STORIES OF THIEVES. OF INGENUITY AND COOLNESS, Good Tales of Light Fingered Gents. INSTANCES It has not been many years since a well-known jurist chanced to ask a friend the time of day as he entered the temple of justice, remarking at the ame time that he had forgotten his ratch at home. At the conclusion of his day’s duties he returned home, and when he asked his wife for his chro- nomeler was not a little surprised to hear that she had given it to a young man who had come for it, representing | that the jurist had sent him. The young'man was a thief. He had heard the Judge remark that he had forgot- ten his watch. Without a moment's delay the cunning rogue ran to the Judge’s house and told the good lady | of the house that her husband had sent | him for the watch. It was a clever | story, plausibly told, and it won the watch, Tue proprietor of a large jewelry | house in Cincinnati can scarcely have | forgotten his e.perience with an ex- pert knave. It was along toward noon pune very hot day in the summer of 1876 when a ministerial-appearing fel low in a black suit, with a white tie, | entered the store. Je leisurely walked | to the showcase and asked to see some diamond studs. After some hesitation be bought a small stone for £35. Ie then wished to look at some rings— thought of making his wife a present. As he followed the clerk to the show- tase containing the diamond rings he began to eat an apple. Several valua- ble gems were looked at with dissatis- faction. One valued at $500 pleased him, but was not just what he wanted. At length he saw one in the case he thought was just the thing. - As the clerk reached to get it the parson-like customer pressed the £500 ring deep | into the apple he was eating and clev- erly tossed it out of the clerk didn’t notice the 1 low who was door. The , DULL & fel standing on the outsid ed that i folds of the Ivers garments. am the Rev. Dr. customer, in wrath, naming s in a village about rity miles distant, | “and I'll give vou to understand that 1} did not come here to be insulted.” Well, the proprietor became angry snd called. a policeman, and the al. leged clergyman was removed to a back room, protesting idnignantly at the treatment. A short consultation was held, and a telegram was sent to the address given by the prisoner, mak. ing inquiry as his character and thereabouts. The reply was slow in coming, and it was decided to search the prisoner. He was forced to strip, and every fold and crease in his clothes was searched. It is needless to say the ring was not found. The telegram to the village, thirty miles away, came, saying that the Rev. Dr. G no was one of the most reli- | able men in the town, and that he was visiting friends in Cincinnati. Up to} this time the proprietor had been of opinion that the customer was a pious fraud, but the telegram changed the | tune. He wanted to make amends right away. The parson talked heavy damages and law, but was at length soothed into silence by four crisp £100 bills. In some way the story of the minister's insult leaked out. His! friends heard it and asked him about | it. In the end he called at the jewelry store to see about it, and the preaprietor was amazed to find he had been duped. Detectives were at once put on the case, and in a few days srrested the bogus clergyman and his confederate trying to pawn the ring. They were the famous ¢‘ Frenchy” La Mountain and Cal Duncan, A night watchman wno was employ- ed to protect a jewelry store in Denver | against the ravages of thieves, was neatly outwitted by the notorious Billy Forrester some years before his death. The firm carried an immense stock of gems, and kept them in a large old- fashioned safe. Forrester had, by long years experience, become so fa- miliar with safes of that pattern that he could tell when to reverse and when to turn the Knob forward, by placing his ear close to the door above the com. bination, and in this way could open the safe in a short time. By taking a wax impression of the key-hole he made a key for the front door. Hav- ing previously located the safe in the store, ho was now ready to begin. If was a cold, snowy, stormy night, about 10 o'clock, and Forrester walked up to the stors with an air of owner- ship and unlocked the door. He car- ried a small sample-case 2in his hand. Going in, he turned up the gas in the rear of the store and shook down the stove. He leisurely worked the com- bination to the safe, and in less than half an hour he had before Lim thou- ands of dollars worth of costly jewels od watches. At this very interesting wint the night watchman came in. “Good evening”, said the cordial urglar, as he continued to remove aluables from the safd to his sample hse. “Come back to the fire apd warm G——n,” said the tones of ex: ir h to do yourself; it is very cold out to-night.” The patrolman allowed that