v r5' im ex ViAe - Sir r , i 4? ' 5 r fU Bifpfelj. ESTABLISHED FEBRUARY 8. IMS. VoL 44. No. TL Entered at Pittsburg Foatomce, November 14, 1SSZ, as second-class matter. Business Office 97 and 89 Fifth Avenue. News Booms andfcunllshiiig: House 76, 77 and 79 Diamond Street. Average circulation of the dally edition of The Ditpa.uk far alx moatha ending April 1.1SS9, 27,986 Copies per Issue. Average circulation of the Bandar edition Of Tbs Dispatch for March. 1SS9, 46,423 Copies per Issne. "TrpntS OF THE DISPATCH. POSTAGE FREE IN THE UNITED STATES. DAILY DIETATCH. One-Tear. ....I S 00 Daily Dispatch, Pec Quarter.... 2 00 Dailt Dispatch. One Manth.. TO Dailt Dispatch. Including Sunday, one year...... 10 00 Dailt Dispatch; Including Sunday, per quarter.. ...-.. .......... 2 SO Dailt Dispatch, Including Sunday, one uonth ........ a........... .... ....... no Euitdat Distatch. one jcar.. ..... ........ 2 SO Weeklt Dispatch, one year.. is The Dailt Dispatch la delivered by carriers at U cents per week, or Including the Sunday edition, at 20 cents per wee fc. POSTAGE Alt persona who iup.1 the Sunday laane of The Dispatch to friends ahould bear In mind the fact that the poat- bes thereon la Two (2) Cents. All double and triple number copies ol The Dispatch require a, 2-cent stamp to Insure prompt delivery. PITTSBUBG, FRIDAY, APE. 19. 1889. THE BBEWEBS EEPLT. The local brewers, in a resolution pub lished elsewhere, hnrl back the insinuation that their beer is adulterated, and challenge public investigation on the subject. Their appeal to the growing demand for their beer as an evidence of its parity ought to be a good argument; but unfortunately the large sale of adulterated food articles of late indi cates the possibility that the natural infer ence of a, diminished demand for adulterated stuff will not always work, for instance, regular beer drinkers will testify to the ex cessive element of froth in their beerjbut the sale keeps up just the same. Nevertheless the brewers' challenge seems to be a fair one. If, as they appear to do, they intend to guarantee the purity of the product ofthe entire brewery interest of Allegheny county, they only add to the facility which any one who thinks that he can refute their position will enjoj. It would certainly be interesting to the public and profitable to the brewers who tarn out a genuine article to have a fair and exhaust ive test of all the beer sold in this market, and a public statement of its ingredients. We have had plenty o! statements of the remarkable elements contained in the beer of commerce. The opportunity to determine how much truth there is in them seems a good one. THE GEEED OF 1IAMM0K. It seems almost incredible that at the close of the nineteenth century, there can be, as reported, trade interests in England so selfish and stupid as to oppose the inter national effort to suppress the African slave trade. This opposition is said to be based on the fear that their sales of goods to the Arab slave traders will be interfered with. It would seem natural that even the inspiration of enlightened selfishness should show that trade with peaceful Africans would take immensely greater proportions than trade with a continent devastated and harried by the slave hunters. But this short-sighted greed has always tried to block the great reforms of the world. To a certain element in commerce the dime that can be got at once looks larger than the dollar that can be obtained in the future, and to get it all considerations of philan thropy, humanity or justice are ignored. It was that stupid trade spirit that tried to arrest the anti-slavery agitation, and that to-day is ready to draw profits from alliance with monopolies and corporate injustice. Its appearance in England is only another proof that the commercial sentiment still exists which is ready to make money out of human suffering and to profit by turning a blind eye toward the most gigantic crimes. AN ANOMALY OF LEGISLATION. It is 8tped to be a subject of gratification to the people of this country that the steam ship line, of which the new and fast steam ers, the City of Paris and the City of New York, are the crack vessels, is largely owned by. American capital. It is settled beyond dispute that the Inman Line, which has put these two steamers into commis sion, though nominally a foreign company, is really owned and controlled by leading American capitalists. But there is undoubtedly force in the con tention that this legitimate gratification is largely allayed by the further fact that the navigation laws, which are supposed to en courage an American mercantile navy, prevent the owners of these steamers from sailing and operating them under the American flag. It is a singular illustra tion of the effect of these laws that they not only make American capitalists buy foreign built steamers, but force them to sail these steamers under foreign flags. If there should be a war, these steamers would be controlled by another jower, and might evenn be used against the country in which they are owned. The additional understanding that the