I - V. WUESK&T, '-aSERUT ?9r- 1889.V fc.'JKj'j'P w' V SHtoS? .- irail ". T-aT K- ' .. t ..-. . - " " "'4 Vjjt Bippfrlj. ESTABLISHED FEBRUARY 8. 1S18. Vol. , No. 6L Entered at Plttsbnrgrostoffice, Noi ember It, 1S87, as second-class matter. Business Office 07 and 99 Fifth Avenue. News Rooms and Publishing House75, 77 and 79 Diamond Street. Average clrcalatlon of the dally edition of The Dispatch for six months ending: April 1. 1SS9, 27,986 Copies per Isaac Averace circulation of the Sunday edition of The Dispatch for March, 1SS9, 46,423 Copies per issne. TERMS OF TOE DISPATCH. POSTAGE TKCC IX THE UXTTED STATES. Daily Dispatch. One Year t 8 00 Daily DitrATCii, Tcr Quarter 2 00 Daily Dispatch. One Month 0 Daily Dispatch, Including Sunday, one year .. 10 00 Daily Dispatch, Including Sunday, per quarter 2 50 Daily Dispatch, Including Sunday, one month 90 feUNDAY Dispatch, oneyear 2 50 Weekly Dispatch, one year. 1 25 The Daily Dispatch Is delivered by carriers at 15 cnts per week, or including the bunday edition, at 3) cents per weel.. PITTSBURG, TUESDAY, APR. 9. 1SS3. PITTSBUEG'S BATTLE. The reports from business circles show the mercantile And manufacturing interests to be getting fully awake to the importance of the -agitation on the question of railway rates. The recognition is almost universal that in this matter are bound up the future of Pittsburg and the question whether our city shall gain the full benefit of its natural advantages or have its growth limited and restrained by adverse railway charges. The Tery vital fact is pointed out by one wholesale merchant, that we have in the Constitution a very complete system of regu lation for State railways, which has re mained a dead letter for fifteen years because railroad influence prevented its enforce ment This is a fact to which The Dis patch has often adverted, and it is made the more cogent because these Tery pro visions of the fundamental law are evaded in the compact by which the South Penn road was strangled. However it may be necessary to support the Constitution with provisions requiring a more reasonable pro portion between State and inter-State rates, it is certainly a good platform for the start to insist on enforcing the constitutional provisions that we have. To add to the force of awakening public opinion Mr. Carnegie gave the members of the Legislature last night a very lively statement of the needs and wishes of our in dustrial interests. If Mr. Carnegie suc ceeds in waking up the Legislature as he has aroused Pittsburg, he can congratulate himself on a great success. SISUUPTIOir OF THE EIVEE MINES. The resumption of the majority of the river mines, a little over a week after the shut-down which was so impressively an nounced, will be likely to create the im pression that the declaration of an indefinite stoppage, until wages were reduced or the market improved, required a considerable saline seasoning. It seems Dy the commen tary of events to have rested on the basis of a customary shut-down until the empty craft got back aud there was another opportunity for shipments. "Whether this is the true ex planation or not, we congratulate both the operators and miners upon the practical evidence that there is still a little margin for shipping coal, and that work can be found for the miners on their present basis for wages. "Whether steadier work might not be secured by a slight reduction is a. qcestion for the operators and miners to de termine between themselves. But that the above conclusion is justified by the resump tion is proved by the well known fact that the operators do not, as a rule, ship coal merely for amusement. TWO KINDS OF METHODS. The first day of the conflict between the Producers' Association and the middle men in the milk trade does not seem to have crowned the policy of shutting off the sup ply with any glittering suocess. The milk dealers profess to have been able to obtain supplies for their trade; and, so far as can be perceived from the outside, the principal losers are those producers who, by the edict of the association, have cut down their shipments 75 per cent. Claims are made that the grip of the asso ciation will be demonstrated in a day or two; but the tact that the milk supply is easily increased makes it doubtful if the actual result may not be the other way. But another project of the association, namely, that of directly supplying retailers and consumers promises more of an out come. That is a legitimate way of de creasing the cost of taking the product from the producer to the consumer. There is little doubt that the middlemen's charges have been large, and an organization which reduces that margin by controlling a large trade will be likely to confer equal ad vantages upon the farmer and the city con sumer. The sooner the Producers' Association enters upon that legitimate effort to control the milk trade, and abandons the illegiti mate attempt to create artificial scarcity, the sooner will it aid the farmer by increased competition and increased consumption for its product. THE DEMAND OF DISCIPLINE. The statements which are made on behalf of Mr. Ellis H. Roberts, in accepting the position of sub-Treasurer at New York, in dicate the growth of an unwritten constitu tion governing the duty of political leaders to take offices. It was the Hon. "William Lawrence, of Ohio, we believe,' who once developed the theory, in connection with an antediluvian salary grab, that as ihe Con stitution says that Congressmen "shall re ceive" the compensation fixed by law, they have no option, and if they refuse to take their share of a big salary they would vio late the Constitution. Some unwritten en actment of the same tenor seems to have prevailed in Mr. Roberts' case. The place of f8,000 a year could not lure him from his rural grandeur as a Utica editor; but Presi dent Harrison insisted that the Republican party owed the appointment to Mr. Roberts, and therefore party discipline required him to lake the tolerably well-paid place he did not want This is a singular example of the way in which the love of party con straineth ns. TEES' PAY THE EXPENSE. As a criticism of the proposition to re duce letter postage to one cent, the Atlanta Constitution advances the proposition that "the rednction in postage has already out stripped the facilities for handling and de livering the mail." It then proceeds to criticise the fact that the resident of a city has his mail delivered to him several times a day, while the countryman is compelled, to go a great many miles for his mail, and is fortunate if he gets it once a week. These considerations lead the Constitution to de clare: , It cannot be denied that the postal service, as It is now conducted, centers privileges on one class of citizens that it docs not conler on another. The mail facilities of the people of a small town are not to be compared with those of the people of a city, and yet there is no rea son why the Government should accommodate one at the expense of another. This is, perhaps, a natural view for a rep resentative of the agricultural interests to take; hut there is a boomerang in it. For although the mail facilities of the country district are necessarily far less complete than those of the cities, if the account is drawn between them as separate classes, it will be found that the postal system gives mail facilities to the country people at the expense of the city people. In other words, the large receipts of city postoffices not only pay the expenses of their increased facilities, but yield a material balance toward bearing the cost of the ordinary facilities in country districts where the receipts 40 not meet ex penses. This has been demonstrated in two ways. In the first place city delivery systems have prospered and made money by delivering letters in cities at the regnlar postage