WM nil .;m nil ng A Yicomte's vagary A jd mi- im mi mi The little Vlcomte de Danville In Ills younger days made no snnll pro teiusions to being a "bu1 dog." He par ticularly enjoyed flirtations, which Is not to he wondered at; but he prefer red them complicated, which, to my mind, is n mistake. In love, In cookery, the slmple.-t Is the bet, and, n urcover, does not pall po quickly. Me was forever (Iron mini; of in trisues, diseulKes, and niyste:ic-:. If he had had the task of reconstructing the old leKcnds, he would have m:ide Romeo scale Juliet's balcony as n te''Wnph line repairer. Oik day after a luncheon- which would have been a dinner if t'.ie sun liad not still been up, so ntmii rh;rn pairne had he consumed at it--C!r.s!on de ranville.laid a wager that before 'lx o'clock that evoniiiR it was then ner.rly four-he would return v'th at least three francs collected by sins'tiK in the streets. Twenty minutes later, an u;i';ei-pt, tattered, and pent-rally ssr-'picous-ln.)';-ins individual emerrr-d fro n the fa mous rest-iurant where the p;u iy !"i.l bet-a dluing, and ploppf.1 at a !.";. 'house in an ndjatn-.t sl-.-rr-t. I: v i; tip -ton, who lac-UeJ ucOiInx fir 1:!? role of street-singer. An li.ru- li'er. his companions be'crld Mm r-. (t 'ei the room whore tl.f.v wo r. him with the hest jmiienee i:i I t "There you are," lie nti:io;"r.---.-1. to -sin on tho table a lonls nrl r. voluminous park?.s. "I have vor my bet, and start! a flr th'iu-e oi vrinnirg: a very pret'y little vrnr-." ''Jn so f!;ort a time!"' they r'c. 'Rut what Is the trophy? -the h-.'.s-ba-H1.':' V.enfr?" "No." said Caston. "only hs trous ers', nut I can say no move, the tale Involves the honor of a lady of hi&h decree. " Jn vain did his friends endeavor to extract anything more from him. T'p sy as he was, the hero of the afer noon's adventure was dumb as an oyster. Loss dlseret than he, I shall recount bis adventures. When De Tianville entered the court of No. 75, Rue Duphot, the Barcine de Pompinet was leaning out of a win dow, watching the movements of her pet fox-terrier, which was playing In the court. Evidently the dog had no ear for music, for no sooner did the pretended beggar open his mouth to sing at the same time, from force of habit, directing an admiring glance at the fair lady before him than Punch trotted up to him, and, on a hostile demonstration from the singer, flew at the latter and planted hla teeth In an undefended portion of his anptomy. The baroness uttered a shriek, and Gaston, foreseeing his inability to collect the stipulated sum, and his consequent loss of the bet, was de parting, furious, to repair his ward robe, when a trim little maid came running after him. "Here," she said, slipping a frame Into his hand; "here is something the baroness sends you. Is It enough?" "Knough!" cried De Banville, with a disgust that was not all stimulated, "why, my pants Is all tore, to say nothing of my wounds!" "Well, you can come and settle the matter with my mistress, It would be better than going to the police." Miss Annette could have added that her mistress had already been defend ant in a dozen suits for assaults of this kind committed by Punch, and had lost every one of them. walf an hour later, Gaston took leave of the baroness, bearing away, beF.ide his twenty francs, a collect .on of del'cious smiles, a worn pair of the biron's troupers in place of his own, which had suffered heavy losses In the encounter with the dog, and even a letter of credit on the druggist at the corner. But the pretended bes? p,:ir had no need of liniments p.nd salves, for Punch, for once In his life, bad leaped too short and Gaston's l-.ide was whcle. ' As he was going down the servants' r.tairway, the pretended Invalid gal hintly saluted Mile. Annette on her blooming cheek. The girl did not get anhry, for the viftount was not so badly grimed that he was not still a good-looking young fellow. "What do you n:ean, sir??" she cried; "are you crazy?" "Yea," replied Punch's victim; ''your dog has given me hydrophobia, and that's the way I bite," But De Banville was revolving In hla brain a