Bellefonte, Pa., January 17, 1890. P. GRAY MEEK, - - - Ebprror. Meeting of Democratic State Committee. HARRISBURG, Pa., January Tth, 1890. The Democratic State Central Committee will meet at the rooms of the Committee, Mark- et Street, Harrisburg, Pa., on Wednesday, Jan- uary 22d, 1890, at twelve o'clock, noon, to elect one person to serve as Chairman of Democratic Committees, and one person to serve as Per- manent Secretary of the State Central Com- mittee, for the ensuing year; and to transact such other jusiness as may properly be brought before the committee. BexsamiN M. Neap, Permanent Secretary. ELLIOTT P. KISNER, Chairman. ———The Philadelphia Times,speak- ing of Judge KeLLy immediately pre- vious to his election to Congress, said that at that time he was engaged in lo- cating a route for the Sunbury and Erie Railroad ‘through the- then al- most unexplored wilderness of North- ern Pennsylvania.” The Record thinks this is imputing too much savagery to the then existing condition of a part of the State which as far back as Jack- soN’s time had heen surveyed fora ca- nal route. The fact is that a traveler on seme paris of the P.& E., (old Sunbury and Erie) railroad, at this date passes through miles of country which can be considered practically a wilderness. A Greundless Objection. 1 Some objection is being made to the reformed ballot system on the ground that it will injure the Democratic party, and the result of the recent election in Boston, where the Democratic vote was diminished, is cited as an example of such injury. The theory of these ob- jectors is that a majority of those who can not read their ballots are Demo- crats who would consequently be deter- red from voting, or would vete mistak- ingly through the Australian system. Should not this theory be rejected as offensively reflecting upon the intelli- gence of the Democratic party? But WiLLsan E. RusseLr, who was last year's Democratic candidate for Governor in Massachusetts, denies that the Democrats were the losers by the working of the Australian system. In regard to this matter he says: So far as I can ascertain, the mistakes were about equally divided between the parties, and I think were made quite as much by men of edueation as by men of little education. The result showed in every eity of the Common - wealth, where the Democratic vote is made up very largely of workingmen and men who have not had many advantages in education, that without exception in those places the Democrats gained largely over prior years, with the single exception of the city of Boston: The contrary resultin Boston was due entirel y I think, to a eause outside of the ballot law. Most reforms meet with objections, either through ignorance or interested motives, which the test of time and ex- perience proves to have been ground- less. ———————— Not Cowardly, But Very Prudent. . _— In the dispute that arose between | England and Portugal concerning their respective claims to the same territory on the east coast of Africa, it has turn- ed out, as was expected, that the small- er power had to yield to the larger. Tn this case England appears to have had the right as well as the might on her side, which has not always been the case in tke maintenance of her claims. About two hundred years ago the Portuguese made some straggling set- tlements on the territory in question, but failed to keep up even an appear- ance of ownership; in fact absolutely abandoned it. After the value of Afri- can possessions became apparent within the last twenty-five years, demonstrated by the explorations of LiviNasroNg, STANLEY and others who penetrated the mysteries of the dark continent, the English established trading posts and introduced missionaries in the re gion the tenure of which Portugal had ceased to maintain. A few years ago the latter saw fit to reassert her old claim, broke up some of the English set- tlements and packed off the mission- aries. This was a course of conduct that couid not be justified; England had the right side of the controversy, and having also the might, the weaker Power had to back down from its pre- tensions, But here comes in the interesting feature of the incid:nt. If it had been a first-class power like France, Germa- ny, Russia, or the United States that had taken such liberties with England's right, would she have been so prompt in sending a fleet to inforce it? Brittania can't be accused of being cowardly, for she has done some good fighting in her time, but she is very prudent when a big antagonist con- | fronts her. ——The winter in St. Petersburg is described as “the mildest and unhealth- jest known