&' $ BaI4 ESTABUSIIED FEBRUARY 8, 1S4G, VoL , Ao. 335. -Entered u Pittsburg Post- rfficc, November 11. 1SST, at sOond-ciass matter. Business Office 7 and09 Fifth Avenue. News Rooms and .Publishing House75, 77 and 79 Di amond Street TU1 paper having ntorc than Double the circulation of any other Lithe mte outside cl Philadelphia, its ndvnntKes as an adver tising medium Mill be apparent. TERMS OP THE DISPATCH. rOETAGE FREt IN TUE UNITED STATES. DAILT DisrATCit, One Year. 8 8 09 Diit-T DispATCit. Vm Ouarter 200 Djult Dispatch, One Month Daily distatcu, Including Snnday, one year MOO Daily Dispatch, Including Sundial P quarter 2 SO Daily Dispatch, Including Snnday. ona month - SO Bcndat Dispatch, one year. TM WtEKLTDisrATCn,oncjear 125 The Daily dispatch Is delivered by carriers at J.' cents per -week, orlncludingtheSundaycditlon, at SO cents per wee k. PITTSBURG, MONDAY, JAN. 7. 1SS9. SLOW, BUT IT WILL COME. The newest thing as to the Pittsburg Ex position, which everybody hopes is coming, is that Mr. Nicholson, the gentleman from Cincinnati, who came to get the necessary 5500,000 subscriptions, now retires from the scene but little pleased with the result of his labors. Mr. Nicholson's observations are given in another column of The DisrATCii this morning. The sharpness of his dis appointment is quite natural because of his uniform success in quickly raising far larger sums for exposition purposes in Cin cinnati. But it would be foolish to exag gerate the importance of the incident. "We all know that Tittsburg, though leading Cincinnati in business by at least $100,000, 000 every year, outranking it in natural re sources and enjoying just now such an ex ceptional period of growth, has yet to learn the practical benefits of expositions, a mat ter in which Cincinnati has been thoroughly posted, by experiments covering the past 14 years. The view which President Marvin takes is the correct one. As a competent associa tion of reputable and capable business men, who as individuals do not know failure, have set to the work of building the Exposi tion, their ultimate success is not to be doubted. That they will meet difficulties; that they will receive slow responses from quarters in which they might reasonably expect quick encouragement; that they will have to argue much with doubting Thomases, and that they may themselves at times feel almost like following the exam ple of Mr. Nicholson, counts for nothing. These are but the ordinary incidents of a canvass in the city where the project is new. The assured fact remains behind that the Tittsburg Exposition will be finished no matter what the temporary delays. With- ont doubt the new board to be elected on Tuesday will push the project with re doubled vigor. AN ANNEXATION CAMPAIGN. An interesting indication of the progress ot annexation sentiment in Canadais afforded T)T the iact that in the mayoralty campaign of Windsor, Ontario, now in progress, two of the four candidates in the field have pub licly pronounced in favor of annexation, one of them, in his desire to catch the annex ation vote, going so far as to declare that he was prepared to fight either the "United States or Canada to make annexation a suc cess. The other annexationist, who is con sidered the leading candidate, confines his wishes to peaceful annexation. That "Windsor is hardly representative of the feeling of Canada as a whole may be in ferred, inasmuch as its location, immediate ly opposite Detroit, would naturally create a strong feeling in favor of annexation. Allowing for that, however, these indica tions of the strength of the annexation sen timent warrant the belief that the time is coming when Canada will ask to be admitted to the United States. When that time ar rives the United States will grant the wish. ELEPHANT EXPERTS IK DEMAND. A pretty, zoological style oi boom has been started for Adam Forepaugh with a view of landing him in General Harrison's Cabinet. It is true that Mr. Forepaugh has been very successful in disposing of His ele phants recently. He has killed one and has presented two others to the cities of Philadelphia and New York. Genera Harrison has a number of elephants on his hands, and it is suggested that Mr. Forepaugh might be persuaded to help him to dispose of them. But the still more famous showman, Mr. P. T. Barnnm, has parallel claims, we imagine. After he had procured or manufactured a sacred white elephant and it began to pale upon the public, and its pallor began to peel off in unseemly patches, we remember with what wondrous celerity that beautiful ani mal became a common, everyday pachyderm in color but a veritable Grimaldi among elephantine clowns. Mr. TJarnunTs ability to transform ele fphants from time to time,in accordance with the popular demand would seem to recom mend him to General Harrison in this emergency more strongly even than Mt. Forepaugh, whose ability to kill and give away elephants is undoubted. General Harrison can hardly kill or even give away ihis elephants, but he would like to know Show to transform a candidate for the Cabi net into an ally of his prospective adminis tration without the bribe of a portfolio. A DISCHARGE THAT KICKS. Fremont Cole, the Speaker of the New York House of Representatives, is consid ered to have countered rather strongly on Go Ternor Hill by saying in his opening ad dress: "The issue has been joined as to whether the politics of 6,000,000 people should be dominated by the power of 30,000 saloons, and the saloons have won." The declaration is clearly intended to apply to Governor Hill's re-election; but in view of the tact that Mr. Cole has been given a lead ing position by the party which holds a ma jority in the Legislature it appears to have a dangerous recoil. .The committees to be appointed by Mr. Cole and the majority which elevated that gentleman to the Speakership will have a good deal to say about legislation affecting the respective in terests ot the people and the saloons. Mr. Cole does not wish the people to think that the saloons triumphed in securing the bu premacy of his party in the Legislature; but there are better ways of proving that it is not so than laying "the responsibility on someone else. SUPERVISING THE DRAMA. Municipal bodies are waking up to the gravity of their duties, and are determined to discharce their functions by a close super vision of the theatrical 'companies that come into their respective bailiwicks. The coun try has heretofore been called upon to ad mire the vigilance of certain Legislators m who wanted laws passed for the regulation of the railways, requiring free passes to be furnished to the lawmakers. The municipal bodies have too clear a comprehension of the positions of master and servant to at tempt to reculate the railroads; but the idea seems to be spreading in that class that they must regulate something, and they propose to regulate the theaters. In order that they can supervise them properly, the municipal legislators have passed an ordinance re quiring all theaters to furnish free admis sion to all city officers, councilnien, in spectors and policeofficials. Lansinjj, Mich., has followed suit, calling for free passes for the Mayor and thence all the way down. There is every reason that the city fathers who have thus assumed the task of su pervising the drama will be constant and diligent in their duties. From orchestra chairs they will carefully study the ques tions of costume and anatomy arising out of burlesque and ballet performances, and from the aristocratic region of the boxes they will watch over the performance of Shakespearean tragedy or grand opera. As long as the attractions are good, we may be sure that the work of supervision will be kept steadily np; and in a few years the city officials will probably have attained a wide circle of information about the drama, while the dramatic profession will also have learned considerably more about city offi cials. WHAT THE FIGURES SHOW. The DisrATcn has already called atten tion to the clement of water in the capital of railroads which have gone into the hands