machiavellian scheme di rected against the peace of the baro ness, who pleased him prodigiously. That Very evening he sent her anony mously a hfjhdsome bouquet. The next day ho appeared beneath her window Bgaln, wearing the baron's trousers, a particularly delicate attention. Mine. de Pompinet appeared again, and be slowed on him a franc and a smile, on which latter he set a very high val uation. The following day, another smile and another piece of money, but In an envelope this time, and with a note. The affair was becoming Inter esting. Scarcely had Gaston got out Into the street, when he tore the note open. "At ubout four o'clock (it ran), go to No. 82, Rue du Cirque, and sing an air from 'The Huguenots.' You will bo repaid for your trouble," "Well, well," thought the viscount, "if I pleaaa hor in these astroctoua trigs, what will ulie bay when she sees me in all the splendor of my own ap purel? What extraordinary creative these blase women of society are! But why does she send me to the Rue du Cirque? She will be there, doubtless, concealed behind some friend's cur tali. s. Well, we shall see.'' Promptly at four, Gaston was at the appointed place, singing: "Plu biancB del velo." Hut he saw nothing unitminl and went away at last with two sous giv en him by a little girl. The following day the baroness again sent him to the Rue du Cirque, but this time It was "Faust" that he must slug. You should have seen tho feeling with which I)i Banville sang: "Salve dlmora casta et pura." But again nothing untoward hap pened. Still, Instead of hU lover-like Impatience, his pride as an artist was satisfied. He bore away with him n collection of fourteen sous. It was now time to take n decisive step. That evening, In his offering of flowers - the fourth the baroneiu found the following note, unsigned and in an unknown hand: "It is an admirable trait to love music, but the artists themnelves de serve encouragement, lio you not think that the duo from Taust' is worthy of being suns; in pome more private plnee than a court?" 1:3 Hhe rend tlico line;', the J OT Baroness de Pnmpinet almost f.ilnicd. "Great heavens;" she cried, "ci.uc one knows my secret. I am !o;: Slip (I'd not close her eyes th.U t -v.-tire n!i;Iit. ,hlle the bnrone:--3 was rump'ina the la co of her pillow under her easy little blonde head, Gaston, in 'lu su-okins-rooin of his club, hr.d j .!-,! er.di-d the recital of the events n -r rat'.il, keeping to himreif, o conr.-e the names of streets and ev.-ons. "And v. hat are jou r.oinz to ic !M)v;?" he was nsi-d; "for jivi : i : . ' il.) rot In'.irul to keep up your v:ca eat role forever." ' What nm I jriS f1 do? To-wr-row the stree; s:a;;er will ;;ive w.i..- tc the man of the world. You cr.n in.ng ;:ic the rlupc rfar tlon of the l 'iy when I pny to her: 'I still come to be of you. But I nm rot n n-crcen i; v bi r, and I prefi r tho jrii't of : 'ii smiles." Iih, boys, what a th: t will mnV!" ' What new Joke in Canton t-".'n'; you?'1 asked the Marquis do I'ies:in. who entered the room just then. 'Oh, nothing much," mid ('in,.n. nonchalantly, "jut a litle adventure- of mine. I was amusing them with fie tricks of a woman." "Faith, In the matter of tricks, p"n need not try to rival women. Just listen to this: A charmlnf? friend o.r mine has a most undependablo hus band, you can never tell whether he Is coing to go out or to stry at ho le. Now, can you guess what she has de vised to keep me posted on the pro gramme of the day? Why, she hires a poor beggar of a street-singer to come and sing before my house. We hav a code agreed upon beforehand. Each opera has a special significance. 'The Huguenots' means 'I am waiting for you.' 'Faust' Is 'Not to-day.' 'Wil liam Tell' is 'I shall be in tho Bols. And so on. It Is a great scheme." The shout of laughter that greeted this recital could be heard four squares away. Gaston alone did not Join in it. Translated for the Ar gonaut from the French of Leon do Tinseau. An Unappreciated Gift. It Is rude to look a gift-horse In the mouth but It Is also wise for the giv er to inquire what sort of a horse would be most welcome. A writer In Tit-Bits reports a happening In the ?erkiii3 family bearing on this point. When old Mr. Perkins left the ho :se in which he had lived for forty years, n.nd arrived with all his household "i'ooiis and ti ensures at the home of lis son, there was trouble. Or.o of his most treasured family u I-'.oains was nilsshiB a big far My iiii.