for many years.” The New Post_Master. On Wednesday last the name of Jas. A. FeipLer,editor of the Gazette of this place, was sent to the Senate for con- tirmation as Postmaster at Bellefonte. Among all the candidates mentioned for the position since Harrison’s elec- tion, he is prehaps the most unpopular, and his appointment will give the least general satisfaction. He is compara tively a new comer to the place; has already received all the public patron: age in the way of printing the party has had to bestow, and has bean a standing candidate for every po- sition that had a salary attached to it, ever since he came to town. The only claim he had on this or any other position is the fact that he has been the servile and willing tool Bellefonte ring, of which Gov. Beaver and Gen. Hastings are the avowed head. i: He has the ability to make a re- spectable and fair official, and the dispo- sition, training and gall to turn the post-office into a political pot-house and serve partisan ends at the sacrifice of public interest and official trust. For him old and respected citizens— life time residents of the place, who have been Jrepublicans since birth, like Joux Harris, W. F. Manny, and others, were crowded aside; wounded and disabled veterans, fully competent and deserving like Harvey BENNER or Dr. Geo. B. FAIRLAMB, were ignored, the wishes of the business interests overlooked, and the desire of our peo- ple as a mass disregarded and repu- diated. These facts are not to Mr. FIEDLER'S discredit, however. He has secured the position in spite of the general pub- lic sentiment there was azainst his appointment, and he is to be com- plimented on his good Inck. What- ever of condemnation there isin this whole matter belongs to the little ring of Republican bosses who re- gardless of the wishes of the people, or the welfare of the public interest, do as they please and imagine their pleasure is going to be forever and eternally indorsed by the republican people. l — —————— | Congressional Protection against High Water. Johnstown is asking Congress to ap- propriate half a million of dollars to deepen the Conemaugh river and Stony creek by dredging, as a protec- tion against future floods. Congress has no right to give money for such a purpose, as neither of those streams is navigable and therefore cannot be in- cluded among those which may be made the objects of such expenditure. If Harry WHITE were still in Congress he might be able to squeeze the Cone- maugh and Stony creek into a River and Harbor bill, as he once did the far famed Kiskiminitas, but it is doubtful whether there is a man in the present House who is equal to such a perform- ance. The people of the Conemaugh valley should be advised that the pre- vention of such constructions as the South Fork dam will afford them bet- ter protection against flood disasters than anything that Congress may be able to do for them. ——The wise men of Congress seem to be a little shy of the Brazilian movement. It is now quite awhile since the repoted republican govern- ment was proclaimed as having suc- eceded to the Empire, and still our authorities withheld their recognition of the bantling successor to the mon- archy. The soldiers down there are beginning to shoot citizens in the name of freedom. Congress had bet- ter hold on a little longer before it ex- tends the hand of fellowship to a repub- lic which seems to have been brought into existence cheitly through the in- stramentalivy of the military. The two French frigates which visited Philadelphia some months ago and met with such a hospitable recep- tion from the people of that city, have steamed up the Mississippi and are now anchored before New Orleans, where preparations are being made to overwhelm them with Southern hos- | pitality, Grateful recollections of a French fleet in command of Count Dr | Grasse, which appeared in the Chesa- | peake at a critical period of our his- | tory with very important assistance, [over a hundred years ago, render { French ships of war welcome visitors | to our shores. TET ET —— | | | Of Brice, the prospective Ohio U. S. Senator, Frank Carpenter writes as follows: “Ie cuts a different figure now | than he did when I knew him there { nine years ago. He was building the 1 Ohio Central Railroad, out of which he | got his start in 1880, and he used to ; come around the Ohio State Capitol i with his pantaloons in his boots, a rustic | coat spattered with mud and a slouch | hat pulled over his steel blue eyes. Ie tis worth at least $5,000,000, and is, I i am told, getting richer every year. All I of his prosperity has come within the "past ten years, and a decade ago he was a red-whiskered, blue-eyed young lawyer , of 30 odd years on the ragged edge of a country practice.” of the | A Barbecue of Horse Flesh at Louis- ville, Over Two Hundred Thousand Dollars Worth of Valuable Horses Tortur- ed by the Cruel lames. LexiNeroN, Jan. 12.