WASHINGTON LETTER. DEMOO'EATIO CAUCUS POSTPONED. AMKNDMF.NrS TO WILSON MM.. Knight of Labor, Bankruptcy Bill, Intor nal Revenue. (From our Kcgulnr CorroHpomle-.t.) Washington, Dec. i3, i8ot Representative Holman, chairman ' nf the democratic caucuf, after ton-, suiting with his democratic colleagues decided not to call the caucus which it has been determined to hold to con sider the Wilson bill, until after the Christmas recess. There are several reasons, all good, for this decision. Many democrats have already gone home to spend Christmas and if the caucus had been held this week, it would consequently have been slimly attended. Besides, those who spend their holiday at home will get an op portunity to learn just how the Wilson bill ha9 been received by their con stituents which will enable them to lay before the caucus any objections which may exist. It to in fact very fortunate that the bill has been delay ed. It will enable the democrats to do what has never been done before consult the people about the details of a tariff bill. The republicans of the House have announced with a great flourish of trumpets that they will not vote with democrats who oppose any section of the Wilson bill to amend the measure. A more unnecessary announcement was never made. It was, of course, made tolely for the purpose of mis leading the country into the belief that there arc enough democrats who wish to amend the bill to succeed in doing so, if the republicans would only vote with them. There are, it is true, a number of democratic representatives not so large, however, as the repub licans would like the country to be lieve who will endeavor to get the bill amended in caucus, but failing in that, there are not five of them who will refuse to vote for the bill. The House has shown itself to be thoroughly in accord with the policy of trie democratic party by taking ad vantage of the unavoidable delay in getting the tariff bill ready, to pass bills admitting to statehood Utah, Ari zona and New Mexico, although re publican filibustering made it necessary for the committee on rules to report continuing orders before it could be done. The people of these territories are not likely to forget this republican filibustering. Congressmen, particularly those who have been so precipitate in their criti cism, will do well to spend a part of their Christmas holiday in studying President Cleveland's special message and the Hawaiian documents of which it treats. It will not be necessary for them to indorse the President's Ha waiian policy in its entirety to discover how absurd Senator Hoar's recent re marks about impeachment were. There has been neither technical nor actual violation of either the letter or the spirit of the Constitution by the Presi dent; the idea that there had been was conceived by malignant partisan ship and nurtured by such men as Hoar. Mr. J. R. Sovereign, the new head of the Knights of Labor, is in Wash ington in attendance upon the confer ence of the executive committee of the Bi metallic League, with which he is in sympathy. Speaking of the tariff he said : 'I am an out and out free trader. The so-called protection of American labor is a delusion. Labor is not protected. Invested capital re ceives a bonus in the form of protec tion, and it is then optional with the capitalist to give a share of the bonus to labor in the form of increased wages. But this option is seldom, if ever, exercised." There is no fcod for reflection in thes? words of Mr. Sovereign, who is certainly in a posi tion to speak from the point of view of the American wage earner. . Representative Culbertson, Chair man of the House Judiciary commit tee considers it very doubtful whether a bankruptcy bill of any kind will get through the House at this session, al though representative Bailey will en deavor to push his voluntary bank ruptcy bill, and representative Oates will introduce a new bill modifying the Torrey bill, which was recently killed in the House. It has about been decided that the internal revenue bill shall include an inheritance tax, but it is still an open question whether this tax shall take the place of the proposed income tax or shall be in addition thereto. It is not considered probable by members of the Ways and Means committee that the internal revenue bill will be report d to the House until after the holidays. The tariff bill will be re ported to the House to morrow, unless something now unexpected shall pre vent, but it will not be called up for debate until after the recess. "A snake in the grass" is all the Wore dangerous from being unsuspec ted. So are many of the blood medi c'nes offered the public. To avoid 'lrUk.ask your druggiit for Ayci's Sarsaparilla, and also Jor Ayer's Alma nac, which is just out for the new year. