-WSfSV. ww -VJV' t. THE PITTSBUKQ- v DISPATCH. THURSDAY, t APRIL ' 11", 1889. t 5 t i ft B$$ft&. ESTABLISHED FEBRUARY 8. 1846. VoL 44, S.o. 63 Entered at Pittsburg Tostoflce, November 14, 1887, as second-class matter. Business Office 07 and. 00 Fifth Avenue. News Booms and. Publishing House 75, 77 and 70 Diamond Street. Average circulation of the daily edition of The Dispatch for aix mouths ending April 1, 1SS9, 27,986 Copies per lune. Average rircnlation of tho Sunday edition of The Dispatch for march, 1SS9, 46,423 Coplea per issue. TERMS OF THE DISPATCH. POSTAGE FKEE IV TUB UNITED ETATXS. DAILT DISPATCH. One Year t 8 00 Daily DlbPATCH, Per Quarter 2 00 Daily Dispatch, One Month TO Dailt DisrATCH, Including Sunday, one year WOO Dailt Dispatch, Including Sunday, per quarter 2 50 Daily Dispatch, including Sunday, one month 90 Sunday Dispatch, one year 2 GO eeklt Dispatch, one year 1 25 The Daili DisrATCH Is delivered by carriers at U cents per week, or Including the Sunday edition, at SO cents per w ect PITTSBURG, THURSDAY, APR U, 1SS9. THE BIGHTS OP THE SMALLER. The point brought out in an interview with George Shiras, Esq., on the necessity of nsing the right of eminent domain, in favor of smaller corporations, as against the larger, is interesting and important at present The case which he cites is a typical one; bat a more prominent example is afforded by the experience of the Junction road in trying to cross the Allegheny Valley Bail road yards. For the purpose of preventing the competing lines from reaching the man ufacturing establishments above Forty-third street, new tracks were laid by the insolvent corporation. "When it came to getting the Junction road across that yard, it was found that the law which permits one railroad to cross the main tracks of another, would not, as construed by the courts, permit it to cross the other's freight yards. Such incongruities should be remedied by law; and if Mr. Shiras bill will afford the adequate cure, it is to be hoped that it will not remain shelved in committee. TAKE THE BEST HTVESTMEHT. Mr. "Wherry's resolution providing for the investment of the State sinking fnnds, in United States bonds, was reported fa vorably yesterday. Of the general purpose of the resolution, to prevent the sinking funds from lying idle in the treasury, there can be no criticism. But the telegiaphio abstracts of the resolution create the im pression that it is defective in failing to give authority to invest the funds in State bonds, also. Possibly this point is provided for, in which case the resolution is unex ceptional; but if not the amendment should be made. It is a cogent principle that for a State's funds there can be no better in vestment than its own bonds. At the pres ent quotations the State fives yield, we be lieve, about a 34 per cent investment, while Government bonds yield but little over 2 per cent interest. So long as these prices retain this relative position all the State bonds offering should be purchased. It is right to say that the funds must be put into some interest-bearing security, but to put them into the one yielding the least on the investment would be a mistake only less in degree than to keep them idle alto gether. SINHEBS AT "WHOLESALE. The petition presented in the License Court yesterday, before the hearing of the application for license to sell liquor at wholesale, contains matter which deserves, and will be sure to receive, attention from His Honor, Judge "White. In the course of the hearing of the retail cases a week or two ago a well-known attorney asserted that there was more liquor being sold by men without license than by the licensed saloon keepers in this county. This was a grave statement; and it appears to be corrobo rated, in a great degree, by the Department of Public Salety in its petition. The charges against some of the brewers, distillers and wholesale dealers, as pre sented by the city authorities, are that liquor has freely been sold by them to men Without license; that liquor has been de livered to suspicious places, such as unoc cupied houses, river craft, cigar stores and disorderly houses; that the packages have been marked deceptively, and that liquor has been sold in small quantities to any ap plicant without question. As the city offi cials point out, these infractions of the law are fruitful of a general disregard of its provisions among the people. They must be stopped. It must be made plain that any wholesale liquor merchant who indulges in such practises will be liable to have his license revoked, and to bs made ineligible to hold license again. Doubtless the License Court will make this very clear to the parties con cerned. A TBAXSmoK PERIOD. The published report to the English ad miralty showing that the English vessels of the class which has been copied in sev eral of our new vessels, possess serious de fects, corroborates an argument that The DISPATCH has frequently presented in re gard to naval construction. That is that, in dealing with vessels that are evidently in a transition stage, it will be wisdom and economy to build, at the most, one of a class until the most effective form of war vessels is fully settled. It will serve the purposes of this nation if we supply ourselves with swift, unarmored cruisers, and adequate means of harbor defense, until the enduring type of heavy fighting ships is fully fixed. The success which seems to attend on the experiments with dynamite cruisers, sug gests also that it may well to give American ingenuity some scope in developing the new ideas of naval warfare. LEGISLATION AND LOVERS. The Legislature of the State of Delaware has tackled a subject which might tax the statesmanlike powers of the law-givers of much larger States. It has under consid eration a law to forbid runaway marriages, and indicates its intention to stop the elope ments to which the lovers of that small Commonwealth have been prone. "We do not wish to discourage laudable ambition to accomplish a taskin legislation which has hitherto proved impossible; but the Delaware statesmen should remember, in treating of a force that has for ages .laughed at locksmiths, they will be likely to turn their own law into a subject for the derision of love and the eloping couples. V the propensity to brave the anger of the proverbial stern parent is irresistible, what An added zest there will be to the fact that lovers can snap their fingers at the law as well, and seek safety from its penalties in the placid seclusion of Philadelphia. Penn sylvania and New York could not prohibit elopements unless they adopted some legis lative project for infusing iced milk or some such cold liquid into the veins of the youth of the land. How much less could legisla tion of that sort be effective in a State where an evening's drive or a half hour's ride on the cars will carry the fugitive lovers be yond the border. The Delaware Legislature should tackle something simple and easy. It might try to persuade the Delaware river to flow to ward the sea with a rapidity that would be perceptible, or even put a restraint upon the wild imagination of the peach crop liar; but it will not be able to prevent lads and lasses from eloping, when the disturbed course of true love indicates that path to marriage, while youthful human nature retains its present impulses. INTENTIONS OF TEE ENEMY. That Mr. Carnegie has been very success ful in stirring up the Pennsylvania Bail road, is amply proved by the cross-fire of attacks on him. These appear to come from various sources, but bear the mark of railroad influence in being mainly in sinuations against Mr. Carnegie's motives. Such attacks are very evidently foreign to the vital issue, which is the question whether Pittsburg's