rrzjt y& W' WWtW: W saw . '- 5 , t ...V' J ' i A. PITTSBURG DISPATCH,' WEDNESDAY, MARCH: 6.VL889L- K- 4 ' i - The Inaugural SnuvEnir Presented to the Public with TuEBday'e Dispatch Failed to Supply the Demand. AN Extra Edition. Of this Handsome Historical and Pictorial Souvenir has been printed, and will be On Sale This Morning. 3AU those wishing copies of the INATJ GUBAli SotJVenie can obtain the same at the Counting Boom of The Dispatch or from newsboys this morning. Out-of-town people can secure Souvenirs through agents of The DisrATOi. ESTABLISHED FEBRUARY 1SML VoL , So. 17. Entered at Pittsburg Post office. November 14. 1&S7, as second-class matter. 'Business Office 97 and 99 Fifth Avenue. News Booms and Publishing House 75, 77 and 79 Diamond Street. Average circulation of the dally edition of The Dispatch for six months ending March 1,1SS9, 27,988 Copies per Issnc. Average circulation of tbo Sunday edition of The Dispatch for February, 1SS9, 45,144 Copies per issue. TEEMS OF THE DISPATCH. TOSTAGE TTtEE IN THE COTTED STATES. JUILT DisrATCit, One Tear. J 800 Daily Dispatch, Per Quarter 200 Daily Dispatch, OneMonth Ju Daily Dispatch, Including Sunday, one rear. 1000 Daily Dispatch, including Sunday, per quarter "SO Daily dispatch, including Sunday, one month , Bdsday Dispatch, oneyear. ISO Weekly Dispatch, one year 125 The Daily Dispatch Is delivered by carriers at 15 cents per week, or lncludlnglheSunday edition, at 20 cents per week. ; PITTSBURG, WEDNESDAY, MAR. 6, 1889. THE NEW CABINET. The official announcement of the Cabinet and its confirmation yesterday, put an end to the three months' speculation a.nd wire pulling concerning the composition of that important body. The Cabinet confirmed is that which was announced by The Dis ipatch'S specials at the close of last week. So far as the personal character of Presi dent Harrison's official advisors is con cerned, it is more largely an unknown (quantity than any Cabinet that has been an nounced within the memory of the present generation. Except Blaine and "Windom, there is not a man who has such a record in national administration or legislation as to 'afford much indication of his course as a public officer. Mr. Blaine's character as a national leader is too well known to re quire comment. Mr- Windom's previous record in the position he now holds, though short, is favorable. The other six members, while known as able lawyers, successful business men or popular State politicians, have still to show what they can do with national affairs. Of course the jeer is heard that with Blaine and "Windom in the lead and the rest of the Cabinet filled with nonentities it fixes the character of the new administra tion as a Blaine administration. But it is well enough known that such men as Tracy, Noble and Wanamaker are not nonentities, and experience has abund antly proved that a Cabinet officer need not be a failure because he has had no previous commanding position. "Whitney, Manning and Gresham are three men who went into the Cabinet comparatively unknown in national politics and yet three men who have ranked higher as Cabinet officers could hardly be named. Beyond all this the fact is worth remem bering that this is going to be a Harrison administration. The author of Monday's inaugural is certain to be the head of his own administration. THE BIVEB COAL PEOBLEM. The interview on the condition of the river coal trade, published elsewhere, sets forth specifically the need of that interest for relief and predicts a shut-down if the operaters have to continue paying higher wages and greater tolls than their com petitors in the Kanawha district. Of course, if these burdens have deprived the operators of all profit in the shipment of coal, they will have no course open to them but a shut down ; and in that case the miners will do well to consider the policy of accepting a reduced wage rate. But it is also worth while to remember that if this is the case, no concert of action is necessary among the operators. "When men are doing a losing business the one who shuts down first will save the most money. In view of that point and also of the claim of humane policy in keeping the miners at work during the win ter, the fact that early in the winter a con certed shut-down was announced, becomes somewhat pertinent. The miners may be apt to argue that the humane policy was not uppermost in that announcement, and that it was not adhered to,- the inference may be that enough margin was found, in the ship ment of coal, to make it worth while to start the mines once more. A POSSIBLE STANDARD K0VE. The news, given elsewhere by a special correspondent of The Dispatch, that the Standard is not only buying the oil produc ing territory in the Ohio field but is quietly absorbing all of the Pennsylvania region it can get into its grip, presents a possibility at least, which would prove a very in structive sequel to the recent movements in that industry. The spectacle of a monopoly in refining, created first by transportation favors, thus been enabled to impose burdens on the pro ducers, and make their industry steadily unprofitable and finally clinchingtits hold by laying its clutches on the producing territory itself, should be a very emphatic warning as to the results of combination and exclusive privileges in trade. The fact that the wealth which would enable the Standard to finally rivet its control of the petroleum trade has been accumulated at the cost of the independent industry, makes the example all the more telling. Perhaps if the 'producers are confronted with the option of selling their property to the Standard, it the Standard'.! valuation, or of being frozen out, they will realize that their true policy would have been, for the past year or two, to have built up and encouraged Ik Bippiaj. competition to the "Standard, instead of playing the Standard's game for it. THE IRON PA1LTJBE. The announcement of the failure of the Beading Iron Company yesterday, with liabilities that make it a rather heavy bankruptcy, cannot, of course, be pleasant news either to the iron trade or to the cred itors of the concern. While it may be early to predicate the causes of the disaster, we will venture the assertion that it will be found to have been largely due to local causes, such as are not applicable to the iron trade at large, and least of all to Pitts burg. There is a' suggestion of one of the causes in the statements already made pub lic concerning its liabilities. When an es tablishment located in the anthracite re gions, for the sake of using the fuel of that district in its industry, turns out to have been buying coke in Pittsburg and pig iron in distant regions, there is an obvious in ference that the combination which keeps up the price of the anthracite fuel has turned an originally advantageous location into a disadvantageous one. There is an' obvious moral to such a fail ure as this. Whatever the combination of causes that wrecks iron concerns in the an thracite regions and keeps others closed, there is no doubt that the iron interests of Pittsburg are on a solid footing. Margins may be narrow, but the volume of business makes their total, satisfactory in the course of a year. The advantages of our combina tion of fuel supply and of our transporta tion facilities render the iron and steel in terests of Pittsburg impregnable. While other sections are losing money and cutting down wages, this city is paying the highest wages, and on every side the situation is re garded as satisfactory. The lesson is, clearly, that the proper loca tion of iron and steel manufactures is in Pittsburg. It may be a little late to en force this lesson on the owners of the bank rupt Beading