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castorla. STATU PRODUCTIONS. V.'li.t I'armiT nml Mor'.unrn lt;ilo In nrln:; (iinimnmveiilllK. Delaware I it r :,0(H) farms, valued nt f :;-.(i(iO,(M,v The Mnte produced in H; 11 4.(Hl;).n,l!) bushels of corn n ml t.S'm.noo of liri.l. It c:.p 1 ts every year 7,i'Ki, t.i:") fjmirts of i trn wherries nnd 55.001),. .1.1 baskets (if ('I.chcS. Missouri rrrvs'JitV)00,000 bushels of corn. H(I,(!(h).P;i ,.t oats, 20,000,000 f wheat and l.l.'Mii.o.i) pounds of toh.n: co. The ler.d product l,t: exceeded ICO.on.reo pounds In a single year, nnd the r.lno hns equaled l'i,i()) tons a yenr. Illinois produces SSTO.Otin.nno of farm products every year. The rraln proli ne t reaches SI 15,000,000; live stock, S50,000,000j dairy products, ?J7.000,o .;; hoy nnd potatoes, f.jfl.ooo.OOO. The farm property Is valued at more than Sl.O'JV 000.000. Ohio raises 100,000,000 bushels of corn, ST.OOO.ooo of wheat, 87,000,00 i of D.lts, 12,000,000 of potatoes, il.V)00,0:0 pounds of tohaceo nnd Jl.ooo.ooo tons of hay yearly. Tho vineyards produce 5,600,000 trillions of wine and 30,000,000 pounds of .Tapes. Wisconsin raises every year SI 05,000, 000 worth of farm products. The oat prop Is 4:1,000,000 bushels; corn, Ds.ooo, 300; wheat, 21,000,0.10; barley, 12.000, 900. Tho live stock Is valued atSSD,. 000,000. Over lo,"03 square miles are underlaid by mineral deposits. Colorado has ",000,000 acres under artificial Irrigation. Tho farm products exceed 812.000,00:1 a yeur; there are 1. fiOO.noo cattle, 2,000,000 sheep; the coal fields cover 40,000 nqn.lre miles; tho supplies of marble, gran i to and other building stone arc inexhaustible. Arkansas has 100,000 farms which produeo C00.003 bales of cotton, 000,000 bushels of sweet potatoes, 1,000,000 pounds of tobacco, 42,000,000 bushels of corn and 2,000,000 bushels of wheat. From tho Arkansas forests arc cut over 820,000,000 of lumber every year. Wyoming has HO.OOO square miles of coal deports. There are 5,000 miles of Irrigating cunals, watering1 2.000,000 neres. The canals cost over $10,000,000. The live stock interests, exceed 100,. CO.1.000 in value. Over 85,000,003 in bullion has been taken from the mines in one county. WROTE SERMONS WHILE ASLEEP Tho ItiMnnrknbln Somimmlmllstle Feat ot nil KnrcltHh Thoilot;lrnl student. Ono of tho most remarkable and puz zling stories of somnambulism Is re lated by tho London News. The y.b ject was a young ecclesiastic at a. semi nary. Tho bishop of the diocese was rut deeply interested that ho went nightly to the young man's chamber, lie saw him get out of bed, secure pa per, compose and write sermons. On finishing a pago ho read it aloud. When a word displeased him ho wrote a correction with great exactness. Tho bishop had seen a beginning of sonic of theso somnambulistic sermons, and thought them well composed and cor rectly written. Curious to ascertain whether tho young man made use of his eyes, tho bishop put a card under bis chin in such a manner as to prevent him seeing the paper on tho table be fore him, but lie still continued to write. Not yet satisfied whether or not he could distinguish different ob jects placed before him, tho bishop took away tho pieeo of paper on which ho wrote and substituted several other kinds at different times. He always perceived tho change, because tho pieces of paper wero of different sizes. When a piece exactly like his own was substituted ho used it, and wrote bin corrections on tho places correspond ing to those on his own paper. It was by this means that portions of bis noc turnal compositions wero obtained. His most astonishing production was a pieeo of musio written with great ex actitude. Ho used a cane for a ruler. The clefs, the flats and tho sharps were all. in their right places. Tho notes were all made as circles, and thoiO re quiring it wero afterward blackened with ink. Tho words were all written below, but oiiee they wero in such very large characters that they did not come directly below their proper notes, and, perceiving this, ho