in the policy of leaving the question of property in the Behring Sea for future consideration. Canada is pro testing a good deal, but not very effectively. It would be reassuring to know that Sec retary Blaine has a definite policy as to this question. He may have, but It looks very much as if he had not made up his mind about this country's rights in Behring Sea. Judge White read the riot act to the grand jurors yesterday and some of the con stables did practically the same act for the benefit tof the sneafc-easies. There is a strengthening i repression up about the Court House that this is a good time to en force the law. In connection with the fact .that a pork speculation in Chicago has advanced the I THE PITTSBURG- ' price of that staple ?2 00 per barrel, the Philadelphia Inquirer remarks that there is no reason why gambling in food staples should not ho placed under the ban ot the law, as mueli as gambling in cards. Since gambling in cards only results in damaging thoe who engage immediately in it, and, as the Inquirer points out, gambling in food staples generally results in some hardship upon the great mass of consumers, the con clusion seems to bo tolerably clear that there is much more reason why the commercial form of gambling should be prohibited by the law, than the mere betting on cards, which has so long been prohibited. Talk of the recent Republican Field Marshal being sanguine! When the in domitable Democracy contemplates overcom ing a Republican majority of 80,000 in Pennsylvania it puts every hair of Thomas Cooper's leonine locks to the blush. With regard to Mr. Elliott F. Shepard's declaration that Divine Providence led the Republican party to victory last year, it seems to be a very pertinent commentary that Providence never vouchsafes a blessing without some qualification to save the re cipients from being too mnch puffed up. While the Republican party was led to victory, the inscrutable decree permitted Colonel Shepard to fasten the burden of himself upon the party at the same time. The Baltimore Republican clubs have paraphrased the old platform by their practical resolutions, first, that the offices and the fatness thereof belong to the Repub lican saints; and second, that they are the Republican saints. The State is to have its annual fair after all, but it will be merely an enlargement of the York County Agricultural Fair. That will be quite a deserving exhibit, we have no doubt; but Western Pennsylvania will turn with some interest to the problem whether the need of this end of the State for an annual exhibition cannot be supplied by the Exposition which inaugurates its. good work in Pittsburg to-day. The reed bird season has opened in the Eastern cities; and the problem of the ex termination of the English sparrow is rap idly moving forward toward solution. The manufacturers having made one step toward a compromise of the window glass strike, would it not be well for the glass workers to make some movement to ward meeting them? The side of a strike that allows its readiness to make a fair set tlement displays the best judgment of the proper way to maintain good relations be tween capital and labor. Laboe Dat appears to have been very appropriately named for Pittsburg. It was the day on which the majority of the labor ers pitched in and worked as usual. REroEis are in circulation in New York that Sheriff Flack has been forced by the Tammany Hall authorities to Bend in his resignation of his position of Sheriff. It is also one of the undercurrents of rumor that the health of his royal highness, the Prince of Darkness, is so precarious that Tammany Hail is likely to be turned into a monastery. The Democratic convention to-day is likely to be as harmonious as a Elate on which the sums are all figured out. David Dudley Field expresses his opinion that State Legislatures should not be held in ridicule by the people. The public at large will agree with Mr. Field in this respect; and in order to secure the realization of the desire, the people must turn in and take measures calculated to es tablish a new kind of Legislature. PL0PLE OF PROMINENCE. Pbof. Tyndall, though taking a vacation in the Alps, is still ardently interested In British politics. Mbs. Julia D. Ghant, the widow of the General, who bas been spending the summer in Vienna with her son, tho United States Minister, expects to return to this country and pass the winter in Washington. Dr. George MacDonald, the novelist, has been lecturing in the south of England and on the Channel Islands. During bis earlier Lon don season he was obliged to deliver his talks from an armchair. This was due, however, not to any abatement of physical vigor, but to a a badly sprained foot Tile Rev. Father Henselp Saragian, who was sent by the Armenian Patriarch of Constanti nople to look after the spiritual Interests of the Armenians living in this country, held his first service in Boston on Sunday. This is said to be the first use of the Armenian ritual by a genuine delegate of the Patriarch in America. President Harbison's visit to the Log College. Bucks county, Pa., will remind him that his wife's relatives were prominent people iu the last century. One of the original trus tees of Neshaminy Church was John Scott, an ancestor of Mrs. Harrison. The old oven In the Scott house bas received a fresh coat of whitewash and will do honor to the President's visit When the new Chinese Minister comes to Washington, wbere he is expected within a month, be will bring his wife with him; and this will be the first instance where the wife of an envoy from the Celestial Kingdom has ever accompanied her husband to this country. The titled and distinguished lady in question will not hon ever, be any addition to American so ciety, as will bo strictly a recluse, in conform ance with Chinese customs J. T. Trowbridge, whose stories for boys have made him famous, was born in lSZ7in Western New York. He taught himself Latin, French and German. He writes at tho present time almost wholly for the Youth's Companion and makes a handsome income. He is a tall, fresh-looking man, with a very pleasant face. His bair is white, bnt otherwise ho does not show his years. Ho has never cared for society and lives in retirement in Boston. He has a taste for