industries are discrim inated against, as Mr. Carnegie -asserts, and -as no one yet has disputed. It is rather interesting, though, that the idea which suggested itself to The Dis patch at the opening of the discussion; has just struck some person in Kef York whose elaboration of the thought was telegraphed to a city cotemporary yesterday. The idea was with reference to the difference between Mr. Carnegie's attitude in this fight and the stories concerning his. course in the South Penn fiasco. At the time The Dispatch referred to this point, it had some cogency as bearing on the sincerity and permanence of Mr. Carnegie as a fighting factor. Now Mr. Carnegie has met that point in a gen eral denial over his own signature, as all his allegations in this matter are made, against which anonymous repetitions of the old story can have no standing with the public Beyond that Mr. Carnegie has shown that he is in the fight for the public interest, to stay there till he wins. On that basis old 'issues are not pertinent. The question is whether we shall do what is possible to secure Pittsburg and "Western Pennsylvania their rights; and the public answer to it has been practically unani mous. The only reply to the real issue, which we have seen from the railroad side, is an editorial in the Philadelphia Telegraph. That journal being a semi-official organ of the Pennsylvania Bailroad, it might be ex pected to put the railroad side in its best form; and with that expectation the actual replv is amusing. It is comprised in the following extract: If the great iron and steel master had bnt gone to the fountain-head of railroad statistics in this conntrv. to wit Poor's Manual he would have seen that for the years 1885. 1SS6 J anaiu taere ueing ut oinciai ugurcs siuco presented the tables of earnings, expenses and profits per mile very clearly set forth that the average rates of the Pennsylvania Company, in stead of being so much greater than its alien rivals, as stated by him, were for all those years, with the single exception of those of the Erie for 1886, really less. Bless your sonl, dear Philadelphia co temporary, that is what the industrial inter ests are complaining of. The figures for 1888 have been published, by the way in the last report of the company and the contrast between the low average rate and the high rates charged the local industries, and especially the iron industries, is the very meat of the indictment. The average rate per ton per mile on the Pennsylvania Bailroad, in 1888, ras 63-100e, on which there was a profit of 24-100c. The coke, iron ore and pig iron, which constitute chief items of Pittsburg freights, are among the cheapest freights hauled. They are loaded by shippers and unloaded by re ceivers, hauled in the cheapest cars, and are the least subject to loss. Under all rules of classification, such a traffic counted by hundreds of ""millions of ton-miles, should be rated one-third below the average rate, and would still be among the most profitable freight that a railroad can get Is it strange that shippers should complain at being taxed from Jic per ton-mile on such freights, in order to enable the rail road company to carry through freights at such a figure as to reduce the average to half the charge on the freights of the principal supporters of the Pennsylvania Bailroad? It is this sort of thing that Pittsburg And the manufacturers, workingmen and far mers of the State are fighting; and it is this sort of thing that the railroad managers will, sooner, or later, have to abandon. NOT FOUNDED ON FACT. It is an interesting example of the aver age free trade argument that is afforded by a recent article in the Chicago Herald on re duction of wages in the coal mines of this section. It drifts into the allegation that "the miner earns 1 cents for digging a bushel of coal on which the owner rearjs 3 cents of protection," and asks the question : "Will Carnegie be poorer in 1889 than his miner?" It should be instructive to the esteemed Herald to have some miner give it the rather pertinent information in connec tion with such allegations; first, that the miners of the Monongahela Valley resumed work this week at the old rate of 3 cents a bushel for digging; second, that Mr. Car negie does not, so far as any one in this sec tion knows, own any mines in which the miners are paid by the bushel; and, third, that the coke works in which he is interested have for the past year been paying 6 per cent higher wages than their competitors. The reduction which has just taken place simply equalized the difference. The free trade logic might be more forcible j.! it would pre serve som,e sort of distant relationship with the facts. DONNELLY'S HIND FOUND. It ought to be comforting to the Ameri can nation to know that the Hon. Ignatius Donnelly has found somebody besides him self to believe in. To be sure, the man whom he has chosen to treasure his confi dence is not of much account, namely, Bishop, the mind reader. But even half a man is better than none at all. Nor is it wonderful that Mr. Donnelly should do all in his power for Bishop, seeing that the latter has definitely declared that Ignatius has a mind. For some time we have been under the impression that the gall of the would-be annihilator of Shakespeare had squeezed everything else, especially his rea soning powers, out of Mr. Donnelly. Mr. Donnelly says that Bishop's discov ery of his mind is a proof to him of the im mortality of the soul. He reasons that if he possesses something that nobody but Bishop and he can at this stage in the game locate, to wit, a mind, therefore, to quote an intelli gent writer in the Minneapolis Tribune, "it is evidence direct to him that man has a soul which is bound to exist, even when the body that holds it dies." We confess we fail to see the conclusiveness of Mr. Don nelly's logic; hut we congratulate him all the same on Mr. Bishop's discovery. If he has been brought to believe in the immor tality of the soul as well, so much the better for him and so much the bigger advertise ment for Mr, Bishop. Perhaps, now that Mr. Bishop has located Mr. Donnelly's mind, he will oblige the public Tiy letting them know what that peculiar machine thinks about the business aspect of writing hocus-pocus books to prove that Shakespeare's plays were written by Bacon. It is generally believed that it is not as profitable as body-snatching. The fact that the Methodist ministers of Chicago recently addressed a petition to the President of the United States with the superscription, "Hon. "W. H. Harrison," inspires a sinful paper of that city to -express the fear that ."William Henry Harri son can do nothing for them at "Washington. "With "Fred Grant, "Walker Blaine and Bobert Lincoln before their eyes the minis ters may think otherwise. And they are very confident that whatever the grand father's address may be, he is in a position to see the necessity of indorsing the min isters. It may presently dawn upon the often sively partisan Democratic papers that are indulging in jeers because four of the Amer ican war vessels have recently been cast away, that they are jumping on the navy as "Whitney left it. Air interesting event appears to be prom ised by the offer of the owner of alive gorilla, in France, to back the animal to fight any pugilist in the world; but it will never come off. The pugilist will of course at once file the objection that if he were put face to face with the animals he would be compelled to violate scientific rules by fight ing. The gorilla, on the other hand!, would be entitled to object to such a match on the ground that evil associations corrupt good manners. The oil and wheat booms still continue to linger in Jhe impenetrable shades of the