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The courtesy of re turning rejected manuscripts will be extended uhen stampsor that purpose arc enclosed, but the Editor of The Disi-atch iH under no circumstances be responsible for the care of un litieitvd manuscripts. PITTSBURG, SUNDAY. FEB. 10. 1SS9L THE FEnTEKTIABr DISCIPLINE. The protracted inquiry into the details of the charges against the hospital steward of the penitentiary is now at an cud, and the official inspectors are considering their de cision. "When that shall have been made known the public will be better prepared to judge how far responsibility for the things complained of at the investigation extends. Tor the present, however, several conclu sions will likely be reached without going far astray. The leading one is. that the weight of evidence established a looseness of discipline in allowing money among the inmates, and also raised a strong presump tion that Dr. Maharnekehad financial deal ings, bargains for privileges, with those tinder his care. That the application of electrical apparatus, whether for curing or punishing, was also a proceeding which under the motive of anger might readily be, if it was not indeed actually, abused, is also clear. The profanity was virtually con ceded. In place of endeavoring to indicate to the inspectors what their course should be, the public will rather wait with curiosity for the inspectors own judgment. As The Dispatch stated when the matter came up a week ago, testimony from the inmates alone, owing to their peculiar antecedents, could not be regarded as conclusive unless corroborating circumstances were clear. It is perfectly w ell known that there are cer tain classes of witnesses and sorts of testi mony upon which neither the public nor the courts will imperil the rights or the reputation of any private citizen. But that upon which no jury would feel safe in con victing a private citizen, might yet be 1 enough to establish strong beliefs as to the inefficiency or unfitness of an officer in a public institution. The sum of the matter is that while it is absurd to think that prison keepers can please those under their charge, or that they can establish a government which will ever commend itself to the inmates, it is impera tive that there shall be no abuse of power. Prisoners are entitled to ieel that justice which punishes can descend through its agents to no littleness or injustice, and that the community would much rather see them come out reformed and with new and better ideas than embittered and inspired to bad moods by unauthorized, harsh or vindictive treatment. AN TJNFEOPHEHC DANIEL. Senator John "W. Daniel, of Virginia, has delivered himself on the subject of the civil service reform policy of the new ad ministration. He wants it understood that lie is "agin it," and he hopes that President Harrison will "go back to the old prin ciple." Probably Senator Daniel's oppo sition to the new-fangled idea of appointing officers for the benefit of the public rather than the politicians has been strengthened by the obstacle which the remnants of President Cleveland's reform policy has presented to Senator Daniel's getting his 11 of patronage before the Democratic ad ministration goes out. It is certain, too, that as he is not a member of President Harrison's party, he could view with perfect indifference the violation by the incoming President of his own pledge and of the double pledge in the party platform, to ex tend andenforcetheprincipleot selection for efficiency and not fpr party purposes. Sen ator Daniel's hope of getting civil service reform killed for the benefit of future Dem ocratic administrations is not likely to be fulfilled. "We do not think President Har rison will prove quite so obliging as that This is not "a Daniel come to judgment." CHICAGO'S NEW AMBITION. It is pleasant to know that the plans for the opening of the Chicago Auditorium are not going to fall short for lack of being suf - ciently ambitious. "We believe that it was Sir Philip Sj'dney who said that "he who t shoots at the noonday sun, though he know ' that he shall never reach his mark, yet is he certain that his arrow will fly higher than if , aimed at the wayside bush." On this 1 principle it is quite evident that the Chicago ; arrow will take a lofty flight; for Mr. J. C. Duff, who is going abroad to secure attrac tions for that fine building, announces his , intentions as follows: I My first object is to get Gilbert and Snllivan i to write another "Pinafore" and Audran another "Mascot" I hope to persuade Plan quette to give us another "Chimes of Nor mandy." and if 1 succeed I guess we can rest -on our oars a little while. Only three composers who are expected to take the contract of beating their own records, and Chicago will be satisfied! "Well, the notorious modesty of our "Western neighbors, as heretofore, is safe to take a form that will not stand in her light All that Audran, Planquettc and Gilbert and Sullivan will have to do in the matter will be to name terms according to the Chicago style, "seller May," or possibly June, and Chicago will rest in sublime confidence that the operas will be turned out, just as her own great minds would make good their 'deliveries of stated amounts of No. 1 hard wheat or strictly pure cottonseed lard. But there are contingencies which Chi cago does not seem to take fully into con sideration when she starts out to go long on operas in this reckless muner. It is true that the visible supply of opera, grading strictly as No. 1, is quite short, but that fails to in clude all the factors that may work in such a deal on operatic futures. In view of the fact that these composers have beeu trying for some ten years to surpass their great suc cesses, it may turn out that they would be unable to beat themselves now. Suppose, to bring it down to the Chicago phraseology, (that the crop of operas which that city in- tends to buy up should be ample in volume but deficient in quality. 'Who is to do the grading, and what are to be the rules of in spection? This'is a vital point to our sister city, be cause it suggests numerous practices by which such catastrophies may be circum vented. Thus, if the grades of operatic wheat should be lowered, &o that what is really No. 2 spring can pass inspection as Xo. 1 extra, it will make it easier for the sellers, as Chicago knows; but the ex perience of the buyers under these circum stances is not so satisfactory. So, also, in case the contract should be filled by the de livery of round lots of opera, apparently of first-class quality and up to the standard, but proving on inspection to contain a large proportion of operatic oleomargarine.cotton sced oil and other unsuspected substitutes for the real article, the usual relations of Chicago with the rcst.nf the world would be sadly reversed. "With due recognition of these perils in herent in an operatic bull movement, we wish our Western friends success. But above all things we hope that they will avoid attempting to corner the market ia opera. Previous experience of Chicago efforts in that direction warrants the ap prehension that such an eflort would smash up the whole business. EDGEETON'S DECAPITATION. The bouncing of Edgerton, by the Presi dent yesterday, as a closing stroke ot ad ministration policy is noticeable for its comic features although it seems to be tragi cal enough for the decapitated places-holder. The President asked Edgerton to resign, ap parently for the purpose of putting in his place a friend who might have a chance of prolonging his term beyond the inaugura tion of the Eepublican administration. As there might be a whole month, and possibly six weeks, of salary for Edgciton before Harrison could replace him, he ut