charges, until the Government interfered with the business as an encroachment on the governmental monopoly. In the next place, the showing of the largest postoffice of the country gives the exact figures. The excess of leceipts over expenditures at the 'New York Postoffice in 1888 was $3,271,000, or about half the gross receipts. This bal ance, with similar contributions in smaller amounts fromther cities, is used in paying the expenses of country mail service where the receipts do not balance the expendi tures. The city people can well afford to pay the slight contribution made upon them to keep up a good mail service to all parts of the country. But if instead of viewing the pos tal system as a whole, the idea of setting the interests of one class against the other were to prevail, the inevitable result of our cotemporary's principle would be the lower ing of postage in the cities and raising it in the country districts. BOULANGER'S LAST MOVE. General Boulangcr has been told to leave Belgium, it is said. General Boulanger probably did not expect to stay in Brussels for any length of .time. He will, it is said, go to England and console himself with the salt air and expensive hotels of Brighton. There will be no objection to his presence there, so long as the "Boulanger March" is played in the slow time and minor key which has characterized it lately. An absurd report has appeared to the effect that some Englishmen objected to Boulanger's being allowed to take refugein England, and would petition the Goern ment to put their objection into execution. In the first place it is very improbable that any Englishmen of importance entertain such remarkable hostility to General Boulanger, and, in the second, it would be against all precedent for the English Gov ernment to forbid, therelugee to land in England. The case of Johann Most, who was imprisoned for publicly expressing sympathy with the assassins of Emperor Alexander of Russia in his London paper, has not the remotest bearing upon the question of General Boulanger's right to stay at his pleasure in an English hotel. The charges against General Boulanger are entirely political, and as far as the French Ministry has revealed them, do not amount to much anyhow, considering the normal characteristics of French politics. His worst offense seems to have lain in his successful flight. The leader of the anti Boulangist party, and motive member of the present Ministry, was in favor of removing the "man on horseback" from the public's view by measures more or less desperate. The proposed victim did not see the utility of permitting his enemies to experiment with him as they pleased, and quietly fled. Lord Salisbury might be glad to close the doors in the highly-advertised Frenchman's face, if he could do so with safety to himself. But he cannot. Boulanger will be heartily welcomed Uy the Brighton hotelkeepers, and the Sonth Coast railways will doubtless soon be running excursion trains to accom modate the crowds eager to seethe blue-eyed hero and bogy of France. THE "W0EEY OF PATEONAGE. The editorial deduction of the New York Tribune from the visible effects of the worry and strain to which the President has been subjected of late, is a rather striking proof of the logic of events. The Tribune among the ranks of the civil service reformers is almost as refreshing a novelty as Saul among the prophets; yet that journal very plainly declares that the greatest tax upon General Harrison's strength has been from the office seekers during the past month. It then proceeds to drive the nail home by in dorsing ex-Secretary Endicott's asseition that "civil service reform is a necessity, in order to protect the health and life of a President." However conclusive this may seem to the public mind, it will fall short of the occa sion bv utterly failing to convince the Sena tors who have lately been flinging up their hindquarters over the President's exercise of his appointing power. They are heroically ready to stand in the breach and relieve the President of all trouble. They will jointly and severally undertake to bear the worry of selecting the appointees" from their re spective States. Their theory of govern ment has been announced to the effect that the members of the Legislature should wield the nominating power and bear the responsi bility. "With the offices parceled out to the Senators and Congressmen, they think that the strain upon Presidental strength might be wholly taken away, and any damage in the past could be wholly recuperated by let ting the President go fishing. This plan seems admirably adapted for relieving the President, alike of trouble, re sponsibility and authority. The Senators seem confident of their ability to stand the strain; but after a few years of that sort of appointments the people might worry them a good deal. A BURGLARY COMPANY. A rather stunning example of the lengths to which corporate undertakings can be carried is furnished by the annonncement that, under the laws of Connecticut, the Hartford. Burglary Company is to be started. This title is not intended to ad vertise a wholesale departure in the burgling business. On the contrary, its purpose is to insnre policy holders against burglary and to secure the. arrest of th'e burglars. "Whether that protection might not be aided by an entente cordtale between the company aud the burglars, like that between Donald Bean Lean and Fergus Maclvor, may provoke discussion in the future. But'it can hardly fail to impress itself on the minds of the majority that they already belong to an organization, to which they have contributed considerable payments, for purposes very similar to this. If 'the purposes of Government do not include the protection of the people against burglary and other crimes, and the arrest of the crimi nals, it is getting high time to inquire what we really do pay taxes for. "When the corporations begin to discharge the tunctions of Government it is getting to be high time to decide whether they shall run the Government or the Government run them. The reported statement of a grand jury man, that the effect on constables of the re cent disciplinary measures has been to make them anxious to do 'their duty, is calculated to provoke the wish that the trouble might bo contagious and that in the contact be tween the officers of the law and the grand jury the latter body might catch it In referring to, the visits of the Secretary of the Javy to the League Island Navy Yard at Philadelphia, the Record of that city describes the place as "covered with rotting timbers, rusty and grass-grown rail way tracks, disordered material, ramshackly storehouses, vessels bilged and sunken, and other obstreperous indications of neglect and decay." It then goes on to refer to "a continuation of the reforms begun by Sec retary "Whitney." It seems as if four years of reform under Secretary "Whitney ought to have ameliorated some of the conditions which are described by his party organ at the end of his term. "When a "West Virginia grocer is able to eject the Governor of that State from his grocery, it seems as if the people of that State might summon up resolution enough to eject the official from the office which he is holding, and which belongs to another man. The circular of an Eastern brokerage firm to the stockholders of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad, urging them to send in their proxies for an election which shall make a change of management in the interest of the protection of the stock holders, is made some what remarkable from the fact that this firm is closely allied with Jay Gould. The idea of putting Jay Gould in the charge of a railroad for the protection of the stockholders is either a gigantio joke or is intended as the most cutting sarcasm upon the former management ol the com