of receivers as a cause of their bankruptcy. The detailed figures of railroad insolvency for the past year show the actual presence of this element to a considerable degree. The year in the present decade in which railroad bankruptcies have been most numerous was 18S4, when 11,000 miles of railroad passed into the hands of receivers with an average capitalization of $65,000 per mile. This year the failures involve only 3,270 miles of track and the capitalization on hem was a fraction under 00,000 per mile, and that is just about the average capitalization on the 43,770 miles of road that have been defaulted since 1S7G. These figures have no slightsignificance. In 1874 the average capitalization of all the railroads in the United States waS $60,000 per mile. That represented war prices for construction and equipment, which were two or three times what they now are. It included such notorious examples of stock watering as the Pacific railroads, the New York Central and Erie, and the whole brood of Western wads, which were built at ex travagant prices solely on bonds. Since then, every department of business has been scaled down to a basis of solid values ex cept the railroad business. Nearly one hundred thousand miles j of railroad have since "been built and capitalized at nearly war prices, the present average being about $57,000 per mile. In view of this fact, and the further one that nearly all these bankrupt roads were located where the cost of grading is notori ously low, the showing presents a remark ably good one for the railroads. During a period when the whole business of the country had to undergo a process of shrink age and reorganization less than one-third, the railroad mileage of the country has gone through the process, and the averaee capitalization of the bankrupt roads in 1889 is actually in excess of the inflated and watered capitalization of 1874. Instead of this being an indication of un profitable railroad, investments, it is an evidence that the railroad business is re markably successful when it can sustain such a weight of inflation with a total of bankruptcy of about 1 per cent annually. The proposition to amend the United States Constitution so as to give Congress the power to enact uniform laws on marriage and divorce, Is being boomed by the New York Herald. As The Dispatch proposed that way of reformlng'the confusion of State laws some years ago, it is 'glad to see other people falling into line. A rather sigular method of judging evidence is famished by the remark of the Philadelphia Times with regard to the Bismarck-Morier squahble that "it is by no means sure that the calumnies of which Mr. Morier complains are calumnies in fact, since the only testimony offered in disproof of them is the word of Marshal Bazaine." Whether the cnarges against Sir R. D. Morier are true or not, is not very import ant to the American public; but it is some what interesting, since the only testimony which afforded any basis for the charges was an alleged statement by Bazaine, to find an intelligent American journal arguing that a denial from the alleged authority does not amount to disproof. It is rather instructive and should be something of a warning to note how each newly elected Senator has his public repu tation based on the fact that he is either a millionaire or a corporation attorney. The Irish citizens of Pittsburg denonnce the testimonyof informer Flanagan before the Parnell commission, with regard to raising money in Pittsburg forthe purchase of arms, as perjury. Unfortunately, however, this rebutting evidence will not reach the En lish court in which the purchased perjury was produced.. A communication to the New York World intimates that if Amelie Rives' "Herod and Mariamne" is compared with a work published beiore the war, entitled. "Marianne, or the Queen's Fate," some in teresting discoveries may be made. That is calculated to evoke the hope that if anyone wrote such overwrought and gory stuff before'the war, he was killed off before the war was over. The House of Representatives took a wise precaution in amending the Nicaragua Canal bill so as to prevent the United States from assuming any pecuniary responsibility in connection with that measure. If the Senate has any desire to place the affair ona proper basis, it will agree to that amend ment Lieutenant Governor Davtes opin ion that the Legislature wants longer ses sions in which to transact its business has this foundation in fact, that the Legislature does not do much business with the usual length of sessions. But that is not a -demonstration that it might not do more if it di vided its time by some other rule of propor tion than one day of work to seven of recess. The recent inquiry started by the New York Herald: "What Shall We Do in Heaven?" has inevitably provoked a dis cussion which ought to be more pertinent to the editors of that sheet as to what they will do in the other place. Mature consideration of Dan Dough erty's outbreak to the effect that Pennsyl vania "has stocked the whole' country with poison," anttytber commendatory language, THE leads to the conclusion that there is some basis for it The State must plead guilty to having furnished the advocate of the New York boodlers in the person of the brazen-tongued Mr. Dougherty. The method adopted by the Mayor of Harrisburg in raising "loans," as he calls them, from the police force for the benefit of the Democratic campaign fund, is a return to an old method. More famous campaign ers than this politician have adopted the practice ot concealing plunder under the name of "forced loans." PDEELT PERSONAL Lillie Devereui Bolton says that the American eagle is a hen. E. P. Roe's most popular novels aro being translated into German. In spite of tempting offers Lord Tennyson re fuses to write his memoirs. Alphonse Daudet is nearly 60 years of age, but does not look it by at least ten years. President Dwight, of Yalo College, does his writing on an old-fashioned secretary that is said to have been in the family 200 years. Judge Chabxes J. McCurdy, of Lyme, Comf., is now the eldest living graduate of Yale. Ho was graduated in the class of 1817. Mrs. Frank Leslie wears a No. 1 shoe, and toasts her tiny toes on a coil of steam pipes be neath her office desk from 9 A. M. until 3 p. Jr. The Queen of Portugal not only has a mustache, but she is proud of it Tho ladles of her court do not feel inclined to follow the fashion. The Queen of Sweden, who still suffers from shattered neives, finds ease in working like a housemaid and in weeding and digging in her garden. Mrs. James G. Blaine. Jr., was offered K00 per week Dy a Bowery variety manager to sing in concerts, and she bad tho good sense to decline tho offer. Lord Wolseley's brother, who is a squat ter in Australia, has invented a sheering ma chine by the use of which a dexterons hand can shear 144 sheep in a day. Robert Louis Stevenson will step foot on American soil again In a fortnight at San Fran cisco. He will come direct to New York, ar riving hero about February 1, and set himsolf immediately to literary work. General Grant was once a pupil of W.W. Richeson, a teacher, who died in Maysrille, Ky., day before yesterday. When Grant be came President be tendered his old preceptor an office, which Mr. Richeson declined, saying that he would not exchange the work ho loved for the highest office in the country. ANOTHER NATIONAL PAE. A Scheme to Establish a Fresh Breathing Spot for the Citizens of tho Capital. (SPECIAL TELEGRAM TO THE DISPATCH.! Washington, January 6. The movement on foot to establish a public park in the Dis trict of Columbia has definitely taken shape, and the prospect for a general indorsement of the idea grows brighter each day. It is pro posed that the tract of land lying on both sides of Rock creek, beginning at Woodley Lano bridge, on the road leading to President Cleve land's country house.and running northwardly, following the course of the creek, shall be se cured and set apart as a public park or pleas ure ground for the people. Tho wholo tract to be selected