speculation, but has never indulged it to any great extent HIS FIRST RIDE HIS LASr. An Old Man Dies While Trnvellag by Rail for tbe First Time. Nashville, September 3. Campbell A. Walton rode to bis death to-day. He was over 80 and lived with his wife noar Castalian Springs, in Sumner county. Neither of them had ever seen a railroad tram until to-day. This morning they rode over to Gallatin and got on tho train coming to Nashville. Walton went into the smoking car, leaving his wife in the parlor car. He was apparently muh ex cited over bis novel journey, and in half an hour from the time he Started he suddenly fell over dead in his seat. His wife was notified and his body taken from the train at Saundersvillc. His death was caused by heart disease and primarily by tbe excitement, it is supposed, ot bis strange journey. Not Newsy Enough for an Item. From tho Conner-Journal, t The present editor of tbe Harlan county Jveus his name does not appear in the paper has learned tbe value of discretion. Turner, who was killed by Howard up there tbe other day, had once been tbe editor of the JVeuij, but in tbe last week's issue there is not a solitary word about the bloody events which bave pro duced a reign of terror there. Wenltcninp Labor's Cnqse. From th New York World. J Occasionally unjust and unreasonable de mands bave weakened the cause of organized labor more than all tbe assaults and resistance which it bas encountered from without. DISPATCH, WEDNEStJATrEPTlfP THE TOPICAL TAEKBB. Tho Slgnnl of .Autumn The Wny Sho Comet and Goes A Scnson of Loans. Although it Is as warm as It should have been in tbe-very heart of August, and the good people who have been away from the city spending tho summer and their savings like as not at the seaside or in the mountains, are real, izlng that they have really come home to the plains of pavements and the hills of bouses to enjoy tho only real hot days of the year al though it is more like what the calendar tells us the weather should bare been six weeks ago, and although there is a good deal of grumbling abont tho provoking tendency of the signal service to play practical jokes on the public, one thing is certain fall is at hand. The first signs of her approach, a danger signal as it were, to warn the unwary that autumn is near ly due, I saw in the grand vista of a valley not 20 miles from the hum and hustle of Pittsburg. It was a solitary gum tree overhanging the rocky bed of a creek that was in the extremity of death from drought. Around it were oaks, hickories, pines and other trees densely, darkly, green. But the gnm tree sparkled in the sun light. The pointed leaves shone lice jets of flamo, and it seemed as if the heart of the tree were a glowing fire. It was autumn's alarm, She comes quietly. v AUTUMN. With shy hrown eyes she comes again, With hair a sunny, silken skein, As full or light as golden rod; Love In her voice, love in her nod. She treads so softly no one knows The time she comes, the time she goes. The grass is hrown, the leaves begin Their gold and crimson dm to win. Kach cricket sings as loud as ten To drown the noisy locust, when Yon come, O maid, to bid us cry To summer sweet a long goodby. And when yon go the leaves are gone; The aster's farewell scent is flown; Poor cupid puts away his wings. And close to cozy corners clings. Tho rndo wind ushers, with a shout, The winter In, tho autumn out. There's sadness In her shy brown eyes, Though gay her gown with tawny dyes. Love's In her voice but telling most Of one who's loved, but loved and lost. She treads so softly no one knows The time she comes, the time she goes. -H.J. This time of the year seems to be dedicated to borrowers. Have you not noticed that ev erybody that is given at all to procuring loans goes a gunning for lenders about the first week in September? I have the word of a very excellent lady who has lived in a multitude of places, that the borrowing of all the rest of the year hardly equals that of September. She relates several queer loans in which she has played the cred itor. "The most persistent borrower I ever knew was one I had for a neighbor when I lived in the suburbs of Philadelphia." she said. "She was a woman of middle age, and her husband was in some mercantile calling which returned him a very good income. Thero was really no need for her to borrow things as Bhe did, bnt she appeared to have a mama for borrowing. She would ask for the loan of 10 cents or my piano with equal unconcern. Once when there was a death in her family she came over and asked me to lend her a cake basket and a water pitcher both silver. I let her have them. I went to the funeral and noticed that neither were used in fact, I found them in a room which was locked up for the day. "You'll hardly believe it, but I've known that woman on wash day to ask me to lend her some soiled clothes to add to her laundry. She always brought back what she borrowed." OFFICIAL REPORTS MUSING. A Number of Regiments Represented nt Chlcknmnnga Not Yet Ileal d From. Washington, September 3. The compila tion of the volumes of the war records, com prising the operations about Chattanooga and Knoxvllle, including the battle of Missionary Ridge, is progressing rapidly tinder the direc tion ot Major George B. Davis. Twovolnmes of the Chickamauga records bave been com pleted, containing both the Union and the Con federate reports and some advance sheets will be printed tor nso at the approaching reunion of the Society of the Army of tho Cumberland at Chattanooga. The following reports of the Battle of Missionary Ridge and Knoxville are missing. If members of these organizations having either the original reports or copies known to be such will send them to Major George B. Davis, care of War Department Washington, they can still be nsed in making up the vol umes. Bnt they should be forwarded as soon as possible: Ohio-Infantry resriments First Tenth, Eieh teenth. Thirtieth, Ihtrty-seventh, Forty-sixth, 1'orty-seventh. i ifty-tblrd. Firtr-fourth, Fifty seventh, lifty-nlnth. Sixty-first, Eightieth, Eightv-seeond, Ninety-eighth, One Hundredth. One Hundred aud Third. One Hundred and Fourth, One Hundred and Eighth. One Hundred and Thirteenth, One Hundred and Twenty-flrst, One Hundred and Twenty-ninth. Cavalry