it was, and sauntered back to the stove. “I'm packing up my samples,” went on the thief, suavely, “Going out on ready to-night. man to examine. In this way Forrester packed over to his sample case, cuatting cheerfully wll the while. As he was about to close his sample by a happy thought, and then picked up a very pretty ring. Turning the watchman he asked him if he had a wife. a careless laugh Forrester tossed him the ring, saving; tell her it is a mark of appreciation her husband.” ple’s property was delighted, and was It was not until the next morning that that had been practised upon him. Forrester by that time was well out of the way, and his connection with the robberry fore his death, when he confessed it. -_—— HISTORICAL. The steamship Savannah made the first ocean vovage in July, 1819, sailing from New York to Liverpool in twenty- six dave, The government of St. which claims to have the only original bones of Columbus, is desirous of forwarding them to the United States i in return for them $20,000 cash down, and twenty per cent. of receipts on public exhibition of the same. The repeal of the embargo, which re. ceived the t od tha ” is CI { we ONE 1 resides ture March it's signa Of WES A ITY In earlier wn for OW ined : OrsaxKe tf Tower Hill lowing of 100 or 2 gentlemen in ery and white frieze, lined son tafletas, and to spend two or three times their yearly income in a merry dave it $i rey x fie B i : Helr or Shoe Lane with estales an fit rigid ing in Gray's Inn Fields, 1sii and Highgate, and in buring fine enough to adorn court j and processions, where i nobles of the land accepted the honor of bearing the queen's litter. A correspondent to the Pall Gazette sends the following extract from Pepy’s Diary, which is very dangers of a mild Winter. After recording in August, 1661, ‘+a sickly time both in the city and country everywhere (of a sort of dresses © greatest rd * iis unless it was in the plague time,” he 1662, the following remarkable entry: «15th January, 1662. A fast day order- ed by the Parliament, to pray for more seasonable weather: it having hitherto been Summer weather, that it is, both as to warmth and every other thing, just as if it were the middle of May or June, which do threaten a plague (as all men think) to follow, for so it was almost the last Winter; and the whole year afier hath been a very sickly time to this day.” ——————————— Popular Books, Charles McDonald—The book whic) had the greatest run in its day fre m iny counters was ‘Lorna Doone.” 1 havn't had a call for it for months, but for a long time everybody who came begin to get enough to supply the de- mand. Of the old books, Dumas’ “Monte Cristo,” “The Three Guards men” and “The Mysteries of Paris have # hold on my customers, I sell a copy of Vietor Hugo's ‘Les Miserables” every ten days regularly. Occasionally 1 have an order for some one of Guan ter’s books, ‘‘Barues of New York” be ing in the lead. 1 had a box of Steven son's “Jekyll and Hyde" which I had left over after the rage for Stevenson's books. I got this box out the other day and put the books in front of the house, but people look at them and then laugh at me Poor Hugh Con. way’s books seemed to bave drop out of recollection. What a ran had! And there was John Habberton, When his “Helen's Babies” came oun’ people stood in a line in this store te buy them. I don't believe I could give ) A mirror brought to this country In 1776 stands in the window of a Chester (Penn, ) furniture store. The coast line of Alaska exceeds in Jeugsi by 3020 miles that of all the re- ma of the United States, . At the present sacred pigs roam inviolate about the as Is rokm les of Canton and elsewhere in China. Electricity drives drills Apples as Medicine. Chemically, th: apple is composed of vegetable fibre, albumen, sugar, gum, chlorophyll, malic acid, gallie acid, lime and much water. Furthermore, the German analysts say that the apple phorus than any other fruit or vege- table. This phosphorus is admirably for renewing the essential the brain It is, perhaps, for understood, and spinal chord. sent the appie as the food of the gods, who, when they felt themseves to be growing feeble and infirm, resorted to Algo, the acids of { the apple are of signal use for men of sedentary habits, whose livers are | sluggish in action; those acids serving ito eliminate from the body noxious | matters, which, if retained, would | make the brain heavy and dull, or bring about jaundice or skin eruptions | and other allied troubles, Some such an experience must have led to our custom of taking apple sauce with roa t pork, rich goose and like dishes. The malic acid of ripe apples either raw or cooked, will neutralize any excess of chalky malter engen- | dered by eating too much meat. It is also the fact that such fresh meats as [the apple, the pear and the plum, when | taken ripe and without sugar, diminish | acidity in the stomach rather than pro- i voke it. Their vegetable salts and juices are converted into alkaline car- { bonates, which tend to counteract acid | ity. A good, ripe, raw apple is one of the easiest of vegetable substances for the stomach to deal with, the whole process tof its digestion being completed in eighty-five minutes. Gefrard found (that the “‘pulpe of roasted apples | mixed in & wine quart of faire water, { mind and body. be as apples and ale, which we call lambes-wool, never faileth in fiseases of raines, whieh rained ' “The an apple cut pnewhat thicl inside ; certain the hath often proved both crownes and « ing of and the § TEN i Lat ii * FAME Tesson, A h#t: To eat the docts Hospital, i wire fo bed, rh gh A Whim of Fortune, Probably the most striking ijgastra tion of the whim of fortune in con- nection with the turf is the story of iy and their beautiful is bread. filiy, Reciare. that was little more than sufficient keep himself and family. the boy was sent to Jimmy Shields, at Bay. He made some nature soon clamored for her rights, and young Warnke found that he was much too big and heavy to ride any reducing. About this time the father, who had put by a couple of hundred dollars, clubbed his savings with the earnings of his son, and set off for the sale of Commodore Kittson's yearlings at Erdenheim. A handsome black caught ther eyes, and when she was put up at auction they went their limit and secured her for $425, The filly was brougut to Brighton Beach and a stable constructed for her near the littie cottage where the switch-tender made his home. Reclare was the name bestowed upon the filly by Mrs. Warnke, and, as the winter passed, the young miss improved in sppear- ance, until she was the finest looking youngster around the Brighton Beach track. When Spring came and Re- clare began to take her gallops, young Warnke, now trainer and exercise boy combined, found that the black filly had a world of speed, and visions of big winnings at Gravesend and Sheeps- head Bay filled his mind. The first time Reclare ran was at Sheepshead Bay in a big field. «She was a very long short in the betting, and every member of the Warnke family was there to see her debut. Johany Rea- gan had the mount, and after the first furlong there was nothing in it but Reclare, the filly winning under a double pull. Mutuel tickets costing $5 yielded a dividend of $195 on the race. From that time forward Raclare was the champion of her age and sex, suffering defeat but three - times, her earnings in stakes and purses alone footing up close to $25,000. It is a modest estimate to place Mr. Warnke's fortune at £50,000, besides which he still owns Reclare, and should she train on as a three yesr-old and retain her form of Inst season he can with perfect safety write down his winnings at $25,000~perhaps double that sum. Arabian Bables, Lifo has exceptional difficulties for the babies of nations, espe- cially for those who are of sufficiently high rank to be brought o to all the ancient customs bandage about its boay, atier 1t nas baen bathed and perfumed. The little creature is then placed on its hack, its arms and feet are stiaightened and the entire body swathed to the shoulders. In this position it remains motionless for forty days, but the bandage is re- moved twice a day that the child may have a bath. The Arabs believe that this process will make the body straight for life. Under such ecireum- stances it seems fortunite that baby- hood is not a period which can be re- membered in after years, for no one would choose to suffer such days of misery again, even in recollection. day after her birth, holes, usually six throughout her life-time, except during periods of mourning for relatives, is shaved, a ceremony which scarcely be performed in our own couniry, where thick hair is usually of un latter growth. This operation is con- gidered a very important one, and thirty or foity persons are witnesses of garded as a very weighty matter; it must not be tha sea, or hidden in some crevice of a wall. The fortieth day marks a turning point in the child's life. Heretofore it has only been seen by its parents, the slaves on duty, snd a few intimate friends of the family; now, however, it may be seen by anvbody, and is re- garded as fairly launched on the tide of existence. Several charms are attached to its body for protection against the “evil eye,” boys wearing them to a certain age, and girls still longer. The favor- { ite charm consists of a gold or silver locket worn on a chain, The smallest children among Arabians are st y perfumed ; every. | thing ther use, frem cies of their clothing to $3 the Lnlief, In covered it ved hafare i ¥ a fe n t. ¥ L100 esd ns of : *. DEACON ANG Giana HORSE NOTES, ~The Latonia spring meetings are open. — Landy