future. In faot there is reason to suspect that the day of speculative booms is over, pending the rise of a new generation of lambs. It is rather amusing to hear that a trust or combine has been formed to put up the price of livers from the old rate of 10 cents to the much more remunerative figure of 25 cents per pound. "We can hardly credit this story from the fact that the esteemed Chicago 2kTetcs, which gives an .editorial statement of the fact, fails to denounce this as one of the depraved results of a pro tective tariff. It is understood that a movement is on foot among the Chinese to expel all Ameri cans from that empire. That is an insult which would call for screams from the American eagle that is if the eagle had a navy. General Alger's presence, at a "White House dinner the othernight, occasions some comment Nevertheless, it must have been very satisfactory to the President to have Alger there. If he could compromise with all the aspirants to Cabinet positions and other high places at the rate of a dinner apiece, he might count himself in great luok and start an eating house. ' Mb. Btjssell Harrison appears to be improving on FalstafTs position. He is understood to say that if apologies were as thick as office seekers he would not give one upon compulsion unless he has to. The remark of an applicant for wholesale license yesterday that "Mr. Brown (of the Department of Public Safety) Is meddling too much in other people's business;" may also voice the internal conviction of the whole sale liquor dealers that the law is meddling too much with their business. But that is a way the law has, sometimes. The powers interested in Samoa seem to have taken the advice of The Dispatch and come to the conclusion that one vessel apiece is enough to keep at Samoa for the sport of the Pacific hurricanes. The work of killing by railroad accidents goes on, if not by wholesale, at least in jobbing lots. Four deaths was the total from the accident in Illinois yesterday, which most of the papers consider too com monplace to call for a display head. It seems to be stretching a point when the St Lou's .Republic callsBoulangera "trage dian." If that is what he is, where shall we find our burlesque comedians? The railroad coal interests appear, to be coming to the wise conclusion that com promise is better than conflict This prom ises fewer empty flour barrels in, the miners' houses and more full coal trains going "West, than the other policy. PEOPLE OP PROMINENCE. Mrs. Frances Hodgson Burnett will sail for England on May 1L She dearly loves the Britons. Russell Harrison is the only member of the President's family who has not been sick since they became tenants ot the White House. Miss Kate Field is lecturing against pro hibition in Boston, and the Massachusetts W, C T. U. has hired a ball for Mrs. Mary T. Latbrop, of Michigan, to offset her efforts. John Bbight's fine collection of pipes is to be preserved. Tobacco lovers may justly say of the eminent statesman that he smoked nearly all his life and died without a cancer. Mrs. Ann Lane, wife of Hiram Lane of Bath county, Kentucky, died recently, aged 84 years. She was a cousin of Robert Burns, and occasionally touched the magic string herself' Hon. Ellis H. Roberts, of Utica, N. Y., who has just been appointed Assistant Treas urer at New York, bears the distinction of be ing the only Welshman ever elected to Con gress. The new military post near Denver, Col., which has heretofore been known merely as the "post near Denver," has been designated Fort Logan," In honor of the memory of the late General John A. Logan. A conic opera by an American composer, Mr. Robert Goldbeck, will soon be produced in the rand drawing room of Devonshire Honse, on Piccadilly, through the kindness of the Duke. The piece is called "New York." 11ns. Louise CnANnT.nii Mnmimi ati f nr "England on June 1, and will remain in London until the close of "the season.'' She has fallen into the way of summering In Europe of late years, and the Bostonlans feel grieved thereat. A St. Louis paper has been interviewing 500 Missouri women on politics. Miss Elizabeth Harrison, of Rolls, says: "Notwithstanding the present prominence of the family in the Republican party, and despite the fact that I call President Harrison Cousin Bon, I have never strayed from the paths of righteousness. I am a staunch Democrat" Enough to Anger film. , From the Harrisburg Call. ; It George Washington should by any means accidentally learn of some of the arlstocratlo things they intend to do at his centennial over In New York, ho would likely appear in full uniform, sword In hand, and forbid the whole business. THE TOPICAL TALKER. TboLengne ot Advance Agents Theatrical GosaljH-Waraer Miller'- Health He Hnd toIIaXe a Paiie-Tfae Lftud Talker. Fob startling audacity Mr. Folk, advance agent for that pleasing child actress Lydla Thompson, is entitled, in the classic, phrase, to take the biscuit baid he yesterday: "When 1 get back to New York next month I intend to start a union, a league, or branch of the K. of L.. to contain no body but theatrical advance agents. It will be a beneficial order ot course, but especially planned to protect the advance agent from tyrannical newspaper men. When all the ad vance agents in America are leagued together they will get their rights. Any dramatic editor or critic who declines to give every advance agent who calls uppn him the best chair in the office, a good cigar and an invitation to dine at the swell restaurant of the town, will be boy cotted by all members of the A. A. It, that Is, the Advance Agents' League." The poor advance agents have been in need of some such protection for a long time. It is a doubtful question which are the most unsightly the glaring circus posters of "Jim the Penman," or- the libelous lithographs of Miss Minnie Maddern. From the former one would gather that "Jim the Penman" is a companion play to "The Dark Secret" or some such tankatroclty, and because of the latter It will be no wonder if a good many people stay an ay from theGrand Opera Honse under the Impression that Miss Mad dern is a song and dance artist with scarlet nair and a nose of excruciating redness. Tho lithograph craze surely ought to abate soon. Talking of Miss Maddern, in the review of "Caprice" in this paper on Tuesday morning, an injustice was unintentionally aone to ur. John Jennings. He was so very admirable in the character of Jethro Baxter, an old farmer of the type that Mr. Couldock has made so fa miliar and so famous, that be deserved moro than a passing word of pralBe. It is unfortunate that he Is the only actor of ability Miss Mad dern has to support her. V A gentleman who saw ex-Senator Warner Miller last week in New York says that he is looklngverymuch aged and broken in health. It is unhealthy for a man to bo for any length of time outside the breastworks, picturesque us the position may appear to be. HB nAD TO nAVB A PASS. A legislator lay one day. As sick as others were of him, "When Death came riding; by that way, And shouted hoarsely: "Jim!" t That was the sick man's name, yon see. Said Death: "Jim, come along with me I" The legislator looked aghast And muttered: "Air. Speaker, 1 My vote 'gainst this proposal cast If I wcren' t growing weak er 1 Would tell you 20 reasons why It Is not right for me to die." The white horse tramped upon the floor, And Death repeated: "Jim, I can't Afford with tu to parley more. My time is growing scant You'll travel on a pass, you know." Jim smiled and whispered: "Then, I'll go." Why is it that this man will persist in dis cussing with aggravating minuteness the symp toms of his liver complaint in such a tone that the mixed audience of a railroad car cannot but catch his every