concern, but it will be salu tary to others. Will BRAZEN IT OUT. In borrowing the cynical audacity which is the distinguishing characteristic of Mr. Balfour, the London Times will still further help to enlighten the civilized world on the true inwardness of Toryism. In place of an honest admission that it had wronged Parnell, that it had without foundation unjustly accused him of com plicity in murder, the collapsed "Thunderer" goes on with its cose before the Commission. Yesterday there was a dribbling out of weary old stories about what Patrick Ford's paper contained in advocacy of dynamite, of the terrible fact that the Land Leaguers read Fold's paper; and of the treasonable circumstance that occasionally the League actually circulated it, Though ob jection was made to this sort of testimony as irrelevant and useless, the Court allowed it. It merely requires a parity of reasoning to make every one who has read the Times in the past year a sharer in the moral obliquity shown in its defamation of Parnell, and if anybody sent the Times to other people through the post office it was crowning proof that they in dorsed aud were committed to all the false hoods it contained! The weakness and desperation of the at tacks on the Home Bulers were never more clearly shown in the attempts made to in criminate them. The party and the organ of the aristocratic and snob classes in Great Britain are reduced to the dire extremity of having to catch at any sort of straws to save themselves from drowning. EXTEND THE RULE. It is the common assertion of both inde pendently Democratic and Bepublican pa pers that Attorney General Garland's Pan Electric affiliations constitute the black spot of the retiring administration. How much of this is inspired by the Bell telephone in terest it is hard to say; but there is truth in it, to the extent that a high official using his powers to forward a corporation in which he is interested, is a very uncommendable sight. Tet there is a good deal of instruction in the remark recently made by an Eastern pa per that Garland probably regrets that he did not stay in the Senate. It is worth while remembering that the retiring Attor ney General formed his Pan-Electric connec tions while in the Senate; and it is a re markable indication of the incongruity of our public morals, that if he had re mained in that body and used his official in fluence there in favor of his own inter est, he would have been all right. It is notorious that other Senators go., much further in that direction than Garland ever did. He only attacked a patent in the in terest of the public as well as of his own com pany: while within the past month the na tion has witnessed the spectacle of Stanford declaring that the Senate should not pass the bill for the settlement of the Union Pacific debt, unless his road was provided for by a practical gift of its public obliga tions, and Payne voting in the Standard Oil interest on the amendment to the inter State commerce act. These things and many similar things done in Congress hard ly raise a ripple of comment. It is healthy to have members of the Cabinet forbidden by public opinion to use their offices for private gain; but .would it not be healthier to have the rule extended so as to take in the dignified members of the United States Senate? VINDICTIVE LITIGATION. The complication of perjury, libel and as sault and battery cases, which has grown out of the Law and Order prosecutions, has reached a degree which -exhibits personal and vindictive prosecutions rather than an impartial desire to punish wrong-doing. This fact may have no bearing on the trial as to whether the offenses charged have been really committed; but in case they should be found to be without foundation, the ques tion of animus may become very important in determining the further question of ma licious prosecutions. In view of the feat ures attending the arrest of the agents of the Law and Ordsr Society yesterday, it is nec essary to point out that while .they should be held responsible for the transgression of the rights of others, they have their legal rights, among which we have the authority of the courts for including that of giving bail on an assault and battery charge. The litigation in these cases has reached a stage which is creditable to no one connected with it. "GekeeaIi B. P. Tbacy's professional training for the duties of Secretary of the Navy very much resembles that of Sir Joseph Porter, K, C. B.,"-remarks the anti administration Providence Journal. True enough; but might not the esteemed Journal remember that the- same can be said of nearly all of General Tracy's predecessors, including William CV Whitney, Uncle Dick Thompson, George M. Bobeson and Gideon Welles. With the precedents, that way, cotemporaries of the independent stripe should recognize as the satisfactory feature of Tracy's appointment, that by it the New York machine factions are served up for the first course of the administration ban quet. The law nassed bv the Arizona Lewisln, ture making train robbery a capital offense suggests the important opening ot Mrs. Glass' famous receipt for cooking a hare. "First catch your train robbers." "In President Cleveland's veto of the Direct Tax bill it is clearly shown that if constitutional power to pass such a bill could be lodged in Congress, then the judg ment of the majority of the National Legis lature would be the only safeguard of the public funds," remarks the esteemed hut somewhat partisan Philadelphia Record. In view of the increase in appropriations by Congress during the past four years, to the tune of over $100,000,000, it would be inter esting to have it explained what other safe guard there is anyhow. Can there be any more tragically ludicrous example of the ruling passion strong in death, than the report that another letter has arrived in London from Pigott, posted the day of his death? The report from Washington that some of the Pennsylvania militia refused to give up the quarters in the Postoffice Depart ment that has been afforded them, so that the department could resume business is, we hope, incorrect. Pour years ago, it was necessary to impress upon our citizen soldiery, that the fact of their going to Washington to attend an inauguration as soldiers does not release them from the obligations of common decency or good order,and it was hoped that the lesson could be remembered for four years. WhatITuto Lima oil into certificate oill Does not a report of that sort bring up a general inquiry from the Pennsylvania oil fields, whether that is what they went into the shut-down movement for. The assertion that only four out of the thirteen steel mills are running, is made by the Philadelphia Record, but our esteemed cotemporary fails to perceive that that fact in conjunction with the other one of 28 steel rails, does not indicate that the ,steel mill combination is any glittering success. The boom in wheat has burst. Now listen while the Northwestern millers squeal over the decline of flour to a parity with the reduced cost of the raw material. The first thing that the public made the President do, after getting into office, was a job of wholesale hand shaking. This shows that the few thousands who flock to Washington have a different idea of the Presidental duties than the millions who stay away. Well, some people thought, four years ago, that the Cabinet which concluded .its labors Monday was likely to be a Bayard Cabinet,, too. These is comfort in the reflection that it will be four years before the majority of the newspapers in the country will again inflict upon their readers that antique and totally inappropriate reflection about "the King is dead; long live the