terly failed to perceive the advantage of the change. He refused, with the consequence that the President removed him and sent ia the nomination of Thompson. The only criticism that can be made on the President's action is that it is too late; and that iault is a vital one. The appoint ment of a professed and unblushing advo cate of the principle of patronage lor the spoils only on the Civil Service Commission reduced the pretense of reform to a farce. Such an appointment might be excused on the plea of ignorance as to Edgerton's real character; but as that character was mani fested very shortly after he began his work of reducing civil service relorm to a hum bug, to let him continue the work for years, and then remove him at this late day, bears the essential characteristics of a death-bed repentance. As for Mr. Edgerton's declaration that he is removed because he is a Democrat, while Mr. Cleveland is a Mugwump, it may be true. But if it is true that fidelity to the spoils principle is a cardinal point of the Democratic creed, it might be healthy to remember that Mr. Cleveland as a Mug wump reformer is the one national candi date whom the Democrats have elected for thirty years; while it was after he put snch spoilsmen as Edgerton in place that he suffered defeat FASHION AND SALVATION. The New York fashion ot "slumming," which was considered the correct thine for the Four Hundred and their imitators a year or two ago, is now reported to have run its course. Its main recommendation to the gilded society of the metropolis was that it was supposed to be an accurate copy of the charitable duties of the nobility and gentry of Great Britain; and as it consisted of wit nessing the most unedifying sights ot the seamy side of New York without any per ceptible diminution of the great mass of vice and misery, the wane of charity which was merely a iashionabic whim, need not be especially regretted. But, of course, fashionable New York must cultivate a religious "fad," and it is interesting to learn that the one which has replaced "slumming" is that of lionizing Mrs. Booth, the young and pretty wife of the Commander-in-Chief of the Salvation Army in the United States. Whether this is an imported fashion, or is the original product of some daring and fertile mind among the Pour Hundred alleged brains of New York high society, is not in evidence. It is only known that Mrs. Booth is pro nounced a very charming young woman, with a sweet voice, soft eyes, and a face of refined beauty. These qualities have not always proved an open sesame to the New York circles of fashion; but the capabilities of the young lady as a lioness, together with her personal charms, have made her a social craze If the association of Murray Hill with the Salvatiop Army could inspire the for mer with some of the earnestness of the lat ter, this freak of fashion would be very use ful. Even the exchange of the fashionable idiocies for the freakish characteristics of Salvation campaigns would be a distinct improvement But we fear that the result of making a Salvation Army heroine fash ionable is more likely to prove demoraliz ing to the fair Salvationist than inspiring to the societv lion-hunters. NOT THE EIGHT CUKE. The summing up of the losses from the New York street car strike estimates a cost of 100,000 to the men, ?250,000 to the com panies and a still greater, but unestimated cost of inconvenience and loss to the public of New York. This is generally taken as a text to show the foolishness of the strikers; and there is much justice in that view. The fact that $100,000 of the men's wages has been thrown away with nothing to show for it but utter defeat, should teach the workmgmen that the methods of industrial warfare are only to be regarded as a last resort, available for the most desperate junctures. But the fact that the loss to the compan ies is placed at a higher sum than the loss to the men should also have its lesson. It is as much to the purpose to show the need for them to avoid a strike as it is to draw the same lesson with regard to the workers. The idea of the New York corporations seems to be that they will protect themselves against future strikes by compelling the men who resume work to abjure their right to organ ize. But will it have that effect? It may prevent the immediate recurrence of strikes; but will not its future effect be to make the men cherish their grievances more secretly, form their organizations more completely under cover, and use more violent and sub versive measures when they get ready to renew the conflict? The fact may be ad mitted that the street-car strikes were ac companied by unjustifiable acts of violence; but it is the best way to prevent the recur rence to such measures, for the companies to" show their employes that they will re spect all the rights of the latter, and will only go into a conflict where it is necessary to preserve their own rights. Strikes should be avoided as long as they can with manliness on either side. But capital and labor should make equal efforts to avoid them; and we do not believe that the former is taking the right course to se cure a permanent solution "of the labor question, when it denies the right of the latter to organization. The Philadelphia Traction Company, which took a second trial - in order to escape paying 518,000 damages for cutting off a newsboy's leg, has re ceived a stunner in the shape of a verdict of ?20,000 on the second trial. The ability to know when it had got enough would have been valuable to this corpora tion; but of even greater value to similar corporations will be the ability to recognize that the surest way to avoid big damage suits of this kind will be to have no one in jured on their lines. The country awaits with calm indiffer ence the question whether Bismarck will grab Samoa or Harrison enforce civil service reform; but the one thing which keeps it breathless is whether the St. Louis baseball team will own Arlie Latham for the coming year. One home industry has been broken up not even natural gas and the geographical advantages of the site could save it, viz.: a manufactory for counterfeit gold and silver dollar pieces in Butler county. Uncle Sam still insists on having a monopoly in that business as the thirteen Butlerites cap tured yesterday realize now to their sorrow. They are also taught the useful lesson that the safest way of "making money" is to earn it Dr. Titus Munson Coan is quoted as declaring that "water is the most dangerous drink known to man." This is the first in timation the country has received that the eminent gentleman has joined the Hill wing of the New York Democracy. The news that Germany has made over tures to England to restore the double stand ard of coinage will give aid and comfort to the stoutly struggling bi-nietallists of this country. Having, according to the inscrip tion on the paternal dollars trusted in the Deity for about 24 cents on the dollar, these many years, it will be a relief to observe the probability of a reinforcement and to trust in Bismarck for change. The savage critics ot the purists in art have as yet failed to raise an outcry at the action of the Ohio and Pennsylvania Legis latures in refusing to pass laws against dressed beef. It has recently come out in the Dominion Parliament that a member of that body ac quired a timber right from the Government on seventy-five square miles of pine land for 316, and sold it in three days for?50,000. This may bo why our esteemed cotemporary, the Toronto Empire, turns up its nose at the corruption of the United States. Twelve hundred applications forlicense in this county, this year, will keep the courts busy on the job of cutting them down to about five hundred. A Western journal declares emphati