THE PITTSBUKG- DISPATCH, TUESDAY, - FEBRUARY' 19, 1889. ! r Wk BIppM. ESTABLISHED FEBRUARY 8, 1S1G. Vol. 41, No. 11. filtered at 1'lttsburg Post oflice, Nocmbirlt, 1M7, as second-class matter. Business Offlce--87 andS9 Fifth Avenue. News Rooms and Publishing House 75, 77 and 70 Diamond Street This paper having more than Double the circulation of any other In the State outkldo of Philadelphia, its advantages as an adver tising medium villi be apparent. TEKMs OF THE DlsPATCH. TOWAGE TT.EE IN THE CMTEO STATES. BAILTDlSPATCIt, One Year. SOT DAILY DlSPATCn, Per Quarter -W Daily Dispatch. Oneilonth ,u Daily Dispatch, including Sunday, one year Daily Dispatch, Including fcunday, per quarter " Daily Dispaicu, including fcunday. one month SO Ednbay Dispatch, oneycar IM Weekly DisrATCit, oneycar ,.. 123 The Daily DisrATCU Is delivered by carriers at 15 cents per week, orlncludlngtheSunday edition, at 3) cents per week. PITTSBURG, TUESDAY, FEB. 19. 1SS9. EDGEETOITS ANGER. The weighty quotations from Pope and Juvenal, which ex-Comniissioner Edgerton hurls at the devoted head of President Cleveland for the offense of turning out the writer of the very wrathful letter may have a tragio tone to the parties immediately interested; but their public aspect is de liciously comic The remarkable exposure of Mr. Cleve land's demerits which is caused by Mr. Edgerton's removal, in contrast to . the un qualified indorsements which 'the latter gentleman was always making of the ad ministration while he was permitted to draw a good salary for the task of nullify ing the civil service law, furnishes the leading rein of comedy; but the letter is further enlivened by the striking details of humor breaking out in the clas sical allusions which Mr. Edgerton has evidently gleaned from the civil service ex amination papers. There is also an auda cious joke in declaring that Mr. Cleveland is turned out by the Democratic party on account cf his adherence to the mugwumps, the fact being that Mr. Cleveland threw over the mugwumps, and the Democratic party supported him solidly which may furnish to men not blinded with partisan ship an explanation of his defeat Mr. Edgerton is a very angry man. Most men are, at losing a month's salary, of a lucrative position, but the majority of them do not make such public display of their wrath. THE TALL OF BUILDINGS. The unfortunate example which Pitts burg set of haying high buildings fall down has started an epidemic of tumbling archi tecture. The fall of ten floors in a fourteen story building at Chicago, though unaccom panied by loss of life, is very impressive in its warning of what might be the case if such a building were full of people; while the terrible disaster at Hartford, yesterday, is only second to our Wood street horror, in its awful lesson. Possibly the organized builders of these cities will formally lay the responsibility on Providence or the innate deDravity of inanimate objects; but the pub lic will be apt to perceive in the simulta neous occurrence of such fearlul casualties the signs of carelessness or false economy in construction. CAN BE DONE THIS YEAR-- . All the real estate agents are of one mind in wishing a change of "moving day" from April 1 to May 1. Everyone who has had experience of flitting amid April showers, of going into cold quarters, of superintend ing the transportation of families and furni ture with the chances of slush and mud un der foot, or snow or rain in steady down pour, will agree that it is a dangerous and foolish waste of exertion and risk of health to keep up the present unreasonable and un seasonable arrangement But some people say the change cannot be made. "Why not? Let tenants this year see that their leases are made out for thir teen months in place "of twelve. Landlords will be glad enough to agree. Not only can their property be seen to better advant-. age by adopting the 1st of May for renting time, but it will be less damaged when the moving takes place, in longer hours, more leisurely and in a cheerful spirit Those who want to set a useful fashion can begin this year by renting for thirteen months. It will become immediately popu lar. The customers of any one of the lead ing agencies vtauld of themselves be able to start the programme successfully. WHAT LABOR CAN BO. A very commendable example of the mast effective resort for labor that is, or considers itself to be, unjustly treated, has been evolved from the strike of the "feather girls" in 2ew York. The female workers in feathers got into a dead-lock with their employers a few months ago. The cause of the strike is notof importance in comparison with the result The outcome is that after trying for a time the unequal contest of sitting idle and trying to keep new hands away from their old places, the feather girls set up shop for themselves. This experiment is stated to be eminently successful. The new enterprise is on a good basis, the girls pay themselves their own wages out of the receipts, and arc entirely independent of their employers. It is obvi ous that this settles the question of wages of feather girls; and it shows that a strike was not necessary for the settlement, either. If the employers are not willing to pay what the work is worth the girls can go to work for thgmselves and the employers will be left without hands. Under such an in fluence the profits of employers will be kept down to what their skill in management and their risk in furnishing the capital is worth; and if they try to get more than that, the workers have demonstrated they can supply the management lor themselves. This is bringing the regulative influence of free competition in favor of the workers in stead of against them; and it is the true so lution of the greater halt of the wages question. It may, of course, be objected that it does not apply where large amounts of capital are needed to start establishments, in which laborers can work for themselves on joint account. But when we consider the money that has been lost in strikes dur ing the past ten years, it will appear that if the same self-sacrifice had been directed toward giving this remedy its full experi ment, there would hardly be an industry irom steel mills down to coal mines in which the necessary capital could not have been furnished to organized labor setting up on its own account Of course the question of intelligent man agement is vital in all such enterprises. But as the managers of ninety-nine 6ne hnndredths of all industrial enterprises have risen from the ranks of labor, it ought not to be impossible that the same skill may be secured for new forms of organization. A SYSTEM THAT NEEDS CHANGING. When, if ever, the rational course is fol lowed in Pennsylvania cities of reducing by one-half tho number of councilmen, and of choosing at least one branch upon a general ticket, we can look with confidence for an interest in city elections, which does not now prevail. The suggestion is an old one. It has been offered time and again, but, so far from losing any of its merits by neglect, every year will show it forth in stronger colors. As things go now, in place of any sort of general judgment by the public as to the men who are to manage city affairs, there is a series of petty battles, in the wards in which strictly local or purely personal considerations too often deter mine the choice. Men are elected because they are amiable and have many friends in their district; because the other fellows are disliked; because of a fight over a street opening; because they train with this crowd of politicians or because theyoppose another crowd; upon any and all sorts of causes, usually limited to the ward, the election turns.ecepting probably the most desirable of causes, viz: That the favored candidates have intelligible and well defined views as to what should be done for the city's benefit, andtbave such experience and character as wcftld lead the public to look for genuine ability and wisdom in their counsels. It is not meant to convey the idea that there are no capable men among the City Fathers, or that to-night's returns will fail to show a proportion of such. But it clearly is meant and cannot successfully be disputed, that the wider the constituency the better