King." Will the administration continne its harmony with the month of its inception by going out like a lion? The lawyer who brought the late Henry Ward Beecher through his legal troubles ought to be able to rule over the complica tions of naval affairs easily. But that pre cedent in the treatment of scandals is not entirely reassuring. PUBLIC PEOPLE PARAGRAPHED. Patti can converse in five tongues. Dr. Mary Walxeb will apply for a Wash ington clerkship. The Duke of Newcastle built a new church at Clumber at a cost of over $200,000, and his grateful tenants have put a fine memorial win dow in it as a wedding present to him. Hamilton Disston, the Philadelphia saw manufacturer, is looked on as a nabob by the people of Florida, where he owns more land than any other six men in the State. He is now on his way home from a visit to his Flori da possessions. Sabah Bernhabdt had a remarkable run of luck at the Monte Carlo roulette table last week, where she won three times in succession, each time with the chances 86 to 1 against her. The crowd broke out into applause at her nn. usual success. Jefferson Davis, the aged leader of the Southern Confederacy, is how past SO years of age. Although his hair is white, and his voice not so strong as it was in the prime of life, Mr. Davis is intellectually as clear and bright as ever. His step has lost its firmness and elasticity some what, yet he stands as erect and moves about as easily as a much younger man. These seems to be an evil fatality in Belgian royal matrimonial alliances with the Imperial family of Austria. Twice in one generation a Belgian Princess has been married to a Haps burg, and in each case the husband has been torn from the wife by a sudden and horrible death. On the 19th Of June 1S67, the Belgian Princess Charlotte lost her husband, the Em peror Maximilian, who was executed by the bullets of the Mexicans at Queretaro, and the widow has ever since been hopelessly insane. On the 30th of January, 1SS9, the Belgian Princess Stephanie lost her husband by a fate even more terrible. To an accident is attributed Victorien Sar dou's singularly superstitious mysticism, for he is a great believer in portents and omens. Along the narrow street there was passing a wagon laden with cut stone, and to allow room Sardou took refuge in a doorway, but he had scarcely established himself there when a big fat man was driven to the same shelter. It was obvious to the dramatist there wasuo room for two of them, so he crossed over the street, and established himself in a doorway opposite. The wagon passed, the swearing driver all the time whipping his horses, and it was probably owing to some jerk they had given that a huge cubo of stone was detached, and crushed in its fall the man to whom, waiving his claim as first occupant, he had sur rendered the place.' It was this that laid the foundation of his superstition. To express it he has borrowed a word from the Arabs, those inveterate fatalists, bonkra, which means to morrow. After those wild gusts of passion at rehearsals, when he reduced to dumbness by his own shouting, this is bis first word when he is sufficiently recovered to utter it. Kale Field's Fashlonab c Woman, From the Buffalo Express. Kate Field says that the woman who aims to be fashionable might as well commit suicide at the start. She must neglect home, husband and children, put away comfort and conven ience, be a first-class hypocrite and. a good slanderer, and at the end of ten years break down and become a phpsical wreck. Miss Field has delivered herself of some very true sayings lately. This is one ot them. DEATHS OP A DAI. John Balrd. WASnniGTOir, Pa., March 6. John Balrd, for many years a prominent business man, died yes terday, aged 73 years. He was stricken with paralysis about 15 years ago, while attending a funeral of a friend,, from -which he never fully re covered, and which finally resulted lu his death. Dllss Diary I Booth. New Yobk, March 5. Miss Mary L. Booth, editor of harper's Jiazar, died at her residence, No. 101 East Fifty-niuth street; at S o'clock this afternoon. Rev. J. G. Barticlt. Pabezbsbubo, March 5. Kev. J. G. Bartlett, a Lutheran minister of Belpre, ,0., aged 71 years,', aicu very vuuaeniy lasfc mgaii THE. TOPICAL TALKER, Bits of Gossip From the Green Boom and Other Places. When the' great combination containing Joe Jefferson," W. J. Florence, Mrs. Drew and John Gilbert comes to this city next year, and Mr Wilt assured mo yesterday that ha had con tracted with them, we'are to be treated to an auction of seats, 'and doubtless the bidding will be extremely spirited. Probably the big sums which such an auction will produce could noj be realized at the regular prices, or even if the scale were raised to the figures at which Messrs. Booth and Barrett played. And yet it has been tbe general experience of theatrical managers In Pittsburg, I believe, that buying seats at auction is not regarded with favor by theater-goers here. The fact that the Jefferson-Florence Com pany will only play here three nights it was their original Intention to give Pittsburg only one night may Induce a great many to nay tbe fancy prices which will be asked. The per formances will be an extraordinary treat. V .Br the way, Mr. "Wilt doesn't think Pittsburg is behind other cities of like size in getting the new ana desirable attractions from the East. He instanced several companies which he had been Instrumental in bringing to this city, and it may be admitted that Pittsburg is not always slighted. But it certainly remains true that Pittsburg does not get anything like her fair share of the good things going in a theatri cal way. This could easily bo proved by enumerating the many first-class companies on the road which have not been and will not be here this season. It is large list, and by com paring with it the list of what we havo seen the injustice done to Pittsburg would bo ap parent. V A very valuable picture might be obtained by the photographer who would catch with his camera the entire gallery of the Bijou Theater during the interval of almost total darkness before the shipwreck scene in "The Fugitive." Suoh a picture taken instantaneously by flash light wonld show a wonderful variety of qnaint faces, mostly twisted Into grimace. . The gallery gods at the Bijou enjoy to the utmost a chance to give unrestrained vent to their feelings in whoops, whistlings, cat-calls and personal salutations. The patience of some railroad conductors is simply marvelous. On a midnight Cleveland & Pittsburg train very recently, when the conductor reached a slouchy, loose-jointed lout of a youth and asked for his ticket, the latter produced a monthly commutation ticket, which boro tbe na,me of a station at which the train did not stop. The conductor told the passenger that thofare to the nearest station at which the train wonld stop was 10 cents more than the commutation ticket was good for. 1 haven't got 10 cents," coolly remarked the youth. "Don't you know anybody on the train who can pay it for you?" "No," said the youth without stirring an inch. "Then I shall have to put you off the train," said the conductor quietly, and reaching! or tbo whistle cord, he began to signal the engineer to stop. At the same moment tbe youth dipped his fingers into his vest pocket, pulled out some change and gave the conductor the 10 cents without any remark. "You had that dime all the time; you ought to be put off the train anyhow," was all the con ductorsaid. A good many passengers wonld have enjoyed kicking that incarnation of meanness and Im pudence off the cars. JAPAN'S NEW REGIME. Foil Particulars of the Declaration of the New Constitution, SAN Feancisco, March 5. The steamship City