erased them all aad wrote them over again. DEPTH OF THE ATLANTIC. Ono f-'pot Tlmt Mcuiiuro Four nn'i a Quarter Mile Deep. Tho floor of tho Atlantio ocean is now ulmost as well-known to tho ex perts of tho hydrogriiphio bureaus ol tho world as tho surface is to tho most experienced navigators. Its depths, currents, tide, etc., havo been care fully and systematically studied from Greenland and Spitzbcrgen to the great ice barriers of the antarctic cir cle, l'rof. Forbes gives some reliable dula on ocean depths for use in "Notes for tho Curious." "Tho gen eral contour of tho Atlantic's unduh.t ing bed may now be regarded as pretty well determined. Scarcely any portion of its floor has a depth ex ceeding 11,000 fathoms, or about three and a quarter miles. There- is n re markuble exception to this last state ment, however, in a wonderful sik or depression lying about ono hundred miles north of Kt. Thomas, an island off tho coai t of Africa in tho Gulf ol Guinea. Tho outlines of this depres sion are similur to those of un old timo river bed. Tho Challenger ex pedition traced its meandering for upwards of 1,000 miles, finding po tions of It more thun u mile deeper than tho surrounding cceun, n'.ul-iug tho depth of tho Atlantio ut those points not loss than four and a quarter miles, or about U.ST5 fathoms." Htutlont. New words, or tho old words with modified meanings, have been in t re duced into our language by railways. Tho word station, in tho senso of a place for travelers to stop at, Is thought to bo ono of theso. That con jecture is that when a general term was required by tho early railway makers to indicute a stopping place for tho trains, some ono, calling to imud tho stations with which Britain was studded in the Roman tlmo, suggested what was then a new uso of an old word. . Gu:j3rri cucTrtucTioN. Tim Tir.- dc l or.n el n Clouit. Curat la Dfni 't V.i'lcy. AUhor.'.S little rain falls In Death fa I ley, so culled from the terrible loss tf life from b :it w hlch occurred tliero in I -50, ( l.tu.l-biirsts of tl.'i utmost fury are often experienced. The cloud 1-. always fornu I above the mountains, nnd after n timo its bulbous body st rikes a p a!t. Hoods of water arc re leafed on the instant, nml in waves of incredible si.-.e they roll down tho cliffs r; rut canyons. In an hour the face of tho mountain may be ro changed as to bo scarcely rccogniznbln, nnd even tho lighter stormp rip the heart out of a canyon so that only gulches and heaps of broken rock ore found where once, perhaps, a good truil existed. Cub" Lee, in "Sketches in Death Valley," tells of sleeping in camp near the mouth of Furnace Creek canyon one night with a "bug hunter," as tho desert-tramping scientists are called. It was so hot that tho naturalist could not sleep. About midnight ho heard a roaring noise up the canyon, which, ns It kept Increasing in volume, caused him to look that way. To hi3 surprise ho saw, as ho supposed, tho sky between tho canyon walls grow suddenly white. At that moment Lee rolled over, and the "bug-hunter" asked him what ailed the sky. Leo gave ono glance, and shouted: "Cloud-burst! Climb!" They scrambled up tho steep walls ns best they could, just in timo to savo their lives. Leo thinks tho foaming V'all of water that whitened tho sky and swept everything beforo it was not less than ono hundred feet high. THE FUTURE OF AFRICA. Etplnrom Think tho Durk Continent Will In Time fiencmlilo South America. There Is no country in tho world to which so much, attention has of lata been directed ns to Africa, and, If tho powers of Europe can only smother their rivalries and jealousies, tho pros peels are bright for tho development of tho "Dark Continent." In thj opinion of explorers, it will, when progress has been made in tho work of civilization, bo liko South America. There Is a strango mingling of tongues nnd of tribc3 in Africa. There aro three great families on tha continent tho Niger in tho west, tho Runlas in the cast and south, and tho llamits In tho north. Hut there are hundreds of different kinds of languages spoken in Africa, nnd some of the tribes uro lis different from tho others us aro Cltfncso from Europeans. Many of them are Indus trious, wb.'.'