word, and that man will in an equally generous voice proclaim the malign traits of his mother-in-law in a popular restaur ant? . This habit of loud talking is sufficiently com mon in these parts to be a downright nuisance. Some day a faithful reporter will take down one of these private speeches delivered in public and print it What a howl there would be from the lond talker! but it would be just his deserts. As the rhymester might express it: Some men who nothing have to lay, Think to Impress the crowd. By shouting nothings all the day, In accents harsh and loud. SHE HUGGED THE BEAB. A Lady's Nerxy Fei formance at the Smith onlan Institution. Washington, April 10. At the Smith sonian Institution recently, while Captain Weeden, the keeper, was standing in front of the bear pit an elegantly-dressed woman, of apparent refinement, approached, and, after looking through the bars a few moments, ex claimed impulsively: "How I would like to hug that bear." The Captain was astonished, bnt managed to say: "Well, there's nothing to prevent it" "But how Bhall I get in?" the visitor asked. "Come with me." Together they went to tho door at the side, and withont a moment's hesitation or even a loss of perfect composure, the lady followed her guide into the pit Going baldly up to the largest bear she patted him on the bead, to the intense astonishment and admiration of the Captain, who remarked. "Madam, you're the nerviest woman in Washington," . Thinking to teit her further. Captain Weeden began to edge off toward the door, but blsgnest had evidently read about the traits of wild animals in captivity, and kept close to the keeper's side, making her exit safely in his company, and departing without making herself known. NO PROCLAMATION NECESSARY. Governor Beaver Says the President Hat Declared April 30 a Pnblle Holiday. Special Telegram to The Dispatch. Harrisburg, April la Governor Beaver has received numerous letters suggesting a proclamation by him declaring the 30th of April, the date of the New York centennial celebration of the inauguration of Washing ton, a legal holiday. The Governor is of the opinion that no proclamation by him is neces sary, as- by proclamation, under date of April 5, the President recites that the day has been declared a general holiday by act of Congress, and by proclamation recommends that the peo ple of the United States do assemble in their respective places of divine worship, to "im plore the favor of God that the blessings of liberty, prosperity and peace may abldo with as as a people, and that His hand may lead us in the paths of righteousness and good deeds." And the act of Assembly of Pennsylvania of April 2, 1873, enacts that any day appointed or recommended bv the Governor of this State or the President of the United States as a day of fasting or thanksgiving, or for the general ces sation of business, shall be regarded as a legal holiday. G1TE HIM A BEST. Editor Unlstend Thinks Harrison Needs a Bulldog and a Vacation. From the Cincinnati Commercial Gazette. The President Is about to enjoy a few days' recreation. He should not be followed by an army of place-seekers, as the farmer with a basket of corn is followed by a drove of hungry and squealing swine. It is furthermore said that a movement is on foot at Atlantic City to build a handsome cottage to be reserved for the use of the President and his family. If the cottage is built and its use accepted, a high fence should surround it and a bulldog be posted at the front gate to receive the cards of visitors. A Model Legislature. From the St Paul Globe. 1 Three of the most important measures passed by the Indiana Legislature have proved In valid through defects and clerical blunders. One of these was the adoption of high license to the extent ot $250 in the cities and $150 in towns. Sad, bat Doubtless Trne. From the if ew York Bun .1 We are pained to learn Tiy the latest advices from Madrid that His Majesty the King of Spain has taken to the bottle to express his displeasure at the course of General Boulanger. DEATHS OP A DAY. - Rear Admiral T. H. Patterson. WASHINGTON, April 10. Bear Admiral Thomas H. Patterson, U. S. X., retired, died this morning at his residence In this city from exhaustion, con sequent upon a long illness Ills funeral will take place to-morrow, and will be strictly private. Me was 83 years of age. Klin Geicr. Little Etta, the bright yonng daughter Mrs. Kate (J erst, of Allegheny, died at 2 o'clock yes terday afternoon. She had only been 111 for a few dava. and the death was unAxnected. ThAtMi.i -was B years of age and hideen suffering with UlCABtCB illl UVy ITCCU A PATEIOTIC UTTERANCE. The Letter of Cardinal Gibbons Concerning the Washington Centennial Celebration. Baltimore, April 10. Cardinal Gibbons to day Jssued a circular letter to the clergy of Baltimore in relation to the approaching cen tennial celebration of the Inauguration of George Washington. The letter reads as fol lows: Kxrv. Dxar SiB:-On Tuesday, April 30 next as you aie doubtless aware, the citizens of the Me publlc will unite in celebrating the centenary of the Inauguration of George Washington, the Father of his Country and first President of the "United States. To Washington will remain the imperishable glory of leading this people out of the bouse of bondage and oppression Into the clear light of freedom and national prosperity. The history of these United States Is the history ef the gradual rising from the foundatlons-of liberty and order by him so deeply and so bravely laid, of that stately fabric of our National institutions, which has become the admiration of the world. There fore do we testify our love for him and endeavor to repay a small fraction of the inestimable dent we oe to his memory by giving his name to fair and thriving cities from our great Capital west ward to lofty mountain peaks, and majestic ships, andtoonr sons of thousands. His name, too, with wider range and deeper Import la cher ished in the hearts of all. Most Just and nttlng-lt is that this nation, so founded, rising so magnificently upon the line; which belaid down, should honor with especial and grateful commemoration the hundredth anni versary or the taking by the great captain in war ofthe chair of office in peace, as the Chief Magis trate of the land he had fought for with such ef fective valor. To all it should be a matter of pro found satisfaction that the citizens or the United Mates, without regard to race or creed or previ ous allegiance to any flag soever, are about to recognize the life and achievements of the great est man this western world has nurtured, as a gift of Almighty God to bis own age, and as an ex emplar to all the ages to be. In order, therefore, to give expression to our heartfelt thanks for the civil and religious bless ings thus far vouchsafed to us by thu Giver of every perfect girt, and to pray that the spirit of patriotism which burned In the heart of Wash ington may continue to animate those to whom the destinies of our beloved country may be In trusted, you are Invited, reverend, dear sir, to announce at a seasonable time beforehand a special service for the morning or April 30, at 9 o'clock, oV at any other hour most sufmble for the congregation. i"ou are further requested at such service to make an address suggested by the occasion, clos ing with the "Prayer for the authorities " AS an additional .rnr.Mlnn if In. nnH thftnlr.. F.lTin?tne ehurch belli will be rung from 10 to 10.30 the same mornln ? JAMES, CARDINAL GIBBONS. A PLEASANT PRECEDENT. An Old Soldier Receives a Pension for In Jarlea Received at a Circus. WASHlNGTON.April 10. Assistant Secretary Bussey to-day rendered a decision on the claim of Zenas Hamilton, late pnvate.'Company D. Twelfth