pany. The advance of spring brings wheat down and accomplishes the still more use ful result of making all the fellows who have been screwing up on the price of flour for the past six months run to cover. " The progress toward a change of the moving day from April to May suggests the further question, why it is necessary to have any moving day at all. "Why not let leases begin and expire at all seasons throughout the year, just as contracts for iron or sales ot steel rails are -made? On such a plan the renting business could be extended over twelve months, and the de mand and supply of houses would be more nearly equal at all seasons. The failure of the Signal Service to say anything about the dying kick of the , Snow King on Saturdav warrants the remark that the weather bureau did not make it snow by the success of its predictions. Mb. Ainstvobth, of the New York As sembly, recently declared on the floor of that body that he would vote against the Sew York bill because the papers of New York were in favor of it. Since the papers of the metropolis have been pitching into Mr. Ainsworth for the energetic way in which he did not investigate the ceiling jobbery, he has come to the obvious con clusion that it is his policy to copper the New York press on everything. Since Major Armes is to be court-martialed for pulling Governor Beaver's nose, how much Senator Chandler must wish that military discipline conld be enforced in the Senate. A phenomenon w"hich accompanied the announcement of the appointment of -Col lector Erhardt and Postmaster Van Cott, of New York, is considered by the JFVeM.suf ficiently important to announce in a dis play head to the effect that "they have many friends." The fact would be more remarkable if the Press was able to name a case in which the appointees to those offices ever did not suffer from an embarrassing richness of friends. Fboji present indications that milk com bine is likely to do more execution at the breech than at the muzzle. A characteristic of New York relig ious observance is displayed by the an nouncement, in the fashion columns of the Tribune, that "the Lenten season drags along with an all-pervading listless ness." It may seem peculiar to some that a devotional season should be characterized by listlessness; but after all it maybe no more than natural when the devotion is of the fashionable-kind. PEOPLE OP PROMINENCE. FrVE of the seven members of tho Vermont Supreme Court were born in 1835. Rev. G. O. Barnes, the "mountain evange list" has settled on Sanibel Island, off the coast of Florida. It is recalled that President Lincoln once ex tended executive clemency to a young English man found guilty of piracy and blockade running because, as he expressed it, "John Bright of England, has asked us to par don him.." Rev. Sterling Bbown, formerly of Cleve land, is pastor of Plymouth Congregational Church in Washington. Mr. Brown is a rather slim mulatto about S3 years old, with a slight black mustache, and wears glasses. He is a pleasing talker. The daughter of the celebrated Prof. Aeas siz is busy in Boston establishing a manual training-school. Over 2,000 boys and girls shared in the advantages of this school last year. Efforts are being cut forth to have the school adopted by tho city. Captain Axel Aslaksen, of the Nor wegian steamer Amicltia, will hereafter carry a costly gold watch and chain, presented by the President of the United States for his bravery in rescuing the crew of the shipwrecked American schooner San Domingo on Novem ber 27 last Cabl Benjamin, King of the Marshall Is lands, is a native of Massachusetts, about SO years old. He was shipwrecked on one of the islands about nine years ago, became ac quainted with the people, and was made King a short time ago. He has 19 wives and numer ous children. General Benjaktn F. Tract, the newly appointed Secretary of the Navy, paid his first official visit to the New York Navy Yard yes terday. The place presented a holiday appear ance, and the flags were flying. Commodore Ramsey welcomed the Secretary, and he was saluted on all bands. Mrs. McCbea, daughter of Millionaire Snell, who was killed by fugitive Tascott last year, wants 10 buy or lease a New York theater in order to make her professional debut She has been prominent In the amateur circles of Chicago, and Is very rich in her own right. Re cently she has been a pujsl !u Dion Boucicanlt's school. THE TOPICAL TALKER. Senator Quay Means to Best A Woman's View of tho President A New Nursery Ballad The Mocking Bird and the Hen. The office seeker who thinks to advance his cause by descending upon Senator Quay in his home at Beaver is sadly mistaken. Mr. Quay has been so thoroughly exhausted in his tussle -with men wanting favors at Washington that no nas anowea nis family to decree mat now he is homo he shall deny himself to all who ap proach htm asking gifts. He is accessible to .those whose business is not connected with securing consulates and of fices for themselves, but on the best authority I learn that the office seeker pure and simple ik ill not receive the slightest attention from the junior Senator from the State until he has enjoyed a season of rest and recuperation. One who saw him a few days ago says that JIr.NQuay is looking very much more tired and unwhole some than he did the day after Harrison's elec tion In November. V A young woman of this' city who has just returned from Washington, D. C, said to me yesterday: "President Harrison has not been treated "very generously by the Washington correspondents in some respects. By almost everyone he seems to have been given the name of being an austere, chilly and curt sort of man. I thought he would have no use at all lor me, but I was agreeably disappointed. Some friends of mine from Colorado and Kan sas, who had been spending the winter at St. Augustine, Fla., came up toWashlngton a week or two before I left, and of course they wanted'to see the President "Well, an obliging Senator was found to pro cure a morning audience for us at the White House. There were more than a dozen In the party, and only two of them were gentlemen. More thaa that not more than three of the ladles were really grown up. It was a crowd of girls. Possibly there was a good deal of gig gling when the President came into tho East rqom, where we were all assembled. The Pres ident, however, did not appear to ba a bit em barrassed, and he smiled and said something to Senator , who advanced to greet him, which I could not hear, but which was prob ably some jocose allusion to the number of ladles nnder the Senatorial wine. Tbeu' Mr. Harrison shook hands with U3 all.. He has a nice way of shaking hands. It isn't the rather flabby grasp which Mr. Cleveland dealt out to girls I believe he gripped a man's hand good and bard but a nice, genial clasp and pressure of the hand. I noticed Mr. Harrison's hands are well-shaped and not very large. 