.e others steal and murder, but tho latter will undoubtedly bo ex terminated in tho course of timo. There tiro reasons for believing that away back in history white pcoplo camo from tho north, and established an empiro around the great African lakes. There is a tribe in that region called Recjina, which Is evidently de scended from them. Tho men and women aro a very light brown. They bury their dead in tho snmo way as the old Egyptians did, in pyramids; only they do not usa stone, but timber. Many of tho pyramids havo crumbled away, und only tho mummies remain. Each ono of theso pyramids means a generation. It would bo strango if Africa should again bo ruled by tho white race, ns at tho beginning. A TURN ADOUT. Tho f.lon V.'oro l'ur, 15ut tho Car Wr.s 0 llcro. Tho Zoophilist of London repro duces a good dog story from a Roman paper. "A ten-year-old little girl had fallen into tho Tiber that day (July 24) from tho parapets of tho I'onto Marghorita. Tho crowd who witnessed the accident merely ran hither and thither oa tho bridge nnd tho banks culling for some ono to help tho child nobody daring to do bo. Two police men spent tho time in making inquir ies as to whether 'it was a case of mur der or suicide.' Tho child, meanwhile, was visibly drowning, when a dog a workman's misserablo dog, destined to Mill a wretched day in tho Stabulario muuieipalo (lost dogs' yard) leaped barking into tho Tiber under tho eyes of all tho screaming, but useless crowd. "Tho poor beast, accustomed to fcod upon street offal and to bleep in any shed it could tind, swam out to tho lit tle girl in peril, caught her dress nnd 3rew her to tho shore. When ho saw her in safety the dog jumped and bayed for joy, licking tho child's fuco and hands. It appears they had been friends. The child had known tho dog n a manufactory at l'rati di Castello, And tho poor animal was grateful to her for some crumbs or careKf.es. l'ho crowd then tried to catch tho do3 to see bow on animal moro bravo than so many men was made, llut it ran through their midi-t nnd disappeared.' Tea-i-lriiUIn;; In lCiiffl.tnd. The London Hospital has been sound ing a note of alarm regarding tho cx tent to which tho habit of tea-drinking is indulged, no less a quantity than 207,055,0! 9 pounds huviug been consumed in Circa t Britain lust year. This paper states that "not only uro ,ve yielding, with all the weakness of r.n inebriate, to tho diseases of nerve und stomach which execssivo tia--.Iriuking brings in its train;" but, after Instituting a comparison between teas of Chinese and Indian growth, it con tinues: "Wo drink more tea than our parent:.; we take it oftener, stror.gti nnd of coarser quality. Tho remits uro less obvious than those of alcoholic f:ito::icatio:i, 1-ut not less serious; ar.d in truth the time may not bo fur dis tant wjea tho curliest disciples of the ricv temperance will plead with us, v:th tears in their eyes; 'tlivo up this accursed to a, uud take to cocoa, or even to Leer.' " ' . f.'liuj of .ipi:o Treed. In tho Buinlwich islands tho applo lias become wild nud forests of many acres nio found i:i various parts of tho country. They extend from the l.-vel of tha sea far up into the mount;.' iu sides. It is said miles of theso npj la Jjrcsts can occasionally besceu Jlovv Un i.ticnv. Lawyer Are yon sura that occur rence was on the fccventeenth of tha mo n tli? Witnci Yes, It wm tho seven tcetith. Lawyer Now remember, you are un der oath. Ibe.t do you know it was tha seventeenth? Witness 'Causo tho day beforo that Lawyer Do careful what you say, now. (!o on. Witness was tho sixteenth, and tho dav after it was tho eighteenth. N. Y. Weekly. An Ininrnhnbla Yarn. "Ono of my ancestors won a battle during tho crusades by his skill in handling his nrtlllcry," Raid the baron. "Hut, my dear baron," said his friend, "at tho tlmo of tho crusades gunpowder had not yet been discov ered." "I'know that ns well as you do, and so did my ancestors." "How did ho win tho battle, then?" "Ho brought his artillery to bear on tho Saracens, and tho stupid fools, seeing tho guns, supposed that powder had ot last been discovered and lied in dismay." THIS WAX HE SrENT IT, Mrs. Wellment Why, you aro the same man I gave ten cents to last week. What did you do with it? Hungry Harry Well, I'll tell yer honest, mum. I spent it fcr a Turkish bath, a hair cut, a shampoo, a shave, n shine; a whito flannel yachting suit an' a diamond pin; an' I'm sorry ter say, mum, dat I'm busted agin. Judge. t anae for Divorce. Mrs. Friendly What's tho trouble? Can't you get along with your hus band? Mrs. N'ewdywcd no's all right, but I can't get