—Bell Boy, the $51,000 coit, who enjoyed the distine- tion of being the highest priced horse ever sold at auction in America, was burned to death Saturday morning to- ‘gether with forty-four other horses, in Macey Brothers’ training and livery _ stables, at Versailles. It was the largest barbecue of horse flesh on record, and the loss will amount to upward of $200,- 000. The fire broke out at about four o’clock in the morning, and is supposed | to have been of incendiary origin. The stables covered almost an entire | square consisting of proper sheds for | training and adjacent stalls for horses. | There ware quantities of loose hay and ‘straw in all portions of the structure, which were rapidly licked up by the i flames. Beil Boy's quarters were ad- ' jacent to the office of the stables, where | a groom was on guard. This man made i a determined effort to reach the horse and get him out, but the animal refused to move, and before sufficient assistance could be had to force him from the building the intense heat drove the groom away. Bell Boy’s charred body, burnt so that the entrails protrude, lies in full view of the people who congre- gatein great crowds. : BELL BOY'S HISTORY. Senator Stanford sold Bell Boy asa yearling to Messrs. Brown & Stock- bridge, of Kalamazoo, and the colt was entered in several stakes for 2-year- old. He won all his engagements and in severa! events had a walkover. At the Kentucky Trotting Horse Breed- ers’ Meeting at Lexirgton in October he trotted a mile 1n 2:26, his fastest per- formance that year, and the best mark for a 2-year-old of his sex. In the Spring of 1888 Bell Boy was sold to Jefferson & Seaman, of Kentucky, for $30,900, which was the highest price ever paid for a 3-year-old-trotter. During the season the youngster made a record of 2:19%. Late in the summer of 1888 Bell Boy was put up at a special sale which was advertised as being held in order that Mr. Jefferson might dispose of his share of the colt. At that time Mr. Seaman bid $50,000, and Bell Boy was declared to be his sole property. The sensu- tional young horse was again placed in the market and sold atthe Woodward sale at Lexington, Kentucky, on Feb- ruary 21, 1889, to Judson H. Clark, of the Genessee Valley Stud Farm, near Elmira, New York for $51,000. The forty-four other horses were high priced animals. burnt To Save a Life. A Man Gives Twenty-eight Ounces of His Blood for Transfusion. NEw Yorx, Jan. 13.—In the medical ward of the New York hospital are two patients in whose condition every other patient and all the doctors take a special nterest. ‘I'hey are Amos A. Lincoln iand Lizzie Cunningham. Miss Cun- ningham is the girl who with Mary Fallon, was found asphyxiated by gas in her room. Miss Fallon died and if the Cunningham girl should recoyer she will undoubtedly owe her life to Amos A. Linc. In, a sturdy telegraph lineman, who, when he heard last Thursday that some good strong human blood was needed to save the girl’s life, promptly offered his own. The surgeons accepted, and the opera- tion of transfusion was successfully performed. Twenty-eight ounces «f Lincoln’s blood was forced into the veins of Miss Cunningham’s arm, but without apparent beneficial effect until yesterday, when she became conscious for the first time since her admission to the hospital. The chances of her recov- ery are now a little better, but she is by no means out of danger, the doctors say. Lincoln is little the worse for the loss of nearly two pounds of blood. He is a Philadelphia man, and he is said to bee poor and friendless. He. brought to tha hospital on Nov. 9. suffering from a nervous tremor similar to St. Vitus’ dance, from which he has recovered. In Memory of Tilden. Congressman Cummings Proposes a Statue for the Rotunda of the Capitol. WasnHiNGgToN, D. C., Jan. 13.