real owners of these steamers are among the leading Protectionists of the country, only heightens the anomaly. It seems as though the policy of protection might be more in telligently applied than in laws which make American capital reinforce' the mer cantile navies of other powers. POLICE AND POLITICS. For a long time a number of Chicago papers have complained of the inefficiency of the police force oi that city. Important police officers were suspended by the Mayor who has just retired, and now resignations and removals are generally changing the personnel of the force. But apparently nobody in Chicago has discovered the true source of the inefi,;iency of the police de partment. Perhaps the remarks of Police Captain Aldricb, of Chicago, will make the matter clear. Captain Aldricb, in accounting for his resignation from the police department, told a reporter that he was a Republican and would not stay under a Democratic admin istration if he could. "I am not one of those fellows," said he, "who fight one way and beg another. 'To the victors belong the spoils.' Had I been on the other side fight ing as hard as I have for the Republicans I shonld expect to be rewarded. Now, it is fair that I get out and give the others a chance." There is the key to the inefficiency and rottenness of Chicago's 'police force. Cap tain Aldrich calmly confesses that he has been devoting his best energies and his lime, for both of which the city paid him a s alary, to campaigning in the interest of the Re publican party. The Chicago police have so well attended to politics that they have had very little time for guarding the public and arresting criminals. Murderers have been allowed to escape while the patrolmen made themselves solid in "der ward." Everyone iu the department, from the rank and file to the highest ofcer,hns been more careful to make his party strong than to keep life and property safe in Chicago. The consequence is that Chicago has the name of being one of the most lawless cities in this union. What is Chicago going to do about it? One set of political heeler called policemen is being turned out of office; will another set of a different political stripe take their places? That is the question. And Pitts burg will not do amiss to study it also. Po licemen ought to serve the public, not a po litical party. It would Be a great blessing if the police department Vere to be man aged in accordance with the latest civil service reform rules. When a police force becomes merely a part of a political ma chine its usefulness is almost annihilated. NAMES AND 3503X8. Governor Beaver's testimony at the Armes court martial puts ,a rather new phase on that already remarkable case. First, as to the original cause of the trouble, the Governor explains that.Captain Armes was given a place in the inaugural procession, under the Impression that he was General Ames. The error be ing discovered, Captain Armes was ejected from the procession; and thence came the tale of Ilium's woes, horrid war and the last extremity of nose-pulling. This, it must be said, looks like rather hard lines for the gallant Captain. Are noble warriors to be denied the privileges of pa rade and subjected to the publio con tumely of being ejected from the line of military display on account of having a su perfluous "r" in their names? The Governor's evidence as to the insult offered to the Gubernatorial nose Jater on, also invests the subject with a new light He does not testify that his nose was pulled. On the contrary, he says that he felt his antagonist's hand brush across his face, and concluding that indignity was intended, promptly went into action with his crutches. But does not the doubt as to whether the Governor's nose was actually and soundly tweaked somewhat cloud the necessity of extreme discipline in the Captain's case? Looking at it in a State light, does the dig nity of Pennsylvania require that a soldier who has already undergone ejection from a parade-because his name contained more letters than the Governor thought it did, call for expulsion or other severe measures, for a simple and futile dalliance with the facial features of our State Executive? On this statement of the case, might not honors or dishonors be considered easy, and the military heartburnings be permitted to die out. It looks as if the Governor, should he de sire his late assailant to suffer the full pen alties of military law, will have to amend his testimony and confess that the Executive nose suffered from a really severe nip. COL SHEPARD'S DECISION. The anxious publio will draw a long breath of satisfaction on receiving from Colonel Elliott P. Shepard an assurance on the foreign mission question. The hope of a rural Ohio paper that the Colonel's admir ing country should not be deprived of bis services abroad, evokes from the Colonel a declaration that he will not be taken away from his duties in this nation. "We will not take any office either at home or abroad," says the Colonel in the Mail and Express. He goes on to say that "we" have been named for almost every office in the gift