is to be within 2,000 acres, and of a width not less at any point than 400 feet, in cluding the bed of the creek, of which not less than SO feet is to be on either side of the creek. The ground along the creek which will be condemned if Congress passes the bill appro priating the necessary funds is in possession of several persons who are in sympathy with this movement, and in its present natural state ar willing to dispose of their property at a reasonable figure. A bill has already been pre- Fared and will shortly be introduced in Congress, t is based in part on tho act setting apart the Yellowstone National Park and in part on the act condemning the National Library site on Capitol Hill, the idea being to get a bill which had a precedent. This varies somewhat from a former proposition which, it was claimed, savored of a scheme to boom land held by speculators. Most of the land involved in the present project is owned by old citizens who wish to see the natnral beauty of their lands preserved .or the pleasure of future genera tions, and therefore, while not feeling ablo to donate it, desire to keep it from the grasp of speculators. BUSINESS BEFORE PLEASURE. A Ynnkeo Doctor Sends His Brldo Alono on Bridal Tonr. Cbumpton, Mo., January 6. The village gossips are discussing tho marriage of Miss Mattle Glanding,- the principal of the school, and Dr. C. T. Cahoon, the village physician and druggist When the ministerial blessing had been given and the benediction pronounced, the happy pair stepped into the finest team the town could afford and drove to Ralph's wharf, twelve miles away, to take the steamer Emm! A. Ford for a wedding trip to Baltimore and Washington. When the steamer was reached, however, the bridegroom concluded that he could not desert bis practice and bis drug store, even for the pleasure of a bridal tour, so placing his hrido on the steamer, with many emphatic injunc tions to the officers to look after her comfort, he slowly and sorrowfully wended his way home, while the lonely bride came on to Balti more. Mrs. Cahoon visited friends in Balti more and Washington, and enjoyed her lonely wedding tour as best she could. After three days' absence she returned, and this morning was met by her husband at the wharf. The lit tle house was ready for her, and the happy pair have gone to housekeeping. M0ET0N VISITS PHILADELPHIA. Tho Vice President-Elect and His Wife At tend Dedicntlon Ceremonies. Philadelphia, January 6. Vice President elect Morton and wife arrived in this city last evening;. They were driven to the residence of Rev. Dr. Francis L. Bobbins, whose wife is a niece of the Vice President-elect The evening was spent in a purely social and informal way, and only a lew callers paid their respects. This evening Mr. and Mrs. Morton and Dr. Field attended the ceremonies of the dedication of Disston Hall and Beacon Dis pensaries, connected with the Beacon Presby terian Church at Cumberland and Cedar streets, Qanr Said to Favor Blaine. Prom the Philadelphia Press.. One of the minor revelations of Senator Quay's presence In the city is the fact that the Chairman has received"! letter from James G. Blaine, congratulating him on the manage- Tnent of the campaign. It is no longer much of a secret that Senator Quay is not only not op posed to Mr. Blaine for the Cabinet but is dis posed to favor him. He is also desirous that ex-Senator Piatt and John S. ClarKson, of Iowa, as well as Mr. Wanamaker, shall be among the President's advisers. As She Heard It. From the Hartford Courant A very little girl in the infant class of one Of our city Snnday schools came home' last Sun day and told her mother that the teacher had taught them a new song. On expressing a wish to hear it the mother was much aston ished at the following sentence, which was all tho child could remember: "I'm a little green horn among a half a cheese." The words which had "been misunderstood by the child were these: "Tm a little gleaner among the harvest sheaves." The Bobs Mangier. 1'rom the Oil City Blizzard. There is a compositor on a paper in Albany, N. Y., who, if not "a thing of beauty and a joy forever," is at least a James W. Dandy, "They wonld strain at a gnat and swallow a camel" was the expression be bad to set a day or two ago, and this is the way he Is said to have set it: "They would strain at a goat and swallow a canal." Franklin Was an Annexationist. From the Boston Journal. If Benjamin Franklin had only stuck to his original idea of making it a part of the treaty of peace with England that Canada should be ceded to the United States, what a heap of trouble might have been saved. But England would not listen, and the idea was abandoned. And Not Oat to Grass at That. From the New York Sun. It is a positive fact that Colonel William M. Singeriys Holsteln cow never gave more milk than at present PITTSBTTKG DISPATCH, . JOTSJraKET, Tho Cotton Belt nud the Cotton Press Tho Cradle of the Confederacy Some Re flections Concerning Birmingham and the Recent Eplsado There. Montgomery, Ala., Week Before Last, 1SS8. We are now in the center of the cotton belt. I have not been in the center of a cotton belt before since I was a child. Here we went over, Mr. Riley and J, to see the large press squat tho daylights out of a bale of cotton. The old-fashioned cottoD-squatter, which worked like a cider press, is only utilized at present for home use. It puts a $40 bale of cotton down to about the size of an upright piano or folding bed. Then it is brought to town, where a large athletic press of more modern mechanism shuts it up into one-fourth its former size, while nimble fingers readjust the hoop-iron wrappers. The old-fashioned press is operated by a mule, supported by a colered man, whose whole life is a shoreless calm, and whose system is saturated with rest. The mule walks around the press and the negro remains stationary, It is tho origin of what has been since called the walk around. Tho upright of the press is a large screw, which, as it revolves, brings the relentless laws of the machine closer and closer together. Six bands of hoop-iron are then wrapped around it, and it is ready for market. Most all the cotton planters of Alabama are engaged in raising a crop to pav for the grub and good clothes of the past They do not appear to enjoy it, but" they have formed that habit and they can not overcome it now. It is one of the drawbacks of cotton planting that the planter gets his goods on credit at enormous prices, and then gives the crop to tho merchant at the end of the season. In this way ho is really only a kind of hired man for the one who furnishes him with supplies. He is wearing oundhe soihand barely keeping his soul and body inside the same suit of clothes. That is the reason his gate hangs by one binge and tho winds sigh through the vertebra) of his borse and carriage. That is the reason why you do not mell new paint around his premises, and the carpets on his floors are never hung on the line to be chastised. To-day wo visited the new Statehouse, the cradle and the grave of tho Confederacy. Here for the first year the Rebellion rolled up its sleeves and prepared for the future, and here Jefferson Davis stood and addressed the people whose warfare had been waged in vain. I stood on the spot where be stood.to address the peo ple, near the big white pillar and commanding a view of the beautiful street In my mind's eye I could see him there with white hair and beard as he recalled the past. He does not yet understand that he made a mistake,but thinks, like Mr. Cleveland, that he was not defeated. It was a principle that got a black eye. It is pleasant to look upon things in that way. I often wish I could do so. One time I was kicked through the side of a log corral in the far West by a mule whose bunion 1 was treating at tho time, and if I could have felt that there was" nothing personal about it, and that it was just simply the defeat of a great principle instead of feeling as I did that a normal school building had fallen on me. it wonld have been worth $100 to mo. But I cannot reason