regl-ments-Flrst, Third, Fourth, Tenth. Artillery First Light Artillery, batteries U, C, E, F, i, X, K, M. Batteries-t orth, Sixth, Eighteenth, Twentieth. Pennsylvania Infantry regiments forty firth, Fortv-eighth. Mftieth, Fifty-first Seventy fifth, One Hundred and .Ninth. ArtUlerj Light Batteries B and V. West Virginia Infantry regiments Fourth. A LITTLE ROMANCE SPOILED. An Elopement Prevented by a Policeman and n Pnrcnt. Atlantic Cut, September 3. There was an amusing elopement here to-night which had rather a disappointing termination for the two young principals, and to-night the hero of the episode occupies a cell at the City Hall, and the fair young heroine graces the office of Major Hoffman in the same building. His names is William Keates, and ho Is a fireman on the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore road. He lives at Wilmington, where his father is division operator of the railroad on which he is employed. Her name is Bertha Filmore, and sne lives with her widowed mother here, on Georgia avenue. She is a petite blonde ot 18 years. He is a fair sample of the cigarette flend of 20 years. Tney met last Fri dav afternoon in the surf and be floated her with such loving tenderness and she liked it so well that before the bath was over they were completely enamored of each other. She was ill treated by ber mother, she said. As a result tbey decided to elope to Wilming ton, and to-night she accompanied bim to the Reading depot, and they boarded a parlor car on the 9.30 express. Jubt then Bertha's mother and Policeman Driscoll stepped aboard, and the youthful lovers were marched to the City Hall, where a charge nf attempted abduction was pieferred against Keates, TORRENTS COULDN'T STOP TEEM. A Pair jof Elopers Receive Very Timely Assistance From n Friend. Memphis, September 3.--The mutual friend acquitted himself nobly in an" elopement at Marion, Ark.. Sunday night. Dr. T. O. Bridge forth loved and wished to wed Miss Ella Bas sett tho daughter of a wealthy merchant of that town. The young lady was willing hut her parents were not, so an elopement was ar ranged. A heavy rain had fallen, submerging tbe streets, and tbe broad ditch along the rail road track was waist deep in water. The inend met tbe lady at tbe back door of her father's residence end escorted her to a point nearly op posite the rear end of the sleeper attached to a train in waiting. There was no time to hunt for a crossing over the ditch which was now a miniature torrent. Tho conductor called out "All aboard," and the mutual friend caught up his fair charge, and plunging into the stream, bore her to the rear platform of the sleeper and placed her safely on board just as the wheels began to revolve. The Doctor at the same time boarded the train from the depot platform and joined his bride in tbe sleeper, while the friend re tired from public view to change bis trousers. The couple went to Jonesboro, wbere tbey were married. Colonel Ingcrsoll'a Sermons. From the Chicago Trlbune.1 If read over tho grave of a favorite horse or pet fawn. Colonel Ingersoll's funeral orations might edify the hearer, bnt they fail to convey much comfort to a human soul bereft of the earthly companionship of some one near and dear. A Pointer for Playwrights. From tbe Eoston Herald. 2 If any of our comic dramatists are In search of a plot for a howling farce, let them turn their attention to the Behring Sea muddle There's millions in it, millions in It I It's Not Their Wny. From theFhUadelpbla Times.; Tbe lost Walter Blaine bas found himself. No Blaine In 'Office was ever known to stay lost ' fx:r CHANGE IN TREASURY REPORTS. - " Tho Debt Statement Misleading, and Car. rency Destroyed. rSPZCIAL, TELXnitAM TO TUB DISPATCH. 1 Washington, September 8. There is is sued every month from the Treasury Depart ment a great square sheet of paper, full of printed figures, complicated financial terms and dollar marks. It is called the statement showing tho condition of thoNatlonal debt of tho country, and gives the amount of money on band, the various obligations of the Govern. ment In the way of bonds and promissory notes, balanced against each other. By means of an arithmetic unsolvable by the layman, this shows the amount ot the debt, the size of the surplus, and various other Interesting items. This form of statement was adopted by the last administration almost immediately upon its accession, the old one used by the preceding United States Treasurer being amended be yond recognition. Treasurer Huston is now thinking over the matter of changing the form again, so as to make the debt statement show things in a dif ferent light from that which is now cast upon the financial condition ot the country by this monthly sheet ot paper. "Swelling the Bnrnltis itit.m.nL , nl,trt nf the change from the old rorm to ho present one adopted under the Cleveland administration." said the Treasurer to-day, "was to swell the ap parent size ot the surplus. It isn't a fair state ment to send out, for by the system of booking there carried out there are a good many things put down as liabilities that should properly be long on the other side, or rather could be very materially r educed. For example, there is an item Inserted every month as a liability of several millions ot dollars, this being a part of one of the first Issues of war notes. Now, It is known as an absolute fact that millions of these dollars have been destroyed, torn, burned, worn out. de faced, and in other ways made valueless, and it Is positively certain that they will never be pre sented for redemption, practically speaking, they have ceased to exist, and yet they are still carried on the statement as liabilities that may cause a disbursement of funds at anytime. Then, too, there are fully 7.000, 000 or fractional currency still classed as liabilities, when it is an absolute certainty that tbey wlil never be re deemed. Like the other notes tbey hare been de stroyed or defaced beyond recognition, and the remainder are in private collections as curiosi ties, and will undoubtedly remain there. I am confident that at least ! 