of the President, bu$ firmly announces that "we" will not have-lt. This Is proof positive of the Colonel's earnest desire to remain fully in accord with the aots and decisions of the administration. The journalism of the country will be deeply touched at the determination of the eminently cood Colonel not to desert it. Without Colonel Shepard, life in the Ameri can newspaper world would be almost a desert, with only Murat Hal stead left as an oasis. But with the Colonel left to us, journalists will always have food for humor and, at the same time, will possess a re markable example of the harmony which exists between Phariseeism and the service of Mammon. But is not the Colonel's firm determin ation not to be misled into the acceptance of any foreign or domestic post, slightly tinged with the same consideration that led the proverbial boy to decline to eat his supper? TEE SHEARERS SHORN. There is a good deal of satisfaction for the public in the fact that the Sugar Trust has caught a Tartar in its endeavors to control the market for raw sugar. In addition to its policy of squeezing the last possible cent out of the consumers of its refined product, it has tried to add to its profits by bearing the prices which are paid for the raw ma terial. tLast year it was successful in this policy, and this year it tried to repeat the game by refusing to pay more than 33 cents. This price the sellers of sugar, gener ally refused, and while outside refineries bought some at an advance upon the prices offered by the trust, the contest between the trust and the producers of sugar was pro tracted. The trust now wakes up to dis cover that some one on the outside has stepped in and bought almost the entire stock at an advance. The market is cor nered, and the trust must pay the price that the speculators propose to exact or else go without its. supply for the coming season. There is a good deal of poetic justice in this disclosure that the cornerers and fore stallers have suddenly reached the point where they themselves are cornered and forestalled. Such things ought to be im possible, with the slightest respect to the laws of trade. But when one conspiracy has succeeded in establishing a conntrol of the refined trade it is healthy to find that some one else has cornered the raw sugar market, and will make the trust schemers pay dearly for their supply. Having dug a pit for the public, the Sugar Trust obtains a slight measure of the justice due it by falling into the pit itself. The public must pay the cost of these corners and manipulations in the long run; but it will be some compensation to it to perceive that those who started out to do the biting have got badly bitten themselves. PHILADELPHIA'S EXPERIENCE. The commercial bodies of Philadelphia are engaged in a struggle which very closely parallels some that Pittsburg has embarked in. It has been found that the elevators dependent on the Pennsylvania Railroad could not compete with those of other ports on accountof unfavorablerailroad rates; and a belt line has been proposed which shall admit competiog'railroads to "those elevators, all along the Delaware river. This project has1 'been indorsed bv manv of the leadinc com. THE PITTSBUBG- mercial bodies of ' Philadelphia, for the obvious reason that to admit railroad com petition to all the wharves would naturally enhance the shipping interests. But the railroad interest has. interposed, and being very powerful iu Philadelphia has forced, at least one of these commercial bodies, to swallow its formal resolutions. Upon every theory of public right ia the construction of railroads, the project of bringing railroad competition to the wharves i and elevators of Philadelphia would stand on an indisputable foundation. It rests on the same basis as the idea of a belt line, pre sented by the Junction and Marginal rail roads for Pittsburg, or as that of .increasing railroad competition by building the South Penn Railroad. But the Pennsylvania Railroad's idea that its title to Philadelphia is exclusive, is rather stronger than its other idea of a complete ownership of the Stats of Pennsylvania. It is, therefore, probable that the owners of wharves and elevators in Philadelphia who think they ought to have the privilege of increasing their business by enhanced railroad competition will find that their rights, and what they are able to are, are two very different things. When the business men of Philadelphia are ready to join hands with the rest of the State in making constitutional rights supe rior to corporate edicts, the era when projects beneficial to the publio can be choked off, in the interest of monopoly, will be suddenly ended. The publio attention a prominent young member of the sou-of-his-father's class is attracting by newspaper enterprises, libel suits and senatorial aspirations, may yet make it necessary for some one to firmly de clare that this Government is not run by the tin of Russell Harrison & Father. The foreign glass-blowers were brought here by contract with their employers; they were imported by the labor union officers; and