things out calmly when in pain. We are having a good time scooting about over thf country, changing cars two or three times in one night, and in other ways enjoying onrselvos to the utmost We sleep days, lectnro evenings, and, at night, abandon ourselves to changing cars. At first we devoted the first half of the night to orations, banquets and demonstrations, but now we have quit Hav ing but one stomach apiece, and having about six months of this tour looming up ahead, with its prospective mirth, music and quail on toast, we have registered a large, hot vow on the hotel register, hereafter to substitute on such occasions our new agentwho has four stomachs and a valise, together with an alimentary which would certainly be an ornament to any society. i Birmingham is the most remarkable city in the South. It is more like a booming mining town than anything else, and looks like Lead villo in the flush times. When we rode into the city it was a remarkable transition from the old stylo of Alabama towns. Red-mouthed fur naces yawned like sleepy giants and painted the somber sky a gaudy crimson with their hot breath. Busy people might have been- seen here and there, going somewhere Instead of waiting patiently for somebody to walk around them or looking reproachfully at strangers, who seemed to be tho slaves .to .business habits. Birmingham reminds me so' forcibly of a boom ing mining town that 1 remarked to Mr. Riley, as we got off the train, that all we needed to carry out tho similarity was an earnest lynch ing party. In less than 24 hours a crowd of 6,000 people made a party call at the jail for the pur pose of extending tho neck of a gentleman named Hawes, but after 20 people had been killed and wounded by the officers thoy re treated. Several strangers who bad never seen a man lynched and wanted to be able to scare their children with the story when they got home by telling about It went to observe tho entertainment, returning later on by way of the undertaker's store. Mr. Hawes was a man who had an earnest nature and a large red elm club, with which he ever an anon attracted the attention of his wife when he wanted to communicate a disagree able truth to her. But ho would mostalwajs feel real sorry about it afterward, and one time after he had broken two of bis wife's ribs in. this way, he. told her he could see that he had' perhaps been hasty and given her needless pain, and he believed that ho had better divide up his attentions between her and another woman, so that one of them could recover while be gently rebuked the other. Now I think that he will ultimately climb a telegraph pole at the hands of his friends, and if the evidence as thus far given be correct the audience is making no mistake. Mr. Hawes did wrong in the first instance in marrying two women. When a man marries two women he is already on tho downward road. "One wife seems to caU for another" in such a case, and then ill-feeling arises. Mr.. Hawes, of course, then tried to obviate tho wife he had at first married, and now people dislike him for it Bill Kye in Once a Week. A WIDOWED PRIMA DONNA. E. J. Wethcrcll, the Husband of Emma Abbott, Dies ofPneuraoniant Denver. Denver, January 6. E. J. Wetherell, the husband of Emma Abbott the prima donna, died at the Windsor Hotel, in this ciity, at 10 o'clock to-day of pneumonia, contracted while he was en route to Kansas City from the Pacific Coast He departed from Los Angeles last Monday, via tho Southern route, and was in his usual health. He had business in Denver in connection with the sale of some valuable real estate which be purchased upon a specula tion a few months ago, and arrived Thursday morninc Mr. Wetherell went to the Windsor Hotel and at once requested a physician, statins that he had contracted a very severe cold on tho road. He went to bed and gradually crew worse until this morning, when he appeared a mug ueuer. xie ab up in uea ana reaa the newspapers and annonnced that be would de part to-morrow morning forKansas Clty.whero the Abbott companr begins an engagement to morrow night One hour later he was seized with choking, and expired immediately. A Fruitless Junket From the Chicago News. The United States hog cholera commission is traveling through the South seeking for infor mation. There is a general Impression here abouts that nothing can kill a southern hog ex cept a streke of lightning or chronic ennui re sulting from too much attention beingpaid to it DEATHS OP A BAY. John D. White. John I). "White, father of Ex-Fire Chief William White, of this city, died at the residence of his son, Itev. A. W. White, Jefferson, Greene county, on Saturday, at the ripe old aire of 89 years. De ceased came to Pittsburg In 1S3Q, and np to within a few years was a familiar flrure. He was a plo. neer In the dra Tins: business in the crood nlrt rfavi of boating, and for a number of rears occupied a position ox trust In the Custom House here. He leaves a large lamuy oi grown-up sons ani ters and numerous grand ana great-ei dren. Funeral services will beheld at his son's residence, No. 8 Clark street; this evening at 6:3a after which the remains will be taken to f lain Grove. Lawrence county, to be Interred be side those of his wife. Christian T. Ihmxcn. ' The manyfrlends of the late Christian T. Ihrascn will be pained to learn of his unexpected death in (Denver, Col., on last Saturday-niornlns;. Mr. Ihmeen had gone to Denver for his health, but his illness was not supposed to be as serious as It really was. He was well known In tbls city, and was the grandson of the late Charles T. Ihmscn, oi me inmsen uiass ores, aoutnsiae, I MONDAY, JANUARY Y, A GEEAT NEWSFAPEIi, The Leading Features of Yesterday's Six teen Page Dispatch. The DiSPATcn yesterday was exceptionally brizht and newsv. The first nan contained a special by cable from Europe, depicting in, vivid terms the sad physical and mental condi tion of Emperor William. The Morier muddle Is still agitating Europe. Count Herbert Bis marck has promised to exonerate Sir Robert Moner of Uncharges made against him, but the latter demands an official apology. In France Boulanger and his campaign is exciting great interest, Coming nearer home, it is reported from In dianapolis that Blaine's appointment to the CaDinet is still uncertain, while a dispatch frpm Washington asserts that Blaine has been assured of the Stato portfolio. The tariff bill, which has been dragging its weary way along in the Senate, is expected to come to a vote on the Zlst inst Senator Quay, who has been in Washington a couple of days, has decided to go 'South' to get rout of the reach of unfortunate office-seekers More developments in the big sugar swindle are coming to lights and it appears that 81,000,- uw, contributed by men on both hemispneres, has been sunk. The murderers of Paymaster McCiure and Hugh Flanagan, who wero killed and robbed near Wilkesbarre, have been cap tured. The Justices of the Supreme Court of the State will convene in Philadelphia to-day in 'all the dignity of silken gowns. News comes from Harrisburg that a vigorous move ment is on foot, supported by the Governor, for the reopening of the soldiers' and sailors' orphan schools. A remarkable case of death from hydrophobia, in which many of the usual symptoms were lacking, is telegraphed from Fall River, Mass. IL The local news Is complete and varied. The charitable bequests made by the late Miss Jane Holmes have doubled in value, owing to the ap preciation of property. A controlling Interest has been obtained in the P. A. & M. road by a syndicate, and the cars aro to be run by electric motors. T. B. Barry, the expelled Knight of Labor, arrives in the city and talks in a con cisc.and pertinent manner. An interview with a Legislator states that a compromise will be made in regard to the Blue Laws and the Brooks law by which the former will be al lowed to remain on the statute books and the latter will be amended. hi. The feature of the second part is the first in stallment of "The Colonel's Cards," an Ameri can novel written especially for The Dis patch by