-m bound in full calf. Mr. Peri ns .-.'. o inconf-olate. "I've used It regular or years.' he said, "and I would a't lave lost it for worlds." "Never mind," said his son, "we'll ee what can be done about it." A litt'.e later he appeared with n lew album, beiuti fully bound In cr'rn on plush, with great brass clasps, .vh'cli he prepensed to his father. On teeing it, the old man's jaw Tell o rn alarming decree. He bang?d his .v'Cu.icd fist on the table with fove. "In the name of goodness," he said, 'who could strop a razor on that?" A Burdened Msn. A certain small boy in grade num ber ai-i was rapidly assuming manly w.ys. Not long ago, say3 a writer in the Cleveland Plain Dealer, there was to he an entertainment at his schcol. Songs, recitations and a grab-bag were the principal features. The small boy waxed eloquent of the com ing glories of this show, and more especially of the part he was to take. On the morning of the entertain iif it his mother suggested that he sh..ld take his little sister, about four years old, with him. He hung his head. "Don't you want to take her?" his mother asked. "No, I don't," he answered. "Why not?" " 'Cause there ain't none of the oth er fellers has to bring their children," was the reply. It Would Not Show. That everything should be neat and shipshape is most important aboard a yucht. A writer in the Mariner's Advocato tells the story of tho captain of a certain sloop, who crossed the deck in a hurry, seemingly very much perplexed. A lady stopped him and asked what the trouble was. "The fact Is, ma'am," he said, "our rudder's broken." "Oh, I shouldn't worry about that," said the lady, "Being under water nearly all the time, no one will notice U." THE COLUMBIAN, PI In 1837 Titus & Angevine Con ceived Idea of Amalgamation. AND THEN P. T. BARNUM The Clever Showman ThougK It Could be Done The Tent Show Business Controlled by a Few Men. Forepaugh a Tireless Fighter. On the eve of the unforsecn panic of 1S37, June, Titus & Angevine, of tho powerful and wealthy combine or "Klalfoots," conceived the Idea of am algamating the interests of those en gaged in tho circus and menagerie business and tho Impo' tation of wild beasts into one gigantic monopoly to ho known as the (iolo.Kh',-,1 Institute Considerable progress was innd-i ' the alarm of ninnngeis, who dcsltid to preserve their individuality, v.lirn tho financial crash of the tv U;ry thwarted their scheme. It was decades after this wcll-uisU successful attempt at eontiali'.itimi, before Phincas Taylor llarnmi i a no to believe that tho tent chow 'nisir.esa could be controlled by a fey vr., with himself at the head. Th'-i opin ion was strengthened by the. Immeoi ate unparalleled success of the I'. T. Barnuni Show under the dirc.-'ioua '".t William C. Coup. Adam Korepaush, was at f11 h.'ntl of a large show and his fle'd was, nfter leaving Philadelphia, the terri tory went of Pittsburg and Buifalo. Ho had touched the Kast and piid fo." his experience, snipping bin wholi outfit out of Yankeedom i-.a fast nr. a special train could carry him. In IST'.t he again tempted fate down liast v,l(h unsatisfactory results, but later on he conquered the land of the rising sun and by tours of tho extreme West the Pacific Coast and the .South, ac quired a national reputation nnd be came the only admitted rival of P. T. Barnum. "Old" John Robinson "owned the South" as Barnum and Coi:;i learned to their cost. Then there entered the Amcrl-.an sawdust arena, a new gladiator with his fighting clothes on In the person of James A. Bailey, backed by his former employer an" later associate, James E. Cooper. Bailey was a Whirl wind warrior and hit a nianagerltl head wherever he saw one, and went after P. T. Barnum and Adam oro paugh as fearlessly 83 he did t'ie small