15, 000,000 now classed In the statement as liabilities might be crjucd altogether from the list. Yes. I am thinking very seriously of having the form changed. " THE WORLD'S COAL SUPPLY. No Danger of a Fuel Famine for Many Years Yet to Come. From Iron. In view of tho question which has suggested itself on more than one occasion as to how long it would be before the Old World coal deposits wonld become exhausted, the Deutsche Han-dels-Museum supplies some interesting figures relating to the world's coal fields outside of the North American continent According to these the low countries, Switzerland, Denmark, Ger many and Bohemia, possess coal mines ot a sur face area of abont 59.000 sauare miles. Russia alone bas 22,000 square miles. The deposits of the island of Formosa amount to something like 10,000 square miles, some of the coal veins ranging up to 90 feet in thickness. The coal fields of Austria, Spain, Portugal, Italy,. Greece, Turkey and Persia cover abont S9,000 square miles, those of India 35,000 and those of Japan 6,000 square miles, while those of China are estimated at the enormous figure of 100,000 square miles. But these are not all. The Falkland Islands, Patagonia and Pern are very rich in coal, whilo the southern part of Chill is one immense deposit In Brazil veins varying in thickness from 17 to 25 feet are found in numbers, and in the United States of Columbia there Is an abund ance of the mineral. Mexico and the Vancouver Islands are also well supplied, there being probably not far from 20,000 square miles, while the deposits thus far dis covered in Tasmania, New Caledonia, and Natal are estimated to cover 100.000 square miles, the larger number of these deposits not jet having been worked. Without reckoning the immense stores of coal in the United States, and merely relying upon those given above, there seems to be but little prospect of a coal famine for some years. SAEA BERNHARDT'S CRDELTT. A Washington Lady Explains How She Didn't Burn Hor Dog. (SPECIAL TELEOKAM TO TIIS DISPATCH. 1 Washington, September a A Washington lady now in Paris writing to a friend in this city of the story that Sara Bernhardt, in a fit of passion, burned her pet dog to death in the presence of an American lady visiting her, says: "One should, it is said, give even the devil his due. So here goes for the explanation of the affair, given me by one who knows Sara .very well. We have had a jolly laugh over the ctory, a copy of which goes to the Bernhardt Shis m6rmng. This story represents Sara as putting her little dog in a stove and burning bim to death. "It is the most common thing in the world for a Paris lady to punish her little dogby shutting bim up in a cold, empty stove. The dog very naturally bowls at first, and then like a little philosopher curls up and goes to sleep, his bowls and whines growing fainter and fainter, like those of a spoiled baby as it drops off to sleep in spite of itself. The little stoves are rather more for ornament than for use and are rarely lighted in a drawing room, as the other stoves tborugh the open doors keep it sufficiently warm. "Sara is greatly given to practical joking, and no doubt well knew the impression this would make upon the American lady when she caught up her little pet and gavo bim his customary punishment." OUR POSTAL FACILITIES. A German Omclnl Has Come to Investigate the American System. Washington, September 3. Mr. Gustav Wabner, Postal Councilor of the Postofflco Department of tho German Empire, who is in charge of the telegraph and telephone service of that department at Berlin, called on the .Postmaster General to-day. Mr. Wabner has been commissioned by his Government to visit the principal cities of tbe United States in or der to make a thorongh examination of tbe operations and special features of our telegraph and telephone systems, and to submit a detailed report thereon to bis department. After a pleasant interview in regard to the object of his mission Mr. Wabner procured from the Postmaster General letters of intro duction to several influential persons who coula furnish him facilities for obtaining the iuformation be seeks. Good Dress Parade Soldiers. From the Eoston Globe. 1 Belva Lockwood advocates the commission, jng of women as officers of the regular army. And wby not? In these piping times of peace an army officer bas little to do but look pretty, and a woman can do that better than a man any day. Kalamazoo Getting Rlcb. From the Minneapolis Tribune. Kalamazoo. Mich., bas sold S1,000,OCO worth of celery this season. With a few moro good crops tbe town will bo able to buy a new name or have tbe old one turned and pressed. Change of Bill at tho Itijsn. The play at tho Bijou Theater will be changed to-night to 'The Buckeye." This was Lizzie Evans' great success last season, and is highly praised. At the matinee to-day "Fine Feathers" will be repeated. ONE YEAR AGO TO-DAY. To-day one year ago, love, 'Neath skies September blue, With autumn tints aglow, love, I sat and talked with yon. My heart In rapture wild, love, With faith and hope beat high. Throbbed madly when you smiled, love; Echoed each low sweet sigh . One year ago to-diy, love, I held your han J in mine And watched the lovelights play, love, Deep in-yourcyes divine; September days are fair, love, But fatrest of all was this. And never a day so rare, love, So filled with perfect bliss I . Ah. I may long In vain, love, My passionate soul may bum, For well I know again, love. That day will never return; Around my aching brow, love, Tnrong memories of the past. But the spelLts broken now, love, alio dream too sweet to lastl Oh, since that blessed day, love, I've lived a hundred years, Have wandered to and fro, love, Through a thousand tolls and tears; And it breaks my heart to-day, love. As I sit here alone. To thlnL of tbe sad decay, love, Of a love that was all my ownl To-day one year ago, love Still means the sad refrain I I'd give this world to know, love JSutthe wlshisalu, sovalnl I'll act tbe prodigal's part love, Since all is lost, and so, ' I'll feed my hungering heart, love, On the husks of a vear agol '-Montgomery M. Foltom ' FABLES 'Afo FOtMORl Pi r( WSBaSSSSkW Cnrloas Tales and Tradition of Different' Nations A Falcon 'That Saved a idea's Lire How Mico Defeated a Great Arsay Tho Originof Beer. One of the most Interestine and Dlctaresame spots fn Wales Is Betu-pellert, with its weH preserved dog's grave. Every tourist climbs Snowdon, and nearly all see the