'Then for 20 minutes Mr. Harrison and our party talked about all sorts of things, about Washington and St Augustine, the weather, and strange to say, about the Paris Exposition, which Mr. Harrison said he would have very much liked to see. I said and I don't know how I dared to: 'Mr. President, I will take your place if you want to go to Paris this sum mer.' "Mr. Harrison laughed heartily and replied: 'I'm afraid I should have much the best of the bargain but I'll lay the matter before the Cabinet' "If you ask me what I think of Mr. Harrl son I say that he's too nice for anythingf' V A NEW NCBSEBT BALLAD. There was a line new President, Who tried with all his might, To serve his friends whene'er he conld, And pen the pigs in eight. There were a dozen Senators, All wise and worthy men. Who said that nalstcad was a pig Not fit for any pen. Then Halstead? who is called Hunt, Uprose as large as ten. And skewered every Senator ' Upon his cruel pen. A moral 's In this piteous tale: "Ne'er tight a porker when He's after public office. If He owns a private penl" It was such warm, cheery weather yesterday that the mocking bird was taken, cage and all, from his cozy corner in the kitchen and given a sun bath on the porch. The bird enjoyed his first outing for the year immensely. For the first ten minutes or so he amused himself trying to catch a few small gnats that buzzed rather prematurely about a leafless vine. Then he began to whistle scraps of hymn tunes and popular songs indiscriminately. Under a tree near the porch an old hen had gathered her brood ot interesting balls of fluff, andpromlsory feathers, some day to boreal spring chickens. Between the porch and the tree, under which the old' hen was delivering a noonday lecture to her 13 children, lay a plump and religious-looking cat. She was not one of your scampish, frisky, half-fledged cats; but a demure, old tabby, too well fed and perhaps 'too moral to even look with evil eye upon the sparrows in the bushes nearby. She certainly was at the time I speak of when the mocking bird was making a strange aitty out of "Hark! HarklMySoul" and "Dem Golden Slippers" combined as quiet and benevolent as a cat can be. After awhile the mocking bird stopped whist ling, and apparently directed all his attention to observing the scene before him. All at once there came from the mocking bird's cage the shrill pipe of a young chicken in pain. The old hen heard the cry, and in an instant had left her flock and flown with ruffled neck and wings outspread upon the sleepy cat The cat was terror stricken by the suddenness of the as sault and received several sharp pecks and scratches before she could get away. The old hen kept up the pursuit till the cat fled Into the house. The mockingbird, whose skillful imitation of a chicken's cry had caused the disturbance, cheerily whistled: "There's a land that is fairer than this." BUSK WON'T BUN IN DEBT. He Will Keep Within His Means, If He Discharges Bis Entire Force. Washington. April 8. Secretary Rusk finds the roll ot employes of the Agricultural Department so largely in excess of the re sources for the current year that until affer June 30 there" will be far more dismissals than appointments. In the second division alone 80 of the employes have been dismissed, and the forco will be still further reduced. Secretary Rusk says he is determined that there shall be no deficiency in his department for Congress to provide for, If he can help it, and he thinks he can, Luxuries the Poor Can Have. From the Western Press. 3 A Sharon man has been fined $20 for kissing a young lady. All Sharon men don't pay 120 apiece, however. If they did we would rather have the aggregate of fines for a' month than to have Kimberley's judgment of a million against Arms. DEATHS OP A DAY. Dr. J. H. Kidder. WASHLVOTOIf, April f .-Dr. J. H. Kidder, of the Smithsonian lmtitutee died this moraine at his residence In this city, from an attack or pneu monia. Dr. Eldder served as a surgeon in the navy until he resigned, about 12 years ago, since which time he has been connected with the scientific branch of the Government service. Tin der Prof. Ralrd he was connected with the Fish Commission, and latterly was director of tho In ternational Exchanges in the Smithsonian Insti tute. He leaves a widow, daughter orthc late As sistant Postmaster General iiaynard, of Tennes see, and three children. Blaster Workmnn W. H. Hnnnn. Special Telegram to The Dispatch. NEWCASTLE, April 8. yr. H. Hanna. District Master Workman or the Knights of Labor, died at his home In this city 'at an early Dour this morn ing, aged 31 years. Mr. Hanna presldeo over this district at the time of the Carbon limestone strike, and when the Knights of Labor failed to gain their point and went to work, the matter weighed heavily on his mind until he Anally became In sane, and congestion of the brain took him off. He was one or the best known labor advocates In the Shenango and Mahoning Valleys. Sirs. Theodore Thomas. New Yobk, April 8. Mrs. Theodore Thomas, wife of tlie musician, died in this city this morn ing, after a lingering and painful Illness. She had been confined to her bed since last autnnui with a form of nervous prostration which from the first pnzzled medical skill, thongh It was not till within a lew weeks of the end that hope of successful cop ing with It was abandoned. Mrs, Thomas was a woman of fine intellectual attainments and un usual force of character. . J. HIcDowell. f ALlJCQUEBQCI, N. iL, April 8.-A. J. McDow ell, of Boston, auditor of the Mexican Central Hallway Company, and well known in New York, Boston and the West was taken with a congestive chill last Wednesday morning en route from the City or Mexico and was compelled to stop over at Albuquerque. After lingering five days he died this morning. " - AT THE THEATERS. Jim tho Penman, Minnie Bladders and Other Theatrical Attractions. When Sir Charles Young's drama, "Jim the Penman," was here last ysar It was pronounced generally the best modern work seen upon the stage. It was then acted by a superb company beaded by Miss Ada Dyas, one of the best actresses In .America. This year "Jim the Penman" Is given by a. company even better than the first, but Miss Dyas Is not at its head. Miss Brooklyn has been supplied to fill Miss Dyas place. There Is no occasion now for a recital of the plot and the wonderful dramatic effects of "Jim the Penman." It is still a marvelously Interesting play; Impelled by a motive that is rationally outside the possible, but by the author's and actors rare art brought back within the possible to all appearances. The play was very nicely staged; the drawing room" scenery did not look like a butler's pantry in bad repair, but conveyed a full impression of the rich setting of life in aristocratic English circles. So perfect a performance is hardly ever vouchsafed to Pittsburg audiences. Miss Brooklyn Is a woman of considerable facial beauty and a figure which is seldom to be seen except in the masterpieces of sculpture. She is also an actress of large emotional powers and fine artistic training. The delicacy of the character of Nina Iialston Is easily recognized, and very few women on the stage to-day could interpret the nice work it involves with greater skill and discernment than Miss Brooklyn showed last night. It was in all its chapters, from tbe subdued passages to the awful climax of tbe letter scene, a remarkably fine piece of acting. Some may like Miss Brooklyn better than Miss Dyas she has physical charms which the latter had not. As far as our opinion goes the wonderful, easy grace and poise of Miss Dyas, her revelation ot varying emotions without ap parent effort, and her personality, made her performance as Nina Iialston distinctly supe rior to Miss Brooklyn's, very good as the tat ter's is. Mr. Whiting repeated his admirable work as Jim the JPenman, and the detective of Mr. W. J. Ferguson is as finished and Ingenious a char acter as ever. Tbe changes in tbe cast all seem to be for the better. Mr. Harry Eytinge gives a Jewish color to the Baron Hartfeld, the rascally confederate of Iialston, and makes him intensely offensive without the least exag geration. In fact, this character in Mr. Eytlnge's hands is a seta, Mr. Hardy Vernor makes -a very acceptable .Lord Drelincourt, and the Louis Percival of .Mr. Clarence Hahdy side is fully up to the requirements. The rest of the company cannot bo caviled at. Tbe audience was large and received the play with generous applause. Grand Opera Honse. v It Is impossible to bury the genius of MlssMln nie Maddern out of sigbt,even If a bad play and a poor companj are used as clods in the grave. Miss Maddern's genius is as clear in How ard P. Taylor's so-called picture of to dayIt should have been