Michigan Volunteers, for an original Invalid pension. It appears from the testimony in the ease that the claimant, was injured while seated among an audlenceMntnesslng a circus performance by a fall of seats, but it also ap pears that be was at the place where the per formance was in progress as a tember of a de tail, ordered to protect and guard the circus, and n as within the tent by permission of his superior officer. The decision holds that his being in the cir cus tent looking at the performance was merely incidental to his being on doty at the place as a member of a guard, and that be was simply awaiting there tho proper time to arrive when he wonldbe again required to walk his post as sentinel, and was in a place where he had per mission to be near his post of dnty, in a posi tion where be was ready to respond in a mo ment to any call that might be made upon him, and in the judgment of the Assistant Secretary was in the line of his duty as a sol dier and a member of said guard at the time the accident occurred; "nor do I think," con tinues the decision, "it is just or reasonable to hold that his pensionable status should be In any way affected by the circumstance that be was a spectator of a circus performance which happened to be transpiring at the time." This decision overrules that of March 15,1888, and directs that the name of the claimant be placed on the pension rolls. A N0TEL BANK WAR. Checks Are Summarily Cashed With Silver by the Wheelbarrow Load. Philadelphia, April 10. The refusal of the City National Bank of Salem, N. J., to ac cept certain terms of exchange offered by the Woodstown, N. J., National Bank, has involved those institutions in a war which has assumed a comical aspect As the Salem bank receives on deposit daily a large number of the Woods town Bank checks, a messenger Is dispatched to the latter place, eight miles distant twice a week to receive the money for the same. In order to punish the Salem people, Cashier Flit craft Imported from Philadelphia thousands of dollars in silver coin, counted out in bags, to meet these checks semi-weekly. Messenger Powell, whom the Salem bank sent aown last week, protested, whereupon Cashier Flitcraf t yesterday, when Powell ap peared with 84,800 in checks, wheeled out the money in a wheelbarrow to the middle of the bank and dumped the whole amount loose on the floor, compelling Powell to count the en tire amount When bags were asked for in which to carry the money to Salem, Cashier Flitcraf t politely responded that banks were not in thejiablt of fnrnishing their patrons with purses. Powell sent back for a team and armed gnard to assist him in the transporta tion of his burden. The war continues, and is the topic of conversation of the citizens of the two counties. A SISTER'S DEVOTION, Though Exerted to the Utmost, Falls Io Save Her Brother's Life. Habtford, CdNN., Apnl 10. After one of the most hitter legislative struggles in the his tory of the State, it has been decided that John H. Swift must hang Apnl 18 for the murder of his wife. In 1885 Swift married Kate McCann, the former being 10 years of age and the latter 20. They frequently met, but never lived together, and why they were married was a mystery. July 1, 1887, as Katie was returning from her work, sne was shot dead by her husband after refusing to live with him. Swift pleaded in sanity1 caused by drink, but be was condemned to deatb,and the higher court upheld the de cision. (This was the state of the case when the General Assembly convened in January. Swift s sister, a handsome, intelligent young woman, Introduced a petition to commute the sentence, and lobbied so successfully that it passed both Houses. On Friday last, however, the day Swift was sentenced to hang. Governor Bulkely reprieved the condemned man until the 18th and vetoed the resolution. The Senate again passed the resolution over the Governor's veto, and yesterday the Honse voted on it. After a long and bitter discussion a vote was taken and the resolution lost by 24 votes. Swift's sister is at homo heartbroken, and his mother docs nothing but weep. ODD ITEMS FROM ABROAD. The fastest of British cruisers, the Shel drake, 21 knots, just launched, is a steel twin screw. All devices for French playing cards must now be submitted to the officials, since the face of General Boulanger has appeared among the court cards. A Dr. Richardson has achieved some in structive experiments in the use of the grapho phone for recording physical symptoms, such as coughs and pulses. A congh of to-day can always be recorded and compared readily with one of days before. Greek drapery is driving out the Empire style for dresses. The dress is allowed to fall from the neck to the instep with only the inter ference of a loose girdle, and it is caught np at the side to show a silk petticoat with the regu lar Greek pattern. The French Chamber has decided upon 2,000,000 francs for a monument in commemora tion of the first revolution, to be erected on the site of the Tuileiies, instead of the 12,000,000 desired. They have also appropriated 50,000 francs for a design. The fashionable dog for 1883 is to be the schippetke, or little skipper. He comes from the Low countries and is the old-time com panion of the Flemish bargee. He ia,black, with next to no tail, and a hard coat inclined to be rough, and does not weigh over 12 pounds. Emile Zola's new novel is expected to have flvb murders in it It will deal with railroad ing, and tho author has been fora long while studying railroads to learn exactly t he labor performed by all the" functionaries of every grade. It will be a psychological study of crime. The fun that the English press has had over the appearance of our baseball catchers in ac tion must sober down In the face of arising agitation for a better protection for the wicket keepers. Suerwin, the best wicket keeper of J tne aay, ac&nowieages mat me post is more dangerous than bo likes. After his first ap pearance in a professional match he came out fit for a hospital. One ball had cut a frightful gash over bis eye, which had to be stitched. At the next mitch bis month was cuf and sev eral teeth knocked out and since then he has received various minor injuries too numerous to meubivu. LEGISLATIVE GOSSIP. Amendment to the General Revenue Bills The School Syndicate Objects To In vestlgate the Penitentiary Matron for Police Stations. rVEOM A STAJT COBBBXPOirDXKT.'l Habbisbubo, April 10. Auditor General McCamant and Corporation Clerk Glenn, of the Auditor General's, department appeared before the Finance Committee of the Senate to-day and proposed a number of amendments to the general revenue bill. These were adopted and at the request of the committee the gentlemen to-night put the bill in shape to be reported to the Senate in the morning. One amendment provides that natural gas com panies, which pay a portion of their gross re ceipts to other companies which supply them with gas, shall not be required to pay the gross receipts tax on such portion. This is to avoid double taxation. The amendment that Dr: Nefthad inserted in the 'House, providing that indebtedness on which a man pays interest shall be deducted from the amount of his money at Interest In making assessments is stricken out Sections 20 and 21 of the act of 1879 are substituted for the same sections of the present bill. The exemption of manufac turing corporations Is only slightly altered. It Is made to exclude from taxation corporations "exclusively for manufacturing purposes, ex cept such as enjoy or are permitted to exercise the right of eminent domain and brewing, dis tilling, packing and canning companies." The section taxing private bankers and brokers 2 per cent on their gross receipts is