chance of getting first-class material; and that by choosing one branch on a general ticket, for which the whole city could vote, there would be such a chance for concerted, popular expression at the polls, as is not possible by any other plan. But a faulty system exenses no one from voting. Each citizen must look at the can didates in his own ward, and choose accord ing to his lights. Honesty, intelligence and independence of character are the qualifica tions in demand. The Dispatch does not think that it is absolutely necessary for voters to take their lanterns with them like Diogenes; but the occasion in some instances mny be one for prayerful thought and mi nute circumspection, and in the end for doubt whether much has been accomplished. There will be less of this when, by reducing the numberof Councjlmcn, the responsibility of each shall be increased; and when, by electing one branch on a general ticket, each candidate comes under the scrutiny of the whole community. A SNUB FBOM ITALY. And now Italy has insulted us. This time it is not an indirect stab, like that which Germany recently gave us throngh the sav age hides of the Samoans, but a deliberate, cold-blooded insult to American citizens. The Italian authorities positively refused to allow the Chicago and All-America baseball teams tb play the American na tional game in the Amphitheater at Naples or in the Coliseum at Borne. Our corre spondent, who heard these outrageous re bluffs delivered, writes: "The powers that be object to anyone playing in the historic ruin, partly because the galleries and walls are unsafe, but more because they affect to think that such playing would be a desecra tion of the building." Think of it! a mere tumble-down building, out of date and badly in need of repair, re taining under the shadow of an effete mon archy its reputation as a human slaughter house of antiquity, and rejoicing in thejsame name as a second-hand rink in Allegheny, the Coliseum of Borne, to-wit, desecrated by the patriotic players of baseball. If Cicero were alive we have no doubt that he would repeat in italics, O temporal 0 mores! For the smart Roman barrister when' he wasn't denouncing Catiline in the Senate or meditating in his front yard upon the cuss edness of his friends, liked nothing better than to see Apulius, the gladiator, play fully insert his trident into his brother in arms, the middleweight champion with the short sword. The Emperor Titus had he been ruling Rome to-day would have wel comed Mr. Spalding's athletes with open arms and a special gladiatorial show. But the descendants of Titus are not worthy of him. In Titus's time men used to be butch ered by the thousand to make a Roman holi day; but now when a baseball team offering to come as near murdering an umpire as possible, asks for the Coliseum, the Romans will have none of them. But the decadence of Roman taste, re gretable as it is, however, does not interest us as much as the snub which the Italian Government has seen fit to administer to our baseball champions. We are glad to notice that Mr. Spalding feels much gratified at the action of our State Department in in- structinz all the American consuls and diplomatic agents to accord the baseballists every assistance in their power; but cannot Secretary Bayard do something more in this emergency? He may not like war, but then he should remember that by the time the Duiliois bombarding New York and the price of peanuts has risen to unheard-of-heights owing to the revolt of the Italian venders in this country there will be an other man in the Secretary's chair. "We beg Mr. Bayard to give this question due at tention. The news that the true False Prophet has determined to -suppress the false False Prophet who is now ruling at Khartoum, promises an addition to the already lively times that have been prevailing in equatorial Africa. The prophetic profession in Africa is much more hazardous in its surround ings than it is in the United States. The latest Prophet appears to claim a monopoly of the business which permits a hope that after he gets through at Khartoum he may come over to this country and suppress Wiggins. The statement that Germany has issued a white book on the Samoan affair raises a question of the appropriateness of the title. A study of its statements is enongh to con vince any one that its misreprescntatio ns of fact are not of the white variety. It now appears that Judge Edgerton feels at liberty to say what he thinks of Mugwumpcry and Civil Service reform. If he was not at liberty to do so when in office, his language did not indicate it With re gard to the expression of any stronger views, the laws against profanity are in force now just as much as they were before his invol untary retirement Mr. Gillette's determination to drama tize "Robert Elsmere" should inspire Mr. Hoyt to make a similar treat of Mr. Bay ard's foreign policy. The latter possesses the essential elements of a farce-comedy. The uncertainty continues; but the public has the solace of knowing that whether Windom runs the Treasury or not; and whether McKinley getteth there as Speake or the contrary, the world will continue to turn on its axis every twenty-four hours and the earth to bring forth fruits in their sea- The Delaware crop liar is commencing his attempt to make the public believe that the peach crop is as badly winterkilled as Secretary Bayard's diplomacy; but there are limits even to the public credulity. It is pleasant news for the public that the Jute Bagging Trust has been knocked into a cocked hat by the use of pine needle straw for cotton bagging. This will give the monopolists in that particular line a decided check until they are able to fix things up for a Pine Needle Bagging Trust. The fall of modern and supposititiously well-constructed buildings is likely to bring with it a tumble in the lofty reputation of architects and builders who put up struct ures that do not stand. It will be solace to the radically partisan heart to know that Senator Ingalls is avenged. Senator and Mrs. Ingalis gave a tea the other night and President and Mrs. Cleveland were not invited. Things being even now, the affairs of state can, we hope, move on as usual. Stanley having been in the interior of Africa six months longer, the European cor respondents have commenced killing him once more. A 3IURDEKER was recently caught in India by the services of a monkey. The unusual ability of the simians a detective and the quality most generally found in that business may explain the admiration of the Chicago public for the "Brass Monkey." PERSONAL FACTS AND FANCIES. Cab ajjel left a fortune of more than 5400,000. Count Herbert Bismarck cynically says: "The only advantage of better society is that its morality is worse." Mr. H. H. Johnson, the African cxplorer.is now about 45 years old; a small, wiry man, with bright eyes and a bronzed face. Mr. Dawes, of the Bryant farm, Cumming ton, Mass., a brother of Benator Dawes, sends annually 1500 barrels of apples to England. The Crown Princess of Austria wore at her husband's funeral a gown with a train made from the mourning dress worn by Maria Theresa at tho funeral of Francis of Lorraine. The Emperor of Germany, is about to be come an oarsman, and is having a four-oared boat built for him at Richmond, where is also being constructed a very gaudy launch for tho Sultan. The late Dr. M.H.Stinson, of Norristown, Pa., took up the study of medicine for the sake of her own health. She was the first woman appointed to the head of a hospital department lor her own sex. A lively rivalry has been going on in the House of Representatives at Washington be tween Messrs. La Follette, Yost and Washing ton for tho palm for youthfulness in looks. The latter, known to his Tennessee constituents as "Joe Washington," has come off victorious by shaving his face clean. He now looks al most painfully ,young. A few days ago he clapped his hands for a page. Tho boys laughed at him. They thought one of their number was playing a joke on them. Wash ington had to walk over to them and assure them that he was not a page. Secretary Colman, head of the Agricul tural Department, is a mesmerist and ventrilo quist of remarkable powers. He entertains his friends