fry. Cooper was a man of considerable financial resources, and Bailey, in 18S1, planned the purchase of tho Forepaugh and Coup shows, which added to the London, would have made Cooper and Bailey a power on the rond. The Coup shov; was in straits but the Forepaugh :how nna already cleared for the season three times as much money as its wouid-bo purchaser offered for tlie entire fabric. Adam Forepaugh only lanc'-cd at tho inadequate proposition. Bailey now looked hopefully to an alliance with P. T. Barnum as a stepping ston? to his heart's desire. Bailey assumed the Barnum manage ment nnd the personal direction of all the advertising, and he just made ev erything hum and the weaklings stand from under, or take to the woods. P. T. Barnum and James A. Bailey both underrated Adam Forepaugh who wn3 a diamond In the rough without graces or culture, but an ubum'ance of common sense. One spring P. T. Barnum came out In one of the official publications of the show in a personal card, the like of which he wns so skilled in Inditing and boldly called on the dear public to support the Barnum show and the Barnum show alone. With the clever argument that if he received all the patronage, he would be the better equipped to supply all the arenic am usements, Mr. Barnum was speaking for himself and the "equal owner" who probably endorsed the sentiment. When Adam Forepaugh read this proposition he exploded verbally and emphatically, and he said: "Barnum and Bailey or no one else In the busi ness can ever monopolize It." Barnum & Bailey, in their attempt to corner the business, nh:o set out to secure the brains In the circus call ing. Their staff was made up of the very beBt of talent but when they were all assembled there Btill remain ed men of capacity and Intellect in the employ of pugnacious and hectoring rivals fully able to contend against an nihilation. In England, after the death of Mr. Barnum and Mr. Bailey's sole succes sion, the result was quite different than here. In that "tight little Isle" the Barnum & Bailey show crushed all opposition out of existence and lastingly ruined the circus business ia Oreat Britain. No "Mountain High" Waves When writers speak of waves "mountain high" they are merely In dulging In poetic extravagance. A wave exceeding 30 feet in height Is seldom encountered. Some have been seen on tho Atlantic that reached a height of 44 to 48 feet, but that waa entirely exceptional, Hugglna That pretty little sculpt ress I met at your reception the other evening completely turned my head. Mlsa Peachley Indeed! I knew she modeled in clay, but I wasn't tware that she worked la wood. VIS II II 10 BL00MS3UR0. PA FOOMXO Till: C'OM.KCTOUS. Rutting n House With 1'iike Antique a Trick Worked In Knxlnnil. Evidently America Is not the only fools' pnrndlse where the hoodwink ing of collectors of antiquities Is a profitable business. Here Is a scheme which, according to the Grand Maza rine, is true in all Its details and Is prnctlced In London: trft the reader Imagine ho Is lis tening to the end of an earnest con versation between a dealer of world wide reputation and one of the hit ter's most Important customers, a man whose bottomless p:irse Is the lodestar of nil swlndlcdom. The vis itor complains that nothing really fine Is to be picked up nowadays. When he thinks he Ikib nt length dis covered some ancient piece of furni ture In on oul-oi'-the-way farmhouse, he Is sure to learn nt the hut mo ment that it Is not authentic and has merely been planted there by some cunnlnii roguo of Wardour street or the Hue dos I-'auKsaircn. "Ah," replies the dealer, looking very sag!, "I know at leas' one place where then1 are still i.ome perf'-ct treasurer: It's an ohl Elizabethan mansion in Slunibeilu.'j.-lilre, but the owner, an unmarried lady, nearly seventy, though she has barely enough to live upon, absolutely re fuses to sell a mii;.,!o article. Slio won't even allow a stranger to enter the house. 