cally that "the new Secretary of Agri culture must be a practical agriculturist." Probably he should be, and probably he will when the Secretarv of War is a prac tical soldier and the Secretary of State a statesman. Until then they are all likely to be practical politicians. Various cities are trying to abolish the bobtail street cars; but the bobtail flushes continue to lure their victims to ruin with out interference. The grand jury of Steubenville, Ohio, recently passed a vote of thanks to the pros ecuting attorney for his "patience, expedi tion and endurance." If an Allegheny county prosecuting attorney could get a chance to thank a graud jury for these qualities, the sensation would be novel. There is hope that the litigation over the electric light plants will be settled by about the time that the patents run out. The Central Traffic Association having failed to make the combination which it wished to make, of course the report of a rate war is heard. After the rate-cutting has forced the combination, it will next be beld up as an awful example of competi tion between the railroads. PDBLIC PEOPLE PARAGRAPHED. Mrs. Mona Caird is a brunette, tall, grace ful and handsome. Mr. John P. St. John is speculating In land In California. Of course he will have nothing to do with vineyards. Writtxg to Mr. Newman Hall the other day, Mr. Spurgeon said: "Something of the comic attends solemnity when I am in it" The Empress Frederick will get 5,000,000 francs under the will of the Duchess of Galicia. She receives an annuity of 40,000 as Queen dowager of Prussia, and is richly provided for by her late husband. Senoka Romero will give a dancing party at Washington on Tuesday next at which the President and Mrs. Cleveland are expected to be present. Senor Romero and Mrs. Whitney will lead the cotillon. Sir Charles Dilke was recently asked his opinion of Boulangcr, and replied: ''I can only repeat what I said in the Fo tnighlly He view in 18S7. I have not discovered whether he is a clown, a charlatan, or the coming Caesar." By an oversight of the "White House stew ard the wine gave out in the middle of the re cent dinner given by President and Mrs. Cleve land to the Diplomatic Corps. White House servants were flying about Washington at mid night trying to secure enough bottles to repair the blunder. AN attempt to lower Weston's record of 5,000 miles in 100 days was recently begun at Sitting- bourne, England, by Charles Green, over a three-quarter mile course on the main road from London to Dover. He walks bare-hetd-cd, wears a flannel skirt and trousers, stout leather boots, and, like his American rival, wears a pair of gaiters, while he carries a rid ing whip in one hand. Paris is at last to honor itself with a monu ment in memory of Balzac As in the case of Victor Hugo at the Avenne d'Eylau, and of Thomas Carlyle at Cheynowalk, It is proposed to place the statue near the house where the great author died. Alieady the Parisians have renamed the adjoining street Rue Balzac, and though the house is falling into ruin it has still very close associations with the author's life. A tree that grows in tho courtyard, and is seen over tho wall, was planted by Balzac the day of his marriage. Harper's JJazar says: Andrew Carnegie, the millionaire iron founder, says that he be gan his business career by sweeping out an of fice, and that his fellow-sweepers were David McCargo, now President of the Allegheny Val ley Railroad, Robert Pitcairn, Superintendent of the Pennsylvania Railroad, and Mr. More land, City Attorney of Pittsburg. What a busy time those brooms must have had if the son was father to the man in the case of this quar tet of sweepers! Mr. Carnegie, by-tbe-way, is said to have a most gorgeous music room in his New York house. The walls are separated by pilasters of carved satinwood, and hung with pink satin damask. (A pretty effect no doubt, bnt upholstery is fatal in a music room). The portiere is of embroidered plush. Tho renter panel of the ceiling was painted by Mr. Frederick Crowninsbicld. The most striking feature of the room is the mantel piece of Mexican onyx. Certainly Mr. Carnegie swept to some purpose. THE TOPICAL TALKER. The Strango Behavior of a Society Leader Fair Florida Mourns tor tho Visitor Who Come Not Poker Knocks Out ulnslc Mrs. Jean PoultneyBigelow, whose death The Dispatch; announced yesterday, was a remark able, though eccentric, woman in many ways. She was naturally a woman of social promin ence as the wife of the Hop. John Blgelow, ex Minister to France, and she was almost as widely known in tho aristocratic circles of Eng land and France, as at home in New York City. But the news of her death recalls to my mind & very peculiar series of accidents in her last voyage homo from England. She traveled on tho City of New York, the crack steamerof the Inman Line. A few days before the City of New York sailed the agents of the line at Liverpool were requested by somebody in authority to meet a lady whose name I cannot recall, whom we will call Brown, at the station of the Northwestern, on the afternoon the ship was to sail. The agents sent one of tbelr young men to the sta tion as requested, and when the train came in he was on the lookout for Mrs. Brown. He saw an elderly lady apparently looking for some one, and asked her if she were Mrs. Brown. The lady responded in the affirmative and ac cepted the young man's offer to escort her to the steamer. She reached the ship and was, shown to Mrs. Brown's quarters, which were of the best to be had on hoard tho palatial vessel. V Just before the City of Now York put out of the Mersey, the purser was approached by an elderly lady who said she was Mrs. Brown, and asked with some indignation to be shown to stateroom, adding that she had been promised a better reception by the Inman Line people. The purser took this Mrs. Brown to tho state room allotted to her, only to find that it was occupied by another lady who said she was Mrs. Brown. Tho purser consulted his list of cabin passengers and found there was only one Mrs. Brown in it Here were two Mrs. Browns demanding the same berth. Mrs. Brown No. 2, however, was able to produce a cabin ticket on which her name was written opposito to the. stateroom which sbe claimed. The purser asked tho lady who bad possession of the state room to produce her ticket but she refused point blank. It was not until late that night that the pur ser could persuade Mrs. Brown No. 1 to give up the stateroom to the rightful possessor. By the time he had succeeded in doing this he had discovered that Mrs. Brown No. 1 was no other than Mrs. John Blgelow, who for some reason had personated Mrs. Brown. V After this curious adventure Mrs. Bigelow still declined to show her ticket but tho pur ser persisted until several days out from Qucenstown he succeeded in getting it Then, strange to say, it was found to be indorsed in the part which the bolder is requested to fill in: Joseph Pulitzer, journalist, age , etc., de scribing the proprietor of the New York World, who had been expected to travel on the City of New York, but who was compelled to stay behind for some reason or other. Of course this use of Mr. Pulitzer's namo was entirely urauthorized, and Mrs. Bigelow never ex plained what she meant by it Strange as her behavior in this and some other respects was during that long and tire some voyage, I only remember her as the most distinguished looking lady on board the ship. This time last year Pittsburgers were to ba found in every resort of fashion and health in Florida, yesterday a gentleman who has been roaming about St Augustine and the places near it, for a tew weeks, told me that not only are Pittsburgers scarce in Florida, but visitors from all parts of the country are