—Con- gressman Amos Cummings, of New York, created a sensation in the House to-day when he offered a resolution to appropriate $50,000 for the erection of a bronze statue to the late Samuel J. Tilden in the centre of the rotunda of the Capitol. The resolution provided that on the front base of the statue there shall be engraved the words. ‘Samuel J. Tilden, Nineteenth President of the United States—elected, but not seated ;” that on the right of the base shall be inscribed the date of birth, election and death of Tilden, and that on the opposite side shall be engraven an eagle with a solution was referred. nm ne Jeff as a Pioneer. Northwest, was built by Jefferson Da- vis,” was the novel historical statement made to me yesterday by L Mich. His statement was followed by this ex- old pamphlets I was overhauling the other day. Davis was a lieutenant in the United States army, serving under old Zac Taylor, whose daughter he af- terward married. Tavlor was in com- mand of Fort Crawford, now Prairie dn Chien. It became necessary to build other forts in the Northwest. The government sent a sawmill to Taylor to prepare the lumber. up the Chippewa River to locate the mill and operateit. That was the first sawmill in what is now one of the greatest lumber sections of the country, It sounds queer that Jeff’ Davis should thus be entitled to be classedas the pio neer lumberman of the Northwest.” — N.Y, Press: The Obsequtes of Hon. W. D. Kelly. Services of an Impressive Character Held in the Hall of the House. ‘WA HINGTON Jan. 12.—The funeral services over the remains of the late Congressman W. D. Kelley took place in the hull of the house yesterday. As the solemn procession moved down the aisle, Rev. Mr. Cuthbert read aloud the preliminary Baptist burial service. The casket, carried by policemen, bore no other decoration thun a large bunch ! of lilies and mixed flowers. Mrs. Kel- | ley, leaning on the arm of her eldest | son,and followed by other membersof the | family, entered and took the places re- | served for them. At a rap from the gavel of Speaker Reed the assemblage sat down, and the reading of the re- mainder of the Baptist ritual service was | proceeded with. Dr. Cuthbert closed | the service with the benediction, and | the casket was then taken up by the | body bearers, who followed the mem- | bers of the committee with their burden. | The members of the family walked out of the house directly behind the casket, | and they were followed by the members | of the senate who were present. i Another rap from the speaker’s gavel | called the house again to order, and Mr. ! Bingham of Pennsylvania arose and | moved that the house adjourn. The motion | was carried and the house adjourned un- til Monday. Shortly before 1 o’clock the remains of Judge Kelley were es- corted to the Baltimore & Potomac sta- | tion, and at 1.15 o'clock the funeral! party left for Philadelphia on a special train. Upon arrival at Philadelphia the remains were taken to the residence of Mrs. Horstman on Chestnut street. The services in Philadelphia will occur to-morrow and be conducted by Rev. W. H. Furness. vo | The American Eiffel Tower. The Tallest Smokestack in the World for Making a Draught. Boston Globe. The tallest smokestack in the United States, and, in fact, the tallest in the world, designed solely for the purpose of providing a draught for boilers, is receiving its final courses in Fall River Mass. It is intended to meet the re-, quirements of the entire steam plant of the four new mills of the Fall River Iron Company. Some idea of its size can be had from the following figures, furnished by the contractor: From the top of the granite foundation to the cap is 350 feet, the diameter at the (ase is 30 feet, at the top 21 feet, the flue is 11 feet throughout, and the entire structure rests on a solid granite foundation 55x30, 16 feet deep. In its construction there were used 1,700,000 bricks, 2000 tons of stone, 2000 barrels of mortar, 1000 loads of sand, 1000 barrels of Portland cement, and the estimated cost is $40,000. It is arranged for two flues 9 feet 6 inches by 6 feet, connecting with 40 boilers,which are to be run in connection with four triple-expansion engines of 1350-horse power each. In erecting the immense shaft no outside staging has been used, but as the work progressed cross pieces were set into the inner wall, and on these a platform laid for the time being. All material was carried up on an ele- vator, and self-closing hatches precluded the danger of either workmen or ma- terial falling from above. The Deadly Cold Bed. How the Spare Room Has Slain Its Thousands and Is Still at It. Good Housekeeping. If trustworthy statistics could be had of the number of persons who die every year or become permanently diseased from sleeping in damp or cold beds,they would probably be astonishing and appalling. Itisa peril that constantly besets traveling men, and if they are wise they will invariably insist on hav- ing their beds aired and dried, even at the risk of causing much trcuble to their landlords. But the peril resides in the house, and the cold “spare room’ has slain its theusands ot