1 manared to gt t In by a trick once, and I assure you I was almost dumbfounded at what I saw. The whole place Is in identically the same state it. was 200 years bio." Tho hook Is now baited, but tho dealer, who knows his Juan, allows several days to elapse. Then he sends a telegram: "Just learned that the old lady will be absent from home for a d. Iv or two; can bribe servants to show house." Tho placo Is some distance from London; no matter, off tho pair go, only to find on arrival at their des tination that by nomo fatality the owner of the house has not gone away after nil, so that the Inspection must perforce bn put off. Naturally the collector, if he Is worth his salt, knows no rest now until another op portunity to soo thy treasures pre sents Itself. Hla desire Is finally gratified, and Jn company with his "disinterested" cicerone he Is allowed to run hastily through a few rooms filled with dusty old furniture piled up in pic turesque confusion. He U not per mitted to make a close Inspection m der pretext that the old lady may re turn at any moment and that he will find It difficult to explain his pres ence. "What a terrible pity," sigh both men simultaneously as they hurry away, "that such admirable speci mens should remain here in the dust!" A month, perhaps two months pass; then one morning the dealer rushes In breathlessly to his custo mer's presence. "You remember the old lady?" "Yes, what about her?" "She Is absolutely compelled at last to raise some rendy money, nnd has consented to sell me some of her most precious historical relics." "By Jove, what luck! Buy every thing you can for mo. I must have those things, whatever they cost." What the confiding millionaire did not know though he assuredly sus pects something of tho kind now is that the Elizabethan mansion was rented by the dealer; that ull It con tained was the same person's prop erty, and that both the carefully trained servants and the "old lady" herself were In lils pay. The Largest Steam Whistle. East St. Lo.ils has the biggest steam whistle la the world, says the St. Louis Post-Dlsputeh. It is a re markable triple, machine with three voices a three-chime whistler, whose capacity for the nnnlhilatlon of peace Is extraordinary. This whis tle blows a ten milo blast nt half steam, and with favorabla wind has a disturbing power of twenty miles. It costs a dollar every time it la blown. But this great whlatle Is not all noise. It is an idea in economy, a whistle trust, a noise combine. Al most all the little noises, yelps, toots and whines of smaller mechanical throats In East St. I.oais are now dumb. The giant whistle trust whis tles for them. The independent whistles have to whistle offtime tc bo heard. Within the range of this whistle are said to be 100,000 perrons who tell time by it. The greatest modern siren com prises three whistles. The largest is almost six feet in height, und nearly as big around as a roan. On each side of tho main one 13 a smaller whistle. Tho three units comblno to make one noise, with which even Ba banne, miles away, across the Mis sissippi river, In the west end of St. Louis, is well acquainted. This big triple whistler was also set up at a railway company's elec trical generating station "ns a feat ure." It Is connected with an electric clock, which Is regulated by the government standard time sent out from Washington on the dropping cf a ball at exactly noon each day. The electric clock which connects with the whistle is guaranteed not to vary five teconds in time a year, and tho clock's record to date is satisfac tory. AlmoBt every man looks nt his watch when the first blast Is sound ed by the big whistle ut 7 o'clock In the morning. Almost every house wife In East St. Louis glances at her mantel timepiece when the siren wooes uoon the second blast of the day. The third blast Is an hoar later, and the last Is at 6 In tho evening. Tho Kind Yon Have Always In mo for over 30 years, ana was uccn ntauo unuor his pcr. 7?" fonal supervision slnco Its Infancy. -CSsCcAtt: Allow no ono to dcoclvo you in this. AU Counterfeits, Imitations nnd Juntas-good" are l.iifc Experiments that trlllo with and endanger tho health of Infants nnd Children Experience against Experiment. 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