stricken out and the tax thereby left as at present, viz: Three per cent on their net receipts. Water companies are subjected to the tax on gross receipts as well as the tax on capital stock. Section 29 is so amended that two-fifths of the taxes Imposed by section 21 (the capital stock tax) shall go into the sinking fund until the first of November, 1890, Instead of one-half until the same date in 1S9J. Tho other three fifths shall go into ,tho general fund. After 1890 one halt of this, the capital stock tax, in stead of the whole, shall go Into the sinking fund, and the other half into the general fund. The effect of tho amendment is to give the general fund $500,000 for the next two years more than the bill originally provided. The soldiers' orphan school syndicate has sustained a number of serious reverses at this session of the Legislature, bnt it has not aban doned the fight against adverse legislation. The amendment of Representative Kauftman, of Lancaster, prohibiting the commission to be appointed under the proposed bill from apply ing any portion of the W50,000 to be used in taking care of the wards of the State the next two years to the maintenance of any children in the schools at McAllistervnie, Monnt Joy, Mercer and Chester Springs was a blow between the eyes of the syndicate. It staggered ex Senator Wright and the men associated with him in the management of the schools, and he compiainea oitteny or tne injustice aone mm. A final effort to neutralize the work: which has been done against them is being made by dele gations who are here from Lancaster, Juniata, Mercer and Chester, in which the syndicate schools are ipcatad, for the purpose of having the objectionable features of the pending legis lation eliminated. It is generally admitted that the House will not allow it to be thus amended, but the effort for amendment is a determined one. The gentlemen who are here -claim to come of their own motion. There are Grand Armv men among them, and more good words are being said for the syndicate schools than have been heard abont the Legislature for a long time. The members of the Senate Appropriations Committee leave here in a body for the West to-morrow. They will arrive in Pittsburg to morrow night, and will visit the Western Peni tentiary at 10 A. if. Friday. Senator Bobbins will accompany them there. He is the author of the resolution to investigate the institution. Senator Reyburn says the regular and ordin ary investigation that it is customary for the Appropriations Committee to m ike Is all that will be attempted, unless that investigation de velops something more than the sub-committee of the House Appropriations 'Committee found. The committee will go from Pitts burg to Erie, from there to Warren, thence to Lock Haven, to the State College and to the Danville Asylum. If they have time they will visit Wilkesbarre, where a hospital is being built The latter part of next week will be de voted to Philadelphia and other Eastern insti tutions. The act to prohibit deception in the manu facture, importation and sale of oil passed second reading to-night by a large majority. It is intended to prevent the sale of cottonseed oil under the guise of olive oil, and as such is a blow at the Cotton Oil Trust, an offshoot of the Standard Trust A number of Phlladelphians were here to night to enlighten the Senate Elections Com mittee on the benefits of the Australian mode of balloting. They were taken in hand by snch apostles oi reiorm as ex-unairman uooper ana Senator Reyburn, and finally left quite freely admitting that those gentlemen could give them points on practical politics and then beat them clear out of sight The bill providing for a matron at police stations in cities of the first and second classes was favorably considered this 'afternoon by the Senate Committee on Municipal Affairs. The Senatorial election investigation in Philadelphia will be conclnded on April 20, according to a decision of the committee. Four thousand witnesses have already been examined. Representative Speer is proud of the fact that he has just disposed of an imported French coach horse to Forney Bros., of Coshoc ton county, Ohio, for 53,000. This morning the act for the election of Con stable for three years' in cities of the third class was made to apply to cities of the second class. Simpson. BH0DE ISLAND'S CHOICE. Nathan F. Dixon Elected United States Senator by the Legislature. Providence, April 10. In Joint assembly at noon to-day, the Legislature began balloting again for United States Senator, and the first three ballots resulted in no choice. The next ballot resulted in tho election of Nathan F, Dixon, of Westerly, by the following vote: Dixon, 51: Wetmore, 41; Arnold, i; Colt 2; Spooner, L Total vote, 09; necessary to a choice, 50. Senator Dixon was born in Westerly, R. L, on August 28. 1847. He graduated from Brown University in the class of '69, and from the Albany Caw School in 1871, and Is a practicing lawyer. He was United States District Attor ney from 1877 to 1885. ana was Representative from the Second district in the Forty-eighth Congress to fill a vacancy for a month. He has been a member of the State Senate since May. 1885. His father, Nathan F. Dixon, was a prominent man in the State, representing bis district In Congress, and his grandfather was a United States Senator. Senator Rutan Seriously 111. Senator James 8. Rutan, of Allegheny, was brought home from Harrisburg lastrnight He is suffering from inflammatory rheumatism and his condition is serions. His wife was with him, and although the greatest care was taken he suffered intense pain. Mr. Rutan will not be able to return to the Legislature this session. How Thoy Love Each Other! From the St. Louis Globe-Democrat Evangelist Moody declares that '-if Gabriel himself sbonld go to Chicago he would lose his character before he had been there six weeks." This Is probably an exaggerated estimate of Gabriel's power to resist evil and corrupting Influences. Nut Unlens They Go Tolantnrlly. From the Catbollo News.l A syndicate Is being organized to control the meat markets of the United States. Is there not some way of getting the human hogs into a corner? One ofthe Finest of Rains. From the BInghamton Republic. I A gentleman who has seen Pompeii and Her cnlaneum recently visited the Capitol, at Al bany, and pronbunced it the finest rulu m the world. in a nr-WAY. Thro' the brush and undergrowth A flower took its place: ,' A tiny, wondrous little thing, With sly and pensive face. Thro' the brush and underwood The wind swent thro' and thro', Kissed the flower on neck and breast And dried Its tears or dew. The flower bloomed and quickly died. Like a life, perchance, we know. You and I know Just such an one. That comes and goes like the snow; Only a flower In a by-way path. Living and dying In Christ alone The world better for examples set i For wisdom comes with pain and moan. Dr. Jt!.s L. Macomb Mrtttol, in Ktv Xor Graphic: ONE DAT IN flEW YORK. Caught In the Storm. fjrXW TOKTBUBXAT SFXCIALS.1 New Yobs, April ia The crews of incom ing coastwise steamships tell of terrible storms along the Southern coast The Ocean line steamship Chattahooche arrived from Savan nah this morning with 120 careworn and Badly battered passengers. On last Sunday morning off Cape Hatteras a tremendous sea swept her hurricane deck, carrying away the stanchions and ventilators. At II o'clock Sunday night everyone on board was aroused by the crash of timbers and the roar ot water pouring into the main saloon. The passengers tumbled out Into water waist deep, strapped on life preservers and sat up the rest of the night Eight passen gers were quite Seriously injured by flying glass and fragments of furniture. The