of New York, which arrived last night, brings mail advices respecting the promulga tion of the new Constitution of Japan on Feb ruary 11. The Emperor, having sworn to the solemn oath in the Imperial sanctuary, top "maintain" and secure from decline tbe ancient form of Government, and never at this time nor in the future to fail to be an example to his subjects in observation of laws 'hereby es tablished, took his place on the throne, and in the presence of all the highest functionaries of ,the empire, as well as of the chosen repre sentatives oi tne people, nanaeaiotne Minister President of State, the five laws forming the new system. These laws are: The constitution of the Empire of Japan; the Imperial ordinance concerning the House of Peers; the law of the House; the law of elec tion of members of the House of Representa tives; and the law of finance. They comprise, in all, S32 articles. In the first place, the sacred and inviolable nature of the Imperial title and perpetuity of the throne are asserted with the fullest emphasis. Tbe Emperor remains, as before, the source of, all laws, but his legisla tive functions henceforth to be exercised with tbe sanction of the Diet. Only in the presence of urgent necessity, to maintain the public safety, or to avert a public calamity, can he issue ordinances in lieu of laws, ana it is ex pressly provided that such ordinances must be laid before the Diet at its next session, when, if not approved by that body, they become invalid. The parliamentary system of the new Government is vested in a House of Peers and a House of Representatives, constituting the Imperial Diet The Upper House is partly elective, partly hereditary and partly nominated. The heredi tary portion comprises members of tbe Impe rial family, Princes and Marquises. The elect ive portion comprises both noblemen and commoners. The noblemen are Counts, Vis counts and Barons, elected by members of their respective orders, in numbers not exceeding one-fifth of the number of those orders. The commoners are chosen by cities and prefect ures, one by each, from among tbe highest tax payers. The Lower House, or House of Rep resentatives, consists of 300 members, elected by ballot in districts fixed by a supplementary law exclnsive of members of legations. Only nine foreigners obtained permission to be pres ent at tho declaration. How to Enjoy a Cigarette. From the London Globe. Cheap hand-made cigarettes form a delicious smoke, particularly if while you are enjoying them yon let your mind dwell in a pleasant reverie upon their origin. T&.one who knows, this daily luxury of the cabman and waiter is redolent of associations, for whence have been gathered the materials? There is a three volume novel in every cigarette. What a splendid exercise in imagination it is to figure in one's mind who the smokers wero who con tributed each a cigar end, or the remains of a cigarette, or the emptyings of a pipe for the gamin to dry and f nzzle till it was readv to be a cigarette again. Youth, beauty, fashion, old age, vice and virtue may all havo smoked the tobacco in its earlier form. It must be highly pleasing to construct a group of shadowy smokers for acquaintances. I GOODBY GOD' BLESS YOU. I like the Anglo-Saxon speech With its direct reveallngs It takes a hold and seems to reach Way down Into your feelings; That some folk deem it rude, 1 know, And therefore they abuse it; But 1 have never found It so Before all else I choose it. I don' t object that men should air The Gallic they have paid for With "au revolr," "adieu, machere" For that's what France was made for, But when a crony takes your hand At parting to address you 'He drops all foreign lingo and He says: "Good-by God bless yon!" This seems to me a sacred phrase With reverence Impassioned A thing come down from righteous days, Quaintly but nobly fashioned; It well Incomes an honest face A voice that's round and cheerful; If stays the sturdy in bis place And soothes the weak and fearful. Into the porches of the ears. It steals with subtle unction , Aud in your heart of hearts appears To work Its gracious function; And all daylong with pleasing song It lingers to caress you . I'm sure no human heart goes wrong That's told ' 'Uood-by God bless you?' I lo vo the words perhaps because, "When I was leaving mother, Standing at last In solemn pause We looked at one another, And I I saw In mother's eyes The love she could not tell me A love eternal as the skies Whatever fata befell me; She nut herarms about my neck And soothed the pain of leaving. And though her heart was like to break, ' She spoke no word of grieving; She let no tear bedim her eye, For fear that might distress me. But, kissing me, she said good-by And asked our God to bless me. , Chicago Sens. VARIOUS SOCIAL EVENTS. v The Dingier-Wolf Wedding nnd Several Other Events Worthy of Notice. Doubtless Christ M. E. Church was never the scene of a larger or more brilliant wedding than that of hyjt evening, which joined In marriage Miss Emma Bingler, tbe much-admired and sweet soprano singer, and Mr. Wil liam Wolf, a prominent young business man of the city. One thousand one hundred tickets of admittance were issued, but, before the cere mony commenced, fully 1,200 people had crowded in, filling the space near the, en trances. The guests began to arrive about 8 o'clock, but the hand on the dial, had moved around to 627 ere the white rope was stretched to clear tbe aisle and the rustle of dresses at the door told the waiting spectators that the bride and groom were coming. Soon tho nsheraMr. Frank Bingler, brother of the bride, Mr. J. Sell Atterbury, Mr. Tom Brown, Mr. Doanr Mr. Hibbard and Mr. W. A. Mandelick, of New York, advanced up the aisle, followed by the bridemaids, Misses Miller and Moreland, the maid of honor, Miss Ada Myers, the bride and groom and the best man, Mr. C. Stephenson Gatchel, and Mr. Harry Bingler, eldest brother of the bride, who gave her away. Advancing to the altar, Rev. Dr. Cowles, pastor of the church, stepped forward, and amid the strains of Lohengrin's March, pro nounced tbe beautiful marriage ritual ot the church. The music then changed to Men delssohn's march, and the bride and groom and the guests passed down the aisle to the carriages; thence to the residence of the bride's mother, in Hazelwood, where a short reception was held, and Mr. and Mrs. Wolf left at a o'clock for an extended Southern trip. On their way back to this city, their future home, a reception will be tendered them in Philadelphia by Mr. and Mrs. Walter B. Smith, brother-in-law and Sis? ter of Mr. C. Stephenson Gatchel. The bride wore an elaborate gown of white corded silk, with court train ana veil, and car ried a boquet of lilies of the valley. The maid of honor also wore a white silk, and carried tbe Eastern bridal bouquet of white violets. The bridesmaids both wore light bluo silk, walking length, and carried boquets of white roses. The costumes or many of the guests were also elaborate. The groom presented the bridesmaids with bracelets and the ushers with scarfpins. Be fore the ceremony, members of the Mozart Club rendered an appropriate selection, Mr. Loyd presiding at the organ. DUFF-T0RRANCE. A Charming Wedding at the Macbeth Man- slon In the East End. One of the most brilliant and fitting climaxes of -the wind-up before the Lenten season'' was the celebration last evening of the nuptials of Miss Sophia Duff, daughter of Mrs. J. George Duff and sister of Mrs. George A. Macbeth, and Hugh Charles Torrance, a prominent young business man connected with the Car negie Wire Company, of Beaver Falls. Shortly before 7 o clock p. M. the residence of Mr. Macbeth, on Amberson avenue. Shady side, the scene