with exhibitions of his curious gifts. When he was younger he was in the habit of using his ability as a ventriloquist In public for his own amusement, and he tells many in teresting stories of -the practical jokes he has played. Mr. Colman is a small man with straight gray hair. He wears eye-glasses and dresses quietly. He is a genuine farmer and runs a genuine farm in Missouri. He warmly opposed the bill which has made him a Cabinet officer. SDBMASINE TORPEDO BOATS. One to bo Constrnctod That Will Stay Under One Hour. Special Telegram to The Dispatch. Washington, February 18. Tho bid of the Columbia Iron Works, of Baltimore, for the construction of the submarine torpedo boat de sired by Secretary Whitney is the only one that can be accepted. That of Mr. Baker, of Des Moines, docs not contain the necessary guarantees, while the Baltimore company offers them, and this company is now building the gunboat Petrel for the Navy Department Ihe great problem is as to what this practicable distance beneath the surface is. Many boats cau go all day, and perhaps all night added, with a mere curved back surmounted by a cupola showing. But what is wanted is the distance a boat can go with nothing showing. In other words, the true problem is a submarine boat that can sink miles from the enemy and guide herself under water to that enemy. The heavy projectiles now available from Hotcb k ss cannon and rapid (Ire guns makes the showing of even an armored tower perilous. It is admittod that all submarine torpedo boats yet tried have fallen short of what is de sired, and the proposals made by the Columbia Iron works are, upon the whole, more prom ising than any. A guarantee of nine knots submerged, with a sub-surface endurance for an hour while thus running is more than could have been hoped for ty the most eager advo cate of submarine boats. If she can literally f nihil this our Government will have the start of the rest of the world in this important branch of naval warfare. COAL IN A CREEK. Tho New Kline Opened Up by .Enterprising Mahonoy Farmers. Special Telegram to Tho DlsDatcn. MAnoNOY City. February 18. The bed of the Mahonoy creek from thisplacffto Herndon, where it empties into the Susquehenna river, a distanco of 46 miles, is probably unlike the bed of any other stream in the world. It is com posed almost entirely of anthracite coal, the accumulation of many years washing from the mines that border the stream almost its entire length. Farmers along the creek, whose land extends to low water mark, bavo obtained their sup plies of coal from the creek for time out of mind, but until this mild and open winter it never occurred to them that they could profit ably mine the coal for market The idea v.as at once put into execution and is now w orking successfully. The river coal is of the cleanest and best auality, being washed clean of slate and line irt The prices fur it range from Si to $1 25 a ton, according to locality half the price charged by the regular operators. Asihe coal deposit on the creek bottom is sufficient to sup ply coal in this way lor many years, and as it cannot be claimed by any of the collieries as their property, this new and novel coal business promises to be a serious matter to the regular local coal trade. THE OCEAN'S SECRET. The Last Sad Message of Shipwrecked Dlnriner. Special Telegram to Tne Dispatch. Ojtanoock, Va., February 18. A daughter of E. W. Nottingham, who lives on the seasido in the lower part of Northampton, picked up a bottle on the beach yesterday containing a pieco of paper, on which the following was written in pencil: OrF Cape Cod, July 9. 18SS. The bark Lucy Low Is about to go down with all on board, bhe has been In a gale for 17 days, hue is laden with oil, bound to Liverpool. in nil nnnnn in i iropnnni i:a Good h v. my dear wile, gooaoy. iou must tell Willie abont his papa as soon as he Isold enough to un derstand. Ihe finder of this will nlease keen 11 until the vessel Is advertised for. Cioodby, loved ones. Mr. Nottingham says he sees, no reason to doubt that the paper is genuine. Nothing is known hero of any such vessel or master. To Restore Ilnrmony. from the New York Trlhnne.3 President Harrison will have a most extraor dinary Cabinet consisting of one Secretary of State, five Secretaries of the Treasury, seven Postmasters-General, 13 Secretaries of the Navy, etc vThis is the only way, apparently, to restore harmony to the newspapers. THE TOPICAL TALKER. A Littlo Suggestion of What Housekeeping nod Amateur Cooking Are Worth. When Miss Parloa was here last year teach ing everybody how to cook, she impressed' me wonderfully, as she doubtless did many an other, with the evidences of thorough common sense and knowledge of the world she showed In conversation and in her lectures. The science of cooking is not the limit of her mind, and it seems to me that Missi Parloa might readily have taken a much higher place In literature if she had been so minded. In the current number of the North American Review Miss Parloa has a really admirable lit tle paper on tho question, "Is Housekeeping a Failure?" She says emphatically that house keeping is a success, though many housekeep ers fall by tho wayside and take refuge In boarding houses. Four other women contribute answers to this interesting question, but I think Miss Parloa puts the case of the home as opposed to the mere lodging or abiding place, which tho hotel and the boarding house afford, more strongly and concisely than any of the rest 1 cannot refrain from quoting the following, in which Miss Parloa points out ono of the ad vantages the home has over the hotel or boarding house when one is suffering from a long illness: "You hunger for some particular food, and loving hands prepare it and bring it to your bedside; not to be served, bear iu mind, in the unattractive dishes made expressly for boarding houses, nor yet in those of finer qual ity, though possessing no charms for you, which are lound in hotels, but rather in the various dainty bits of china and glassware whch you prize and with which so many pleasant recol lections may be associated." V Iz is difficult to estimate tho precise amount of benefit that some of Miss Parloa's pupils got out of her lectures last year. One of these pupils a demure damsel of 18 summers approached her father the other day with a request that he expend somo $20 or so on a course of mandolin tuition for her benefit. "How much did 1 pay for your cooking les sons last year?" he asked. "Six dollars, papa," she replied. "Well, what good did that do you? I've never tasted a thing you've cooked yet I don't be lieve you can cook a potato!" She protested Indignantly against this ar raignment. The cooking lessons had been in valuable to her, and so forth. "Well," said her father, "I'll tell you what Pll do. If you will cook the dinner to-day, and without assistance, I'll pay for the mandolin course." She agreed. Over the cooking of that dinner I deem it kindest to the cook to draw a veil. Suffice it to say some soup was in the tureen,a piece of beef, by courtesy, roasted potatoes, com and a few smaller dishes, at least in a nominal state of cookedness, when the head of the household returned from business, with an appetite sharp ened by a brisk walk in frosty air. The family sat down to dinner, the amateur cook, with a scorched face and anxious air, at her accustomed place. When the soup had been served it was noticeable that she turned pale. "1 hope you dinner is not in the soup," said paterfamilias to the pupil of Parloa. Tho latter smiled rather dubiously. But in a minute, when a black and unrecognizable ob ject on a big dish was brought in, she did not smile-at all. Neither did anybody else. They were all hungry, you see, and the prospector an eatable dinner was fast fading away. The beef was burnt to a crisp, the potatoes were .as bard as bullets, the stewed corn was smoked, and even the last resort, an apple pie, con structed, as the cook had thought, on entirely constitutional plans, was a dismal, tough 'and tasteless failure. "Well. Belinda," said her father, "is this your dinner?" "Oh, this Is my first attempt," replied the unhappy girl; "I'll do better to-morrow." "Not if I am to be the judge you won't," re joined her father, taking out his pocket book. "I am satisfied with one experiment, andsooner than sutler from a second I'll give you the $20 for your mandolin course without further ques tion." This parent's reasoning seems good. His daughter may give pain with her mandolin, but she is not as likely to kill with it as with her cooking. A CHINA WEDDING. Sir. and Mrs. Voicht Celcbrnlo nn Anniver sary of Their Nuptials. Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Volght lastevening cele brated the twentieth anniversary of their mar riage at their pleasant home on Highland ave nue, East End. This anniversary is known as the china wedding, and the happy couple were recipients of many pretty presents from their host of friends. A reception was held in the early part of tho evening. At 10 o'clock dancing commenced, and was continued until a late hour. Gernert and Guenther's orchestra furnished the music An enjoyable supper was served at midnight The floral decorations were very profuse in the parlors and the dining-rooms. About 200 guests were in attendance. Mr. and Mrs. Voight, the latter of whom was Miss Mammie Phillips, were married in this city by Rev. Dr. Laird. FROM EIGIIT TO TWO. A Flenaant Reception Given by Ibe Employes of Barnes Bros. The employes of Barnes Bros.' Troy Laundry gave their secondannual reception atLawrenco Turner Hall, on Butler street last evening. The reception was fully attended, and dancing, which was tho main enjoyment of the evening, was continued until 2 o'clock this morning. The Royals furnished the music The managers of the reception were Messrs. A. E. Ether. E. F. Morton, H. S. Cox, G. A. It Stciner, C. E. Landis and E. E. White. Silver Anniversary. The Knights of Pythias will be addressed on Tuesday night 19th inst, at Lafayette Hall, by the Rev. E. R. Donehoo, Rev. It C. Morgan (a Past Commander of the order), of Connells ville: Representative J. C. Cramm, of Phila delphia, and P. S. C. Vau Valkenburg, of Des Moines, Iowa. Members of Nos. 200 and 345 not supplied with invitation cards can get them at Mr. J. P. Miller's cigar store, Smith field street opposite the postoffice. Carried Oil" to the For West. The marriago of Mr. Alex. Porter to Miss Maggie Douglas, of Allegheny, was solemnized at tho residence of Rev. Dr. Gibson, in Ban I r rancisco, ai.. on me evening oi j-ebruary 5, and the bride and groom wBl there take up tbPir residence fur tho future Miss Douglas was well known in Allegheny and will be great ly missed by many friends, who wish her all sorts of good fortune in her new Western home. CONCLUDED TO WAIT NO LONGER. The Boundary Lino Commissioners' Report Forwarded to Congress. Washington, February 18. A communi cation wa3 presented in the Senate, to-day, from the Secretary of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, with a certified copy of the act to confirm the boundary lines between that Commonwealth and the States of New York and West Virginia, and to ratify and co nrirm the agreement entered into by commissioners on the part of Pennsylvania and New York, in iciauuu tu buu uuuuuaij iuicd Uliuruveuouno u. 1SS7. The report of the commissioners had been (the Secretary of the Commonwealth said) held for a long time awaiting concurrent action on the part of the State of New York, but as the end of the Congress was approaching it was deemed proper to transmit it without further delay. Laid on the table. Why lie Knows All Abont lb From the Chicago lntcr-Ocean.1 Mr. Chamberlain has considerable to saA" about American home rule. Recent experience in tho matrimonial line may havo furnished his inspiration. DEATHS OP A BAY. Snraurl P. Goodwin. Philadelphia. February 18. Samuel P. Good win, founder of the Franklin Keformatory Home, this city, died yesterday from neuralgia Of the heart. He was 1 years of age. Mr. Goodwin was well known in this city and other parts of the btate, and was especially prominent in temper ance circles. He was president and founder of the Keformatory Home at 815 Locast street. For ithirty-flve years he was connected with the firm of ,Hood, BonbrlghtA Co., and at the time of his death he was Identified with John ft'anamaker. 1 Colonel John Eyard. WASHINGTON, February 18. The Adjutant General of the Army is Informed of the death, at Fort Bays, Kan., this morning, of Colonel John Eyard. Eighteenth Infantry. This death will cause tbepromotlon of Lieutenant Colonel Henry Lazelle; Twenty-third Infantry, and Major H. S. Hawkins, Tenth Infantry. I AT THE. THEATERS. A Society Comedy, a New Opera and Other Theatrical Attractions. tyhat was said in praise of "Fascination" in this column a week ago, can be repeated with emphasis in regard to "The Wife," this week's attraction at the Grand Opera House. The two comedies are totally unlike in conception and details; the only similarity between them is f ound in the admirable staging given to eacn and the almost complete excellence of the talent engaged in the production. "The Wife" is a society comedy, the sceno of which is laid Washington. Its story deals principally with the lives of three people, one of whom is a woman. The heroine, Helen Truman, the motherless daughter of a New York broker, has a misunderstanding with Robert Gray, her lover, and; be lieving him falso accepts the nand of John Rutherford, a United States Senator and an old friend of tho family. The wife discovers, after marriage, that she still loves Robert, but, attracted by the really ad mirable traits in her husband's character, eventually gives her full affection to him, A cleverly constructed plot, in which the machi nations of male and female mischief makers figure prominently, leads up to the climax of the play. The character of John Rutherord is the very ideal of a generous, noble man, and its in terpretation by Mr. Frank Carlyle well-nigh perfect Mrs. Berlan-Gibbs, In the title role, proved herself an actress of superior ability. A more pathetically sad yet Deautiful scene than that between Rutherord and Helen toward the close of the third act is rarely wit nessed on any stage. When the wife, after acknowledging to her husband that she still loves another man, overcome by her grief, asks Rutherord: "To whom shall I turn in my trouble?" The latter replies: "Turn to me the one who prom-eed to cherish and protect you, and whoso protection you now need moro than ever." Then he repeats the words of the marriage service, binding himself to her anew. It was all admirably done and very impressive. Of the subsidiary characters that of Major Putnam, a veteran who can face cannons, but not women, is a most artistic creation. Tho role Is cleverly sustained by Mr. James O. Bar rows, a very capable comedian. Mr. Charles S. Dickson, as Jack Dexter, a young colleiian, was most excellent, and with Miss Etta Haw kins, who appeared as Kilty Ives, a very giddy maid of 16, kept the audience in roars of laugh ter. Miss Hawkins, by the way, made a de cided hit, and is remarkably well suited to the part Mr. S. Miller Kent, as Robert Gray, read his lines well and made a graceful and hand some, though somewhat conventional, lover. Miss Adeline Stanhope, in the rolo of Lucille Farrant, succeeded well when she was content with being natural, but failed miser ably when she tried to be impressive. The rest of the cast was good, without ex ception, the work of Miss Adelaide Thornton and Mr. Henry Herman being especially worthy of commendation. A more astute and less un natural stage villain than Mr. Herman's Matthew Culver is seldom scon. Tho scenery represents interiors only and is very fine, particularly in the last act in which .a moonlight view of the capital appears beyond tho library window. Mrs. Berlan-Gibbs' won derful gowns drew a large share of the atten tion of the ladies. They are indeed exquisite veritable poems in silk and satin and other ma terial, the very name of which is unknown to the average masculine mortal. "Tho Wife" contains scarcely any blemishes: its tone is pure and elevating and the dialogue remarkably animated. It is a pity that such a fine play should be marred by putting oaths into the mouths of some of the characters. It would be far moro effective and a groat deal more pleasing if they were utterly eliminated. Bijon