no one knows how they were brought here. This is the sum total of the authori tative and exclusive information, up to the present time. Prom this the public is able to tie to about one or two points. The for eign blowers are here; their labor is wanted and they will throw no one out of employ ment. Beyond this there seems to be a'tol erably well-founded impression that the im ported labor law is a barren and innocuous ideality. Connecticut demonstrated yesterday that it couldhanir its wife murderers. This will be likely to discourage the sport of shooting wives and? the occupation of lobby ing in the Legislature to get the murdereroff from punishment. Other States will please go and do likewise. It is said that England's Chancellor of the Exchequer proposes to make up the deficit of 2,000,000 in the annual budget by imposing a duty of one-fourteenth of a penny upon every gallon of beer consumed in the British Empire. There may be a recoil in this proposition. A tax upon beer has over thrown several previous English Cabinets. John Bull will rebel sooner at a tax upon his beer than for an infringement upon the .liberties of the. Irish people. ' Pebhats "no importance is attached to that Lima oil story on the exchanges," as some of the reports allege, but we notice that prices have taken a tumble of about.6 cents since it. was made public Thebe is a solid chunk of truth in the Chicago SVioune's recent remark, that, "of all the editors whom the President ought to compliment and reward, the rejected Hal stead is the only one still exercising the privilege of free speech." It is also worthy of notice that, among the editors whom the President omitted to compliment and re ward, the editor of the Chicago Tribune is exercising the privilege of speaking right out in meeting. Boulanoee has been elected a few times more in Prance; but since he elected himself to go to Belgium he does not seem likely to overturn any governments by the multi plicity of his electoral victories. The fashion papers, which now have de partments exclusively devoted to pet dogs, announce that dogs will be worn larger next week than this, including setters, grey hounds and collies. Nothing is said about the fashion in husbands, -which, perhaps, may suggest an explanation for the decrease of matrimony. The ladies mnst find great difficulty in getting husbands to match their dogs. It ia reassuring to learn that one man in the Pennsylvania Legislature is able io deny the charge that he went to the depot to see Senator Quay. The others are discreetly silent. The decision of Acting Secretary Bussy, that a soldier who was drowned while bath ing died in the lineot duty, causes an outcry from the Democratic editors. The idea that bathing can be ! the line of duty is calculated to arouse extreme surprise among the average Democratic politicians. Bath ing in Bourbon view, must be ranked as luxurious and futile dalliance. In the hands of Mayors as entirely inde pendent as Grant and Gleason the ax is mightier than the letter-writing pen of the predecessor of one of them. It required the authority of the "United States Supreme Court to put a quietus upon Adam Badeau by deciding that he cannot draw pay for two offices at once. Now if some equally authoritative tribunal will de cide that he shall not draw pay for one office at once, the needs of the occasion will be fully-met AoEicuLTUEAii activities have already commenced on the Oklahoma border. The boomers are raising Cain very industri ously. ' It is stated that the surplus of the United States Treasury, which was 5103,000,000 last year, will not, at the close of the present fiscal year, amount to half that sum. It is evident that an able-bodied Congress proved adequate to solve the surplus problem by dint of industrious and wholesale appropria tions. A YERY POOR DAY. Pennsylvania Gets Only Tito New Post masters on Thursday. bpeclal Telegram to The Dispatch. WASnnfGTOir, April 18. The absence of Postmaster General Wanamaker to-day cut short the list of beheaded Democrats, as there were only 89 In all appointed, and only two of them lor Pennsylvania, which were George Kise, at East Prospect, and W. Olerviier. at Long Level. The following were appointed for West Vir ginia: W. R. Aukrom. Center Point; W. H. Harris, Glen East; R. A. Rlggs, Grayson; 8. H Legg, Oak Hill, and William fsuter, at Wooa land. Anxious to Hear Something. from the Chicago later-Ocean. 