called a phan tasy of to-morrow Caprice," as it would bo in a drama of power and sustaiued interest She is the same intensely human, unconventional, perplexing, almost exasper ating, little package of nerves and brains that has been wandering without a compass in the dramatic heavens ever since she left school. Some day she will get into port and the whole country will fall at her feet. But very few will understand or grasp the real potency so long as she laughs and cries in such a jungle of Impos sibilities and small talk as "Caprice." But It was in "Caprice" that she braved her first New York audience some five years ago, and made the critics scratch their heads and say nice and nasty things about her because they could not catalogue her easily, because she was abnormal and not deferential to the rules of the stage grandmothers. She's faith ful to the old rag baby still, and because she Is a genius she makes its poor old battered nose look like a live baby's, puts a dimple in its chin, sets fire to its eyes, and, In .a word, suc ceeds in making the public doubtful whether it is so bad a libel on the genuine article after all. Here is the story of "Caprice" in a nutshell: The heroine is a country girt uncouth and un educated. A swell artist marries her; tire s of her, because of her lack of culture, in six months; she leaves blm after he has used harsh "words to ber; in an impossible way gains an education without anyone's knowledge; con ceals net identity all the while, and finally wins back her husband as a young woman of fashionable accomplishments. Tbe stbry is absurd, and it is poorly told. But the heroine in Miss Maddern's hands is a warm-hearted little woman, full of kittenish charm and girlishness. A thoroughly sweet child. In fact. At the parting from her cad of a husband Miss Maddern's control of pathos is grandly shown. In dashes and splashes here and there she wins the audience to laughter and tears. Be side her there is no one in the cast who can act. Mr. John Jennings is capital as her unsophis ticated old father. Miss Mary Maddern was aiss fairly good. The rest of the company seems to lack the experience that years bring. They are too young and innocent The play, "except In the first act, was not-staged it all well. Tbe waits between the acts weie very disagreeably long. Harris Theater. For some time past tbe performances at this house have been of a high character but none were more enjoyable than the bill of the pres ent week. A capable company is giving "Hood man Blind," with good scenery and effects, and as a result tbe standing room of the theater will doubtless be filled all the week. As an emotional drama, "Hoodman Blind" is a suc cess. The plot Is clear cut and well told, and in no portion of the play is it allowed to drag. Pretty pictures of rural English life alternate with squalid scenes in London slums in strik ing contrast and tbe honest heart that beats beneath the village blacksmith's jacket is ex posed in high relief side by side with the sordid, grasping nature of a brute in the form of a .smooth-tongued land agent who stops not even at murder to gain his treacherous ends. The dual roles of Nance and Jess, sisters, are ex cellently portrayed by Miss Eva Mountford, who several times rises far above even the re quirements ot the play. Especially Is this true in the "spinny" scene and on the Thames embankment where, driven to desperation by being cast off by tbe lover to whom she was so true, she attempts to suicide and is rescued by Jack Yeulett (Hamilton Harris), a character, by tbe way, that is assumed In a very manly, careful way. Others in the cast deserving es pecial praise are Elmer Grandln as Mark Lez zard his partner, Thomas Fitzgerald, Tony Eddinger, a typical country tavernxeeper, Miss Carrie Elberts as a crippled waif, J. E. Mc Gregor as Tom Lattiker, Harry Rogers as the blacksmith, who can also sing and dance quite well. Miss Agnes Roselle as Polly Chibbles, the blacksmith's bonny bride, and little Miss Bella McGregor as Klt,JacKt child. All the others In the long cast till their places acceptably. Tbe play runs with that smoothness that comes of a long acquaintance in eood hands, and is consequently pleasing to both eye and mind. Academy ot Music. There Is a departure from tbe usual order of things in the programme at Harry Williams' Academy this week. That popular border melodrama, "Nobody's Claim," was produced last night to a large house. The leading parts were taken by Mr. Joseph J. Dowling and Miss Sadie Hasson, both of whom are very pleasing. The play abounds In romantic and thrilling in cidents, with plenty of humor as well. The company, as a whole, was fully up to expecta tions, and held the attention of the audience closely. The play is sure to have a successful run. Tbe Casino DInseum. At tbe Casino Museum this week the Great Eastern Specialty Company appears. It in cludes a number of first-class people, such as Pauline Ames, Healy and Saunders. Henry Lobman and others. There are also a number of new features In the Curio Hall, headed by the Baby Venus. This house Is open from 10 A. M. to 10 P. M. IE PAUYBE B0ULAKQKB. Minneapolis Tribune: Drop a nickel In the slot and hear Boulanger blow. Buffalo Times: Boulangcr Is a living ex emplification of the old adage that discretion is the better part of valor. Nashville American: Boulanger should come to America and lecture. Then he could go back and buy the French Republio and do what be pleased with it. Richmond Dispatch: The truth of the matter seems to be that Boulanger is trying to work a big advertising "lake" in the interest of Boulanger. Cleveland Leader: It begins to look as if the movement In behalf of Boulanger has fizzled out If such be the case it will bo a blessing to France. Chicago Inter-Ocean: If Boulanger should ask a vote of confidence from the American people just now he would be invited to stay In Belgium and let France saw her own wood. ChattAnoooa Timet: Boulanger is still over in Brussels conferring with a squad of his satellites and promulgating manifestoes to fire across the line. If the French cannot get rid of this small nuisance then certainly they are not fit for self-government Petersbttro Index Appeal: Boulanger, the hero without a battle, hunting a.throne with a brass band and a torchlight procession while the French Government goes into hys terics, Is a theme more worthy of Kepler's pencil than of the serious comment it has evoked In high editorial quarter. MUSIC FOB A SNAKE DANCE. A Serpent Orchestra Plays a Grand March for a Reptilian Ball. It does me good to read so many solemn truths about snakes, writes aBcecher City, 111., correspondent of the St Louis Republic I would like to shake hands with those who have been relating them. It makes me feel young once more, and brines to mvmlnd the days when I was a barefoot boy with one suspender and a sore toe. I like to read the old-f asmonea truths. I recollect once, when I was a boy, I found two tin cans that bad been used for holding baking powder. 