grave of Beth Gellert, and bear the, Story, which the guide la apt to conclude with a remark that clever folks'' say it is all nonsense bnt that if the talo isn't true it ought to be. Prince Llewellyn, a mighty man of war and a true sportsman, was tbe pos sessor of a very fine greyhound, as remarkable for its perfect docility at home as for its fero city in.the chase. The Prince also had a baby son, and the dog, whose name was Gellert, was frequently left In charge of the cradle ana its occupant On one occasion Llewellyn returned home and found tbe cradle upset and empty, while the dog's mouth and several articles of furniture were a mass of blood. Without waiting for any search the Prince decided that bis dog- had killed and eaten the infant, and In his just rage he drew bis sword and took life for life. An Infant's cry diverted the grief of the unhappy man, who found to his Joy the little one lying behind the cradle uninjured. A brief search disclosed tbe cause of the confusion and blood. A huge wolf had evidently entered the bouse and bad attacked the cradle. The faithful and mis judged doer had fought nobly for bis charge and bad killed the wolf. So runs the tale. It has an air of improbability about It, bnt every one in the neighborhood of Snowdon believes the story, and points to the monument which JUewellyn in his anguish erected to the mem pry of the dog he so hastily slew. i A Remarkably Intelligent Fnlcon. History abounds in tales and fables of this description, and, strange to say. they nearly all point In the same direction as the Gellert story, which may owe its origin to any one of them. The story of Kolliculus is, perhaps, the most in teresting of these. This knight was a great hunter, and among his possessions were a noble greyhound and an exceptionally Intelligent falcon. He bad also an only son, whom he loved very dearly, and for whom three nurses were provided. On one occasion, master, mis tress and servants all went to a tournament, leaving the child in com'pany with the dog and the falcon. The dog fell asleep by tbe side of tbe cradle, and tbe falcon watched from his perch. After awhile tbe silence encouraged a serpent, which had a hole near the cradle, to come forth andreconnoiter. Seeing the child in the cradle, tbe venomous monster prepared to seize it, ' The falcon at once awoke the dog by flapping its wings, and the dog lost no time in attacking tne serpent. The fight was long and severe, the cradle was upset and tbe dog seriously wounded. J3ut in tbe end virtue, as represnted by the faithful hound, was victorious, and tbe serpent met with well-merited death. When the nurses returned thev fnnnrf ch&n nrV9l. ing, the cradle upset, and the baby and tbe dog alike covered with blood. Assuming that the dog bad killed the child, tbe nurses fled in terror, but were met by their mistress, to whom they related tbe sad tale. She in turn narrated the events of the tragedy to the knight, who rushed to the house. The poor wounded dog crept forward to receive the-usual recognition, but tho master, attributing its condition to fear, at once slew it. Directly afterward he found tbe uninjured child and the dead reptile. In remorse, he destroyed the fatal weapon and made a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. Animals That Reasoned Well. That the ancients bad a high appreciation of the reasoning power of animals of the lower order is clear from the great number of fables in Sanscrit, Greek and Chinese concerning in dividual Instances of thought and sagacity. These tales are told repeatedly In various forms, each writer giving a different locality for the occurrence and changing the details slightly, while adhering to the narrative of the main In cident Thus the story about the ichneumon is repeated, with various animals, including the polecat, named as the hero. In the way of averting disasters which might have over whelmed men, animals are said by myth-makers to have done wonders. An Egyptian fable states mat on one occasion a man had prepared a very savory pot of herb", which a wall will fully broke. The unfortunate animal was severely thrashedfor its interference, but when tbe man went to pick up tbe fragments of bis prepared delicacy be found a venomous ser pent concealed among them. A very similar story, in all probability arising ont of the same fable, tells how a favorite falcon saved a king from swallowing a live ser pent. His Majesty bad raised a drinking ves sel, presumably one of tbe old style earthen ware pots, to his lips, when tbe faithful bird flew suddenly down, and throwing it full weight against the vessel, npset it. The King, in his wrath, killed the bird, whereupon he dis covered that there had been a small serpent in the water, and that the martyred bird had saved his life. In the Greek there is another stojy of this kind. A .peasant liberated an eagle from tbe clutcbes of a dragon. The latter out of revenge poisoned some water which tho peasant was about to drink, but the eagle showed its gratitude by upsetting the vessel and spilling its contents. Armies of Alice. Some old European histories seriously tell of an enemy of Henry IV. of Germany, who was eaten np by mice. As tho story runs, the man was at a banquet, when he was suddenly at tacked by a whole army of mice, which in no way molested his neighbors, who went to the assistance of the victim and spared no pains in their efforts to free bim from his small but vicions foes. After he bad been badly bitten, bis friends got him on board a smack and took him out to sea. But tbe rats followed him and gnawed the planks of the boat so viciously that it bad to be run ashore. They then got pos session of the unhappy man and gnawed bim to pieces, after which thev disappeared as if by magic This apparently absurd tale was re peated as evidence of Henry's divine pro tection. Herodotus tells a wonderful story of bow mice once secured the defeat of a great army. Tbe Biblical account of the defeat of Sennach erib before Jerusalem is not indorsed bv the father of hi'torv, who gives the Egyptian story. According to this, tbe Egyptian armies were afraid to resist the great warrior, and the priests humiliated themselves in the Temple. While the high priest was praying be fell asleep, and in a vision was assured