3 Just ask Governor Hill or General Palmer whattbe wild. waves are-saying about ,Groyer Cleveland and 1S9Z They both hare their ears' WaMW feWMMW. i J DISPATCH,1 FRIDAY, THE TOPICAL TALIEE. Prospects In Oklahoma Lydla's SllentLova Two Hearts United Whiffs of Lienor, A lkttib from Mr. Lydlck, the young Pitts burg attorney who, with a friend, started for Oklahoma a week or two ago, was shown to me yesterday. Mr. Lydlck describes the scene on the borders of Oklahoma1 very brightly, and seems to be cheerful, because there is a pros pect of considerable bloodshed and litigation. Bays be; "I hope to. be able to attend to the litigation and abstain from bloodshed on my own part." t HOW HE LOVXP LYDIA. When he was young and soft of heart, "With Lydla he rellta love. , He loved her beaaty and her art; Bat Lydla he never told, He was not bold. "When he grew np to nan's estate With Lydl h stayed in love, Bought bouquets at a wholesale rate tor ber, All heart's delight, Aye, every night. Still when he came to middle age Ha loved fair Lydla no leu. His 111 o, was bat a single page Writ o'er and o'er with li'f And nothing else. Bat Time, alas, was not so kind To him as to falrLydla A fact you'4 better bear in mind Life's short, so says the song. Bat art is long! And on the tombstone o'er his head The legend runs: "Fair Lydla come To charmmy eye when you are dead!" In the parquet I'll alt borne call It pit. V Two old ladies have lived with a friend of mine in the East for many years. They are, taken singly and apart, charming old ladies. Together they are not so lovely, fori regret to say that they fight They are both related by blood to my Mend, and ha has generously placed his house in New York at their disposal as a home. A day or two ago my friend was here, and I asked him how his two old aunts were getting along, "Beauttf ullj !" he replied. "They never have any spats now. The peace and quiet of the house now is almost alarming." "How did you effect this revolution!" "Well I went to Aunt A and told her that I hoped that she would be patient and forbear ing toward Aunt B.,as Aunt B.'s mind was fall ing fast that her age was making her childish and so on. Aunt A. promised to be very in dulgent to poor Aunt B and she kept her word. Then I went to Aunt B. and told her that she must really be centle and considerate toward Aunt A, because she was growing senile and didn't know what she said or did half the time. Aunt B. agreed with alacrity and has been mindful of her promise. Conse quence Is the two old ladles are in an ideal state of content and harmony all the time. Each imagines that she is the keeper of ths other." V A man of singularly sleepy appearance came in from a rather remote corner of Allegheny county dnringthe recent license court hearings to consult a well-known attorney of this city. He had had a license and wanted It renewed. The lawyer asked the saloon keeper a few questions as to the way he had conducted his boose, whether he had broken the license law in any particular, and woundup with the ques tion's "Have you ever sold to minors t" ''res," replied the liquor man, complacently. "Is It generally known that . you have sold to minors f" "Falxl dere aln',t nobody but miners 'most at come to my plat's I" "Do you Ijnow what I mean by minors T" asked the bewildered attorney. "Men as works at der mines, in coorsel" The worthy Economltes do not mean to come Into collision with the liquor laws, if they can help it Tbey have locked up their cellars in Economy until the State shall have decided for or against prohibition. The wine made by the Economltes ia highly valued by those who know its sterling qualities and purity for the use of invalids, and several persons who have made the journey to Economy lately to got some of it have come back empty-handed. Tb,e cellars are even closed to the Economltes themselves, Mr. Henrici's orders are that no wine shall be sold Or given away until after the June election. " PEOPLE OP PROMINENCE. Mb. WhttexawReid, the newly-appointed Minister to France, took tbeoath of office at the Department of State yesterday. Rubinstein will celebrate his jubilee on July 23. It was in 1839 that ho made his first public appearance at a benefit concert In Moscow. Seobetaby Tbaoy of the Navy is a man of wide reading and fond of quotation. He has a fine library and has a special partiality to Eng lish classics. Geohoe Wilmam C otitis has been a pris oner In bis Staten Island residence since last summer, when he snrained his leg. He is im proving, and expects to be able to walk in a month or so. The Prince of Wales now practices upon the banjo, or "California harp," as it Is styled in his district, with creat persistency, and the Czar is hard at work upon one of the lower wind instruments. Alan Aethcr, son of the late ex-President is not desirous of any political office. He In tends to devote his time to business, and will settle permanently, in New Yoifc. He is not engaged to be married ana his intimate friends are his former classmates at Princeton. Clinton P. Febbt, who not very long ago had his nose bitten by his wife In Paris, is the nephew of ex-Governor Ferry, of Wash ington Territorry, and the prospective first Governor of the new State. He has two adopted daughters, one of whom, MayBucka low Ferry, is sole hstrcs; of his first wife, and is worth 40,000. Chahles Savabt, who was known as one of the most eccentric citizens of Bangor, Me., died Wednesday of pneumonia. The greater part of Mr. Bavary's life was passed in New York, where he was a member of the Now York Stock Exchange, and was known as "The Mathematician of Wall streot" Mr. Savary was at one time worth about a million. Nearly all of this was swept away from him on Black Friday. He soon after left the