very few in number. There is only one explanation for this phe nomenon. The yellow fever bugaboo has scared everybody away. It is not unnatural, but it is very hard upon the people of St Augustine, for example; who were so careful whde the plague was at its height to quaran tine themselves from all their neighbors. It is doubtful if the fever ever got nearer to St. Augustine than SO miles. Jacksonville, which yellow jack made his headquarters, is at least S5 miles from St Augustine, as the crow flies. But anyone who has knowlege of the move ments of those Pittsburgers who in other years have escaped the vilo weather we endure at this season, by following the blue birds to tlielr winter quarters, is aware that ever since the exodns began last fall Southern California, and even the south of Europe, have been preferred to Florida and the Gulf coast. . TnE season at its best begins in St Augustine in a week or two, and doubtless the great hotels there will bavc more tenants when March comes. Spring begins, in St. Augustine much earlier than it does here, usually putting in its appearance about Maroh 1. The coldest days of the car in tho same neighborhood are usually encountered about tho middle of De cember. . In the advertising columns of a cotemporary an enterprising firm asserts its ability to "re cover umbrellas in one day." Such philanthropic industry ought to be en couraged, but it is to be feared that the ad vertiser Is a little too sanguine. Umbrellas have often been lost in less than a minute, but very, very few have ever been recovered at all, much less in ono day. bTRANGERS visiting this city have often commented upon the unusual love for music, which is to be found among the sons of wealthy men here. Only a few days ago In a Western city a gentleman assured me that he had never encountered so many young men of standing in good society who could play, not merely the piano but also wind and string instruments, as he had during a recent visit to Pittsburg. It would have pained my Western friend, as it did me, to hear a young man who is a power in East End amateur musical circles observe: "Ihe odd thing about 'these little musical seances we have been enjoying among our selves this winter is that they always wind up in the same way, although no such finale is on the programme. The bojs have a habit of put ting a silver dollar or two in their trousers' pockets, and almost as soon as the concert has begun, some one among the performers will jingle the money in his pocket and it's all up with music at once. Nobody's happy till poker's under way, and the charms of Chopin, Mozart Mendelssohn, Rubcnstein and the rest are as naught before four aces and a king." Hepburn Johns. Lynching as a Floe Art. From the Chicago Herald. A lynching near Schuyler, Neb., the other night is described as one of "the most quiet and orderly" proceedings of the kind that ever 'took place. "Why can't all lynchings be con ducted in this manner, and the nerves of the man to be lynched spared the irritation often due to the boisterous clamor and rude disorder of the men? A Pointer for Bonrdlns-Uouse Keepers From the Lewlston Journal. I A Bath genius has made a discovery that entitles him to the everlasting gratitudo of boarding-housekeepers. He has found a way to make a tender steak out of almost anything. His way is to run itthrough asausage machine, hich Is guaranteed to make tenderloin out of neck. The Pension Agency, From the Grccnsburg Tress. 1 Colonel Chill Hazzard, of Monongahela City, wo arc pleased to note, is receiving the strong est possible support for the Pension Agency of this district We do not know this man who is better fitted for the position than the Colonel. His friends in this section are legion, and they hope to see him receive tho reward of his faithful service as a soldier and Republican. Hard on AInlne. From the Chicago News. It has been discovered that a very large pro portion of the people who visit Maine imme diately settle down and remain permanently. They travel to that State on corpse tickets, and Instead of investing in real estate become in vested in it. Maine is a State which can be heartily recommended to dead people. A Fatal Mistake. From the Chicago News. J Three Kentuckians have been rendered fatally ill by drinking poisoned whisky. Some body must have poured water into the tipple. Consnl Sewall's Resignation Received. "Washington, February 9. The resignation of H. M. Bewail as Consul General at Samoa Iwo tcwiicu uj wo Bvxuujr ui. ptate mis morning. THE CKOW HAS ITS PBICB, Ten Cents a Head to be Paid for the Pests by the State of Maine. Augusta, Me., February 9. The orators of the Maine House of Representatives were in spired by the subject of tho crow yesterday. There was a queer debate upon a bill intro duced by a granger Representative, fixing a bounty of 10 cents on the scalp of every crow killed, and Instructing town treasurers to immediately dostroy by fire, after paying the bounty, all crows' heads deposited with them in lots of ten or more each. The Representative from Mercer thought this question one of the 'most important betore the Legislature. The" losses to the farmer ot Maine by the depredations of crows are enor mous. The representative from Stetson had planted two acres of corn two years ago, and the crows had taken the corn out of every hill. 'They destroy our apples and our potatoes," he said, "and are an awful pest to the farm ers." Representative Cloutier didn't favor the bounty. He thought the crow was the most important bird in the State. He was no sneak. He came in tho daytime with his charming music. There is no law preventing tho farmer from shooting him, and if he Is such a pest, let the farmer take his gun and kill him. Representative Burleigh proposed as an amendment that the words "by fire" should bo stricken out, so that town treasurers might de stroy the beads in any manner they wished. Mayor Wakefield, of Bath, moved an amend ment that the craws be canned and sent to the hotel and boarding house proprietors of Au gusta for use on their tables. Mr. Burleigh moved an amendment to this, providing that the gentleman from Bath eat the crow. There was a long discussion over an amend ment to reduce the bounty to5cents, butflnally the original bill was passed. A crow's scalp Is nowworth lOcents in Maine, just 51 90 less than a bear's scalp. WEDDED ON A WAGER. Dr. Lo Caron's Matrimonial Experience During the War. From the Mew York World. 1 An interesting episode in the career of Henry Beach, alias Major Lo Caron, was his courtship and marriage in the South, as narrated by one or his former comrades. It serves to show the devil-may-care spirit of the adventurer who is now testifying before the Parnell Commission. The regiment was temporarily quartered near a thriving settlement, and the customary diversions of camp life served to while away the weeks ot waiting. During an exciting game of ecarte one day, a discussion arose regarding a pretty brunette who had wounded the hearts of many of the soldiers. The dispute waxed high, and ended with Major Le Caron laying a wager that he would forfeit 8100 if ho did not marry her inside of one month. As the Major and the lady were unacquainted, and the young object of the wager was jealously guarded by an old aunt the offer was readily snapped up. Every effort was made to block the doctor's game, and numerous gay' suitors made hard love and tried to cut him out. But he proven equal to the task by marrying the girl on the last day allowed by tho terms of the wager. He came North soon afterward, settled here, and it was not until a couple of years afterward that he went back to see her. He found her a blooming woman with a child who for three years had been carefully guarded. This