hapless guests, and will go on with its slaughter till people learn wisdom. Not only the guest but the family suffer the penalty of sleeping in cold rooms and chilling their bodies at a time when they need all of their bodly heat, by getting be- tween cold sheets. Even in warm sum- mer weather a cold damp bed will get in its deadly work. It is a needless peril, and the neglect to provide dry rooms and beds hasin it the elements of murder and suicide. Inexcusable Delay. On the 31st of" May, 1889, oc- curred that ever to-be-remembered flocd that desolated the Conemaugh valley with death an, destrac- ticn.. On the 12th of January 1890, Governor Beaver’s relief commis- sion reports $200,000 on hand. Only the good Lord knows what want and misery the impoverished survivors of that awful disaster have suffered in the long interval since millions of dollars were thrust into Governor DBeaver’s planation : I found this fact in some" snake in his talons, and under them | been sore need for every dollar given— these words : For The Right.” The re. | and more. Have the governor's methods i ) | | | “The first sawmill ever built in Wis. | shameful status of his case as does the OnSite AndTT thick the first in ‘the | statement of naked facts ?. Two hundred ious | thousand; dollars still held back | those for whom it was given. Iman at the railroad bridge on the : found dexd Friday morning by the work Davis was sent | what has been given? hands for their benefit. Hasn't there even allowed prompt distribution of To be honest about it, has the so-called injustice of newspaper criticism ever set up such a from Do the mors ?-— flood safferers need nothing Pittsburg Post. A WarcumaNn Fouxp DErap.— John Waltz, employed as night watch- Beech Creek railroad a short distance below Beech Creek borough, was men when they went to the bridge to commence their days work. The dead man was in a sitting position and the supposition is that a bolt or other piece of iron had fallen from the upper portion of the structure and struck him. Mr. Waltz was about 83 years of age, a resident of Beech Creek borough and leaves a wife and two children. ER ———— Monopolists, it is said, refer to the proposed tariff’ bill as *‘our dollar An Incident of Andersonville, Death of a Man Said to Have Acted as Hangman of Fellow Prisoners. SPRINGFIELD, Mass., Jan. 12.—E. ‘W. Nichols, a veterinary surgeon who died here last Friday from influenza complications, had a remarkable war history. He was a member of the Fourteenth Michigan cavalry and was captured and confined in Andersonville. He was chosen sheriff of the court order- ed by starving Union prisoners to pun- ish a gang of comrades that stole their small supply of rations. Ten were con- victed in a court of Union prisoners and sentenced to be hanged. Nichols, who was a powerful man, had to string the men up alone, and one of the emaciated comrades was hanged the second time, as the rope broke. On his return North Nichols re-enlist- ed, and was with a troop of cavalrymen who captured Jefferson Davis, and shar: ed the $100,000 offered by President Johnson. Nichols had property and was successful in business. On account oi his horrible duty at Andersonville he was shunned by veterans, and rarely al- luded to the affair. A dispatch from Bloomington, Ill., says: Hon. Ivory H. Pike, member of the legislature, denied, to-day, the re- port that E. W. Nichols of the Four- teenth Michigan cavalry, who died at Springfield, Mass. was the hangman of 10 Union prisoners at Andersonville. Mr. Pike says that Le Roy Key of the Sixteenth Illinois cavalry, a printer who died in Springfield, Ill., several years ago, hanged the men, and that there were six, not 10, in number, Mr. Pike was one of the guards that kept order during the hanging. Mr. Pike says Key was respected and be- loved by the old soldiers, and at his death many State associations passed re- solutions of respect to his memory. The Gigantic Dragon Tree. It is Forty-Five Feet in Circumference and 10,000 Years Old. New York Morning Journal. The most gigantic specimen of the fa- mous dragon tree of the Canary islands stocd, until within the vear, and still stands for that matter, but dead as a mummy of the time of the Rameses, near Gratava, on the Island of Teneriffe, the largest one ot the group above men- ticned. This monster warty dragon has been fully described by dozens, yes, hun- dreds, of globe-tourists who have ‘‘done”’ the sights of the world during the past 50 years. No wonder that the great Humboldt did not even make provision for a doubt when he calmly says: “I would consid- er it at least 10,000 years