along with his salary. Mrs. Friendly Oh, I understand. It is income-patibility. Texas Sitt ings. An Abnormal Squint. Tho other day T saw a friend of his sitting at a lunch In a restaurant and reading his paper at tho same time. "Why, how on earth can you manage to eat and read at the same time?" "I'ooh! I read with ono eye and I eat with the other." L'Escaut. Sareil the Trouble. First Domestic I never have to wash dishes at our house. Second Domestic How do you get out of it? First Domestic They are broken beforo they get that fa. Detroit Tribune Knew Iter Falling. Mrs. Ncwhonso Katie, Mr. New house says cook must boil the drinking water after this. Tell her to have soma boiled for dinner to-day. Katie Yes, ma'am. Mrs. Newhouse And, Katie, tell her to bo euro not to burn it. Judge. A Choleo or Terma. "I'm suro wo shall be on good terms," said the man who had just moved Into tho neighborhood to the corner grocer. "No doubt of it, sir. Especially," ho added as an afterthought, "if the terms are cash." Washington Star. l-he Had Heard of Them. Mr. Jason I wonder which one of them heathen goddesses that there gilt flgger represents? Mrs. Jason Fnllns, I guess. I've rend so often in tho papers of gilded palaces, and I allow this is ono of '.hem. Indianapolis Journal. Not Much of s Feat. Ilcrtie Auutio, the car was so crowded I had to stand on one foot all tho whole way from Harlem. Caddie Why, that's nothing. Any goose can do that and never think of talking about it. Harper's Young I'cople. OiiKht to 1 eol Tired. Madge I don't believe Mr. Twaddler knows what it means to feel weary. ' Florence How unjust! Madge Why? l'Torenco Ho has to listen to his own conversation. Chicago Intor Ocean. I'oor Thins;. "Jones, your dog barks so much at night that I haven't had a quiet sleep for a week." "Oront Scott! Docs ho bark as much ns that? I'm afraid he isn't well." Chicago Record. Summer Hotel Amonltlea. Sho (suddenly pervading tho piazza) What, no one here! Where have all tho nice men vanished to? He (bitingly) Where all the nice girls havo vanished to. Voguo. The Dictator. Hor Adorer May I marry your daugh ter? Her Father (dejectedly) I don't know. Ask tho cook; she runs the house. Brooklyn Life. Affliction Kupiireaied. Ethel I could havo loved Harold Vincent but for ono thing. Yvonne What was that? Ethel I was engaged to him. Chi cago Record. He Tickle I'eople to Dewth. "How do you liko your now family physician?" "Oh, he's perfectly killing!" Truth. ' ' CHILDREN. Oeorgo Crefty, of Sellnsrovo, Tfl., Is (he happy father of twenty-five- chil dren, Hij lost of which was prese nted to him by Mrs. Orolty tim other doy. There arc sold to lie 81,0(10 Muttering children In the -e hool of (1 riii.m.v The Increase has been great dui'iiu tho past four years that the defect Is considered to be tfiinsmltted from the stuttering scholars to tin others. Inquiring Hoy Atnminn. don't the Ut ile nngelrt have n gMxl time In heaven? Mamma Certainly, my child; why do you nsk? Inquiring Hoy Heeuuse It says here in tin' prayer book, "Tlie cherubim and seraphim continually do cry ."-Life. "Mamiiiii," sold .Tiitnlo- lnyntorlously, "did I ever have a llttli brother that fell into the well?" "So," said his mamma. "Why?" "Why, I looknl In to the well this morning and there was n little fellow down there looked Just like me." "I'm six nnd you're only four," said Bessie loftily to her little sister Belle, and then added In a still more aggra vating tone, "nml when I was four you were nothing but dust" "Yes," re torted Belle, spitefully, "nnd If I'd been n mini puddle I'd splashed yon, no I would." Harper's Young People. Toople who nre bent on fun enn have it in splto of poverty, says a New York paper. Small, unwiished boys nre often seen in City Hall Bark playing marbles without marbles, the substitutes lM-ing rounded pebbles. Along the river front it Is no uncom mon thing to see 'longshoremen play ing checkers on squares they have chalked on the sidewalk, the strlng picco of n pier, or perhaps a cellar door that does not slant too much, the checkers being grains of corn for the white pieces and pebbles or beans for the bli'i l; ones. Little Lady Alexander Duff, first granddaughter of the l'rlnee of Wales, has overcome the dislike to the bag pipes which she so strongly manifest ed ns a small baliy. On previous occa sions when she wns In Scotland she screamed luxtlly whenever the "skirl" of