of the ceremony, presented a gay appearance. On the balustrades of the windine stairs leading to the reception room Florist Smith had entwined festoons of roses and smllax, the alcove formed by the stairs having a background of lilies and tropical plants. Over the mantels were ferns, roses and curious plants. In tho dining room, over which Caterer Kennedy presided, a beautiful pyramid of pink roses graced tho center of the table. As the hour of 7 approached, Gernert & Gnenther's Lohengrin Wedding March was wafted down the stairway as the bride and Soom, attended by their retinue, took places the alcove and Bey. Edmund Balfour, of the Grant Street Lutheran Church, pronounced them bride and groom. The bride wore a beautiful, imported white corded silk, trimmed with duchess and point lace with a veil. She carried lilies of tho val ley. She was given away by her brother-in-law, Mr. Henry Balken, and was attended by her 7-year-old niece, Miss Annie V. Macbeth, and nephew, Mr. Edward Balken. After the reception, Mr. and Mrs. Torrance left on a tour of the East, prior to making Beaver Falls their home. BARKER-BUCHANAN. Tho Nice Nuptials at Calvary Episcopal Church Lnst Evening:. Last night was also a gala one for Calvary Episcopal Church, East End, It being the scene of a large wedding the largest, according to many, that has ever been held in the church. In this instance the contracting parties wero Miss Katharine Hailman Barker, daughter of Mrs. George Barker, and Mr. Harris Buchan an, both well-known society young people. Mr. Robert J. Buchanan officiated as best man, and the mother, Mrs; Mary Barker, gave the bride away. There were no bridesmaids. The" following acted as ushers: Messrs. C. B. Nicholson, A. Macpherson, Roland Gerry, W. B. Moore, E. G. Stucky and Howard Parker. Bev. George Hodges, pastor of the church, performed the ceremony, after which the couple went direct to the depot and took tbe 8:50 train for the East. On their return they will reside on Shady avenue.' The bride wore a gobelin blue traveling dress, with hat to match. MARRIED AT HIGH MASS. Mr. James P. McGulro and Miss Tllllo Dia mond the Parties. Mr. Jas. P. McGuire and MissTillle Diamond were married yesterday morning at high mass in the Lawrenceville Cathedral. A reception took place in tbe evening, and the newly-joined counlo departed for the East this morning, to return in a few weeks to take up their perman ent abode in Lawrenceville. Miss Findle's Reception. Miss Findle, of 431 Penn avenue, gave a very pleasant reception at her home last evening, dancing being one of the attractions. The hostess was assisted in receiving by Miss Met calf, of Colorado Springs; Miss Jamison, Misses Clora and Julia Morgan. Miss Bodgers, Miss Hayes, Miss Bailey. Miss Metcalf and Misses Elinor and Bessie Stevenson. The rooms were nicely decorated with tropical plants, and a luncheon was served by Kennedy. A Turnvercln Supper; and Dnnce. Last night tho Manchester Turners held a pleasant supper and dance in their hall, on Beaver avenne, Allegheny. Messrs. Joseph Miller, Charles Geiger, Henry Selling. Charles Mees and Dr. Both had complete charge of the management. The Crescent Orchestra ren dered the music, to which nearly 200 couples passed away the merry hours. Tbe Sleeping Queen. The opera of the "Sleeping Queen" was pre sented last evening at Library hall, Mt. Washington, for the benefit of Grace Episcooal Church choir. The Cast was as follows: Queen, Mrs. M. Henkle; Agnes, Miss Edith Harris; Phillips, Mr. J. Boyd Duff; Regent, Mr. E. H. Dermitt. ' A Talk dn Alaska. The members of the Junta Club held .their regular semi-monthly meeting last night at the residence of Mr. C. D. Scully, Coltart square. Mr. George Wardman, who was a guest of the clnb, read a very interesting paper on Alaska. A Pleasant Cotillon. The Auxiliary Circles of G. A. E. Post 88, of Allegheny, gave a well-attended cotillon in Union Bink, Allegheny, last night. The danc ing lasted till 2, and the proceeds go to the Soldiers' Monument Fund. An Afternoon Reception. Mrs. James Caldwell, of 326 Penn avenue, en tertained a large number of ladies at a recep tion yesterday afternoon. The parlors were very profusely decorated with tulips, lilacs aud mignonette. CANADIAN COMMENT. Opinions of the Dominion Press on Hnrrl sonjs InnugUlhl Address. Toronto, March 5-Beferring to President Harrison's inaugural address, the Empire, Conservative, says: "President Harrison's in augural address is not a startling document, bat is apparently the utterance of an honest, honorable man, who feels deeply the .responsi bility of bis high position and is determined to do his duty to the people over whom he has been called to preside. The tone througnout the'message is high and there seems to be jhe riug of sincerity in the excellent advice he gives on many important subjects." The Mail, Independent, says: "General Har rison's message is not a document which is likely to become history as the straightforward utterance of a man who holds his ideas honest ly. Though some of them are peculiar, their deliverance is entitled to certain respect. The President voiced the opinion of sensible peo ple as to keeping out of wars and jingoism; he uttered some wise words as to the civil service; but taken as a whole, the message is character ized by placid commonplaceness, which. Is, after all, far better than, mock heroics and in flated buncombe." ' The Globe. Liberal, says: "President- Harri son's rather bombastic address seems to"sIgnlfy that ho means to enter upon, a policy of ex penditure that would delight the heart of our own Sir John. The President may ba congrat ulated on having discovered a new name for a policy that enhances tbe price of the people's necessaries. He calls, it 'commercial emanci- nntlnn A PROPHETIC GLASS. Remarkable Revelations of a Ollrror Used , ia Tracking Barn Burners What tbo Erdsplegel Is nnd How It Is Used Cryptograms andCharmiAgalnst Witch craft. That there is in this part of the country such a thing as the Erdspiegel, or earttfgjass, was but little known until last Monday, says a Han over, Pa., correspondent of tbe Baltimore American. On that day was published an ac count of how the glass was used to track sus; pected barn burners.' The Erdspiegel Is a glass, which, it is claimed, will reveal unseen things; if looked into by the right person. It takes it name from the fact that it bas to be buried in the earth one year before it becomes possessed of great power. The Erdspiegel is not a new thing; in fact, It is very old,and those posted In German folk-lore are well acquainted with the wonderful powers it Is claimed to pos sess. The one in this part of the country is owned by Mr. John Keagy, a well-known and prosperous farmer who lives a -short distance from McSherrystown. He prizes the glass highly, and claims that it was through its powe r last Saturday night that he was able to discern, the approach of the men who intended to burn his barn, and not only to scare them away, bat to follow and recognize them. Cabalistic Words. By invitation of Mr. Joseph Keagy, tho. brother of the owner of the glass, I went out to the'farm to test the glass myself. At first, he did not believe in tbe glass, bat he says he has had snch wonderful experiences with it that his faith in it now is as wonderful to an un believer as the virtues of the glass. Mr. Cnrby J. Smith, also of this city, made the third of, the party. Mr. Keagy guards the glass with great care, and keeps it in a silk handkerchief and other wrappings, to prevent breaking it. It is a piece of very heavy plate glass 6x8 inches in size. Beneath it is a sheet of white paper containiog words and symbols. On the glass is cut a star, having