Franklin File, a purely American writer, whose contributions to the press have appeared under m Ay non de plumes. Bill Nye discusses the Inter-State commerce law from his peculiar, bald-headed point of view. Captain Charles King, the author and fighter, contributes an article on riding. E. W. Bart lett discloses a few secrets of wig makers and wig wearers. An interesting article on the re vival of the minuet is contributed, and Dr, Hammond explains why dancing is healthy ex ercise. Lillian Spencer depicts in a sprightly manner the London Alhambra, the home of the ballet Our traveling correspondent de scribes Korea and its ruler, Clara Belle sends a budget of fresh New York gossip, and Rev. George Hodges gives advice to ill-tempered people. Bart describes tho inside workings of a mercantile agency, and Clarke Russell tells why he left the sea. Wakeman, in his inimita ble manner, describes his experiences in two Irish inns, and Prof. Shaler talks about recent scientific discoveries in a manner which can be at once understood and appreciated by the laity. The receptions of tho traveling baseball teams at Honolulu is set forth vividly by a traveling correspondent In addition to all this, The Dispatch is re plete with facts and fancies gathered from all parts of the globo by its complete corps of news gatherers and artists. THE NEXT DISCOVERY. It Will be Some Method of Getting Elec tricity From Coal Direct. Being asked by a New York reporter what he thought would be the next field in wkich elec trical Invention would employ itself, Mr. Edi son said: "Undoubtedly the next great dis covery will be eomo method of 'getting elec tricity from coal direct without the interven tion of boilers to make steam, steam-driven en. gines to run dynamos, which in their turn, with the intervention of magnetism, do work, whether in operating motors In makintr light. Such a consummation would mean one bucket of coal furnishing one horse-power for ten hours a day. As it is now it takes four or five buckets of coal for one horse-power, whereas wo ought to get five or six horse-power out of one bucket That is, we get five or Mx per cent of the units of force, whereas by obtaining electricity direct we should get 75 per cent "But economy of coal is not the great thing arrived at in connection with this coming dis covery, although that would be a great deal in itself. The thing a good many men are work ing on and I have been doing a good deal of it is to get a simple and inexpensive apparatus for applying; the force that is in coal directly to tho wort that It is to do. That would revolu tionize the world of machines, for it would do away largely with boilers and engines. No.it is nothing like tthat Keely is after, because he is trying to get something out of nothing. The thing I speak of is bound to be done." WHY TnEY PARTED. Billy Crane's Reason for Dissolving Partner ship With Robeaon. From the New York Press. Cpmedlan Billy Crane is a wonder. He is one of the strongestopponents to the generally ac cepted laws of rest on the globe. Everybody who knows him wonders If he ever sleeps. -Ho has been known to come from the theater after the performance.spend the night with oneparty of good fellows, wear them all out, seok another group toward morning.spend the day with them, turn In for a short snooze at 5 o'clock in the afternoon and show up, in the greenroom at 7:30 looking brightand chipper as a daisy. Crane spent New Year's afternoon in tho Hoffman House cafe with Colonel Bob Ingersoll and a group of intimate friends. "What is the real reason you and Robson are to separate?" asked one of the party. "I'll tell you," said Crane, "if you will promise not to repeat it It is be cause I am tired of playing fathers to grand fathers." COAL IN DAKOTA. Two Veins Have Been Discovered nnd Farmers Will Cease Csing Hay for Fuel. St. Paul, January 6. Another coal deposit has been fonnd in Dakota, and the hay fuel, with which farmers have had to be content, will probably soon be a thing of the past This find Is three miles north of Ceiitcrvillo, and it was struck by a party drilling a well. One vein eight feet thick was first bored into at a depth of 12S feet, and after going through sandstone and slate another vein was struck, in which the drill is now working. Active efforts to develop the find are now being made. She nnd an Eye to Business. From the Norristown Herald. Mrs. Dumbeigh, having read that a steel plant in Pennsylvania yielded $100,000 a year profit wrote to a neighboring nurseryman ask ing how much such a plant would cost and in what kind of soil It thrived best Ulsmnrck Honored in Louisville. From the Courier-Journal. 3 Bismarck is probably not aware that one of the streets of Louisville bears his name, and that no American or other hogs are aUowed to run on that thoroughfare. SARCASMS ON WOMEN. Lamennais Woman is a flower that exhales her perlumo only in the shade. Caedan When women cannot be revenged, tbey do as children do; they cry. Proverb Take the first advice of a woman under no circumstances the second. Old Phoverb A lady and her maid acting in accord will outwit a dozen devils. La Bbuteee Women are extremists; they are either better or worse than men. Lkmontey Of all heavy bodies, the heaviest is the woman we have ceased to love. Commerson Women distrust men too much in general and not enough in particular. Baezac Woman is acharming creature who1 changes her heart as easily as her gloves. Montaigne There is no.torturethata wom an would not suffer to enhance her beauty. iJaxzac Women aro constantly the dupes or the victims of their extreme sensitiveness. A. US' Musset A woman forgives every thing but the fact that you do not covet ber. J. J. Rosseau O, womanl it is thou that causests the tempests that agitate mankind, 1889. LAUGHS FOR LAWYERS. A Number of Legal Freaks Unearthed by a Correspondent in Ohio. Mr. William A. Taylor, of the Cincinnati Enquirer, has picked up a number of legal freaks during his travels through Ohio. He writes: To a Hocking County Court belongs the re markable distinction of passing upon a woman as personal property. The unique precedent was laid some 25 or 30 years ago and before woman's rights had progressed as far as they have since. . A citizen ot old Hocking married a young lady against the energetic protest of her father, and set up housekeeping on his own account It was a case of "love in a cottage"," as a matter of fact During tho temporary ab sence of the unsuspecting bridegroom the wife's father and brothers invaded love's dom icile and carried her off. The despoiled husband repaired to a neigh boring Justice of the Peace in search of law suited to tho exigencies of the case. After a thorough investigation of Swan's Treaties ana Cradlebaugh's Constable, it was unanimously decided by the 'Squire, the constable and the desolate husband that the proper thing to do was to proceed by an action in replevin! Tho papers were accordingly made out, and tho writ lodged in tho hands of the constable, who proceeded at once to execute it, and re plevied the woman from the custody of her father, who, though exceedingly irate, didn't feel like resisting the edict of the Court When it came to appraising the property and fixing the sworn valuo of a woman, the constable was rather perplexed, but the three freeholders whom he called in to act as appraisers solved the problem in a manner at once off-hand and business-like. They sent for her husband, the plaintiff, and ascertained from him that he 'had expended the following sums of money upon his "prop erty:" License, 75 cents: Justice's marriage fee, $2 50: one new dress, 8 cents; one new bonnet 37 cents. They furthermore decided that the wonjan was "perishable property," andhervalne was only to be estimated theo retically. Whereupon they fixed the value of ner laoor ana services tor tne montn at 4,wmcn they added to the other items, making $8 SO. In due course of time the trial came off and the plaintiff duly and satisfactorily proved bis ownership by producing bis marriage certifi cate. Tho defendant could not upset