that there was no danger. Acting upon divine instruc tions, be collected a small band of tradesmen. mechanics and sutlers, and advanced. In the meantime an army ot field mice bad attacked the enemy and eaten up their bows and quivers and the handles of their shields. Thus disa bled, the great host was unable to offer any thing like a concerted resistance. Wby the Mole Is Blind. Absurd stories accounting for the mole hav ing no eyes are f requently told children. They bave their origin in an Indian legend. This states that a Dog-Rib Indian once chased a squirrel up such a very high tree that the little animal escaped in the sky. Not to be daunted, he set a snare for tbe squirrel and descended the tree. Next nay the sun was caught in the trap and darkness was trie immediate result Suspecting the cause, bnt not daring to liberate the sun himself, the crafty Indian sent up sev eral animals to release the strange captive. One by one these were burned up, until at last a mole was commissioned. This cuto little creature burrowed out through the sky, and, gnawing the chords in the snare, liberated the source of light, and tbe darkness ccasod. But as the sun was making his escape the molo thrust its head through the hole and the sight of the sun so close caused it to go blind and be queath its deformity to its descendants. An Extraordinary Temperance Tnlc. Here is perhaps tho oldest temperance story in existence, filth the possible exception of the account of Noah's overindulgence and tbe fate of the son who laughed at bim. Fable says that one Gambrinus, a fiddler, being jilted by his intended, went into the woods with a view to hanging himself. Jnst as be was about to drop, a weird old man in a green coat appeared and bargained with the dlscon solatefiddler to enjoy 30 years of great pros perity, Duttben to give bis soul up to the devil. The fiddler consented, and his bantanic ally helped bim invent lager beer. The Emperor was so pleased with this drink that he made Gambrinus the Duke of Brabant and Count of Flanders. At the end of SO jears the devil sent Jocko, one of his envoys, to receive the sonl, as bargained. Jocko found Gambrinus busy drinking lager beer, drank freely himself, and finally became so drunk tnat ho could not fulfill his mission. So Gambnnns was left to drink to his heart's conttnt, and be kept on until be finally turned into a beer barrel. Works Just as Well. From the New York Trlbune.1 It used to be a tradition with tbe theatrical profession to try it on a dog. But now they have changed all that and try it on New York instead. WUrru Failure Is Certain. from the 1'hlladelphla Inquirer..! It is not expected that the postal telegraph, if adopted, will be any great help to the woman who posts her telegrams in her husband's pocket Fill' ,MMliHmt ' f tsrtsni'iasiimfcMn iiia NJsjr Yowc, September S.-WBmmmmmm, aefewatejMreiit ot work,: momth Feny-eeTWt ttntt pier about aoo tf He toelc a bam sewlwkb f row Mi pocket, Bo it, iiudtw remaining hH sMcfUtyem the etrinf pfaee aad stepped off lose tkettve. 'Six Men from aeihborIng bnekyrd mmttA fcto.wHttiMie'dMsctttty, aadJaW htsoMt back ob the ?r. He lay qnle( f y tn mm. hThea he arose; picked np his half Murfftitt and walked right oft into the water ais. 3 was again tobed oat' by tbo.bricksailwii.wtio, i carried turn several, stooss away troea tM wMtr and tfcreateaed to hare him arrested. ' Tweatr minute Jtr 1m tripped dews, the fete Melt overBeoM isr we wura Hsae. 'ITongHeirort pulled bl-B. oat, laid 'Men'over a beam' ft4 spanked him hard with a piece ot pieak. When' last beard of be. wm begRteg mosey witb wfcJefc tobuyratpefee. 9 ' Died Free 0verExertIau Thomas Vincent' Murray.-the lS-year-oM lea of Police Saneriateadest Murray, slaved base ball for an hourat Xedbaak, N. J to-day,, alter caring sailea a yacht lorlonr hears. At the end of tbe gasiehe threw a high fly to a, friend. The ball had hardly left -his hands be fore he threw up hi arms and. fell to tbe ground. He4 said something in his cheet bad given away arid was growing weak. He wm taken homeand a physician wm summoned. An examination showed that he had raptured a blood vessel near his' heart by over-exertion. Two hours later he died. An Effective Method of Advertising. About 2Vclock this afternoon a wagon was driven upon the big bridge at the Brooklyn en trance. In it beside tbe driver, were two mea, one of whom sat rigid In hie seat, attired la tbe garb of a workingman. The other man seemed nervous and kept looking around as it fearing arrest, or somethinglike it Wbentheyreacbed the middle of the bridge both men got oft, and, leaping over the rails, were soon oa the outside o'f the structure. Instantlytbeoae who looked like a workingman jumped off. He struck the, water on his side and floated toward ihe bay with the tide. A. report that a workingman had jumped off the bridge attracted a large crowd on the promenade. People on tbe ferry boats tried to get a view of the unfortunate man, while hundreds congregated on the bridge dock and on vessels nearby. Officers of the bridge force gave an alarm. Two mea la a rowboat pulled out into the middle of tbe river and picked np the body. It was a stuffed figure with this sign on it: "A Legal Wreck, at the Brooklyn Theater." Prominent Persona Going to Kafope. Max Adler, George Gould, Mrs. Gould, Mrs. John W. Mackey and William Mackey will sail for Europe to-morrow on the steamship City of r-aris. A Japanese Olnlden Disappears. Dainty little KakeiKura Is missing. Kakel is a little Japanese maiden from Tomioko. She is plump and pretty, with the brownest of slanting eyes, rosy lips and white teetb. Ber era! years ago Kal Kura, Kakei's father, ar rived in San Francisco-and started a shooting gallery. Kakel Kura was then about 16 years old. A young Jap wished to marry her and she wished to marry bim. but papa Kura said no, and eventually took KaEet and tbe rest of bis family off to Los Angeles to escape the impor tunities of tbe unacceptable suitor. A short time ago the Kura family came to New York to live. Last night Kura went to Jersey City on business, leaving his wife and two daughters at borne alone. This morning he returned to find Mrs. Kara and tbe elder daughter all npset and Kakel Kura gone, with all her clothes. Whether tho discarded California lover was responsible for the disappearance or not, no one knows. Kakei stole away from home in the middle of the night without a word ot ex planation. Papa Kura bas reported bis troubles to the police, and offered 125 reward to the finder of tbe missing girL. SnltBet treen Catholic Prelates. The Right Rev. Stephen "Vincent Ryan, Ro man Catholic Blshon of Buffalo, through bis counsel, to-day asked the Supreme Court for a bill of particulars in the slander suit of Father Francis Dent against him for $100,000 damages. Tho Bishop's lawyer demanded the bill upon tbe usual grounds. Father Dent who was bis own Iawyer.