child, Henry, is now, or was lately, in Chicago, the wife and child having returned with Le Caron. The marriage thus strangely entered into has proven a most happy one, if we except the slight eccentricities in the character of the man. COOPER AS A JIOSES. Tho Republican Senator Asked to Lead the Prohibitionists In the Coining Fight. From the rhiladclphia Record. It is on the cards that Senator Thomas V. Cooper, whose success as Chairman of the Re publican Stato Committee has won for him the reputation of being a remarkably successful political organizer, may lead the combined forces in this State for prohibition. A gentleman who is well acquainted with the ins and outs of things at Harrisburg said last evening that the Prohibitionists had asked Senator Cooper to accept the position of Chair man of their State Central Committee, and organize the party for the approaching battle. Senator Cooper is said to have asked for time to consider the offer, and he is now sleeping on it and considering whether an acceptance or a refusal will best promote bis political pros pects. The Republican friends of the Senator are urging htm to place himself at the head of tho prohibition organization. They claim that he could accept the offer without injuring his standing in the party, because of the position ,the organization-' has already taken on it Should the fight result In a victory for prohi bition, it is cUimcd that Senator Cooper would then occupy a position which would demand recognition and make him an available candi date for tho Republican nomination for Gov ernor in 1S90. SUED FOR X0T SHAVING. A White Barber to be Tried for Refusing to Shave a Negro. CAMBRIDGE, O., February 9. A case unde'r the Ohio civil rights law was brought before Justice Turner in this place to-day. The de fendant, George Moses, a white man, is the keeper ot a barber skop hero. Wednesday a colored man named Isaac Green applied for a shave and was refused. This made Green angry, and the snit was the outcome. Hoses waived examination and was remanded to tho Common Pleas Court in 3100. HOTHING SLOW AB0BT THEM. An Ohio Couple Meet. Court and Marry All in Ono Short Hour. PojtEROY, O., February 9. A romantic mar riage took place at Middleport last night. Alexandor Neighborgall, a young man from 1C miles back In the country, came to town and met Miss Ella Rowe at the Grand View Hotel. They were introduced and, after an hour's courtship, were married. They never met be fore. The bride's home is in Rockbridge county, Virginia. The Result of the Treating Bill. From the Hew York Bun. The bill introduced in the Pennsylvania Leg islature forbidding one man to "treat" an other, intoxicants, of course, being the article tabooed, can have but ono result if passed. Hereafter the guests on such occasions will take it out in cash. The barkeeper will still set 'em up, but each man will pay his individual charge and collect from his generous legally regulated host. Wonderful are the suggestions of modern legislation. Proud of the Distinction. From the Sew York Sun. "Are you a boodle Alderman?" asked the visitor kindly. "Indeed I'm not" said the prisoner, drawing himself up proualy. "I am a wife beater." Sad, bnt True. From the New York World. J It is a sad fact that the man who goes out on a strike is often confronted by an empty home plate, MY TOAST. rwntTTEX FOR THE DISPATCH. There's many things or which the Sonth Has reason eood to boast; Her courtlv men, her ladles fair. Her plncy -woods and balmy air; Her rivers broad and foreits deep, And streams that sparkle, laugh and leap; Hut 'tis not these that In my rhyme I oiler as a toast. The "Sunny South" I've rambled o'er From Texas to the coast; From Carolina's mountains grand, To where the Gulf waves kiss the strand; Have stood on Lookout's lofty crown, And sailed the Suwanee river down, But 'tis not these that in my rhyme I offer as a toast. A house so old, you quite believe, 'lis haunted by a ghost; A chimney broad and deep and dark. Two great black dogs (that never bark); A glint backlog lying flat Supporting plies ot brush and "fat;" A match now watch! Tills Is tho time And place to drink my toast. Bring forward that split-bottomed chair; (No nearer, or vou'll roastl) Who does not love that leaping Are; (Like lover's glance, when hearts desire.) V hat castles grand, what maidens fair. What armies have been marshaled there I Bring wine and vintage, old and rare, And drink with me" this toast. . The good old-fashioned chimney place, The genial Southern host. The clean-swept hearth and silent dogs, The snapping, crackling hickory logs. Behind the dark, wainscoted room Where phantoms steal from out the gloom These, these, I pledge the dear old Sonth, And, loving, drink the toastl Helen IUwtuohnb. Norwich, Coxn., February 7. SNAILS A LA MODE. Where the Slimy Molluscs Aro Eaten and Considered Delicious They Never Cause Poisoning, Indigestion or Colic Different Varieties of Frogs Eels, Seals, Frogs nnd Whales Considered ns Food. From tho London Standard.! A Wiltshire correspondent writes us, in some amazement, that only last week he found a man searching for snails, not .as zoological specimens, but as articles of food. Still more extraordinary, he actually praiscd.them. Sim ply roasted on the bars of the grate and eaten with pepper and vinegar, they are declared to be toothsome. Soaked in salt and water, and then cooked and served alter the fashion of whelks and periwinkles, they are still better. At this season tho land shells, like snails, are hibernating in holes, under leaves and in the hollows ot trees. As all the species now in a torpid state lay on a load of fat before retiring for the winter, the snail seeker, though, possibly, he did not quite understand tne reason why, was of opinion that it was only at this period of the year that the molluscs are tit for human consumption. Here, most likely, he was wrong. Bat at all events, in supping freely on such dainty bits, tho Wiltshire gourmet has proved himself a great deal more sensible than many people who may be inclined to call him bard names, and then proceed to swallow a dozen of raw oysters, and a piece of cheese so swaiming with para sites that if the latter were only unanimous it would walk off the table. Snnils Eaten in England. Wiltshire is, however, not singular in possess ing a man above tho prejudices of his neigh bors. In several parts of England snails are regularly eaten not, it is true, as an ordinary article of diet, but at stated feasts. For in stance, the Newcastle glass men wero famous for their taste in that direction. Every year they held a sort of gastronomic festival, at which snails figured as the principal dish. Whether the custom has since then fallen into decay is a question on which, no doubt local information is to be bad. But we believe that the iron pnddlers in some parts of the Black country are wise enough to still indulge in the same dainty, and it is by no means uncommon to hear of snails boiled in milk being pre scribed, like the viper broth of Carolinean times, for patients far gone in consumption. It is less agreeable to know that at one time they were employed in the manufacture of imitation cream, and that in suite of analysts and acts of Parliament they are even yet bruised and stewed in milk to form one of the tolerably palatable articles which pass under that name. Southdown Mutton's Flavor. There is, however, the consolation that many adulterations much more reprehensible than the use of snails enter into the food wo are compelled to consume. Moreover, science leaves us no room to doubt their eminently nu tritive qualities. It Is, indeed, affirmed that the quantities of snails which appear in the chalk pastures after rain, and which aro de voured by the