this evi dence and the plaintiff got judgement of resti tution and 23 cents damages. His property was then restored to him in due and regular form, and the defendant was solemnly notified that a repetition of his offense would be re- carded as petty larceny and punished accord ingly. The man and his wife are still living happily and contentedly together. But Hocking county can not lay .claim to ex cluslveness In "precedents." Over in her next door neighbor. Perry, a horse was once restored to its rightful neighbor under a writ of habeas corpus issued by a Justice of tho Peace. A's horse broke into B's pasture, whereupon B put it into his stable, locked tho door and re fused to give it up. A secured the services of the celebrated Sbep -Tinker as his legal ad viser. Shep knew that his client could not give the necessary bail in an action by replevin, so he decided to bring a different sort of an ac tion. With this intent he went before a Justice of the Peace in old StraitsviUe and took out a writ of habeas corpus and literally brought the horse into Court Lawyer Saunders, a most brilliant practitioner at the Logan bar, and long the Prosecuting Attorney of Hocking county, was called on the other side. He didn't know the nature of the case until the constable made his return upon the writ "Why," exclaimed Mr. Saunders with a look of blank astonishment, "this Court can't issue such a writ, and no court could issue one for a horsel" Shep was more than equal to the emergency. "Your Honor," he said, "a wise and just Court can do anything that is laid down in the books. The writ of habeas corpus has been recognized as sacred for centuries. To say that this Court can't issue it is to say that it is igno rant of Magna Charta." "But this Court kin issue it," interposed the Justice, "and it has issued it already." Mr. Saunders saw his mistake and apologized to the Court for having doubted its abilitv to do anything it chose. It is needless to say that the horse was restored, to its owner. "Can I send an execution from a 'Squire's docket in this county up to Delaware?" in quired a client of Major John CNcill, of Zanesville, many years ago. "There is no doubt about it" was the genial Major's ready re sponse. A month later the client reappeared. "I thought you told me I could send an ex ecution to Delaware county?" he said, ex citedly. ' "Yes; didn't you send it?" "Certainly; but it wasn't worth anything without a transcript and judgment in that county." "Of course it wasn't." said the Maior. "and if you had asked me about it I would have told you so at the time." As funny a thing as ever occurred in a court happened at Napoleon, 0..in 1839, before Judge Potter and a jury. A case was on trial, and an. outsider seated himself on oneof thepuncheons at the far end of the panel ot jurors, there be ing no other available seat When the defend ant's counsel arose to address the jury he scanned the face of each very closely, and nat urally his gaze was directed to the furthest man from him, who didn't happen to be a juror at all. Glaring at him be began: "Gentlemen of Jury: I want to know what this man (referring to the plaintiff In the case) has come Into court for? What is his business? What right has he here? What is he seeking mi. Again i repeat, gentlemen oi tne ury, whyishebere?" The countryman imagined that the question had direct reference to himself, and when the lawyer paused to give due weight and emphasis to the question, he jumped to his feet and howled: "What am I here for, you cross-eyed cock of the walk? "What am I seeking for in this here court? Til tell you in short order, you weazen faced old son of a gun. I've been here three days awaitin' f er my fees, and nary a red kin I git. Pay me my witness fees, sir, and I'll git out of here immegiately." This unexpected oration bronght down the house, and the lawyer never finished his able argument John H- Morrison practiced law many years ago at Findlay and all through that section of Ohio. He bad' some striking peculiarities, nhlchwerein the habit of cropping out in court. He was once trying a case hef ore Judge Patrick Henry Goode anda jury, and opened his side of the case as follows: "May it please the Conrt: By the perjury of witnesses, the Ignorance of the iurvandthe connivance of the Conrt, I expect to lose this case." "What is that yon say, Mr. Morrison?" "That Is all I have to say on that point, and the Court will feci happier if I do not repeat what I have already said. From the looks of the jury 1 infer that they would rathernot have beard it once." Morrison, by the way, must have been a rela tive of the Hocking Justice who replevined the woman, for on one occasion he got out a writ of replevin for a child, whose ownership was in dispute between its parents, who had separated. But the appraisers could not fix a valuation on the child. One set of appraisers after another was called, but none of them could decidewhat the child was worth. Finally the officer in charge of the writ returned it in disgust "There," exclaimed Morrison: "there goes my case. I could replevin Satan himself out of the infernal regions if I could only get some body to put a valuation on him!" Pa'a Boots Too Big For Herby. From the N. Y. Evening Telegram.) About all the public can hear in that Morier diplomatic squabble is the noise Count Ilerbert Bismarck makes when he tries to rattle around in his Pa's shoes. YESTEBDAY. My friend, he spoke of a woman face; It puzzled me, nnd I pansed to think. He told mo of her eyej ?na mouth, the trace Orprayerqn her brow, and quick as wink 1 said: "Oh yes, hut you wronjr her years. She's only a child, tiltX faiths and fears That childhood fit. I tell thee nay; She was a girl last yesterday." "The years are swift and sure, I trow" (Quoth he). "You speak of the longago." Once I strolled in a garden spot And every flower unralsed a head (So It seemed), for they, I wot Were mates oi mine; each bloom and bed, TJicir hours for sleep, their merry mood. The lives and deaths of tho whole sweet brood, Were known tome; itwasmyway To visit them but yesterday. Spake one res rose, in a language low; "We saw you last in the long ago." Entering under the lintel wide, 1 saw the room; 'twas all the same; The oaken press and the (helves aside, The window, small for the sunset flame, The book I loved ou the table large; I ope'd, and lot in the yellow marge The leaf I placed was shrunk and gray. I swear it was green but yesterdayl Then a voice stole ont of the snnsct glow; You lived here mail in the longago." Tls thf same old tale, though It comes to me By a hundred paths of pain and glee. Till I guess the truth at last and know That yesterday is the Long Ago. RUhard E,urton in Jiarper't WeeXly? THE OLD WAR GOVERNOR. Andrew Cm-tin at 71 The Prudent Mo ment of HU JAfe Reealted. From a Bellefonte Letter. At 71 Governor Curtln Is still a well-preserved man. His tall form he is over six feet is slim and erect His large and shapely head is covered with a thick mass of silver hair, while a broad, high forehead overtops a Roman nose in full harmony with the square, resolute jaw. Eyes of dark gray com plete a strong and striking lace. As is often the case with men of positive character who, when aroused, fight fiercely and ask for do quarter, Governor Curtin possesses a noble and generous heart and one of the kindliest natures. The love and esteem In which he is held In his mountain borne are universal, and the poor know him as their- most constant and generous friend. Some years ago a tramp was arrested and brought- before the Burgess of Bellefonte, charged with defacing private residences. He had been caught scrawling cabalistic figures upon Governor Curtin's handsome stone man sion, and the Governor was present at the hear ing, only as a spectator, however, and npt as a prosecutor. , "I am not a tramp," said the prisoner, when asked to give'an account of himself. "lama coal miner oat of a job, and I am working my way tromPittsburg to Schuylkill county. Them marks are signs." "If that is the caso what do the signs mean?" queried the Burgess.