Thcntrc. The composer of "Falka,"FrancoisChassaigne, did not improve upon that merry and musical not to say model light opera when ho wrote "Nadjy." It is very lucky that "Nadjy" does not have to stand upon its musical merits what comic opera has to? and as far as the audiences at the Bijou Theatre are concerned, it is even more lucky that such people as Francis Wilson, Charles Plnnkett,MarIe Jansen, Pauline Hall and Jennie Weathoisby are in the cast. Leave out all tho music and you still have the body of the piece in Francis Wilson. The way to describe "Nadjy's" ap peal to the public for a hearing would be to say that Francis Wilson sings ono or two funny songs of the regulation comic opera pattern, says a score of very droll things and imitates a drunken man to perfection; that Marie Jansen is charming in black and abbroviated skirts, with tights to match, as a bal lerina, and exhibits her peculiar kind of pert uuteness with success; that Pauline Hall looks amazingly pretty in a succession of very tasteful dresses, and sings such songs as tho opera affords her with tho sweet volco na ture has given her: that Charles Plnnkett has a heavy part that doesn't suit him half as well as that of the refined thief m "Erminle," and that Jennie AVeathersby and several clever actors besides have not a ghost of a chance in "Nadjy" to show'thelr abilities. More than this, wo do not know how many girls waste their shapeliness, their good looks and their voices. In concert with a chorus of men, upon the tamo and antique music and the hackneyed ensembles and conventional group ings. It is pitiful to see so much first-class material bestowed upon a work that is not to be mentioned in the same breath with any of the previous Caslrjo successes. There is one air only which has enough in it to live in the bearer's memory for an hour. We mean the song, "What Is Love?" sung by Mario Jansen in the first act This song, if we are not terribly mistaken,is a clean thof t as far as the melody is concerned. The finale of the second act, a vigorous Hungarian dance and chorus, is bright and somewhat original. No other material number in tho whole opera seems worthy of comment. The composer has apparently tried to evade criticism by the very modesty of his undertakings, and the author of the libretto has, with curious confidence in tho perceptlvo powers of tho public, left the plot practically hidden in the programme, whero probably he intended it to be printed. Francis Wilson and Mario Jansen were fore most last evening in the company's combined efforts to instill life into "Nadjy," and they de serve high praise. They appear to recognizo the poverty of tho score and In the third act chanted most agreeably the familiar dirge 'about "A little apple In an orchard grew, etc" thev made it a peach. Tho audience liked the flavor of this and the quaint dance ac companying it and encored it again and again. They accorded the same honor to Francis Wilson's extremely funny rehearsal of the feminine quality of "Gol" In fact the largo and extremely fashionable gathering was generous in its applause. The scenery was very fair, but tho costumes arc marvelously handsome. Indeed, so good Is the cast, and so unusually adequate are all the accessories, that "Nadjy," overlaid with some music of recent date and real merit, and pro vided with a plot'and say half a 'dozen acting, parts, would be a verydelightful comic opera. We are requested to state that the opera will begin at 8 o'clock sharp all this week, as the opera is a long one, and wa3 not over last night till past 11. Ilnrris'Tlicnter. Lovers of a first-class vaudeville performance ought to be in clover this week. The bill of fare presented at Harris' Theater by the Nel sons affords not only quantity, but quality. There's not a dull spot in the programme, and several of the numbers are particularly bright The Twin Brothers Wems are "as like as two peas," and the more one compares them the harder he finds it to distinguish t'other from which. This remarkablo rcsemblaDco add groat amusement to their otherwise enjoyable acts. John A. Coleman is a favorite in Pitts burg, his dancing being inimitable. Mciman, the ventriloquist, is above the average. Clark and Williams do a very clever black-faco act, their greatest fault being a tendency to care lessness of language in theirbadmage, which they should avoid before such a large audience of ladies and children as are always attracted to this very popular theater. Mile. Fogardus and her pretty pigeons and in telligent dogs are a well-known feature of this company. Richard Fitrot is the best traveling imitator of well-known people, and Mile. Adri enne Anclon Is very clever on the trapeze. But the feature that rises above all othera in the entire bill Is the wonderful acrobatic act of the Nelson family, seven athletes, of various sizes and ages, whoso feats of agility and strength cannot be described. The "flying Dutchman" and a peculiar "falling pyramid" are the most striking novelties of the Nelsons' present con tribution to the entertainment given by the company that bears their name. The usual daily matinees and performances every evening at this house this week, with a souvenir candy matinee Friday, Washington's Birthday, for the little ones. Academy of Music When a performance of a legitimate variety character presents itself there is reason for re joicing, and the Australian Novelty Company is an attraction of tbat sort It combines in it self at least enough good stars to rig out two or three good companies. Of course Mile. Aimee, who has a good title to "the human fly," is a wonder that can't be discounted. Ihe Gamella Brothers, Weber and Fields. Miss Minnie Lee, Winnie Nicholson, Charles E. Schilling and the rest of the company are ex cellent in their several departments. It is a good company all through, and the perform ance is well worth seeing. Notes of the Singe. THE Casino Museum is doing good business with a very fair range of attractions both in curiosities and tho variety entertainment I IS IT A GAME OP CHANCE? The English Courts Declde.tbnt Playing Bil liards for tho Rent of the Table is Gam bling Following in the Lend of Allegheny County Courts. 'A decisidn rendered by the English courts in relation to playing billiards in taverns is inter esting, from the fact that Judges Ewing and White took the samo 'ground wherr granting licenses lost year. The London Standard, in referring to the subject says: "The decision pronounced by the Queen's Bench Division, in the case of Dyson, appel lant, will come as an unpleasant surprise to that by no means inconsiderable class of En glishmen who are fond of billiards, and de pend for a table on the inn or public bouse So long as the law remains what Mr. Baron Huddleston has defined it to be, they will have to choose between playing for love or not play ing at all. It is true that the judgment was confined to the specific case of skittle pool, but the arguments on which It rested would appear to cover nearly every variety of the game. Wherever there is anything in the nature of a stake, the prohibition must be held to apply. Even the lightest penalty that usage Imposes on a loser the obligation to pay for the table would, it may be presumed, come under the ban. But for a chance scuffle in a Norwich hostelry, people might have gone on indefinitely in the Id-fashioned way, without the smallest suspic ion tbat they were doing anything contrary to thestatutes. Twoyoungmenhiredatable one afternoon, and played skittle pool on 'it for threepenny, sixpenny, and shilling staky. Tbey did not bet; but there was some dispute among the lookers-on, and out of that dispute grew the assault. The offenders were duly convicted; but, as a sequel to the prosecution, proceedings were taken against the proprietor of the house for permitting gaming on licensed premises. "Was it "gaming" to play skittle pooi for money? If it was, then, undeniably, there had been a breech of tho licensing act of '1872; for, under the seventeenth section, any licensed vicfualer who suffers gamine of any kind to be carried on in his house is sub jected to prescribed penalties. Games of chance that would not bo "unlawful" else where are as strictly forbidden within