Bu'lion will be tried double with Aubine. ~The trotters will perform at Pitts- burg. Both local trot!ing meetings were successes lnancially. ~W, B. McDonald has a string of twelve horses at Buflalo, - Jockey Martin Dergen has signed with David Gideon for the season. ~There will probably be racing at the Ivy City track, Washington, next fail. _~Tenny incurs no penalty for the i Suburban by his win of the Brooklyn. ~Tenny is entered for the St, James | Hotel stakes at Gravesend, to be run. -~1t is Likely that Taral will ride Can- vass in the Great American Stakes, ~The seating capacity at the Sheeps- { head Bay track has been nearly doubled eloce last year. ~Foxhall Keene will race Tourna- ment under his own name and eventu- | ally use him in the stud, —During the first four days of the Brooklyn meeting J. A.& A, H, Morris won seven races aud $18,185, ~Mose Addler, of Baltimore, was one | of the most conspicuous figures on the track. He was always in sight. ~—Jockeys Camp and Michael Bergen were set down for the remainder of the Brooklyn meeting. —Hon, William L. Scott’s horses, | formerly raced as the Algeria Btable, now run as the Northampton Stable, ~0, F. Emery, of Cleveland, has two strings in training, but pone of his horses will start in his early circuits, ~The western Bookmakers’ Associ: iw tion has secured the betling for the Bt. louis meeting. "hi Repox ed | price, $50,000, i —~Henry Se stone 11, 4 n | bul erratic Guy fast as cindy ders recently sent Cling 1s and the ne quariers train passes , and every night at 10 0'¢l tise bridge and as f to induce | But as they do not ap; gi within a few there is no time to | the figures on the bridge are hurled in- water below. every night for a week, Last iseveral men from Hallsville | near the bridge till the three figures appeared and at them without effect. living in the neighborhood are panic.~Chicago Tribune. their stand wildly enginee ar until the ne is vards of stop the train, and to the in a ———— — Slow to Understand Browning. Mr. Wagstafl has been reading Browning aloud to Miss Wilder. Wagstall—< And now what do you think of that particular poem? Deo { you think it worthy of Browning's re- patation 77 { Miss Wilder It's quite too perfect i ly lovely. Only Browning could have { written it.” {i Wagstaff— Yon | fully 2” Miss Wilder—‘Porfectly. clear as light to me.” understand it It is as know but it might be a little obscure, ‘as I've only been reading every other | line, and” the sweet girl bad flounced from the room.—Ameries. API» Blackmalling in New York. “You can send all letters addressed i me to my room,” I heard a gentie- man gay at 8 promivent hotel yester- day. “Is not yon wife with you?” quietly asked the clerk, whereupon the guest flushed up and demanded to know what the other meant. “There are no letters coming to me that my wife may not see, sir,” was his some- what indignant remark. «Oh, no offense and no insinuation, 1 assure you,” said tho clerk with perfect equanimity. ‘We are obliged to be careful sbout such things, becsuse women sharks prey on the male guests of all the hotels, Before you have been forty-eight hours in New York you will receive letters from women claiming to be old acquaintances, ask- ing for appointments, and so on. "ot course ‘you:do not know them and never heard of them, but that is their little game. If they can catch one man in a hundred and weave lum into their toils they are satisfled. Now, such letters as those are best not handed up to a gentleman's room when his wife is with him. He may be a saint, but such letters destroy human nfidence. How do they got address- of guests? Easily enough, through hotel papers which are published ly with complete lists of all the vals at the principal hotels.” The ‘es anger was appeased by the time explanation was Fiven and be- re he walked awny heard him say ‘Well, I guess your rule is safest. i | got my letters in the office."~N, Press. . A AI LSA It is not every boy that can make a bieycle for himself. Yet that is what a colored lad of Georgia, 4, have filled well --President Dwyer hopes to i about a dozen of starters Brookiyn Handicap to try cond at same welghts avd distaves some ds; | next week, adding $5000. i Tho the a— loseph npson, | speculations on the turf in this country { were not successful. He lost §20,000 on the Brooklyn handicap. - William Hayward will not sign with i any other stable than that of Hearst & | holds, and he will be able to get all the i outalde riding he wants, --F, Gebhard’s $21,500 | Canvass, | starter for the Hodson stake, but i scratched, Rumor | gone wrong in one of his fore legs. purchase, i ———————— An Adroit Swindler, i le was a detective, yet there was a | EE i nothing that indicated his calling. { have had many criminale, said he modestly to a Boston { (xlobe reporter. “There is not a single would be compelled to admit the same. “1 remember one case where I was employed to hunt down a swindler who bad victimized many wealthy people in England, but I failed. 