the national mimical Instruments has fallen upon her irs. This year, In the role of nn elder sister, she evi dently feels that she must display dig nity, and she has been present on sev eral public occasions with her parents when the bagpipes hare been sparing ly used, nud has borno the ordeal un-tliuekiugly. EDUCATION. f-, The usual series of military hops hna been begun at Cornell this year. ("rent Britain has eleven universities with 344 professors' nnd 13,4(X) stu dents. There nro seven women In the coun try who havo received the degree of LL. I). Since 1S.T3 Wesleyan hns graduated sixty-one classes, with a total member ship of 1,772. Tho Lehigh University Is to have tho finest laboratory in tho college world. It will cost $200,000. The Yale faculty havo framed a rule Imposing hereafter a severe penalty for yelling and other noises on the campus. At Lake Erie Seminary the elevator Is inn by girls, who pay the greater part of their expenses for tuition and board in this way. The three men holding the highest grades in tho military drill at Yale will receive a certificate equivalent to a diploma at West Point, Over 1,000 applications for admis sion to tho new Armour Institute in Chicago were received, but it has been decided that only COO can bo accom modated. Trof. Clnpp, who has been connect ed with the Creek department at Yale since 18! Ml, has accepted the entire charge of Greek in tho University of Cnllfornla. Mrs. Ixvl P. Morton has leased the house formerly occupied by Senator Jonet, of Nevada, In order to super vise tho complete education of her daughters. Everett Chauncey Bumpus, of Quln cy, Mass., a member of tho present freshman class of Harvard, is com pletely blind, but intends to take the full course for the degree of bachelor of ails. . Centre College, In Kentucky, of which Vice-President Stevenson is nn alum nus, has graduated in the last fifty years two Vice-Presidents, fourteen United Suites Representatives, six United States Senators, six Governors and ono Justice of the United States. Senator Morgan's old school teacher says that the Alabama "Ambassador" went to school for but one year. Ills lack of education, however, did not prevent him from studying law at an early age, and lieeomlng a successful practitioner. Ills literary acquire ments, for which he hns a reputation, wero gained by rending In later years. NUGGETS. Two girls In a Chestnut street car were talking of a third, whom they evidently didn't like. "She always looks to mo," said one, "ns If she had expected a surprise party and it didn't come." Philadelphia Record. Tho Tenant of the Second Flat (hot ly) I thought you assured the land lord that none of your family played tho piano! The Tenant of the Third Flat They don't play tho piano. Why, they're nil only beginning to learn now. Chicago Record. A little live-year-old boy, who had been taught to repeat "Iiove ono an other" ns a text to spenk on his first appearance at a suburban Sunday school, made even the minister laugh when, on his mime being called, he shrilly shouted, "Love little girls." Boston Transcript. A letter written with one's own hand Is considered moro respectful nnd cour teous thuu uny other. Bishop Barring ton, whose handwriting is execrable, wrote to a correspondent: "Out of re spect I write to you with my own hand, but to facilitate the rending 1 send you a copy made by my nmauu ensis." Louisville Western Recorder. Ono of the bureaus of the Treasury Department received a document re cently In which a claimant's name was spelh-d In two ways. The office sent word to the claimant that ho must iniiko nn ntlldnvlt ns to tho correct. Fpelllpg. When the uftldavlt camo the claimant spelled his name in one way In the body of tho paper nud slgus It In another. Washington Capitol. CIIICAfiOJiETTER. THE CIVIC PRIDE OF THE LAKE CITY ILLU3TRATED. fe.intm11 FIpM's Nulilo ilft-A fSre-t llllllnrtt Mutch Defcuo of the lJke -Mmili lml 1'ulltlr iM-hrU of the Fair N11 lliilldliiKH Sacrificed. 4 Hticclnl C'lilcro Lcttor. The peculiar civic pride that charac terizes Chicago's men of wealth has 'ledi again manifested In a striking Miy. Marshall Field, our mlllionalro in 'reliant, hns contributed a million inll.-irs towards founding 11 Columbian Museum, In which will be preserved onie of the best ntuilts of the World' ''oliiinblnu Exposition, nnd will re main a perpetual memorial of that great enterprise. It Is not ns yet known what pnrtlcti ):;; shape Mr. Field's bequest will take. t .."