1 poured some shot into the cans and carried them around to rattle. I was In the orchard one evening, and, seeing some apples that I wanted, I laid my cans down and shinned up the tree. On coming down I was horrified to Bee two large snakes by the cans. In my excitement I picked up a" stick and struck tbe snakes a vicious blow, when. Jump ing Jerusalem! them snakes flew right Into pieces, and, before I recovered from my aston ishment bad coupled onto the cans and were streaking itf or tbe woods. Run? well I should say they did run. Every time the cans hit any thing the would rattle and scare the snakes. But tbe strangest part happened tbe next day. I had to hunt the cows, and while going along (he bottom I heard a tremendous rattling in the brush. I slipped around to see what It was, and what do you think it was? It was a genu ine old-fashioned dance. Actual fact. There were 40 snakes on the floor, besides several spectators, who also bad charge of the lemon ade stand. They had all takeu off the tail joint and were bopping around ion the stubby end, while the two old cusses, who had stolen my cans, furnished music for the congregation by lying across a log and raising the cans a little and then let them drop ontotbelog. Yes, sir, fentlemen, and tbe scene so impressed me that wanted to take out my French harp and play them a regular old dance, but suddenly recol lecting my cows, I went on my way. CENTENNIAL SN0BBEET. A Wearisome Exhibition of the Follies of Shoddy Aristocracy. From the Boston Glpbc.1 "We now see every ambitions clique in the kingdom of social shoddy and aristocratic aspirations in New York chafing and bickering in jealous rivalry as to who shall sit highest on the roost for public Inspection as the procession goes by, and who shall cut the biggest and most gaudy figure at the centennial ball. Modestly beginning with a committee of the New York Historical Society, the arrangements had not gone far before the Chamber of Commerce, wanted a band in the proceedings. It was soon found that the famous "first 400" had deter mined to saddle the ceremonies with rare ex clusiveness. This stirred up the diamond studded political shoddy in the Albany Assem bly. Having pacified Albany, other "sassiety" claimants for chief honors put on their paint and feathers and took the warpath, and noth ing Is settled yet, except that tho expenses of the job are so enormous that tbe longer the purse the greater will be tbe family and social lay-out of centennial honors on April SO. Tbe result of all this wearisome exhibition of snobbery is that people of modesty and true cultivation will pay the real homage to tbe he rolo past In the quiet of their homes, while shoddy will swell and puff itself in the grand parade, glorify itself in print, and perchance score a point in tbe "sassiety" game. The solid structure of American society. In its better sense, still rests upon a groundwork of sober thought and patriotic appreciation of all that is noble In tbe past as well as in the present If we were to believe that the exalted virtues and heroic careers of Washington. Jef ferson and Franklin had left nothing better to perpetuate in em man me snooDery exmmieu in this noisy scramble for places at the coming centennial show In New York, the prospect of perpetuating a republic based on the glorious idea of equality would be Indeed dark. FIGHTING FOB A F0ETUNE. A Somewhat Peculiar Will Case to Come Into the Courts. New Yobk. April 8. A warm contest will be waged over the 500,000 estate of Thomas J. Monroe, the PHarlem hermit" who lived in .1 seclusion many years up town. Mr. Monroe was originally "Jacobs." His father made a fortune in the clothinc business, which was in herited by three sons, "William H. Jacobs, James M. Monroe and Thomas J. Monroe. The Monroes acquired their present names by the act of the Court of Common Pleas. On Janu ary 21, 18S9, the alleged will of Thomas J. Mon roe was offered for probate. It bore tbe date of March 22, 1888, and was apparently re-executed June L The subscribing witnesses were Erastus F. Brown and Edward K. Brown, and the instrument seems to have been written by the testator himself. It provided that three fourths of the income of his estate shonld be given to bis wife and one-fourth to George C. Grennel. the survivor to have the principal. Mrs. Monroe died Jnlv 1. 1888. while the tes tator did not die until January 19,188a. Tbe value of the estate is admitted by urennell to be 225,000. although some estimate It as high as $500,000. Mr. Grennell is said to be a stranger to tbe relatives of Monroe. His name was originally Larry Bensen. Mr. Jacobs says that the first Intimation he bad that his brother was ill was in a call from Grennell's attorney, who Informed him of his brother's death. Undue influence is tbe ground for contest The con test will be tried before Porter V. Ransom, as sistant to the Surrogate. FODETH-CLASS P0STMA3TEE8. Tho Work of Removing nnd RcpIncInaThem Still Goes On. Special Telegram to The Dispatch. "Washington, April 8. The following post masters were appointed to-day for Pennsyl vania: Albert Griener. Beneyeth; N. S. Shaf fer, Caledonia; J. H. Beadle, Dogus Mines; Hid Snyder, Slanchard: L. S. Bricker, Baals burg; M. Yost, East Brady; G. M. Long, Esthal; A. J. St Clair, Fleming; J. W. Gable, Hellam; A. D. Lydlck, Mabaffrey; J. S. Drake, Mllford; Samuel Hooker, Jr., Penn's Park; J. R. Schrock. Pipersville; 8. R. Pringlo, Port Matilda; J. L Yarncll, Snowshoe; J. D. Lone, Spring Mills: T. H. Byers, Worth, and S. F. Donnan, Zion. The following were appointed for "West Vir ginia: Kate A. Arthur. Addison; W. R. Buz zard, Berkeley Springs; J. R. Anderson, Brink; C. E. Haddox, .Carroll; William Bloomfield, Calls; Eliza Hoult, Diamond; William Living good, Earnshaw; W. A. Watson, Fellowsville: J. L. Sweeney, Friendly: W. H. Jenkins, Inde pendence; J. L. Spangler, Ingleside; J. E. Reese. Lazearville; C. P. Bradley. Lindside; C. E. Woodburn, Loudensville: E. B. Stone, Romelsburg, and J. B. Knots, Wileyville. v A LONG COUNT OF MONET. So Many Silver Dollars That the Job Will be a Tedious One. Washington, April 8 The Secretary of tbe Treasury has approved the bond of Mr. Huston as Treasurer of the United States, but he will not qualify and assume the duties ot tbe office until after Treasurer Hyatt is relieved of his duties at the New York sub-Treasury, and probably not until after the count of the moneys and securities at that office has been completed. Assistant Secretary Roberts expects to take charge of tbe New York sub-Treasury next Monday, and the count will probably lie com pleted in about three weeks. The Washington office will then be transferred. The examina tion of tbe Treasury vaults will occupy several months, owing to the immense quantity of silver dollars to be counted. Charity Wins In Coart. Philadelphia, April 8. The hard fought legal contest instituted by tbe heirs of the late Dr. ScottStewart, to brcaKhis legacy of about $209,000, for establishing a hospital of the Methodist Episcopal Church, was brought to a close to-day by a decision of tbe Supreme Court In favor of the trustees of the hospital. Grent Distress at Panama. Panama, April a Owing to the distressed condition of the negroes on the canal works. the British Consul to-day distributed bread among tbe sufferers. Great distress has pre vailed among tbe workmen since the suspen sion of work on the canal. Still Coining: Silver Dollars. Washington, April 8. The Issue of stand ard silver dollars from the mints during the week ended April 6 was $360,978. A Man Easily Offended. Prom the Chicago Tunes. It is entirely superfluous to speak of Russell Harrison as the son of the President Espe cially It Russell is present , Throngh a Booster's Spectacles. From the St. Fanl Globe.1 It was probably an, Indiana man who looked over the river and remarked: "How small tho Ohio men are this year." Like n Senate Session. From the Washington Post. Yesterday wq had regular Halstead weather thunder.lightning, snow, rain and wind. A XITTLE NEW t0E TALK. Hilton's Grip on Mrs. Stewart. rmW TOEK BUBXAU SPECIALS. 