tho walls of the tavern as the most barefaced indulgence in pitch and toss on tho curbstone. The issue was, therefore, narrowed down to the question What constitutes "gaming?" It was urged before the Divisional Court, as it was before the local justices, that the element of skill creates the essential distinction. It was not, indeed, pretended that If the stakes were excessive the penalty of permitting gaming would not be incurred; but it was urged that where they were barely suf ficient to give zest to the play, and when the result depended in the main on the compara tive dexterity of the players tho amusement was not "gaming" in the sense contemplated by the law. The judges declined to take this view. "Gaming."Baron Huddleston uncom promisingly declared, is playing for money. Tho more or less of skill, the lightness or the heaviness of the stakes, matter nothing. The one test is Was there money to be lost or won? Chief Justice Cockburn's Indulgent dictum, that "Gaming must contain somo of the ele ments of chance," was set aside as not at all consistent with the authorities. Unquestiona bly, the tendency of judicial interpretation has been toward harshness. Dominoes, it was held in 1852, if played for money, amounted to gam ing: a fortiori, then, the match at skittle pool, which the Norwich publican was so unlucky as to allow on his premises, must be construed as a breach of the licensing iaw. "It is, of course, conceivable that pool may be played without any recourse to the stimulus of betting in any shape or form. But it would at once cease to be the pool which the majority of billiard players love. Mr. Justice Wills re marked incidentally, during the arguments on the case, that he never played for money or anything else, but found the game quite as in teresting as if money were played for. The confession throws a most pleasing light on the learned Judge's capacity for deriving enjoy ment from mild pursuits. But one is tempted to suspect that he is somewhat less accom plished, or at any rate less keen, as a billiard player than as a lawyer. There are many con scientious persons for whom the mere exercise of walking around the table suffices, and whose highest flight or innocent ambition is to hit, or rather not to miss, the object ball. But these blameless amateurs do not see the standard of taste. The adepts, strange as it may appear, do not find the full measure of possible delight in displaying their consummate mastery of the balls. In billiards, as in whist, there must be the prospect of winning something by luck or by good management or forfeiting something in the event of mischance or clumsiness. AVhy this seasoning of sixpence or half-crowns should be Indispensable to whet the palate, it wonld be a nice, and by no means easy, prob lem to debate. The general feeling is strongly against making stakes at cards so high that loss cannot be borne without per fect equanimity. Yet, quite as universal is the admission that, without a stake, there is no flavor of seriousness in a rubber. There is something paradoxical in the two-fold truth; but truth it is. ' A gentlcmau does nut mind in the least paying np tho points be has lost; bnt he would not have been in duced to cut in at whist unless there was a chance of winning something from his antag onists. The consideration which harmonizes the two frames of mind is perhaps to be found in the circumstance, that whereas, on the average of years, the average player has no balance to show on either side of his account yet this happy equilibrium is due to hi3 having been forced (by tho immediate conditions of each game) to do his best to win. It is not the prospect of profit but the legitimate anxiety to avoid loss, that gives the fillip and the zest If this be true of ordinary games, it is pre-eminently true of pool. It is possible, a3 we have allowed, to play it without stakes: but it is difficult to imagine that it could be seriously attempted on that basis. To pay for forfeit of successive "lives" in sixpence, and to pur chase an extension of vitality by the same sordid means, appears to be of the essence of the thing. To substitute counters (or postage stamps) for coins in a scheme worthy of those hostesses who, to save the trouble and expense of giving a ball, cheat honest pleasure seekers by the transparent imposture of an afternoon dance. "Pool, and the many varieties of billiard play ing, will. In spite of the judgment of tho Queen's Bench Division, go on as heretofore in licensed billiard rooms (provided they form no part of premises licensed for the sale qf intox icating liquors), and In clubs. Ginger will be hot in the mouth in Spite of the Puritanical construction to which the licensing act has lent itself. But for the unfortunate publicans who depend for a large part of their profits on the incomings of the billiard table, the declaration of the law on the subject is a very serious matter. Year after year, pool and pyramids and billiards have been played for money on the premises without the smallest shadow of a suspicion that any licensing regulation was being infringed. Nor is it so much as sug gested that any grave abuse has resulted. The demoralizing influence of tho public house stops, for the most part, in the taproom. The clink of the balls is often a preacher of better things to the confirmed toper. Whatever the lawyers may twist tho act of Parliament into, the instinctive judgment of sensible men is that playing pool, as it is usually played, is not gaming. That there is no clement of chance in billiards, no conscientious player would dare aver. The memory of fortunate flukes would close the mouth ot boasting at once. But it is not the element of accident that gives the fascination: it is the opening for skill;.the infinite posslbilies of acquiring more delicate manipulation and a moro acenrate eye. Tho mere wager is justly condemned; indeed, we should be sorry to say a word that could be interpreted to Imply any encouragement to betting. Bnt to penalize the nominal stakes which give zest to one of the best disciplines that our English list of amusements offers, strikes us as extremely unwise. It is all very well for those who havo comfortable clubs, and rooms especially licensed for billiards only, to resort to. Others are not so fortunately placed. In many a village and town the only decent table is to be found at the inn, and, for the present at all events, the Queen's Bench Divis ion has issued an injunction against its use for the main purpose for which it was made. We do not for one moment suggest that the rule laid down by Baron Huddleston is, in the lawyer's sense, bad law; but as a principle of sumptuary jurisprudence it is simply intolerable." One Sign of Wealth in England. From the London Globe. Cats, says Mr. Besant In one of his novels, have taken the place of oyster shells as the adornment of the backyards of the poor. In other Words, oysters are too dear nowadays for poor folks to eat Tho use ot these grateful and comforting bivalves may, therefore, be taken as indicative of ease if not of opulence. On this ground It was that the Judge of the City of London Court decided last Saturday, that a certain debtor, who was known to be a consumer of oysters, must be sent to gaol if he did not promptly pay his debt It Ulnde- Them I.nngh. Washington, February 18. The Clerk of the House to-day announced that' the proposed Democratic caucus would not be held this evening, having been postponed for the pres ent, the announcement of which called for sar castic laughter from the Republicans. PICKED UP IN GOTHAM. A Veritable Floating Pnlace. 