the signs of the planets cut in each point. Around the edges are more signs and symbols. The glass with the paper beneath is heavily framed in hard wood,be ' cause the white paper must be kept white and free from 'air. Besides the stars and planet signs, the following is on the glass: God Father Son & Holy Ghost. Judar lit. Un the center Is the star, with the signs of the planets In tbe points. Jesus of Nazares Is rex. . ojsrfJ "in mi otuoj' . c: Tbe Cryptogram Interpreted. Tho scratchings on the glass are half Ger man, English and LatinT They are very thin. Under this heavy plate is the white paper. The writer of the signs and sentences was not a good speller or writer, either, and part of the inscription is not legible. I give a faithful transcription, spelling and all: : Gabriel, Gabriel, Azarlcl. : Dlpart, Baton, it Is Bitten : : Thou shalt'nod Temt - : The Lord thl God. t t t : : K. l N. : I. : Here Is a German sentence which cannot be:, :read. : I. : : N. i. B. : : Under nnd. : : Dullx lx ux ur du Kanst : : Nlcnt uber l'ontlo t : : Pontlo 1st uber Pllado. : : Jesus Nnzares Bexjudrum : : Kafead Zacharlel. t t t : Many of the signs on the papers are well known safeguards against evil. For instance, the crosses of letters generally have "Spiritns Sanctns" between the two crosses, and it is a superstition that if so written and always car ried with one it will protect against all evil powers and" all manner of witchcraft. It means "All this be guarded here in time and there in eternity, amen." "When you have the symbol with you and deslro its aid, you must say, "Bless me here in timo and there in eternity." The sentences "Dulllx ix ux and Pontio ist uberEilato f f f " is the sign to prevent witched or malicions persons from doing you harm, while If the sentence "Jesus Nazarenus Bex Judseorum" is repeated before going to court or investigation, it will preserve your rights, according to the superstition. History of the-EtdspIege! Mr. Keagy secured' his Erdspiegel some 15 years ago. It was made by a lamous old man In Lancaster, Pa. The glass and paper were brought to this locality and buried, according to the rule, one year in the earth under some crossroads. It must also, to obtain its' virtues, be burled on Christmas night, between II and 12 o'clock, and unearthed one year later, on the same date and hour. This Erdspiegel was burled at the crossroads near McSherrystown, but unfortunately it was not put in a box, and when dug up it was found that tbe paper had faded and the writing was gone. So the old man wrote another paper, and the glass and paper were framed and buried once more. As the glass alone must stay a year, it was un earthed after three months after tbe second burial and tested, and found to be all right. A Marvelous Gift. Only certain persons have the power to see in the glass. Those born on Christmas Day, or immediately after, it is claimed, see perfectly in it, and to them the glass reveals its inmost secrets. Those born on May I, also, it Is claimed, have the wonderful sight. The reason for this is that Christmas, and the 1st of May always come on the same day of the week. Those who' are fortunate enongh to see in the glass say tnat It must be dark for perfect effect. Those who have seen it say that the glaS3 at first looks dark, then a grayish cloud passes over it, which grows blue, and finally breaks into a bright light, like the sun from behind a cloud. The light is so intense that it almost burns the eye, but you must keep on looking, and then the thing wished for is seen. Mr. John Keagy's sister-in-law is about tbe only one of his immediate family who can see in his glass. Mr. Joseph Keagy went to visit some time ago an old lady who lived at Mari etta, Pa., and whom he did not know, but as soon as sho saw him she told him things he had been doing, and described the finding of ore on his place so correctly that he was mystified, and when told by the lady that she learned it by the aid of her Erdspiegel, the mystery was explained. Remarkable Revelations. Young Mrs. Keagy does not see so well now, she claims, as she did some time ago. Hereyes aro sore, and besides, recently a Colored man came to her house, and as soon as he saw her he exclaimed: "You can read the glass!" He then mado a few passes like a magician at her, and said: "There, I have taken tho power from you." And sure enough, Mrs. Keagy says she has not been able to see as well as sto did before the colored man hoodooed her. Sho says she would give $1,000 if he had never come. To show bow well she had read tbe glass, a test was made ono night. She was given the glass, and told to look and see what her own family were doing. They were in Lancaster, Pa. She looked, and described the position of every member of the family, and Mr. Keagy says she did it correctly. Only a few days before the colored man called, Mr. Keagy said he wonld go out and bury a coin, and she was to find it. Ho did so. She looked in the glass, and imme diately went to the place where he bid it. Perhaps tbe best glass reader about here, or tho one claimed to be tbo best, is Mr. Abraham Connelly. He" Is a neighbor of Mr. Keagy, and is bis chief reader. It was Mr. Connelly who read tho glass last Saturday night and traced the bain burners. To-day ho said: "I could see the men perfectly all the time. It was dark, and I could see my way. I noticed the men and know them now. The Erdspeigel led me on, and I could see them try to find a soft track, and saw them until wereached town, but they outran us." Mr. Keagy remarked that he noticed the Erdspeigel led Connelly over tho softest places in the pursuit. While in the dark he and his son often had a bad tumble. KIMBEULT SCORES A POINT. The U. 8. Supreme Court Reverses the De cision In Favor of Ibo Arms Fnmllj. WASHINGTON, March C In the Supreme Court of the United States, to-day, in the case of Peter L. Klmberly, appellant, versus Charles D. Arms, Hannah M. Arms and the Grand Central Mining Company, coming up on appeal from the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of Ohio, Eastern Di vision, the decision of the lower court was re versed, and the case remanded, with directions to confirm the report of the special master and to take fnrther proceedings. , ' This .was a partnership case, involving the ownership o." a majority of tbo stock of the mining property named in the title. In tho de cision which was delivered by Justice Field, the Court holds that the findings of a master. in chancery to whom a case has been referred by consent of parties, cannot be set aside and dis regarded at. the mere discretion of the Court,' bnt like those of an independent tribunal, are to be taken as presumably correct, l HEW YORK NEWS H0TES. Roped In by Confidence Men. fJIEW TOEX BUBEAU SPECIALS. J NetvYoex, March 5.