1 New Yobk, April & In th Stewart will case to-day Mrs. Helen D. Brown told what Mrs. Stewart did not know about art The first time Mrs. Stewart saw George B. Butler's "Rose of Capri" she said she supposed it was a nice picture, but she "could not understand why George had not put a better gown on the girl." Mrs. Brown explained that the girl was a Usbermalden, and Mrs. Stewart said "Oh." Mrs. Stewart often complained she was "sick and tired of pictures, but bad to buy them be cause the Judge (Hilton) wanted her to." Thomas Hope, formerly of the upholstery de partment in Stewart's store, related bow Judge Hilton charged Mrs. Stewart S28 a yard for goods Inventoried at Jlla yard, and $160 for .a curtain worth but $75. f " Tbe Real Article Going Over. The real "Little Lord Fauntleroy," Master Vivian Burnett, will sail for England with his mother shortly. The object of Mrs. Burnett's trip Is to secure an English copyright for a play that she expects to write while abroad. After a brief tour through Southern France, Switzerland and Italy Mrs. Burnett will take a home in London and settle down to her sum mer's work. Her companion during the trip will be Miss Chlellml, an Italian young woman of phenomenal beauty. Captain Ericsson's Biography. Shortly after the death of Captain John Ericsson, the inventor, the report was circu lated that he had destroyed all his correspond ence and like materials for a biography at the beginning of bis last illness. The rumor was only partially true. Captain Ericsson destroyed his diary, but all his documents since I860 have been preserved. These, with all his papers, have been turned over by his executors to Colonel William C. Church, editor of the Army and Navy Journal. This is according to the desiro of Mr. Ericsscn, who bad expressed tho wish that if a biography of him should be writ ten it should be intrusted to Colonel Church. A Femnlo Smuggler Caught. Mrs. Anna M. Parks, an inspectress of Sur veyor Beattie's force, to-day seized from Mrs. Davis, a passenger on the steamer Adriatic, from Liverpool, about three pounds of woolen yarn, which she had quilted into one of ber petticoats; 13 yards of dress goods, sewed into another, and about 20. yards of flannels, which bad been wrapped around ber little daughter. Mrs. Davis is a resident of Minnesota, and con fessed to having smuggled goods In this man ner before.' The goods were sent to the seizure room. AVEALTflT WOMAN IN CASTLE GABDEN. Government Officials Detain a Rich Pas senger Who Is Incnrnblr Insane. New Yobk, April 8. This morning, for the first time under the new regulation of the Board of Emigration Commissioners, com pelling steamship boarding officers to inspect and examine -first-class passengers' a saloon traveler was detained and placed in confine ment in Castle Garden. The prisoner was Madame Albert 1'Homme-Bonglirale, an edu cated and refined woman of nearly TO years. She occupied one of tbe most costly suites of staterooms on the French steamer La Gascogne. She had 16 large trunks filled with property on board. Tbe boarding officer found that she was Insane, and cansed her removal to Castle Garden. The? physician there said her malady was incurable. Her maiden name, Susan Kennedy, was marked on her baggage. She said she was a widow, her husband, Albert l'Homme-Bon-glivale, having died in Paris ten years ago. She comes of an excellent Irish family. Her brother. Hugh Kennedy, was for many years British Consul at Louisville. Ky where her three neices, whom she was on ber way to visit now reside. Her brother was a graduate of tbe Royal College of Surgeons, Dublin. She la a fluent conversationalist and speaks French, Spanish and German. Her relatives m Louis ville have been telegraphed, and they sent word that one of them would come at once to this city. A SQUABE MILE OF S0TEEEIGNS. What it Cost to Supply Great Britain With Drink for a Year. From the Newcastle (Eng.) Chronlcle.l Yet another curious calculation based on the nation's annual expenditure in drink. Last year's drink bill, as taken from Parliamentary returns, was 124,611,439. This amount, it Is stated, would give 3 7s. per head to the esti mated population of the nation, and 16 15s. for each average family. Its weight in sov ereigns would be 976 tons, while it would cover a space of SIS acres with sovereigns laid edge to edge. If the coins were placed face to face they would leach 115 miles, or make a golden cord reaching from Carlisle to Liverpool or Manchester. Placed edce to edge they would extend a distance of 1,720 miles. To count these coins at one sovereign per second would take four years, less a fortnight. For each letter in the Bible the amount last year expended In liquor is set down at Jt 18s. Oct It is added that about 2,377,736 acres of land in the United Kingdom are estimated to be devoted to the production of tbe raw ma terial used for brewing and distilling. This is exclusive of the 60.000 acres used for hop growing, or nearly one-nineteenth of tbe acre age of the land under cultivation. CEAZED BY BELIG10N. A Young Lady Enthusiast Made Incurably Insane by a Revivalist. Special Telegram to The Dispatch. Ansonia, Conn., April 8. Two weeks ago yesterday Chaplain McCabe preached in the Methodist Church, Birmingham, in an effort to raise money for missions. Among his congre gation was Miss Mary Moore, a young lady well connected here, who was so affected by tbe sermons that she became insane and created quite a commotion in the crowded church. Since then every effort has been made to cure her. Eminent specialists have examined ber aud they have given their opinion that she is hopelessly insane, and to-day she was taken to the asylum at Mlddletown. Miss Moore has always been an enthusiast In religious matters. ODD ITEMS FE0M F0KEIGN SH0BES. Db. Tebbt, of Louvain, an astronomer, an nounces the appearance of a "white region ;on Saturn's ring, opposite shadow globe." The Lord Mayor of London has raised a fund of f 5.000 to pay the expenses of a dele gation of English workingmen at the Paris Ex position. The Paris Exposition will open on May 5. A series of grand fetes has brea arranged to last all through the summer. The Exposi tion wilt end in"September with the award of prizes. y One-thirtieth of tbe whole population of Iceland emigrated last year, moved, it is said, by the unpopularity of the Danish Government and the blandishments of Canadian emigration agents. English public opinion is scandalized by the proposal to build a "dead house" to re ceive the overflow from Westminster Abbey. It is urged that .there is still room enough in the Abbey for monuments to all tlje really great men that are likely to die for some time. t JIenky Ibvtng is said to pay a liberal an nuity to Lewis, tbe adapter of "The Bells," although not under any legal obligation. Lewis never made a success of any play but that one, and is now best known at the bars of public houses, being described as "a curious survival of intellectual distinction mingled with a gen erally dissipated air." M. Dees, tbe new bead of the Sevres china works, hai bad the trade mark of the establish ment registered. Heretofore Sevres' ware has had a different stamp under every different Government, and none of them have been pro tected against forgery, which Is said to have re sulted fn the turning ont of alarge amount of alleged Sevres that never was within sight of the factory. A collection of photographs ot snow scenes taken by Donkin. the celebrated moun tain climber, is being exhibited in London, and is creating much interest, which the climber cannot enjoy. Ho and an English companion are supposed to be lying in a crevasse somewhere in the Caucasus, no trace of them having been found since they started- out to ascend one of tbe loftiest peaks. A pobtbaxt of Anthony Payne, the Cornish giant, painted for Charles IL in 16S0, which has just been acquired by (he Royal Institution at Cornwall, was once the property of Lord Tem ple, and after many vicissitudes passed into the hands of a farmer, from whom it was pur chased by Gilbert the historian, for $10. At the hitter's death.it was sold to a dealer for $210, and In a few weeks" was resold for $4,000. CU110DS C05DENSATIOKS., S Vf One-thirtieth of the whole population of Iceland emigrated last year. . During the civil war267 Union soldiers were executed for desertion. It is estimated that