1NEW TOBK BUBEAU SFECIALS.I ' New York, February IK The Hamburg. American Steamship Company announced to day that its new, steamship, the Augusta Vic toria, would begin her first trip, from Hamburg to New York, on May 2. The A ugusta Victoria was built to rival the Inman Line's big steam ship City of New York. Sho is 4G3 feet long, 56 feet wide, 33 feet deep, and has a displacement of 10,000 tons. Her guaranteed speed will ex ceed 22 miles per bonr. She has five decks of solid steel and teakwood. Many of her state rooms will bs as Iarce and luxuriously furnished as the rooms in a first-class hotel. Sadden Summons of n Priest. The Rev. Father William J. Lane, of the Church of the Visitation. Brooklyn, died short ly aftet midnight last night After the evening service he complained of dizziness. "When he reached home he became unconscious. He never rallied from the stupor. Father Lane was one of the youngest and most eloquent priests in Brooklyn. He was a man of consider able note in the Catholie Church of Southeast ern New York. Can't Get a Jury. The Court of Oyer and Terminer is rapidly pushing the number of ineligible talesmen ex amined by it in the boodle aldermen trial up toward 10,000. For three days the court has been busy pronouncing-'citizens incapable of fairly trying Thomas B. Kerr, who bribed the city fathers to vote for the franchise of the Broadway tramway. An average of one tales man is examined every two minutes of the court's session. No eligible man has turned np yet A Cnwido Against Amusements. The Rev. Father O'Hare, of Green Point, has suspended his crusade against treating and drinking at public bars to declare war against the waltz and masquerade balls. He has an ardent supporter in the Rev. Father Gessner, of Elizabeth, who yesterday expelled from his chnrch flvo young women who waltzed last week despite his advico to the contrary. The five young women threaten to appeal to the bishop for reinstatement Father O'Hare's visitation has created much excitement among the young people of his parish, because in two weeks Green Point Is to have its annual mask ball, which all the young people in the town have attended in former years. Lawyer Marsh In Great Danger. The friends of Luther P. Marsh, lawyer and spiritualist, were startled to-day by the report that Mme. Diss Debar is setting her cap for him. Mme. Diss Debar went to Boston three weeks ago to escape the reporters here. She femained there quite harmless until yesterday morning when she announced that spirits had commanded her to become Mrs. Luther It Marsh. Mr. Marsh's friends here think his po sition exceedingly perilous, as, even in his most skeptical moods, he didn't dare to disobey the madam's spiritualistic communications. Illness of a Mugwump. The clerks in the general postoffice here will probably have nq more chance to rail against the unpopular mugwump postmaster, Mr. Pierson. He is reported to De incurably ill of cancer of the stomach at a hotel in in Aiken, S. C. The heads of the Postoffice Department deny the truth of this report, but they are known to be acting under the instructions of the postmaster, who wishes to keep secret the condition of his health. Merely a Social Call. Scott Harrison, of Kansas City, Mo- brother of the President-elect arrived here last Satur day with his wife and three children, and is visiting his brother-in-law, Dr. It Rldgely Ly tie. Mr. Harrison expects-to remain in this city a week or more before going to Washing ton to the inauguration. He is a well-known lawyer and real estate operator in Kansas City, where he has resided many years. The visit of Mr. Harrison is purely social. He has not been prominent in politics. Mr. Harrison ex pected to make his visit here very quietly, and the politicians have not been aware that he was in town. NOVEL, BUT IMFORTAXT. The Synopsis of Several Bills Now In the Illinois Legislature. Spbisgfield, February 18. In the House to-day a bill was introduced forthe suppression of trusts and combinations in trade and pro ducts. Also one to prohibit the treating of persons to intoxicating liquors. Also a bill to enable mechanics, tradesmen and laborers to form societies for their mutual aid and pro tection. It declares that it shall be lawful for the members of such societies, either individ ually or collectively, to strike work for any em Eloyer because of a disagreement about wages, ours of work or manner of treatment or when to continue work would be in violation of the regulations of such society, and it provides that such persons so striking shall not be sub ject to prosecution or indictment for conspir acy luerelur, uuieas luo tuica ui duuu Buiueiy slmll be in contravention of the Constitution of the State or the United States. The bill further provides that such strikes shall not hinder others who so desire from tak ingthe places left vacant, with the further provision that "the use of force, threat or menace or harm to any person's property shall not be regarded as in any way hindering' such persons. A bill also introduced defining lager, beer as a beverago made of pure barley, malt and hops, and providing that any beer arti ficially colored or containing other ingredients shall be known as "commercial beer," and shall be so designated by means of stamps to be furnished by the State. This bill carries a miuimum penalty for a violation of its pro visions ot 81,000 fine and 30 days In prison. Pro vision is made for a chemical analysis of such sophisticated beers. THE IDES OP MAECH. While Harrison Is Inaugurated There Wll bo Trouble Elsewhere. Special Telegram to The Dispatch. CHAW.EST0N, W. Va., February la The long predicted break from the Kenna ranks came to-day. It was led by Senator Knottwho was followed by Senators Sweeny and Van Pelt, and Delegates Merrill, Peck, Shanklin, Sprigg, Sydenstricker, Altlser, Jack andShiw. Dorr, of course, maintained his old stand and voted for J. B. Jackson, while the Union Labor mem bers voted for Wirt R. Neat Several members made speeches explaining their position. One of the Kenna men reflecting quite severely on Dorr, who did not deign to reply. Justice, of Logan county, stated tbat he had voted for Kenna first and would vote for him to the last, and said defiantly if the gentlemen thought they could elect without tho vote of Logan let them try it Two ballots were taken, the sec ond resulting in Goff receiving 40 votes, Kenna 20, Governor Wilson 6, scattering la Kenna's defeat is now generally conceded, but it does not seem likely tbat his name will be with drawn. , , The joint assembly to open and declare tho result of the State election, which had ad journed until to-day. met this afternoon in the hall of the House. The Republicans had pre pared a resolution to declare Goff duly elected Governor, but before it could be introduced Delegate Sprig moved that the joint assembly dissolve, which was carried without loss of time. There are no new developments In the Gubernatorial matter, but exciting times are expected on March 4. , JIAET ANDEKSOxN IN TROUBLE. She is Billed to Piny In Two Rival Opera Houses. Louisviixe, February 18. Manager Bour lier. of the Masonic Temple Theater, has ad vertised Maty Anderson to play at his theater the closing days of this week. It is now cer tain she will play at Macauley's Theater. It is agreed that the rent of the Masonic Temple for the time of the contract will be paid, but this does not satisfy Bourlier. He saj she will Ipend $5,000 in showing Macauley and Abbey they cannot make a tool of him. He will on Monday next suo to enjoin Mary Anderson from playing at Macauley s. will sua Abbey for damages, "and threatens to sue Macaulev also. He is well backed financially and an interesting fight seems probable. Lncky Tbat Time. From the New York Tribune.! The Thirteen Club owes it to itself to elect to honorary membership or to bestow some other mark of respect on the men who barely escaped from a railway wreck at Ashland, Neb., a day or two ago. There were just IJ of them and they were asleep in a caooose attached to a freight train when another freight train ran into the caboose and knocked it to flinders. Its 13 oc cupants suffered no inconvenience, however, further than tbat one of them had the nose bleed. This trifling Indiscretion ought to be easily overlooked by the deflers of tne 13 super stition in this neighborhood. Greeting from the Thirteen Club is in order. CDKIOUS CONDENSATIONS. A Plymouth (Conn.) dwelling still oc cupied was erected in 1877. D. Edgar Crouse. of Syracuse, N. Y., has just built a SoOO.OOO stable. A rabbit with two tails was caught in a trap at Red Bank, N. J., last week. The numberof books in the Boston pub lic library has now reached 500.000. A revival meeting which has just closed atMuskegop-Micb., gathered in 100 converts. The Bank of England buildinj:. Lon don, covers eight acres and