-Therr was an adver tisement in a local paper, last Sunday, for somebody with JL0O0 ready cash. Big returns were promised for the loan ot that amount for a few days. George H. Chappell responded. Mr. Chappell received a prompt reply, on a lithographed letter-head: "Office of John B. Dean & Co., Bankers and Brokers iri Miscella neous Securities and Real Estate, No. 60 Wall street" He called on Mr. Dean, and Mr. Dean explained that the SL.OOO.was needed to collect a big clahn against a well-known bookmaker. The story was plausible, and Mr. Chappell readily agreed to an appointment to meet Mr. Dean, at the tatter's alleged residence, 132 West Thirty-third street. Mr. Chappell called at the appointed hour, and there was some further talk about the bookmaker's case. In cidentally there was some talk about cards, and Mr. Dean and Mr. Chappell and two or three friends of Mr. Dean, who chanced to drop in, were soon engaged in a friendly game of poker. Before the game ended Mr. Chappell had lost $950. He complained to the police. Mr. Dean and one of his friends were arrested and iden tified as notorious confidence men. No. 132 is a skin gambling house. The prisoners were held in bonds. Big Men In a Trust Company. The New York Security and Trust Company has rented offices on Wall street, "and to-day It filed its certificate of organization at Albany. The head of the organization is ex-Secretary Fairchild. and his many associates In the enter prise include Congressmen Boswell P. Flower and William L. Scott. The capital stock Is 81,000,000. Ran Away From Three Wives. Artist Samuel J. Cowley, from whose studio $28,000 worth of diamonds were alleged to have been stolen a few days ago, has skipped out for parts unknown. The much advertising Mr. Cowley received resulted in bringing three Mrs. Cowleys to the front, each of whom claimed the artist as her husband. One of the women, the one whom he-was living with at the time of the diamond sensation, procured a warrant for his arrest for bigamy. Mr. Cowley got wind of the trouble and ran away. RELICS OP RUDOLF. How the Sporting Trophies of the Crown Prince Are Arranged. The court authorities at Vienna, says the London Times correspondent, are making an inventory of the'late Crown Prince's personal estate. This work, which began after the de parture of the Princess Stephanie, will . take a considerable time. Some of the Prince's most intimate friends have already received souve nirs. The sporting trophies which belonged to His Imperial Highness form an interesting and unique museum. A large number of animals shot by the Prince are most attractively ar ranged in several rooms of the Hofburg. Nat ural trees and shrubs of various kinds reaching to the ceiling are mingled with rocks and grot toes, the whole being a fair representation of a forest. On entering the first room the most striking object is a powerful bear, emerging from a rocky cave. The animal is standing ready for attack, and a hunter is in the act of firing. This bear is the first shot by the Crown Prince at Munkacs, in Hungary, and the scene is accurately imitated. On the other side are eagles in trees, or in their rocky eyries. From holes in the rocks horned owls peep out. From another corner a lynx is abont to make a spring. "Black," the fine old hound of the Crown Prince, has also found a place in this museum. In the center of the room a glass case covers an oak. under the branches of which lie the remains of a fall en horse, partly devoured by vultures, whicb, together with crows, magpies and ravens, are fighting over the carcass. A number of mag nificent eagles watch the scene in majestic calm. In another room the chief group con sists of a hyena defending its prey (a dead sheep), seven Egyptian foxes and a small goat, arranged upon a group of rocks, which are an exact copy of the spot near the Castle Tantur, between Jerusalem and Bethlehem, where the Crown Prince some years ago took up his posi tion when out shooting hyenas. A SPOOK AS A WITNESS. Testimony Based an a Conversation With - a Rich Illan's Spirit. From the Chicago Mall.1 "Did you ever talk with Loamml Hall after he was buried?" was the startling question put to Ellen Nelson, who was testifying in the Hall contested will case before Judge Jamieson to day. The lawyers objected, but the Court ad mitted the "question, and the interpreter was told to ask it, as Mrs. Nelson cannot speak English. The query was made, and "Yes" came the answer unfalteringly. "Didn't he come to you after youJwere dead and tell you he was not burled in the right place?" . Yes." ' "Didn't he say he had desired to be buried at Park Ridge, but instead was buried at Grace land?" "Yes." "Did you not say, after Mr. Hail's death, that he made a great noise in the house when he came to you?" "I told Harry Hall that, and it was true." "Did you understand that it was because there was a wrong done in the making of a will that Mr. Hall came roaming around there at night?" "Yes, partly that and partly because he was burled in the wrong place." "Do you now and did you then believe that it was Loamml Hall that made those noises and came there?" , 'I know it was." The members of the jury moved uneasily In their chairs while Mrs. Nelson's examination was going on, and the judge grew pale, and the tension was getting very hard to bear indeed, when the attorney obligingly switched off on another subject. Loamml Hall died some time since and left $75,000 divided among several relatives, and Mrs. Minerva H. Purdy, his sister, is attacking the will. ' SPRING STILES. New jackets in all stuffs will have Iongrevers and inserted vests. Dinner gowns for wear during lent have no trains, the short skirt resting on the floor. NEW India silks of mouso gray with figures of deeper tone are elegant and fashionable. Miniatube crotch sticks of gold, with frosted handles, are, quite the thing for shawl pins. Many of the light spring woolens exhibit blocks two inches square in strongly contrast ing colors. Dikectoibe and empire evening gowns are now made in silk-warp Henrietta cloth in cream and magnolia tints. Shibeed corsages in thin summer stuffs will be much worn this season. The trimming will take a great variety of shapes. BLACK, brown or green wool widely cross barred with green or blue or red Is very much used for house and school gowns for girls from 12to20. The newest black veil is of plain net, hemmed at tbe bottom, with a faint pattern of gold thread wrought on tbe hem and other lines of gilt above it. With empire gowns the length of the sleeve puff depends on the height of thesasb, asitis desirable that the puff should end just at the top of the girdle. New brocaded ribbons are shown in a variety of patterns. One 'design has a row of green lanrel leaves running along one side of a very rich old rose ribbon. Wooden stuffs for spring and summer gowns are in plain colors, blocks, checks and stripes. Tobaqco-brown and tan-colored woolens are brightened by Scotch plaid sashes of silk surah with fringe raveled out. Black open work gimp is a stylish garniture used on bengaline armure silk- gowns. It ap pears as a girdle and plastron or vest on the corsage and as a collar and wristbands with a broad border trimming the f 6ot of the skirt; An evening costume recently seen in a Lon don ballroom is described almost magnificent; It was made of royal pompadotuvbrocade, tha sumptuous pattern showing a rare blending of the various exquisite shades of mauve, lilac and pink violet on a ground of tulle gold. The petticoat was of violet velvet, with a foot border of flowers shading from the palest silver blue to the deepest violet, the dark blossoms surrounded by leaves, of pointed gold. The bodice is. cut In pompadour style, and below this is a Russian half-vest of violet velvet, which laces over ah Inner vest, of English" point lace. ' v CDSI0DS C0NDESSATI0KS. Andrew Cowenloch. a telegraph opera- "tor at Mflburn, 7N. X, is dying after a week's suffering from hiccougns. The combined Astor estate, real and personal, pays $300,000 into the New York City treasury every year for taxes. In London the windows of private houses are washed by a limited liability com pany at the rate of 8 cents a day. The Trinity Church property, New York, bas an assessed valuation of $8,750,000. This property Is exempt from taxes. The Custer monument in Montana has beeu so greatly defaced by Indians shooting at It that It has been found necessary to recut the names on it. Frozen land turtles have been found in different parts of South Jersey. They were fooled by the open winter and did not burrow deep enough. One of the rules