sheep along with the short, sweet herbage on which both feed, have a large share in imparting that peculiar flavor to which Southdown mutton owes so much of its celeb rity. Be that as it may. the English prejudice against snails is singular, since, from time im memorial, considerable quantities have been collected round London and on the Kentish pastures for export to France. There, at all events, there is no squeamishness on the subject, the only regret of thousands being that they are too expensive to be indulged in as frequently as might be wished. Even in Covent Garden the common snail often appears for sale, the purchasers, however, beipg almost solely the members of tho French, Austrian and Italian colonies in London; for the North Germans and Scandinavians seem, like their Teutonic kindred generally, to hold the dainty morsels in abhorenco. Any one who has passed through the Lisbon fruit market in autumn must havo noticed the huge baskets of snails for sale, and in Madrid and other wealthy Spanish cities, as many as 15 different kinds may sometimes be counted on the slabs of the dealers. Cultivated Snails. Italy they are equally popular; but no sooner are the Alps passed than the snail begins to disappear from the menus, until, by the time Denmark and Sweden are reached, it is never seen on the table. In some of the large towns with a cosmopolitan population there are, of course, as in London, a few patrons of it, Bnt as a rule, the Latin people are its principal friends, just as they arc of a dozen wholesome articles of food which we foolishly neglect. In Southern Europe tho vineyard snail is the species held in most esteem. This form is, however, by no means uncommon in England. At one time it was believed to have been imported by the Romans, while an other theory held is that it was introduced about the fifteenth or six teenth century. It is nndeniably common in the vicinity of old Roman camps. But it is frequent also on chalk and other dry soils, and the opinion now generally entertained is that the Helix pomatia is a native British species. The rulers of the world were, nevertheless, its especial patrons. Not content with eating it stewed in every form, they fattened it in "cochlearia," or styes, meal boiled m wine be ing regarded as the food best fitted for pro ducing large and jjiicy specimens. How suc cessful they wero may be inferred from the fact if fact it be that some of the shells of these domesticated snails would bold a pint of wine. But the trade in them is perhaps better than ever it was during the palmy da)s of Roman luxury. Snails Exported to Amcrlcn. In the neighborhood of Dijon, a small farmer has been known to clear 300 per annum from snails, the vine-growers keeping tVem in dry cellars, or in trenches under coverings of leaves and earth; and from certain "escargo ticres," nearlm, in Wurtemberg, no fewer 10,000.000 of the vineyard snails are sent every year to other gardens, to be fattened before they are dispatched for the use of the Austrian convents during Lent. From Troyes it has been calculated that snails to the value of 20, 000 the wholesale price being 4s per 100 aro forwarded to the Paris markets. Packed in cask, they are also exported in a small way to the United States. Wuolcsomeness of Snails. In truth, it a choice is to be made, tho land snails ought decidedly to be preferred to the sea ones. They are infinitely more delicate in fibre and in flavor, and being for the most part vegetable feeders, they are far more cleanly in their habits. Their wholesomeness is unques tionable. No one ever heard or a case of poisoning, or even, when consumed in modera tion, of an attack of dyspepsia or colic, from a dish of snails, while all of these mischiefs are not infrequently the result of even a sparing indulgence in mussels, clams, cockles, scallops, or other coarso marine mollusca. There is, however, no reasoning with prejudice. Nor are snails the only free food which are re jected. Eels are frequently held in equal dis like, from a sort of idea that they are water snakes, though, except from the legend of the ill turn done to Mother Eve by "the serpent," it is hard to find any logical or dietetic ground for holding the flesh of oae reptile iu esteem, and that of another in loathing. Frogs, Seals and Whales Good. The English frog is not the species most fa vored by the Parisian restaurants. Even there it is only the bind legs of the green ones which are eaten. Yet in Germany all the muscular parts aro used, and in Vienna, where there aro regular preserves for keeping and fattening thorn, almost any species is considered perfectly suitable for tbe table. In tbe West Indies the grunting frog is in favor, and In South Africa a large species when conked might be mistaken for chicken. The seal when joung is excellent and as a matorial for soup is quite equal to the hare, whilo the skin of anyof tho catacea, espe cially that of tbe whalebone whale, if boiled down to a jelly, is a dish lit "to set before a king." It is often sent in hermetically closed tins irom ureeniana to Christian IA.. ot Den mark and therefore has in reality that destina tion. Yet we are Galliosto all these and a score of other easily obtained dainties which are eagerly eaten by the people of the Continent, and especially by those of the South. Terrible Creatures Italians Eat. An Italian will indeed, eat almost anything. There are gruesome tales told of tbe terrible creatures whioh sometimes appear on the tables of old-fashioned Roman families and we admit some very peculiar beasts do hang up in the market. Yet it is undeniable that, as Prlnco Lucien Bonaparte remarked. It is possi ble to make '.i comfortable meal" of most of them, the turkey buzzard always excepted. The reason, wo fancy. Is that in England we have never known the straits of famine which nearly every other country In Europe has, at one time or other, experience 1. Devastated by long wars, foreign and civil, laid waste by mer cenaries, or by the opposing armies which marched over the soil, it has again and again been the lot of tbe people of Germany, Italy, and France to face the alternative of eating anything or dying of hunger. In this way ex perience has been their stern teacher. There's Nothing New. From the New York Son. J A speech by tho Greek orator Hyperides has been discoverad at Athens. It begins: "Mr. Chairman, I had not expected to be called upon to address you this evening, and consequently am ill prepared." It really seems as though there is nothing new under the sun. MATTEBS METROPOLITAN. Hard to Decide Between Two Evils. (NEW TOBS BUREAU SrECIALS. New York, February 9. The stockholders of tho Metropolitan Opera House Company are trying to decide what kind of grand opera they shall givo New York next season. The Board of Direotors, in a circular letter to the share holders, recommend German opera, because it is the cheapest. German opera has paid ex penses this year, and -the directors think it might net them a profit next winter. Many largo shareholders, however, favor Italian opera. Henry Clews prefers Italian opera "be cause it stirs his soul." James Harriman con siders Verdi much less tiresome than Wagner. He is in for anything cheap, however, and If Wagner will cost less than Verdi, he will be a Wagnerite. Levi P. Morton has no choice. He does not care what opera is produced here dur ing his four years' residence in Washington. J. Pierrepont Morgan says he'd just as soon havo "Pinafore" as anything. Mr. Stanton the director of the Opera House, and George Baker, President of the First National Bank, wish German opera. The stockholders think the rich people here show too little Interest in their enterprise. For instance, they say, even the great Mrs. Astor threatened to