- 'They might not mean anything to a gentle man like you," was the reply, "but to every hungry man who travels the road they are plainer than print They will tell him when he comes along, whether it be to-morrow, next week or next month, that tho man who lives In mat house win always give a fellow a square meal for the asking." "Despite all the honors that have from time been paid to me," said the Governor, in speak ing of the incident "it was the proudest moment of my life when that poor devil spoko up for me in the Burgess' office here In my own town." SILENCE SHATTEEED BY SHRIEKS.. How an Obnoxious Teacher Was Disposed of by Two Cincinnati Girls. Cincinnati, January 8. A yonng woman's boarding school in ttu c7 ia just at present discussing the practical joke which a few of tho pupils played on one of the teachers who is far from popular. Two of the girls gained access to her room the other afternoon and painted in phosphorus on the wall facing the head of her bed this thrilling inscription: "This night shalt thou surely die." About 10 o'clock that night the teacher re tired and the girls watched for her light to go out It was some time before this happened, and then there was a profound silenco of about three minutes. When this was broken, it was shattered all to pieces by a blood curdlinc veil which rang through the building to its farthest confines. A rush was made for the room of the ancient maiden, the continued shriek surving as a guiue. One of the practical jokers Jed the proces sion and immediately struck a light The teacher was found flat on the floor with her face firm, still screaming. "What's the mat ter?" said another teacher who now made her appearance. With some difficulty the victim was led to explain. But as there was now a light no signs of the inscriptions were visible. The teacher was induced to look for herself but though the letters were gone, she felt as sured that the Almighty had served a sum mons on her-as ho did on Belshazzar of Babylon. She was put to bed and another teacher agreed to sloep with her to keep her quiet As soon as tho light went out both women yelled more Siercingly than before. This time the principal ctcrmiued on an investigation. The wall was- txamlned and the cause ot the mysterious in scription ascertained. The school is talking and laughing over it and the obnoxious teacher is looking for another place. $4,000 A YEAK AT 0KGAN GBINDING. That Is the Amount a Couple of Pretty Girls Slake in New York. From the .New York Graphic, The business of grinding hand organs is rap idly earning a fortune for an Italian family in this city which owns several veiy superior in struments of the "piano" variety, such as are operated on light-running handcarts. These are pushed around the city by pairs of yonng ana pretty maiaens, aressea in tne picturesque costumes-of the Roman peasantry, who serve as performers. One of the two, In each case, turns the crank of the huge music box, while the other manipulates with deft fingers the sweetly jingling tambourine. The girls arc all sisters, daughters of an an cient brigand called Grosse, a mender of the fiddles and things of tho profession, and the tunes they render, a majority of them from light French operas, are so melodiously given as to set the most unmusical person a-dancing in spite ot himself. And when one of the said organs, on its winding way through the busi ness quarter of the town, pauses to strike up in a side street or alley, all tho clerks, counter hoppers, offlco boys and other employes in the neighboring blocks quit work at once to skip round and throw pennies ont of the windows. So it is not surprising from the players them selves that they average ilO per day apiece for their work. Thii is a trifle more than $1,000 a year, including Sundays, for eacb machine and its attendants. Pretty good pay, is it not? FRIGHTENED HIS WIPE TO DEATH. Foolish Mnnner of Fan Indulged In By an Inebriated Virginia. Farmer. Lexington, Va., January 6. Intelligence is received here of a sad occurrence between here and Greenville. A farmer named Chatter baugh, while drunk, got hold of a false-face and took it home. He thought it wonld be fnn to frighten his wife, who was in a critical con dition. He put the mask on, and, with a large club, entered his house and made at his wife as though to club ber. She became so frightened that she went into spasms and died. It is re ported that he has been arrested. An Interesting Paper. From Harper's Bazar. The following slip was picked up near one of our East River docks on New Year's eve: GAVE. REcsrriD, Cash from Pa f25 00 Muffler from Ma.... 150 Embroidered hat band from Emma 1 DO Scarf-pin to Pa. f 10 "now to oe nap though Married," ipy. id," to M Monotrram die to Sis Fen-wlperfrom Ce ter Emma 5 cilia......... z& Diamond rlne to Ce cilia 130 167 7 75 It Is believed the writer has commited sui cide. TRANSATLANTIC ITEMS. The greyhound Fullerton has been sold at auction for 800 gnineas. Queex Margaret, of Italy, did ber own Christmas shopping and went the rounds of the shops in Rome like the plainest of housewives. Agreeable to the wishts of the German Emperor the theaters have resolved to abolish all French theatrical terms which have crept into the language. Rubinstein has written a cantata to cele brate the preservation of the Czar and Czarina in the recent railway accident It will be given in St Petersburg in January. Sarah Bernhardt is astonishing the Egyp'ia'ns by her extravagance. Her bills at the custom houses for articles purchased al ready amounts to over 818,000. The oldest musical society in the world, the Antlitzgcsellschatt, celebrated its two hundred and seventieth anniversary last week at St Gall, In Switzerland, with great eclat. " Mr. Gilbert, of Gilbert and Salllvan, whose "Brantinghame Hall" was so severely criti cised, has written to Mr. Clement Scott, the critic to say that rather than submit to the lat ter's "insolent gibes," he will write no more plays. While the excellent market women of Mar seilles were meeting to protest against an in crease in their rent for stalls, a long-haired member of the Costermongers' Guild rushed upon the platform and' shouted that there could be nothing accomplished until they Went to the Mayor's office, turned ont the Municipal Council, and inaugurated a revolution. Thi3 frightened the women so that there was a panic, and several were trampled on. The Duchess of Galllero, who Just died in Paris, was so rich that she was able to give $3,000,000 to endow the port of Genoa; 810.000,000; to endow the most magnificent hospital in Europe, to enlarge five streets and restore a dozen churches. She also gave her native city ber celebrated palace and collection of Van dyke painting, and in Paris endowed & museum of art an orphanage and other institutions. Her only son and heir, "SIgsor" Ferrari, is a rabid Socialist, and; refuses the title of duke. CUKI00S CONDENSATION. ' Strawberries are now only 511 a quart. There is a drinking saloon to every 112 inhabitants of Berlin, and onetoSTIn Heidel berg. The electric light Is making great pro gress in Berlin, the number of lamps now in use there being about 25.000, against 830 at tho endoflSSo. One of the Albany newspapers received a letter from New York the other day that had been 65 days en route. It thinks it is about time to put on a fast mail train. Boston's January dividends amount to 812.500,000. JL.500,000 more than those distributed in Philadelphia. On an even distribution this would 'give every Bostonian $30, and every Pniladelphian 811. One Newman, of Rushville, Ind., hai a crow which has forsaken its kind, and asso ciates altogether with the chickens in the barn yard. At night it roosts with the poultry, and during the daytime feeds with them, and alto gether conducts itself as a well-dispositioned chicken. Eugene Cranson, a New Haven carpen ter, while at work in a building fell a distanCB of 30 feet passing between the floor timbers of the first and second stories, which were only 18 inches apart, and landed head down on a brick in the