there are 20,000 more women in Washington than men. Onions are worth only 10 cents a bushel at Cochrantown, Pa., and potatoes only 17. A "sneezing party" is the latest Maine diversion reported- The "treat" was maple sugar on snuff. Glass furniture is. manufactured espe cially for India, where tbe-rajahs like glitter lug and showy rooms. A lady claims to have seen at Albany, Ga.. a snake larger than any boa constrictor or anaconda in tbe New York museums. An Iowa clergyman recently married three couples and conducted two funerals in one day, and to do it drove 50 miles. Total re ceipts, 15. A full-grown coon invaded the play grounds of the school at Ocean View, Cape May county, N. J., a few days ago. It was shot by one of the pupils. A Long Island waiter found a pocket book containlnz J6,8G0 on Sunday and returned it to the owner. Ho received 25 centsTas a re ward for his honesty. Samnel Jones, a colored farmer near Mlddletown, DeL, runs a school house exclu sively for his own children. The eldest sob teaches a dozen of his younger brothers and sisters. A discussion as to the height of trees In the forests of Victoria, New South Wale?, has elicited from Baron von Muellor, the Govern ment botanist, tbe statement that he saw one 525 feet tall. One of the most entirely satisfied men in the country lives at Columbus Junction. Iowa. He has drawn $90 per month all winter for su perintending a snow plow that hasn't been out of the roundhouse. Hosea Ham, of Corinth, Me., has an iron pot, which was brought to this country, in the Mayflower. It was used as a cooking pot in some ot the campaigns of Miles Standish against tbe Indians. A York lady bit Into an apple -and found wrapped around tbe core a piece of coarse thread 21 Inches long. It is thought to have been dropped by a bird when tbe apple was in full blossom. A woman who keeps a saloon in Cincin nati during the past five years has broken beads, arms and legs for seven different men who wouldn't walk out like gentlemen. A wagon spoke is her-favorite weapon. The biggest barometer on the continent is being made for the Georgia Technological School at Atlanta. The tube Is to be 20 feet long, with a diameter of three inches. Sul phuric acid will be used in the tube. The Jamaica railway system, which has been sold to an American syndicate, comprises about 93 miles of line in all, running from Kingston to Spanish Town and Old Harbor and another line from Kingston to Porous. A family which claims the honor of ' being the heaviest in Kennebec county. Maine, is that of William Merrill, of Gardiner. Mr. Memll himself weighs 303, Mrs. Merrill 264. tot eldest daughter 3CQ, a younger daughter 267 and the only son 215. a total fortune of 1,342 pounds to say nothing of shillings and pence. The lance, which once played an im portant part in warfare, is likely to find general readoption in several European armies. It is picturesque, and could doubtless be made ef fective in the bands of cavalry, but it Is scarce ly probable that it will supersede tbe weapons which have been so long in use for ba-J-to-hand conflicts. Robert Sheidler and wife, who live southwest of Fort Dodge, Iowa, were driving when Mrs. Sheldler's clothing took fire by a spark from ber husband's pipe, and she wan burned to death. In his attempt to extinguish the flames Mr. Sheldler's bands were so badly burned that they both had to be amputated, and his recovery is doubtful. A sad and unusual result followed the ringing of a firo alarm at Kingston, N. Y. George W. Shaw had been ill for a few days, but was apparently much better, and was sit ting up when the fire bell began to rinz from the tower near his home. He became greatly agitated at the sound, went into convulsions and died soon afterward. Mr. Sbaw and bis maiden sister lost all their household goods bv a disastrous fire a few years ago. and afterward Mr. Shaw was greatly disturbed by every alarm of fire. Bud Harper, of Carroll county. Georgia, tells ot a very peculiar circumstance which happened at John Nicholson's, a tenant on E. Creel's'place, the other day. Mr. NlcholsuTs children bad put a bottle of linseed oil on the bed and it was turned over. The oil went thtough the bed clothing and into the feather bed. Mrs. Nicholson washed tbe oil out the best she conld and the bed was used two nights. On the third day she was away from home, and on coming in she found there was a peculiar scent in the house like leathers burning. She went to the bed, raised the clothing, and on the sheet she discovered that it had been scorched. Tbe bedtlck was also scorched, and the lady cut it open and took out a very large bulk of feathers that were on lire. The question is, did the linseed oil set tbe feathers on fire? The fire could not get into the bed otherwise. A discovery of immense archaeological interest has recently been made near the small town of Painted Cave, Tex. Laborers came upon a graveyard containing Indian.and Aztec remains, arrows, battle axes, etc About ICO skeleton were dug out A score or two of the maqnanity. the peculiar weapon of the Azat lan race, were found. This weapon is a short metal ax. with blades of class. The metal Is. sapposed to be copper, but the specimens just found are so tarnished and mcrusted by age and burial that this point has not yet been folly determined. A ghastly object was a pair of clinched jaws, holding between their discol ored teeth a small image engraved on agate. This must have been the likeness of a god thrust into tbe mouth by the dying possessor. A, number of gold and silver pendants and a quantityof Aztec currency were picked up. This latter consists of bits of tin in shape like the letter T. - LITTLE PLEASANTRIES. "Yes," saldBagley, "I have become quite fanfbns as an author, and noi I hare to cultivate eccentricities. I am around paying my debts." Albany Journal. ,- OWED TO A CAT. He waked me up at early daws, A most nnseemly time; I conld not go to sleep again. And ao I've writ this rhyme. Somerville Journal, TEMPEBANCE SONG. Whisky is cheap And so Is beer, But their effect Is very dear. Horning Journal. "Now, remember," said the doctor, gravely, "you must have absolute rest and quiet. If yon do not, I tell yoa plainly, I will not answer for the consequences.' 'Yes, doctor," moaned the patient feebly; 'I nnderstand. And Is there any particular place la Philadelphia that you, would recommend?" Somereille Journal. All Right as a Sentiment Sunday school teacher (to new pupil) We are taught by the Bible that when someone smites us on one cheek we should turn the other to him. Isn'tthat a beautiful sentiment? 'Yes, ma'am." "Now, if an enemy were to smite you on one cheek, what would you do?" "I'd ponnd the top of his head off." Hebratta State Journal. Young Journalist Do you keep all sorts of pens? Salesman Yes: which do you prefer? Y. J .I've been advised to use a trenchant pea. I'd like a small box of them, and yoa may pnt ln some caustics, too. Cincinnati Commercial Qa zettt. C. Hicago I say, Jack, old man, what makes yoalook so glum? T. Oledo Divorce ease In which a friend of mine is Interested. a Ulcsgo Aht Some scandal doubtless. Inti mate friend? , , -' T. Olcdo-No, not very; my wire.-vwoniw Commercial Qaitttc. H THE "LAY" OF THE V. V. T. C. I'm a "Western Union Telegraph Jay , AndmynnmberlsNo.il Since J built my L's and shnt out the day I've a mortgage on the sun: I've a mortgage on all the elements My stock of water is simply immense And my lletl on the streets, to all intents. , Is thoroughly well begun I I'm a Western Union Telegraph Jay, I'm railed at on many a road; It's hard to mate some of my properties pay Unless you know when to unload; Bnt I'm working this town for all It's worth. And I'm not an appropriate theme for mirth, For I've got a mortgage on the.earth. As my lawyers recentlr showed I ' -ff. r. World. V, J i