old.” To the native Canary Islander the dra- gon tree is as sacred as the bo tree is to Ceylonese, and the rights performed in its immense hollow, which Humboldt says would comfortably provide shelter for 20 men, were as mystic if not as hor- rible as those performed around the can- ibal tree by the Australian savages. — Pineapples for Diphtheria. The Chicago 7'ibune publishes a new cure for diphtheria which, it .is said never fails, It is simply the juice of the pineapple. The correspondent of the Tribune thus speaks of it : “The doctors who had never heard of this cure now all use it in their practice I understand, and have never known of a death where it was taken in time. The patient ought to gargle the juice and then swallow it, and the dose ought to be repeated fre- quently so as to saturate the system with it. To keep the stuff fresh and prevent fermentation I used to keep it on ice constantly. Of course it is always easy to obtain fresh pineapples here. In the South I have heard that they keep it bottled, when the pineapple is out of season, and it answers the pur- pose just as well provided it is not sweetened. One thing is certain, you can always get a pineapple at my house by asking for it, for we are never out of them now.” La Grippe Affects Freight, PrrrsBurG, January 14.—The Penn- sylvania Railroad company has been compelled to refuse freight for the sea board during the past few days on ac- count of la grippe on one division where 200 conductors, {freight and passenger, are employed, 135 were off duty at one time with the grip. New men were put on some of the trains, but in the majority of the cases it was impossible to get new men, and when they were se- cured they proved to be more easy victims of the grip than the old men. Freight began to collect on eastern div- isions to such an extent that a few days ago an order was issued to send no more freight for sea bound points until furth- er notice. There was a blockade of freight at Altoona yesterday, due to the fact that the trainmaster was unable to get out full crews and only about half of the freight could be handled. The Western Blizzard. A telegram from Kansas City says : The blizzard which raged all day Sun- day throughout Kansas and Nebraska was phenomenal on account of the sud- denness of the storm and the high tem- perature just preceding and at its close. Much suffering is sure to follow among livestock. At many places the drifts are from ten to twelve feet deep. In the northwestern part of Kansas the snowfall is unprecedented, and in the town of Hiawatha all travel is stopped except in beaten paths, Railroads have met with much trouble, not only from. the snow, but from tracks being damag- ed by high water. The greatest danger to be anticipated from the storm in Kansas is acoal fuminein some of the smaller towns, AA The late Mr. F. B. Gowen held life insurance policies to the amount of $220,000. The various companies have begun to pay these, and all of them will be sestled in full without a contest. This is simple justice, but does any sen- sible man doubt that had the holder beena man on alower plane of social and public life, one less known and without influen- tial friends, these insurance com- panies would have paid over this large sun without a protest ? Then there would have been a costly contest before bill.” the heirs could have come by their own. The Election of Constables. There is dispute in some sections o? Pennsylvania as to the term for which Constables were elected at the February election of 1889, and the following is one of several inquiries received at the office of the Philadelphia Times : To The Editor of The Times : Were Constables elected for three years in the boroughs and townships of this Commonwealth in February last? See act of February 14, 1889, P. L., page 6. Or will the election of Constables for three years, under said act, take place in February, 1890? There is a difference of opinion among the attorneys on the subject. Williamsport, Pa., Dec.. 10. '89. N.B KE The act referred to provides that the voters of the townships, boroughs and wards in Pennsylyania, “shall cn the Third Tuesday of February next, and triennially thereafter, vote for and elect a properly qualified person for Consta- ble in each of said districts who shall serve for three years.” This act was approved on the 14th jay of February, 1889, and ‘‘the third Tuesday of Feb- ruary next” would be commonly under- stood to be the 19th of the same month, which was the day on which regular spring or local elections were held in the State. It was the obvious intention of the Legislature to pass the