-argned with some eloquence that the gtving of such a bill would place bim at the Bishop's mercy. In bis affidavit in opposition to the motion. Father Dent said be bad been informed that Bishop Ryan, while acting as an ecclesiastical judge, without warrant of canon law, associated witnesses and used his arbitrary power in attempting to corrupt witnesses that he might secure tbe conviction of a priest; also, that the Rev. Michael A. Corrigan, Archbishop of New York, attempted to persuade a witness to leave the State, who had been subpffinted to give testimony before the Court of Sessions of Cattaraugus county. The court held that Father Dent must at least designate the time and place at which tbe slanderous words were uttered. The suit in question Is tbe outcome of along and bitter quarrel between tbe Bishop and Father Dent about, ecclesiastical matters and a woman. LIGHTNING'S STRANGE FREAKS. Carious Phenomena That Blade Lively Scenes in a Batcher's Shop. Richmond, Ind., September 3. About 6 o'clock this morning John Dirk, employed in Rlechart's butcher shop, went to the back door and carelessly put his band against the iron sheathing. He nttered a yell that might have appalled a Comanche and fled. He rushed into the front room and told Mr. Riechnrt and red Schwegman that he bad received an elec tric shock by touching the iron wall. They all went back to examine. Globules of electric light were twinkling along tbe base of the wall where it touched tbe ground. In the corner, near the grocery build ing, is a window into the cellar beneath, and au excavation around it to permit tbe entrance of light This window had a board over it, and around this board were a number of beautifnl electric lights. Adam Drifmeyer came to look at it put his hand on the wail, jumped about four feet high and went away with a perfectly gratified cariosity. Chief Parsons, of the fire department, soon came and began making examinations. Bv this timo tbe board over the cellar window was on fire. Fred Schwegman picked up a bucket of water and dashed the water on the flame. The electricity followed the water to tbe bucket and nearly knocked bim down. But the fire was temporarily squelched by the timely application, and iu a tew min utes the chief found the source of trouble. A wire attached to tbe electric cable came back over the tin roof fully 30 V feet touching the roof in many places. While everytmng was ury, as uas ueen loo case ever since the electric road has been in operation, the roof was not a strong enough conductor to take the electricity from the wire, but the rain, which fell last night increased Its power, and the iron -wall .made a splendid ground connec tion. The wire was removed and the strange sight was over. TRI-STATE TRIFLES. At Allentown a few days ago a 3-year-old climbed ud and took a seat on the step of the rear car ot a railroad train, which drew out and carried the cherub six miles before he was dis covered. Five dollars and 4 cents were dropped In the box of an Allentown street car by a near-sighted rider, who mistook a $5 gold piece for a penny. An Akron man, called out of his bed by the ringing of the bells, created a great deal of laughter by going along the street with a lan tern looking for the fire. Edward Tilliston, killed a few days ago on tbe Pennsylvania Railroad at Kennett Square, bad a presentiment of bis death. When he kissed bis wife his last good-by be said: "You may never see me again." AN Altoona angler caught a bass weighing5 pounds in the Juniata the other day. It was 23 inches in length. Mrs. Daniel Hill, of Salineville, Pa., has picked 2,000 quarts of huckleberries this sea son, and sold the most of them at G cents per pound. Edwin Rices, a farmer of Pleasants county, W. Va., being greatly annoyed by rats in his barn, filled a halt-bngsbead with water, put chaff over Ihe top, scattered meal on it and in the morning fished out over 2t)0 dead rats. A tbamp who arrived in Stenbenville tbe other day sud be bad walked 125 miles since he bad had a bite to eat When searched half of a loaf of bread was found in one of his pockets. -WJ HMHMI be the MtIafc, - Ifa MdttftietksMlvasswyetl -A Bim. TtXksetm escoBent btigata the iiHijr IfcH MieintMpMuswssl of UaWaoU-piesKV MietUh Owes. 1M , r Bosfcejie, Qa., walked t araKiisiielTt mite aa4watfcdilafMi0M At a wetjstfs is JkrisMM, I mm BMe tmmtt, wita tint ketee. a stale, a heifer, a : ejkeiwiaeeMWU$krstiai -Tfce iUM wWt kal battbeSMkti era? is Mr tats StaMM MUr. erf tMarTtme ,e other theaest gathered fa AmeeJktwfMrM. the Wtl SSBsWilkVj SyjBPsWWC MsWktW Wy HMQvVOfs M9& sbVwB mo P HOeUB BTMTisMBtf' MMtMsMsf HMM Ata"iMmtrserriM"iK Qtafe IMI& eras Chare m nmf tM 1 ewe was rated with towers tmi. pss, mi Diras m their eases we Mae: walls. -iTraak "W. Hak, of Dors, X. ', W 3. sqsasB teat weighs IN poneis. Jt growKg.aBe: Male heoee it wt present wehrbt IiSsmmskIi laereased an leak uul Mvr . -. ...-i--....... Joha Cannon Short, a ae4 ktmtr.tt near ueorsetewa, compote tint sBSMMrtet ueorgetewn taree times per week ira to ,jrers. tne distance eaei seven Miles, be has traveled 8r.ee Judge I". WeUhonse, of ?MesBt.Kaa., is said to be tbe proprietor ox tbe largest orch ard is tbe world. He bas ljm aeres la frak trees, and It is claimed that no otter grower es" thefaeeef Mw globe can stake a similar if Mies Aliee Cole, a cultured young lady of Chester, Bl, ma away fresa boae last Wedaesday. Site is a banker's daubster aJ a society belle. She wm feewd oa Saa4y la St Loeis, where she bad seeered a position sfa cook ia a restaurant Her reason for leaving home was tfcaft sfee dW sot wisfi to return to school.