..1 MurHiiull Field. Probably a handsome memorial build ing will be erected, In which will be presented a complete picture of tho great Fnlr. together with such exhibits .is will best illustrate the progress of art and science at the present time. The Ives-Sehaefer billiard match here attracted unusual attention and lllus- -i rated thoroughly the present progress .if the game. The defeat of Champion Ives by the "Wizard" Schaefer was a very popular result.. Ives has attrib uted his defeat to the partlnllty of tho umpire, but It was In fact due to his own loss of temper. Nobody doubts the ability of Ives to defeat Schaefer If he plays his game. He Is a marvel at billiards and well deserving of the title of the "Nnpoleon" of the cue. But he lost his head entirely, owing to hla peevish temper, which was In striking contrast to the cheerfulness of Schaef er. The game developed a new billiard trick, known ns Uil-"anchor nurse." It was by the use of tlds trick that tha surprising runs were made. The trtct consists in making a depression in the cloth by a masse shot and getting one of the obJiK-t balls securely "anchored" in this hole. By skilful manipulation caroms can 1k counted In this manner almost Indefinitely. It is a trick, how ever, and will probably be barred in future games. A subject that Is likely to bo brought up in tho present Congress through Chicago Interests Is that of the naval control of the lakes and tho defense of: our northern frontier. It runy be ar gued that we are In no danger of at tack from Canada, and under the treaty .f 1S14 lMth the United States and (Jreat Britain nre confined to tho em ployment of only two ships of war on the lakes. It Is proposed, at least, that the representatives of our navy shall bo modern cruisers, and Illinois representatives will make nn effort to have one or two new steel war vessels built for lake sendee. The new Roby Athletic Association, located in Indiana, opposite this city, and which Is ambitious to emulate the pugilistic successes of the Olympic Club, of New Orleans, has scored a victory that will carry Joy to the hearts of the fistic fraternity throughout tho country. Practically, the club has es tablished Its right to hold boxing con tests under the laws of Indiana, and ' nn effort will now undoubtedly be made to secure tho Corbett-Mitchell light. Chicago will now hiwe the satisfac tion of seeing New York repeating on a small scale the wonders of the great Columbian Exposition. The last of the Midway Plntsance exhibitors has Anally departed, and tho West will know them no more forever. But jok ing apart, the exhibition of the prize winners In New York is a most com mendable enterprise. It will, if well managed, afford ninny who could not afford the time or means to visit Chi- Bound for Xow York. o:go a sight of the most meritorious ob.liH'ts exhibited, nnd no doubt many a !i did visit tho Fair would like un ,qioi iiinity for a narrower and more T'.tleiil view of the choicest objects of die great exhibit. Municipal politics will assume great 'mp.'i-tance In this city during the com i.g year. It would lie unjust to the I .n.k- spirit of tho city to say that the !i v:.-i!.-i of Chicago did not keenly feel lu-iitg the Fair period the many do 1. 'eiH-les which are apparent to tlis w of the stranger In the exterior view oi our progress und taste. There are -. -:... very serious problems awaiting i.-i.:tinii, and public sentiment Is about m tuned to the point that It will brook .1.1 further delay. The late elections ii 1 vc.l that the public mind is wide ival.e, nnd a genuine reform niove- II 'lit is likely to result. Chicago Is not : j-erfivt city. It is by uo means en :-:.e:.l municipal corporation. Tha ul.ed character of Its population, Its oiiee nu-ihods, the facilities for Inter-u-'.'iui passenger transportation, and ivuiy o:lier perplexing problems d-- !:.ir i wiser handling than they have yi t received. H l-i u fiir'nm fact that nil of the m i-t. valm-bK- Ktnto buildings at tho V.'oi'V's I'n W- Fimuhl have gone to tho I n k hiiip. Stii'etu.'cs like the New VYi'x, li;n-i,vl-;in!a nnd Massachusetts b.i11 la.;,N wc.v well worthy of prescr vi .i .'i. Tin y '.vere substantlnllv built nt )-'V.-.t hm:, :i!i1 represented 'distinct a"..-1''! -h iiirul si'luvtltf. Yet It was iui jsiswible to preserve the structures. WILfc 8. COOKK. .