cap tain stopped the engines and'the vessel was al lowed to drift for 48 hours. He used all the oil on board to break the combing of the waves. Monday at 10 o'clock this engines were again started. The Chattahooche had drifted 200 miles out of her course. The vessel has several holes in her bow and part of the bridge is car ried away. The port side from stem to stern is splintered and smashed. Five of the state rooms are completely demolished. The Chat tahoochee arrived here three days overdue. The steamer Iroquols-r of the Clyde line, came into port early to-day in little better condition than the Cbattoochee. She encountered the same storm off Cape Hatteras. The first sea crushed the after cabin on the hurricane deck and tumbled tons of water down into the first cabin where the passengers were at breakfast The steering gear was thrown out of order and was repaired only with the greatest difficulty by the assistant engineer, who was held by the heels over the stern of the vessel to do it Sun day night several sailors were injured by a wave which again flooded the hold. The cargo shifted, the vessel began to labor and the 200 passengprs were just about ready to give up the ship when the storm cleared away. Sane Enough to Travel. John Schneider, a fine looking old German, was arrested In Hoboken last evening at the Instance of 'his son in Scranton, who tele graphed to the police that his father was in sane. In court this morning Mr. Schneider said that he was a coal miner and had laved some money. He was in perfect health and came from Scranton with the intentloa of vuiting"his boyhood home in Coblentz, Ger many. His"son did not want him to take the money away, but it was bis own earnings and he wanted to see Coblentz once more before he died. A doctor who examined Mr. Schneider pronounced him perfectly sane and the. sturdy old man was allowed to trudge oft with his big black valise and cedar cane to the White Star docks. Ilelplng the Merchants. The general passenger agents of the trunk lines decided to-day to extend the time-limit of railway tickets for the centennial celebration to May 6. They did this so 'that the centennial visitors could have time to spend all their money in the New York shops. Another Chance for His Neck. The Jury in the case of Frank P. Dudgeon, on trial for causing the death of young Kitty Cody, whom he married on her deathbed, went out at 5 o'clock yesterday afternoon. At 10 o'clock this morning eight jurymen favored conviction and four acquittal. The jury was discharged and Dudgeon was let go on $10,000 ball, a new trial will be begun shortly. Wouldn't Live Without His Wife. Maurice Moran, a master truckman in good circumstances, learned last Saturday that bis wife is ill of an incurable disease. He became very despondent and said he would kill him self rather than live without her. His daughter saw him loading his revolver this noon and ran fora policeman. Two officers who returned with her entered Moran's bedroom just as he fired two bullets into his head. He died im mediately. Jealous Sirs. Ackennan. Mrs. Gilbert L. Ackennan and Nellie Curtis, who fought over Mr. Ackerman on Broadway last night, and Mr. Ackerman. were tried before a big crowd and a police justice this morning. Both women looked tired and angry. Two or three times they tried to get at each other, but they were kept apart by Mr. Ackerman and a policeman. AH three prisoners pleaded guilty and were fined 5 each. Mr. Ackennan paid the fines and walked off with Nellie Curtis. Ackerman married his wife In Chicago three months ago and abandoned her one week later. She followed him to New York, found him on Broadway last night with the Curtis girl ana made the scene that caused the arrest of the whole party. FOOLING WITH FATHER TIME. . Railroad Men In Convention Preparing; a General Schedule. New York, April ia The General Time Convention of the railroad men began its ses sion to-day in the ballroom of the Hotel Bruns wick. The sessions are held with closed doors. The chief object of the convention will be the selection of a date on which the spring time tables shall go into effect Representatives of railroads with a mileage of nearly 22,000 miles favor May 12 as the date of the proposed change. There will also be a report from the committee on car mileage and per diem rates and the committee on the code of standard train rules and rules for the movement of trains by telegraphic orders. The annual election of officers will also take place, and the convention will also act on the proposition to change the name of the organi zation. The attendance is large, and the vari ous roads throughout the country are largely represented. A Neat and Newsy Weekly. The first number of the Wat Penn Press, a weekly journal published it Natrona, has been received. It is well printed, and bears the evi dence of careful editing. If the publishers continue making a paper equal to this sample copy, their venture ought to be a complete success, An Infant Solordon. From the Hew York Tribune.1 Seven-year-old G. did not want to go to an evening entertainment but be was told that he could not be left alone at borne. Retiring to his room and seating himself, be soliloquized: "We live and live and lire. Then we die and live again. And what's the use?" Now National Banks. Washington, April 10. The Acting Con troller of the Currency to-day authorized the Owensboro National Bank, of Owensboro, KyM to begin business with a capital of $125,000, and the First National Bank of Montrose, CoL.wlth a capital of fSO,O0U. He Doe It Every Day. From the Buffalo Express. President Harrison presently will have to sit on a whole lot of ambitious Congressmen who want to share bis duties. PLAYFUL PARAGRAPHS. New Orleans Picayune: The barber who shaves boys would make a good city editor. He learns to cut down. Peoria Transcript: The question, "The Lady or the Tiger?" has been decided in Chi cago. It is tho Tiger. Boston Transcript: It is a little girl of 5 who makes the discovery that the shad is a por cupine tnrned inside ont Trot Times: Spring planting has been post poned for a few hours to let winter enjoy a slight turn at second childhood. Cincinnati Enquirer: A hard-working man is entitled to a little recreation, even if he be President of the United States. Rochester Post-Express: A Whisky Trust his been formed in Dublin. This will tend to raise the spirits of the Irish nation. Detroit Free Press: As long as a man can assign the property of his creditors over to his wife marriage Is not wholly a failure. Boston Herald: The death of the head of the great distillery at Cognao removes a fa mous man, but his spirit is still with us. Jewelers' Weekly: A scarf-pin shield that will protect its wearer from entanglement with a girl's hair would be a boon to mankind. Philadelphia. Inquirer: That New York chess tournament is as wildly exciting as a growing match between rival oyster beds. Boston Gazrtle: Tho Boston girls may wear glasses', but they are never short sighted enough to make spectacles of themselves. Albany Journal; Robert Elsmere drama tized will be a relief to people who cannot lire in Philadelphia, but are troubled with insomnia. CUKIODS CONDEKSATI05S. 4 The sounds or the heart have been n corded and reproduced by the phonograph. Burglars at Warrenton, Ga., robbed the depot and carried off the safe on a hand car. An Iowa Judge has decided that cider is an intoxicant and cannot be sold in the State legally. Within a week eight sets of twins and five of triplets have been born 'in Pike county. Georgia. -jTwo salmon worth $45 were recently cauzht at Bansrnr. Mf One welehftri 55 nrt tt, L other 23K pounds. James Stokes, of Penn'sManpr, Bucks county, is 18 vears old, weighs 280 