bill to take effect at the last February election, but the fact that the bill was delayed in its passage until early in February and not approved until the 14th of that month, law somewhat ambiguous as to the time it should become operative. Had the bill been passad and approved in January, as was expected when it was introduced, the 19th of last February would clearly have been “the 31 Tues- day of February next,” but as it did not become a law until February, and within five days of the date named, there is no room for doubt as to the judiciel interpretation that may be given to the words “the third Tuesday of February next” ina law passed during the month of February. Had the Legislature intended the act to go into effect in 1890 it would have beenso ex- pressed in the bill, and if the clear in- tent of the Legislature shall govern "the construction of the measure, the Con- for three years. The Surpreme Court has gone so far in maintaining the intention of the Legislatnre as to declare that statutes are to be constructed as best to effectuate the intention of the Legislature though such construction may seem contrary to the letter of the law; and that ail laws must be executed according to the: sense and meaning which they imported at the time of their passage. Judging: by the precedents it seems reasonably certain that the Courts would hold that. the Constables elected last February were choosen for three years ; but the opinion of even the most intelligent newspaper men is not to be accepted when the Courts have the last guess at a disputed problem. BT — The Prize Poker Outfit. An Elegant Ivory Leay-Out Made as a Giftto John Morrissey. From a Washington Letter. In a private residence up-town in Washington there is the finest set of poker chips that were ever manufactur- ed in this country. Their history is interesting. They were made for the famous John Morrissey, congressman, State senator, anti-Tammany shoulder hitter, pugilist and gambler. Before Morrissey started his famous Saratoga gambling house he had a place on Bar- claystreet in New York. While there a party of Western sports, among whom was the famous “Big Head Ri- ley” of California, called on Morrisey, and during the week managed to win about $30,000 from him. | As they had been treated very elabor- ately and won s> much they determined to give Morrissey some token of their distinguished consideration. After some discussion it was decided to have made the finest '‘rack” of poker chips that money could buy. The chips now {in Washington were the result of that determination. There were 1000 chips, with a few odds to make up for any that might be lost or broken. Upon each chipis a carving made by hand. On the white ones is a small figure without special significance “5” and 25” in a center of red and yellow. Each chip is carved by hand and from the finest “heart” ivory that could be found in the city of New York. The total cost of the set was over $2000, or $2 apiece. ‘When they were given to Morrissey they were polished to the highest degree and shone and glistened in the light as though they were silver. The case which still holds them is of rosewood, finely polished, and in the top is set a tiger couchant of polished brass, two enormous cat’s eyes being sunk in the head and giving ita peculiar animated appearance. Now, because the chips were given to him by winners, Morris- sey thought it would be bad luck to use them in the same place, and conse- quently they were not used until after Morrissey started his place at Saratoga. Then the superstition worked in ac- cordance with the gambler’s idea and the first time they were used in a heavy game Morrissey lost over $50,000. Then he put them on exhibition and they were stolen within 10 days. Some months afterward they were recognized in a Bowery pawnshop, where the thief had pawned them for $75. Morrissey redeemed them and shortly afterward they were stolen again. A young En- glishman who was doing the country bought them from the thief and carried them to Chicago. After the habit of young Englishmen the tourist in ques- tion becance hard up and sold them to the present owner, who brought them to Washington, where they have been for two years and have been played with by some of the heaviest poker play- ers in the capital. I was shown them the other day and they bear no more signs of use than if they had been bought yesterday. —Considering the amount of noise Foraxer made in his political career who could have supposed that he would so silently dissolve from public view makes the peculiar language of that. stables elected last February were chosen