employs 1,000 per sons. A man in the interior of Pennsylvania killed himself because he couldn't use his $100 new sleigh. There were only 2M daily newspapers in the country In 1830. only 387 in 1S60, but 571 in 1870, 881 In 1BS0 and 1123 in 1888. The Roman Forum is about to be ruined by a road bridge which Is to crow its center-In order to continue tho Via Cavour toward the river. A royal Egyptian mummy landed zi Marseilles, France, the other day was taxed the usual duty on dried fish, no scale for preserved Pharaohs being known to the customs officials. There is a man in "Waterville. Me., who boasts of a pair of mittens that have seen service, but are good for several winters yet The present owner inherited tbem 37 years ago, from the man for whom they were made, and has worn tbem every winter since. The newest thing in crests or mono grams is to pnt them down at the bottom of the note paper instead of at the top, as before, tha chosen corner being the right-hand one. Tha effect is strange, aud rather suggests the writer having made a mistake, and begun his letter topsy-turvy. A writer in an English paper claims forWoodbrldgetbe credit of possessing tha meanest man in the person of a miserly yeoman who refused to allow his daughter to receive a sealskin jacket as a present because he could not afford to pay for the camphor which would be needed to keep the moths out of it during the summer. A new departure has taken place in tho lighting of public conveyances in London. Several of the new omnibuses are lighted by gas Instead of oil. The gas is contained in a small reservoir, similar to those in use on tha railroads, and is carried underneath the vehicle. The light given is greatly superior to oil, and enables the passengers to read a paper with comfort The ladies at Jackson, Mich., are taking tho tenderest care of Latimer, tha alleged murderer of his mother. They supply him with delicate edibles, and their floral offerings have transformed his gloomy cell into a fairy bower. They would bo miserably dii appolnted should he prove to be innocent of crime and never to have had the charming ap.titude for assassination which has won their regard. Back in the last century, Alexander Smith, afterward known as John Adams, ona of the ringleaders in the famous mutiny on tha ship Bounty in 1789, saved a midshipman from drowning. The latter put 100 in bank to await Smith's call. It remained until it had risen to the sum of 96.000. Now three grand sons of the mutineer, living on Norfolk and PItcairn Islands, have discovered their iden tity, and one of them has succeeded in estab lishing bis title to the great accumulation. A Paris correspondent says that com pressed air is now being extensively employed as a motive power in Paris instead of steam. The Central Station comprises 12 boilers' and six compound engines, and the air, which is compressed to six atmospheres. Is stored in vast receivers, and distributed as required to various Industrial establishments. The com pressed air also serves as a refrigerating me dium, which can be utilized for sanitary and other purposes. It is Intended to erect covered markets, which will be provided with cooling chambers, supplied with compressed air from the Central station. An extraordinary crime, if the deed can be called a crime, owing to the offender being a child of only i years of age, was committed in Panama the other day. It appears tbat a poor woman left her rom, leaving her baby of only a few weeks old fast asleep, and a second child, aged some 4 years, playing in the room. On her return, to her consternation she found that the 4-ycar-old child bad beaten the baby so severely over the bead with a stick tbat tha little thing was defld. The only theory ad vanced Is that the baby had awakened, and in order to quiet It the order had innocently beat it over the head and caused its death. Citizenship amoVg any of the five tribes of the Indian nation has a tangible cash value. The Cherokees, of whom there are between 20, 000 and 23,000. po3scss'll,000,000 acres of land, worth from S5 to S15 an acre, and have J2,5OO,0OO in the hands of the United States Government from which they draw $142,000 a year, besides a rental of 200,000 from the cattle companies. When a surplus accumulates it is divided among the citizens. About half the Cherokees are full-blooded, while the rest are of mixed Scotch and Irish blood, but white men cannot acquire citizenship now by simply marrying a Cherokee woman, as formerly. Sam Houston married a Cherokee: so did John Sevier, and to did numbers of Adamses, Rosses and other leading families of the South. A reputed old maid of 60 summers, who had been for years in the service of a grocer at the Halles, France, died recently; and as she was believed to have saved a little money, her niece, a young woman of 13, lately wedded to a policeman, searcned dilizently among her clothes and boxes for the treasure. Nothing, however, was to be found, although the mat tress, which with French people of this class often plays tho part of a bank, had been ripped carefully. A large cheese was discovered in a box under the bed, but as it was too strong for the palates of the policeman and his bride, they disposed of it to the grocer for the sum of 10 francs. The next day, as the worthy man was cutting tha big cheese, bis knife came into contact with a bard substance, and presently gold pieces were rolling about on the floor. The secret was at last out The cheese was now carefully examined, and was found to con tain 2.000 francs, or 80, In notes and gold; but unluckily for the presumed heiress, there was also a little bit of parchment on which tha venerable Rosalie had penned a few lines, set ting forth that she bequeathed the money to her son, whose name she gave, and who is serving in an infantry regiment at Lyons. JUST FOR FUN. Feminine Logic. Teacher "What does Condtllac say about brutes In the scale of being? Seminary (Sirl He says a brute Is an imperfect man. "And whatlsmanV" "ManI Oh, man's a perfect brute!" Spotted Cayute. The pronunciation of some fashionable anglo-manlae clergymen Is getting to be very much lite that or the English clergyman who la reading the passage, "He that hath ears to hear, let him hear." gives It, "He that hathyahsto yah. let him yah." .Vew Xork Tribune. Visitor (dime museum) Ton are not a freak, are yon? Lady Yes. "Beg pardon; but what Is there remarkable about you?" "I have been married ten years and 1 never once told my husband that I could have got plenty or richer and handsomer men If I'd wanted 'em." PAiio delphia Record. She Why, Charley, your grandmother died only a week ago and here yon are at a dtnclng party. I should think you'd have some respect for her memory." He Why. 1 certainly have. But yon see she lost her memory six years before she died ana I date my respect from that time. Boston Beacon. Not an Appropriate Bemedy. Friend not water will cure your nervousness. Mr. Henpeck Not much. I've been In hot water for ten years, ever since I married. In fact. That's what makes mo nervous. "Perhaps If yon heaped coals of nre on your wife's nead she would he better." "Coals of Are? Why, she's red headed already. "Texas Siftingt. Chumpleigh What did you see in Egypt that Impressed you? Corncorner I seen the Sphinx. Chumpleigh Worth seeing? Corncorner It may have been once, but at present the darned shebang is so busted that It don't pay to learn Ut spell the name of It. America Harry (horrified at seeing Kate puffing at a cigarette) Mercy! Do you smoke, Kate? Kate Xot because 1 enjoy it, Harry. I want to 1111 the rooms with smoke, so that should a bur glar break in, he'll think there's a man In the bouse. Harry Well, your only losing your time and soiling your lips. A man never smokes cigarettes leastwise no man that a burglar need be afraid ot. Boston Transcript. Oh, merchant, in thine hour of e e e, if on this paper you should c e c. And look for something to ap p p p Your yearning for greenback V v v, Take our advice and now be y y y, , (So straight ahead and advert ill, 1 You'll find the project of some u n n; eglect can offer no ex q q r. B wise at once, prolong your d a a a, " A silent business soon do kkk. Buffalo Stvtl' liHi WLl &jb '" -' i-!