give up her box a few nights ago if its price for next sea son were raised above 53,000. Joss Can't Get His Board Paid. Ynet Sing and Chinatown's Board ot Alder men are on the ragged edge of a law suit over $o30. the cost of keeping a Chinese Joss for the last three years. When Chinatown's public Joss was bought in the spring of 1685, tho Al dermen of Mott street wero too dead broke to buy him a house. He was kept in the rear room of a laundry until Yuet Sing volunteered to pay bis board and lodging at a hall in the Bowery. The Aldermen promised to reim burse Mr. Sing at the close of the year. They failed to do it. Mr. Yuet Sing threatened to sue them, and five of them went back to San Francisco to escape him. The other seven got so tired of seeing Mr. Sing's bills for Joss sticks and altar cloths that they got out of the Council ono by one and decamped to other cities. The new council has refused to pay the bills, and Mr. Sing has appealed the matter to American law. General Sbermnn's Birthday Celebrated. General Sherman celebrated his sixty-ninth birthday yesterday by giving a dinner at his new home in Harlem. Sixteen or 18 guests were present, among whom were Gen eral O. O. Howard, General H. W. Slocum, General Daniel E. Sickles, General Daniel Butterfleld, Major Hugh Sherman, of Des Moines, Iowa, brother of the General; Colonel Alexander S. Bacon, Colonel Ewing, Chauncey M. Depew, Joseph H. Uhoate ana others. There were no formal speeches, but much solid enjoy ment. Generals Sherman, Howard and Slocum gave interesting recollections of the first meet ing at which the plans were laid which were afterward so successfully carried out in the famous march from Atlanta to the sea. Mr. Depew told some new stories, and it was well op in the morning before the guests departed, Harrison's Inaugural Shoes. In the show window of Edward Day's shoe store is an elegant pair of patent leather shoes, size No. C, over which hangs the sign, "Presi dent Harrison's Inaugural Shoes." Mr. Day is an enthusiastic Republican. He worked day and night, presided over a Republican club, marched in parades and shouted himself sick for Harrison in the last campaign. After elec tion he asked General Harrison, by letter, to accept from him a pair of shoes to wear at the inauguration, and received an answer saying Mr. Harrison would take the shoes and pay for them. TWO HEARTS THAT WEE TRUE. A Kentucky Pastor United to Ills Sweet heart After Seven Years' Absence. PARIS. KTf., February 9. Rev. Geo. T. Wal den, formerly pastor of tho Christian Church at Millersburg, this county, is the hero of quite a little-romance. Seven years ago, when he left his home at Melbourne, Australia, to enter the Bible College of Kentucky Univer sity, at Lexington, he broke an engagement with his lady love, Miss Alice Virco, in order to leave her fancy free during his seven years' absence. After successfully shielding off the darts of several of our most noted Blue Glass belles and finishing his theological edu cation, he returned to the land of his nativity. There were kindled anew the longr pent up flames which had been dormant in his bosom for so many years, and in tbe latter days of December ho made Mi33 Virco his bonnie bride. Elder Walden has been the recipient of showers of letters from his many Kentucky friends bearing the warmest congratulations. He was one of tbe most popular and talented young ministers ever turned out ot college in the State. HO SUCCESSOR TO SACKVILLE Likely to be Appointed Until President HnrrUou Is Seated. WASniNOTOJf, February 9. No information has been received at the State Department in regard to tbe appointment of a British Minis ter to this country. Tbe department has, how ever, been informed that Mr. Edwards. First Secretary of the Legation at AVashington, who has been in London for some time past has sailed from England for this country. On his arrival in this city he will assume bharge of the affairs of tbe Legation and relieve Mr. Herbert, tho Second Secretary, who has been In charge since the enforced departure of Lord Sackville, In November last. Mr. Edwards' return at this particular time is understood by certain officials to mean that there is no immediate prospect of the appoint ment of a successor to Lord Sackville. A Mntnnl Agreement. WAsnufGTOK, February 9. The conferees on tbe diplomatic and consular appropriation bill have reached an agreement The House representatives accepted the Senate amend ment of $500,000 for the maintenance of Ameri can rights in Samoa, while tbe Senate con ferees agree to allow the provision of SIOULOOO for the naval station at Pago Pago to go into the naval appropriation bill. Picturesque Ilooslcrdpm. From the New York World.1 The Indiana Legislature is considering a bill for the abolition of White Caps. It is rumored that tbe White Caps are debating the advisa bility of wiping out the Indiana Legislature. Great and picturesque is Hoosierdoml FACTS AND FIGURES. THE national bank depositories now hold $15,625,433 of Government deposits. IjAST year Louisiana produced 450,000,000 feet or lumber, an increase of 00 per cent since 1SS0. Exports of provisions from tbe four Atlan tic ports last week aggregated 15,775,887 pounds, against 13.752,858 pounds the corresponding week in 1887. The latest official returns show that there are in Gre.tt Britain, out of a population of less than 38,000,000, 1,035,092 persons who receive parish relief that is to say, a fractiop more than one person in every 34 of the population. One of tbe applications of a waste product to a useful purpose is tbe manufacture of paper out of cedar wood pulp, for underlying carpets, wrapping of wool, furs, etc. The paper makers procure the cedar chips of pencil manufact urers, and the paper made of this material will, it is claimed, preserve articles wrapped in it from tbe moths. AM electrical fire engine, which can be tapped for service whenever wanted, ts the latest invention. Tbe advantages claimed are tbat it can be started at full speed; that it is much lighter than a steam fire engine of equal power; that it costs one-third less; that it is noiseless in its operation; makes no smoke, sparks nor ashes; that it is safer and easier to control and is economical. TUB walnut that grows in Persia. Asia Minor and Circassia makes the costliest of all cabinet woods. The veneers are cut to one huu dred and twentieth of an inch In thickness, and sometimes as tbin as 175 to an inch. The veneers used on furniture are somewhat thicker, the thinner ones being used on picture frames and covering for walls, after being backed with strong, toogh paper. TiiEr.E are used annually in the United States about 15,000,000 bushels of wbeaf in various manufactures, such as starch, food preparations, sizing for cloth and piper; 50.000.