- At Deeatarr Tex.,da 8fe4wty, Eph Hu2manwas tried la the DisttsttCewtfer horse theft The courtroom Is used es SaaeVty as a place of Worship. Hmnlny mTTrnrnc daring the services the iary returned a verdet OSAa prisoner was brought is and seateaeea'.teafa years in tne peBiteaaary, after walea teser- ices were resumed. m Lewis Purdy, poslmaster at Shrub Oat Westchester county. N. Y was appointed by President William Henry Harrison ia Maretvi- isu, and bas served continuously frosa that time. Though now in his 85th year, he k rigor ous, his memory and vision are clear, aad he still receives and. distributes the mail twice day, as be has for long years. At the "old settlers" meeting, recently held in Cass county, IntL, a good old ladyfjet up to tell of the early life' in the country for the first time, and as it was her first attempt to speak In public, she bad a severe attack: of stage fright At last she saldr"My frieads,'I am an old citizen. I can remember when tfeese great oak trees were nothing but hazel bushes." An English scientist has been making experiments to determine the important part which light plays In tbe development of animal life. A doxen tadpoles were confined in a box from which every ray of light was excluded. The result was that only two of them devel oped into frogs, and these were shortlived. The others increased considerably in size, but never left the tadpole form. William Crawfordfc23 years old, who died recently in Chicago, was peculiarly af flicted. He had only one skin, which is to say bar he had no outer skin at all. Tbe veins stood out all over bis body in the plainest' manner possible. From tbe time be was 8 years of age young Crawford bad been subject to bleeding spells, which were liable to break out at any time and on any part of bis body. William Johnson, a "West Chester painter of considerable corpulency, has been engaged in renovating tbe Willistows school- house, and a few days ago he sat down at ona.; of tbe desks to eat his noonday meafWlea8 be finished he found himself so tightly wedged that be could" rfWgetnp, and be wonld bave been held a prisoner bnt that he had bis screw driver within reach, and with tbe aid of this he ,J took the chair and desk apart ini, Workmen have been engaged in re moving the log structure that served as Balti. mote's first postoffice from tbe spot on which it bas stood 159 years to Monument Square. wbere it will be set up alongside tbe great granite'' building, occupying a whole block, which next week will be dedicated as tbe new postoffice. Tbe quaint old structure is 11x15 feet and 12 feet high to tbe dormer roof. Tbe openings between the logs were plastered up with oyster shells and mud. The old horse Comanche, the ony sur vivor of the famous Custer massacre, is still handsomely cared for at the Government's ex pense. Bv snecial order of the military anthnr. Hies Comanche is provided with a comfortable stall fitted up especially for bim out in Dakota: No one is permitted to ride him. and be i snot allowed to do any work whatever. Riddled with ballets and scarred by saber wounds, bis body speaks eloquently of tbe perilous duty be has performed in his 22 years of service under tno uovernment A. Florida paper thus tells how a snake bitten horse was cured: "About two weeks ago J. W. Gerald's mare was bitten bv a snake in his grove, on Lake Harris, supposed to hare been a moccasin. The mare bad spasms, and tbe first nigbt after being bitten charged all over the grove on a dead run. She then swell fd until her bide was as tight as a drum-bead. Mr. Gerald tried three remedies, and cured her; a strong, hot salt bath, drenched witb to bacco tea, and with a tea made from th& moss which grows on tbe north side of forest trees. Tne mare was sick 12 days." THE LAUGHING PHILOSOPHERS. Singley How much you resemble your sister. Miss BJones? I wonld take yon for her. Miss BJones W-well, Mr. Singley, this Is so sudden; butyon may ask p, Lawrence Ameri can. Smith Look here, Brown, we'll soon de cide tne matter; let's ask the waiter. Walter, are tomatoes a fruit ora vegetable? Walter Neither, air. Tomatoes is a nextra. Funny I'olks, Natural Apprehension. "Why do yon smoke such infernal cigars?" "Oh, lust to kill time. Why?" 'T thought perhaps you were trying to kill me." Boston Herald. Ethel (entering parlor) Oh, Aggie, so glad to see you. (They kiss.) Wby, yon are en gaged to be married. Aggie How do yon know? "lean tell by the way you klss."-J?oeAtr Herald. "Well, doctor, how did yon enjoy your African Journey? Dow did you like .the sav ages?" Oh, tbey are very kind-hearted people; they wanted to keep me there for dinner." London 'lit-Bits. "What's the matter with McSlim? Ha has put on more'alra of late than a lew?" "Quite natural. He has Jnst returned from a summer re sort. He was the only man there. He'll get over it after a time, bnt Just at present he is so puffed upiwltti self-lmportanceithat yon.cannot touch bbn with a ten-foot pole." Boston Transcript. The Police Court Brand. Rounder-Have you any decent whiskey7 The last I got her wasn't fit to drinkl Bartender-That can't be, sir. Wo keep noth ing but flflo whiskey. Konnder-"Fine" whisky. Yes, that's right! My fine was f 1 and costs. Boston Herald. An Imported Smell. Miss Trust Why, Mr. Bluffer, where have you been all this Urn? I havn'tseen you for two months! Mr. Bluffer (breathing a balmy odor of gin and bitters)-! have been abroad, you know. MIssTrnst-How delightful! And. of course, you visited Cologne? 1 tne w I smelled some per fume when yon came in. Boston Herald. A young lady at Athens, Ga., bas invent ed a lamp that will cease to burn exactly at JO o'clock. The average Georgia lover bas no fault to fiad with the lamp; In fact he would be better satlsned u It would go ont as soon as he cams in. If the yonng lady wants to make a real ten-strike she should Invent a father who wUI go to bed at 9 o'clock. Toledo Commercial. Pr.tty Hard on aFather, First, Citizen- This electric light is a great thing. Second citizen Mighty mean thing I think. i'irst citizen Why what's the matter with it? Second Citizen-Matter with it! Why, they have planted one right In front of my sitting room win dow, where it lights np the whole bouse, and I've got six unmarried daugbten.-10'toa CourUr, u - JgBt 'r i n j 7 4i f1 1-1 1 i-i