of the Koyal Library in Berlin, made with a view to1 preserving quiet and good order, calls for the exclusion-of all members of the gentler sex. An American flag, claimed to be tha first one used, was carried in the Inaugural procession at Washington. It is owned by Mrs. Stafford, of Edgartown, Mass. An empty freight car, which was earned' oft" in the Mississippi cyclone of three years' ago, has j ust been found In a swamp ten mile from the spot where it was picked up. Tip to the present time 80,000,000 rabbit skins have been exported "from New Zealand alone; and yet the number of rabbits in that country has not perceptibly decreased. A 2-year-old youngster in Cincinnati got possession of some brandy, and before his mother arrived on the scene drank nearly a -pint of it. At last accounts the doctor feared the Uttle fellow would die. A remarkable piece of wood has been sent to Portland, Ore., for exhibition. It is v board of white cedar 20 feet long, 30 inches wide and 3 inches thick, without the least sign sign of a knot or twist of any kind. Several Indians,. belonging to a tribe in the Indian Territory, are searching at Moore's Hill, six miles from Columbus, Ind., for treas ure, whicb, according to the traditions and rec ords of the triSe. bas been buried there. One transatlantic line of steamships in New York uses 20,000 tans af Ice, 2,000,000 pounds of meat, 1,000,000 eggs, 50,000 loaves of bread. 22 tons of raislns.and currants, 460 tons of flour and 15 tons of cheese every year. A Genoa, Nev., blacksmith proposes the following scheme for securing water for irrigation: "Lay a pipe over the mountains to Lake Tahoe, roof the lake with an air-tight covering ana then pump air until the pressure is great enough to force the water through the pipe." A Coroner's jury in Cheshire, England, returned a verdict of temporary insanity in the case of a shoemaker who had hanged himself. The poor man had married a widow -with 13 children, and. as the Coroner iustlv observed. L they wanted no better proof that he bad lost ms senses. A strange accident has befallen a young lady of Cherveux, France. She was playing with a little chili! on hor lap, when she sud denly threw back her head and remained mo tionless. A hairpin had penetrated her skull. She never recovered consciousness, and expired a short time afterward. It is said that an astonishing feature of tbe legal practice in Camden connty, Georgia, Is the number of hogs stolen and tbe excuses given by those accused of the theft. When one of the colored inhabitants wants to employ a lawyer to defend him tbe conversation is generally something like this: "Boss, kin I speak wid vou privately a minute?" "Certain ly! What can 1 do for you?" "Well, boss, dey got me np in de big court." "Wbat is the na ture of tbe charge against yon?" "Dey got me 'sensed of sumtin' 'bout a bog, but it's all through prejudice." Philip "Volkert, a silk "hat manufac turer of Cincinnati, was working away quietly one evening lately, when a customer entered t and handed him his hat to be ironed. Some- .1 thine besides the evident antianitvof the tile 1 1 attracted Mr, Volkert's attention, and upon i turning uown ine learner no recognizea nis 1 private mark, placed there when he made tha ' hat as a "jour' hatter, over 30 years ago. Tha customer departed witn a new nat, ana Mr. Volkert possesses the other as a precious relict dfthe way they did things when he was a boy. Besidents in the west and northwest portlpns of Texas are calling the attention of the Legislature to the wholesale destruction of deer, which is now In progress in these sections. Tha animals are killed simply for their hides, and the slanghter is said to be 'somewhat un- Srecedented. The killing is fair enough, as it i all done with the rifle. It Is the constancy with which it is done, and purpose of which is objected to by those most affected. Ten years ago an entire section of country, which Is now under fence, literally swarmed with buffalo; They were exterminated, however, in threa years' time, and strictly by use of the rifle. The deer bids fair to go In the same way. A correspondent writing from Constanti nople says it is stated that a cempany is being formed with a capital of l.OOO.OOOf to work the historical gold mine of Astyra, near Abydos, and the concessionnaires expect to derive mora wealth from the undertakinc? than was ever dreamed of by old King Priam. It is also re ported that a laborer recently discovered a sarcophagus in the neighborhood of Pergamos, which contained, besides human remains, beau tiful specimens of ancient jewelry, some medal lions, coins, vases, toys and lachrymatories, a javelin and a trident. There is no doubt that much valuable treasure lies' buried in different parts of Turkey, and may eventually be brought to light if the comparatively liberal policy of the present Sultan continues to De carried, out. One of the keenest things ever said on ' tbo bench is attributed to Judge Walton, of Georgia. While holding a term ot the Su preme Court at Augusta, he sentenced a man to seven years In prison for a grave crime. Tha prisoner's counsel asked for a mitigation of tha sentence, on the ground that the prisoner's health was very poor. "Your Honor,1' said he. "I am satisfied that my client cannot lire out half that term, and I beg of you to change tha sentence." "Well, under those circum stances," said the Judge, "I will change tbe sentence. I will make it for life, instead of seven years." The prisoner chose to abide by the original sentence, which the judge per mitted him to elect. FDNNY MEX'S FANCIES. The maiden's lover is always a man after -her own heart. The prima donna's precious-tones bring her many precious stones. It doesn't have the effect of refining a -man to bring him up by the elevator. A man hasn't much of an opinion of him- ,. self after a night's folly, and yet strange to say, -that's the time when he has a case of "big bead." Lie on the left side says a health journal. ' Iflthadbeenalaw Journal It would have said "lie on both sides. All from the Boston CoitrUr, BT HOOK OB BT CBOOK. A beautiful girl in Dubuque Fell In love with a pastry" cuque, And she said with a smile His heart I'll beguile And wed him by huque or by cruqus. BEVEBXES OF A PHH.OSO vhek. Although we sometimes sigh and fret. When In our business 1 We have In constant failures met Instead of sweet success, BeOeetfon consolation brings, .; For then 'tis evident That we wonld have been rleb If things , , Had turned out dlnerent. GOING TO EXTREMES. J My wife is fond of iurbelows ;c And edgings rich and rare, ; And ruffles on her plainest clothes , . It pleases her to wear. ' Her very wrappers ruffled are, - But even that won't do; , , She carries out the thing so.far , j " "Her temper's ruffled, too. ij A Lost Opportunity. Jiggers Dam, an ignoramus anyhow. Wliriers What's tbe matter now? JIggers-I was calling on little Miss Pertly.lart ,night and she asked what the phrase "indulging in oscutatory exercises" meauu oaio, saeiouna it In a novel. ' -. . Wlggers-WeU, did yon tell her?. - .. ' ; Jiggers I didn't know what it meant.untai looked through the dictionary this mjratngl 2 errs Haute Express. $ ,, A Fatal Mistake. "What's rrda jteMtoj, ' Bluffers, yon look blue?" ' rVs . Bluffers- "I'll never forgive myself. Ukleked a calleroutofmyhouseUstnlght." "TP' "Huh! I've kicked put many a- one young fel low, 1 suppose?" - '- No; pist middle age." "p "Well, these old codgers have no bastaess to be coming around sparking young 'girls, if kicked out one of that sort last week." . j-, ."Yes; but I've found oat thlsntaawass.'tt court-lng-my daughter. . He ws after my jrsoWier-la- law." rnuaucipnm cwb.; , 1'sbv;"' 2S- -.V.4-.5w