1 think, however, I frightened him out of the business, for he stopped his crooked work. ‘His name was Haven. He sub. scribed to a number of English, Scotch and Irish newspapers and purchased a copy of Burke's Peerage. When a notice of the decease of & nobleman or wealthy commoner appeared he would read the obituary notice, study up the family in the Peerage, or if it was not there he would do the best to find out what he could of the man, and having done this he would dedicate a letter to the dead man, his confederate being a very beautiful young woman. “The latter purpc~ted to be from a woman whom the dead man had ruined and sent to America to live, and the letter would state that she had not re- ceived her usual allowance for so long a time, and that as a consequence she and her child were suffering. At the closing she would say that if she did not hear from him very soon she would return and expose him. “It was a cruel scheme, and in nine eases out of ten worked successfully. The relatives, rather than have the name of the deceased dragged in the mud, usually sent what money was and then, after telling the woman that the gentleman was would negotiate with her for a settle ment. “Haven secured many thousands of doilars in a couple of years. Only on two occasions did relatives cross to the On these ocon- FOOD FOR THOUGHT, Never be dispirited, Right the day must win, Home is a perfect kingdom, Prayer is religion in action, A man may be knowing, but no wise, Love iz blind, but it has its specta~ cles, The first principle in politics is selfish Ness, Mankind are all hunters in various degree, The cheerful giver Is a very lonesome man, Btinginess costs more than extravas gance, A man can quit loving easier than & woman can, Whilst you seek new friendships, cule tivate the old, A noble gentleman; he stands in the face of honor. After praying for goodness, don’t fore get to be good. A man who attempts to flatter you takes you for a fool Men are hike wines—age sours the bad and belters the good. The only real giver in the world fs the cheerful giver. "I'he virtues and vices sometimes live very close together, A wise man is always engaged in cor. reciting his own fauils, When a woman gets cross cross at everybody she meets, No man votes who is persuaded by an» other how he shall vote, she gets To enjoy a good reputation, give pub. licly, sud steal privately. Nine times out of sEvuel mana ten, “absence of ' is absence of bral ns, is apt to torment : at yh # v AV Dg. Man, like the fire, Nothing but death ean frieads from each separate true other, or ow 4 * od nams is a good thing tohave, every better 1 fight, rR. Smile at some i tell you all the trout will r had, A fool is always wishing time AWAY, man is always enjoying * who mingles humor with his life und a cushion for a world of He who knows not when to bend and laugh, has scarcely learned philosophy { by half, “horse sense™ The man with the most lets Liorse-racing severely tl is the one who lets { One, Many men have ended by becoming oundrels, who began by running in i iebt, {4 The hardest of all things to get a man to stop and look bh mseif squarely in the ace, People who never worry do a good deal of missionary work that they don’s j get credit for. : ¢ | One of ths hardest times to love an i enemy is when he is pros ening like a | green bay Gree, No man can be provident of his time who is not prudent in the choice of his | company. { Those peciie who have a great deal | of perfect propriety don’t have much of anyibing else, It is not good for a man to think too much, He should work a little for ress and change. Reputation is the mean of life; some men have to live up to it, others to live it down, To forgive when we have forgotten is easy; to forgive when we know we can never forget is noble. If some men had the nine lives of a cat they would waste them all in folly and then bave nine death bed repent~ ADCS, Nearly every one rates himself at his true valuation, but he is careful not to take the world into his confi dence, “Hope springs eternal in the human breast,” but Despondency always pols lutes the waters before our thirst 1s quenched. The half thoughts of the foolish, put into words, are often the levers that move the wise to think in silence and then act. Our opinjons se a good deal like the time of our clocks and watches, no two just alike, yet we all follow and keep our own, It takes ua y2ars to Jearn what little we do know and twice as long 0 une learn the great deal that we think we know, but don’t, II 1t 1s bard to forgive an enemy an oon dno rys oJ, uel mors , mi ) ; a for the same offense, ; To yield love for service is too much like & commercial n, )