- I 000 bushels are required for seeding, and I 28a,O0u,0OU bushels for food consumption; which leaves only about 50,000,000 bushels for export If these averages are all kept up an increase in the wheat area of the country is Imperatively demanded. UBI0US CONDENSATIONS. It is said that the Empress Frederick has collected 24,000 oDituaxy notices of her hus band. A young lady in Maine had 16 teeth extracted as one of her preparations for mar riage. A Key "West fisherman rubs his body with kerosene oil and swims among sharks in safety. One American manufacturer of base balls employs 500 bands and keeps 40,000 dozen balls in stock. A Vermont man has started a news paper at Jamaica, in that State, and calls it Jamaica Ginger. An Albany snowshoe club kept them selves in practice during the open winter by putting a lot of spring beds iu a circle, covering them with canvas, and tramping over them to slow music A dying wife at Covington owned up that she had gone through her husband's Eockets regularly for 27 years, and that she ad purloined about 8XJ0 from him to use-aa pin money The first bank in the United States was the Bank of North America, chartered by Con gress at the instance of Robert Morris in 17!, and by the State or Pennsylvania in 1781. with a capital of 5100,000. It is still in existence in Philadelphia. Advices from Bnrinah announce that Mandalay has recently been visited by two im mense conflagrations. Iu the first tbe flames destroyed 632 houses, a bazaar and a Buddhist monastery. In the second 00 bouses wero burned. Both conflagrations were of accidental origin. An "Emperor William clock" has beeu made in Berlin. The case represents the old Emperor's palace. AVhen the hour strikes the palace guard marches past and William I, with his first great-grandson, now the little Crown Prince, appears at the historic corner window where he so often showed himself to bis people. Punk, the well-known shaggy black and white shepherd dog, belonging to General R. U. Sheridan, and the constant companion of bis master for the last 13 years, died recently at New Hartford, N. Y. He had lived far be yond the average of bis kind. Few dogs ever reach tbe age of 12 years, Tbe only one on record that lived to a greater age than Punk was the pet dog of Wilhelmlua, the sister of Frederick the Great, which reached the age of 19. Punk was 18. Since the Boulanger election the ped dlers of Paris have been selling dainty-looking little pies wrapped in pink paper and each one bearing the following inscription: "Souvenir of the election of January 27. Tbe Boulanger question. What he promises us. Open and see what he gives." The sale of the pies was immense till the buyers discovered that they had been cruelly deceived, for under the tempt ing exterior was hidden nothing but hay. This is utilizing with a vengeance the parable of tbo wicked father who gives bis son a stone in stead of bread. It was the exciting moment in the mad-house scene of "Light o' Day." Tho Thespians in the St. James's Theater, Manches ter, Eng., followed the incidents intently. Sud denly a yonng lady, moved by the brutality of the blackguards, rushed past the checker at tbe stalls, jumped on the stage, and. seizins tbe actor taking the part of the keeper, sec upon him in a most vigorous manner. Tho audelence seemed to appreciate it then laughter was long and loud and to rather resent the officials' Interruption. A woman named Girvin, liging nt Dur ham, near Rochester. Eng., has just had a nar row escape of being buried alive. She fell into a kind of trance, which was mistakenfordeath, and a coffin was ordered and the usual prepara tions made for a funeral. But while a number of the relatives weie gathered at the bedsido bewailing their bereavement the supposed rose started them by suddenlv rising up in :d and askinc what was the'matter. Tha woman is making good progress toward con valescence. A novel scarfpin of French design has just appeared. It is a singing bird of gay plumage. The apparatus consists of an India rubber bulb connected by a tube with the body of the bird, but concealed by the wearer's clothing. When tbe bulb is pressed it makes a wind current, which works a small whi3tle. and at the same time the bira's beak moves and his tail wiggles in a very natural way. To the spectator, who does not see tbe machinery. jt is a very wonderful thing. Considering that the bird is only the size of an ordinary scarf pin, it is really a curious piece of mechanism. Brinwood, in New South "Wales, has been roused to Indignation aejiinst the China man. This is why. When Ah Jack died, several of his sorrowing relatives decided to annex 35 be bad left in the local bank. So they wrapped the body in a blanket declared tbe dead man was ill. demanded the coin, and one of tbe sons of Confucius directed the dead man's hand in making the necessary signature. "You acknowledge this to be yonr mark?" said tha manager, unexpectedly. The mysterious silence that followed induced him to tear away the blanket He was horrified to find that An Jack was dead. In a school district in London there were many parents who reported no children in their families. In oruer to find just bow many children were thus being kept from school, the school authorities got two monkeys, dressed them gayiy, put them in a wagon in which was a brass band, and started through tne district. At once crowds of children ap peared and followed the wagon, which drove to a neighboring park, when tbe school officers went among the children distributing candies and getting their names and addresses. They thus found that over 60 parents kept their uuuureu irum scnooi; ana as a result or tna monkeys, the brass band, and the candy about 200 little boys and girls have been set at study. The annual review of the American whale fishery shows tbat there are now 108 whaling vessels owned in this country, of which 20 are laid up at home. Prices for the products, except whalebone, have been low, and the right whaling In the Arctic Ocean, where most whalebone Is taken, is becoming more and more popular, so that now about half the total tonnage of whaling vessels is employed in that branch of the service. In the Arctic last summer there were 47 whalers, a slight increase from the year before, but their average catch was only about half that of 1ES7. Of the American whalers now in service. 63 are owned in New Bedford, 23 in' San Francisco, 8 in Provincetown, 4 in Edgartown,3in Boston, 3 in New London, and 2 in Stonington, Several years ago an artist of Dresden persuaded a locksmith there to give up his trade and become an artists' model. It was a good thing for the locksmith, who is now tha tamous "muscle man of Dresden," whose mag nificently developed body makes him probably the most renowned model in the world. Ia order to preserve for future artists an exact duplicate of his extraordinary figure, tbe Di rector of the Royal Saxon Povzellanfabrik at Meissen recently invited him there that a cast from life might be taken of the upper part df his body. It is said that "his muscular devel opment is so complete and detailed that even tbe least and slightest cord of every muscle stands forth prominently, and bis whole body looks as if it were woven together or plaited like basket work. His muscles have such a, hardness that they feel to the tough as it they were carved in wood." TIMELY TOPICS. Why He "Went "Bromley, come take dinner with me at my boarding house to-day." "I will, Darrlnger. I'm not a bit hungry." The poet tries to win a name, Bnt finds there's much to vex When be beholds that name Anon., And often simply Ex. A Strong Temptation. Rob "What was the cause of tbe fire at Bigam Co.'s, the other day? Bob Too much insurance, I guess. DIDX'T TAKE AFTER UIK. "I suspect that our babe's tongue-tied 1 hope that It won't prove true." 'If It should, I'm pretty snre, dear, bhe doesn't take after yoa." A POET'S TRIALS. Better Left Unsaid. Mamie I visited Prof. Gllhooly this afternoon and he said my head was full of nonsense. Jack (sceptlcally-Fshaw, I don't believe there is anything In It. The Reason "Why. "Bob, old man, how well yon loot." How welt you look, I should say." But I'm going to be married this evening." "And 1 was divorced this morning." "Wouldn't be Imposed Upon. Country man (la a dngoods store)-I want a collar. , "What slieJ" "vhat size, ye tirnal fool! Why, big enough to go ronnd my neit, o' course. DIdn' spose I wanted a horse-collar, did ye?" Results of Cash Payments. Alarmed Mother-Why. my daughter, weeping? What's t,1(J matt,.rj Daughter ihrldeof a month) I-I have been shop ping, or trying to. Alarmed Mother-Well? Daughter I find my husband has always paid cash and hain't any credit anywhere. Jilt Jrom Ximt,