cellar. Picked up for dead, he was found to have only sustained scalp wounds. At a circus fair in Oroville, Cal., there were several mammotn exhibits of oranges. They included an immense golden heart, cov ered with thousands of oranges: a grand monu ment on which were displayed 10.000 samples of the fruit and a buee basket In which were piled up 12,150 oranges. Another splendid ex hibit was a Japanese pagoda, in which nearly 5,000 oranges and lemons were displayed. The barkeeper of one of the large New York hotels has decided the interesting ques tion of the value of new year "swear offs." Ho says that he has noticed that immediately after the first of the year the receipts for drinks fall off on an average 33 per cent, but as the month advances they gain steadily, and by February 1 they are back to the starting point. A "swear off," therefore, will generally iastabout 30 days. A banker in Lille, France, h?d the mlsfortuno to wet IS' bills of the Buk of France, and in order to dry them he placed them on a board at an open window where the sun shorsf upon them. They dried mora rapidly than wa3 anticipated. A gust of wind carried them into the street where, unfortu nately, a goat picking up odds and ends at once captured the bank bills and swallowed them. The goat was purchased and the bills secured in a very dilapidated condition, but the Bank of France recognized its obligation and re deemed them. The Norwegian State Antiquarian Nio alaysenhas completed the excavation of the ruins of an ancient monastery on the west coast of Norway. The assembly room, sacristy and refectory have been uncovered, and the covered comdor running along the courtyard. The roof of the assembly hall seems to have been supported by a huge central pillar. All the details of the architecture show a rich and advanced Romanesque style, and the interior arrangements are generally identical with those found in early English monasteries. A few graves were found, and in one the remains of an abbot, judging from the cloak and miter found with the skeleton. 'A young man of Meriden, Wright by name and action, had a very merry Christmas. In the afteruopn, on his way to the skating pond, he saw two young women on the trestle at the head of the pond, right in front of a coming locomotive. They saw" it coming, but were helpless from fright Young Wright ran forward, pushed them both off the trestle, to the bank, and just managed to get of the way himself. Then be bad his skate. Returning home in the dusk, he heard a cry of distress from another pond, and, and running there, found two children in the water. He saved these lives also, and thus closed probably the most successful Christmas of bis life. Major Blnmenthal, an officer of the German Landwehr, has, on the suspicion of be ing a spy, been ordered to leave France within 48 hours. Suspicions were aroused by his tak ing, under the assumed name of Baron do J illy, a chalet near Conflans. not far from Paris. A lady, who was supposed to have taken a part of the chalet from him, turns out to have been a German military cadet They both used to go wandering ab out with a perambulator. What seemed to be a sleeping baby was in reality a large doll that hid a photographic apparatus for taking views of the new forts and the posi tions commanding them. They were also en thusiastic pigeon fanciers, but some of their birds were trapped by suspicious neighbors and found to be carriers. A ter young girls in Hartford, all of thein "Daughters of the King," raised a Ilttlo money by giving some tableaux not long ago, and then set about making someone happy with that money. They heard of a family, con sisting of a hard-worked mother and three lit tle children,, and decided to try and make them happy. First they made a gigantic stocking, and then set out to fill it They went from store to store explaining their object and as a result were able to buy a great deal with their money. Most of tho purchases were useful articles of food and clothing, but they didn't forget toys and candies for the little ones. On Christmas morning the stocking was delivered, and there was but one otber happier group of children than the widow's inHartiordthatday, and they were the girls who filled the stocking. More than 160 languages and dialects are current In India and British Burmah, with their 256,000,000 of people, and the distinct al phabets of these countries, many of which are very elaborate, outnumber all others in the world. Some 40 different alphabets or syllable systems, each having from 250 to 500 combina tions, are used to repiesent the sounds of the 150 languages, and more than 10,000 different signs and types have been elaborated from the original aipnaoet to represent tne ou different sounds all that the combined Indian vernacu lars contain. As these simple sonnds cannot all be represented by the 26 letters of the En glish alphabet, 21 letters of the English pho netic alphabet are captured and made to do service in this new English phonetic alphabet, and we then have one simplo alphabet taking the places of 40 or more and becoming availa ble as the written language of 200,000,000 of pec- -pie who have no written alphabet, because they don't know just how to use one. CLIPPED BITS OF WIT. Princes3 (amateur violinist) Why, my dear maestro, you are always a few beats behind time! Musician Out of proper respect an't please yonr Serene Highness! Der JIoA. Some genius with a fancy for handling babies has ngnred out that a piece of wood the size of a month old baby would be worn down one-half in six months If handled as much as the average baby.:-Exchange. ' He (at party) You are not looking quite your usual self this evening. Miss Van Zanett She No, lam not feoUngat all well. I was at the cooking school th'Is afternoon, and was com pelled to eat some angel food made by that odious Miss Larabee. Enoch. - Office Boy (to his employer) Mr. Brown outside, sir, wants to see the junior partner. Junior Partner Not In; I owe him thirty dol lars. Senior Partner Show him in; he owes me forty. Harper's Bazar. UNCLE SAM AND MISS CANADA. "What's your fortune, my pretty maid 1" "My debts are my fortune, sir, " she said. ' "Then I can't annex you, my prettv maid." "Nobody asked you, sir," she said. Philadelphia Record. If young women knew what desperate i, things young men will sometimes do under the in- fluence of disappointed love, they would be mora K careful how tbey trifle with their deep aflectlons. A Boston girl refused to marry a young man the other evening, and be went rlglit away and pro. posed successfully to another girl before 10 o'clock, r Journal of Education. A Familiar Subject. Able Editor Yes,"."3 sir, Mr. Scribbler, I have a place for you on my stafflfyouwlsh.lt. When -did yon leave the pa- ' per over the way, and what was your work there 1 " Mr. Scribbler-Thls morning. I wrote the po- Utlcal editorials. jj, "Well, take that desk and get up a good strong article pitching Into the political drivel which has i been appearing inUhat paper lately.-PAOode phia Record. $!& More Tribulation. Mother What's thjsjp- matter now? J TS Daughter Oh, I'm In such trouble. It seems as If I'd go crazy. Yon see this little autograph, V album that Mr. Nlcefellow gave me? , . "Certainly, and It's a beauty." v - 'Well, on the fly-leaf I've found the store prieqTi mark, and I I can't make out whether, boo, hoot whether It means 83 or 80 cents. Phitadit- . phia Kicord. A Tiresome Caller. Mrs. Winks Hold--the baby a moment there's a dear. I want to putK back these pictures I got out for Mrs. Minks to look at. Such a tiresome creature as she Is. She' was here for nearly half an hour this afternoon, and did nothing hut talk about the baby. Mr. Winks-Bless his little heart So the ladles comeandsltand admire and talk about the: little , cherub, do tbey? Of course they do;, they caa't f help loving - - J5 Mrs. Winks Gracious me! It "wasn't my baby -i, she talked about It was her own:; Philadelphia Board. . . . " . -'A.JMfefei aSLJ&A ' - I hL ri 4l)e Als&5&,- .:"t. . - vife'ifitias. &...; j MsiTSWWBP-HewBwKH i