pounds, and Is growing heavier rapidly. Two toads found imbedded in coal at Thomas C. Henn's premises, in Tioga county, a few days since were alive, but stone Mind. John Wayne, of Beading, has a leaden jar 659 years old. In which his great-greatgrandfather used to keep tobacco, gold, etc A Georgia exchange says that Hon. H. W. J. Ham, Sam Veal and Major R. A. Bacon met recently by accident in a store at Rome. John Airhart, of Phcenixville, Pa., has a rooster that he claims can eat corn off a table three feet high. He weighs 15 pounds, and his crow istroportionate. William Hedges, who lives near TJr bana, O., shot a big eagle the other day. The bird measured 7 feet from tip to tip of wings and 31 inches from the tip of bill to the tip of tail. A circular saw in a mill in Indiana cnt Charles Wadsworth in two so qnick the other day that he spoke several words before he re alized what had occurred. Then he ceased his remarks, of course. The only ruler on earth who can select just the sort of people be wants in his country Is Dorrfen-Smlth. the owner of the 8cllly Islands. If any islander doesn't suit him he is shipped to the mainland and can't get back. Miss Xiillie Bodmer, of Steelton, Pa., who lately emerged from a trance of several weeks' duration, has again been thrown into s cataleptic state by Immersion at a baptism ser vice which had caused her much religious ex cltement. Por the first time in the history of the game, baseball is made a cause for divorce. A Mrs. Belle Jacobs, of Toledo, has sued for a divorce on the ground that her husband is a con firmed baseball crank. The case is now under advisement by the jndge. A new invention to prevent collisions at sea. consisting of a small plate fixed at the side of the vessel, has been very successfully tried on the Thames. Electricity is tbe active agent The approach of another vessel with in two miles causes a bell to sound, and an In dicating arrow shows the direction whence it comes. London has become' recognized as tho great clearing house for all European thieves who operate on a large scale. Tbe proceeds for any great robbery committed in Eurona which it is Intended to restore throngh nego tiations are always sent to be delivered in London, and there is as yet no legal way to put a stop to the traffic While the pastor of a Dubuque Metho dist Church was in the most Interesting part of his sermon last Sunday, an old man arose from his seat and announced that tbe world would be destroyed in nine days, and that he was com missioned by the Almighty to declare the news. Afterward the old man announced the fact on the high bridge. A French missionary gives a serious ac count of the state of slavery in Ecuador. Though It Is not a legal institution, yet the law permits an Indian to sell himself as a Slavs when he is unable to pay his debts, and once a slave be Is rarely able to free himself. He may be bequeathed by will. The majority of the interior Indians have been reduced to this con dition. A Maine ball player, it is said, has im provised a batting machine He put a long beam on the top of his father's barn, letting one end extend abont three feet over tho side of tbe roof. To the end be attached a stont string, and on the end of the string attached a League baU. The ball hung just at the batting height, and the player would go ont and bat the ball to his heart's content A gentleman in Worth county, Georgia, has trained a large cat to hunt squirrels, and It Is said that be can tree more squirrels in a day than the best dog. When the squirrel hides from the hunter, Tom is sent up in tbe tree to find it He rarely ever fails to run him aronnd so that his master can shoot It When going on a long expedition tbe cat will climb up on his master's shoulder, or run along at his heels like a dog. A daughter of Charles Havins, of West Roxbury, Mass., was amazed lately while look ing through the museum attached to the Dead Letter Office, Washington, to see two minia tures that had been stolen from her farher six years before. Upon examining the records of the office it was found that the articles, in an unaddressed envelope, had been dropped in a Boston letter box a few days after the robbery, and in tbe ordinary course of events were sent to Washington. She was given the property. At the Postoffice Department a curious thing has been found In the line of applications. It is a photograph ot the applicant for a post office, and is accompanied bj a request that the picture be filed with tbe papers in the case. What is intended to be a genial smile has evi dently been too much for tbe skill of the coun try photographer, and the result is an ex pression of mingled astonishment and dismay which is no doubt much more amusing than the original smile. This is tbe third application accompanied by a photograph receivea at the Postoffice Department Colonel John Attaway, of Canton, Ga., has a most remarkable dog. It is keenly alive to tbe misfortunes ot the animal world. Afew days ago this wonderful canine happened upon a cow In the streets that bad lost her tan. After looking with an eye of pity on that poor creature, he dashed off to tbe blacksmith shop, whero an old cow's tall was being nsed to keep the flies from disturbing horses while the smith shod them, and snatching up the brush ran back and laid it down at the cow's feet. Tbe cow. however, failed to appreciate the dog's kindness and left In disgust. Parmer Hufistetter, of Bourbon county, Kentucky, lately witnessed a remarkable battle. What be supposed were two small birds small, er than crows were seen at great height and a quarter of a mile away fighting and descend ing and approaching nearer him. They fought and descended nnlll down they came to the earth Immediately at his feet where they con tinued to fight until he killed one with a pistol and the other with a club One proved to be a black eagle which measured 5 feet 8 inches, and tbe other a gray eagle which measured 8 feet 6 Inches from tip to tip of wings. WHAT WILD WITS ARE SAYING. Anglers are waiting with bated breath. Bujalo Times. The telegraph pole is the loafer's best friend. It supports him. Baltimore American. Twas a goose that laid the golden egg. -. Anybody but a goose would have kept It In his possession. Kea York Commercial Advertiser. And ahl my friend, take my advice, Which yon may find a boon; Whate'er you do don't make a change Of undershirts too soon. - Detroit Free Press. It frequently falls to the man that works t. That his larder Is light on tbe rainy day, Bnt age Is a blank to the one that shirks The man that succeeds keeps pecking away. Oil Qity blizzard. At a Southern WinterBesort "I'd rather be in the moon than here." Why?" "Because there Is said to be aman In the moon.'1 -Life. The American Abroad. "See that red uced man over there? He's the Prince of Wales." "He reminds me of a good poker hand-a Toys' flash. " Judge. Qualified. "Do you think your son has the necessary qualifications to become an artist" I'm sore of It He can do without rood for three days, and he knows the position of every freelanchlnthe clty."-i(''- s Discord From Unanimity. "There is no difference whatever between the two 'political parties." remarked Cnatterton. "They are both agreed on wanting the spoils!" "Bnt don't you know my dear fellow, "returned Pegram, "that that agreement causes their great est dlfferene?"-Ic. -r . Very Seasonable. "What do you call that act!,' said the bass singer to the acrobat 'Oh, that's merely a backward, spring," an- swercd the acrobat. s "Ahl" said the bass singer: "If I should try It there'd be an early rail, eh? Let's go and have a summer!" "Awhat?" "A summer; more than one swallow, yoa know." And then, as the Irishman said, they wlnterwsy together, Pact.