Exchange. For years past he has lived in Bangor a lonely life. Majob John Cobdington Kinney, of Hartford, commander of the Governor's Foot Guards of Connecticut and the Commissioner from Connecticut to the Centennial, has a unique war record. He was a lieutenant in the Thirteenth Connecticut He was the first to learn flag signalling, and was specially dotalle'd to Admiral Farragut's fleet In Mts operations around Mobile. In the action dnring which Farragut was lashed to the mast Lieutenant Kinney iras also lash etl to the mast far above the deck and the Admiral's bead. To him Ad miral Farragut issued his orders, and in the midst of whistling bullets and exploding shells, Lieutenant Kinney waved his flags, conveying the Admiral's orders to all pirts of the fleet DEATHS OP A DAT. ' Mrs. Flush Bran. Mri. Hugh Bean, the mother of Ed. L. Bean, ono of the proprietors of the Anderson Hotel, died at her home lu Wellsvllle yesterday. Mrs. Bean was about SO years old, and was well known In this city, where she lived for a long time. She had charge of the old American House on Water street and the Bed Lion Hotel, when these were the leading public houses of Pittsburg. Airs. Bean was an excellent Christian lady, much given to acts of charity. She was the mother of 12 chil dren, eight of wnom are still living. Mrs Capt. McKlnnle, of tbe Anderson. Is one of her daugh ters. Her eight children were at Mrt. Bean's bed side when she died. Mrs. W. H. L, Wallace. OTTAWA, ILL., April 18.-Mrs. W. H. h. Wal lace, the widow of General W. H. L. "Wallace, who was killed at Bhlloh, and tbe eldest danghter of the late Judge T. Lyle Dickey, died at her resi dence In this city last night from paralysis, after an Illness of several months. She will be burled at the family cemetery to-morrow afternoon at 4 o'clock, B. Cavagnnn. CnJClSNATL April 18. B. Cavagana, widely known to all "business men of Clnclnnitl, died last night aged 90. He has lived in Cincinnati 60 years and nearly all or tbat time was In business at the same place, on Fifth street near Walnut. We Knew it AIIJMong. From the Chicago TImes.3 . ,, President Harrison, we are' proud to say, Is keeping the ablest of us editors at home. . . :,.4 s p - I - " I ' . ..V .1 . ,J APRIL 19, 1889 CURIOUS EASTER CUSTOMS, Old English Belief KegardlngEggs Qnalnt nud Beautlinl Ceremonies Among: the Germans and Italians Origin of ths Practice or Painting Egg Shells, Whence came the Easter eggsT Well," It Is not easy to say precisely, for some sort of a feast of the eggs of which the display In shop windows this year Is the lineal descendant seems to have existed about as long as the busi ness record of the hen Itself, but our observ ance, of coarse, comes directly from England, along with the Easter bonnet. At Easter let your clothes be new, Or else be sure you will It rue, says the old English couplet In allusion to the common belief tnat failure to wear new clothes on the day bought Is-bad luck. But the Easter egg lsfai way older than anything English, and much older than Christianity. Hebrews have the egs la their Passover to symbolize the bird Zlz. It is said that the Egyptians used It away in the dusty past to represent the renova tion of mankind after the deluge, and one learned pundit says tbat the custom of making presents of, eggs at Easter can be traced up to the theology and philosophy of the Persians, Gauls, Greeks, Romans and so on, among all of whom an egg was an emblem of tie universe; but no matter about that Superstitions About Eggs. The Easter egg Itself has .occupied a large place in the greatest of Christian church festi vals in Europe, and England and the Continent yet have many curious customs conneoted with it as well as some'superstitions. Because it contained the mysterious germ of future life the egg was naturally given a special signifi cance in connection with the Feast of the Resur rection, bat its prominence in a popular way was no doubt largely due to material causes. Eggs were sometimes forbidden during Lent and a literal feast of them would be natural at Easter, and then it is to be remembered tbat just at this season eggs are especially plenty, and a free use of them for food and presents comes easily. So the staining of the shells red ia said to typify the blood of Christ bat It is possible that this was an afterthought sug gested by the coloring of the presents to make them more acceptable. But in any case the church regarded the egg seriously, for the rit ual of Paul the Fifth for use In Great Britain had this: Bless, O Lord 1 yre beseech Thee, this Thy creat ure or egirs, that It may be a wholesome suste nance to Thy faithful servants, eating it In thank, fulness to Ihee, on account of the resurrection of the Lord. Easter Presents in Germany. All bat the very modern Easter eggs are ver itable productions of the hen, and concerning their ornamentation it maybe remarked that an old and easy way to make a neat thing Is by heating the egg In water, then writing words or drawing a design on it with a tallow pencil; and then putting it in dye. The parts covered with tallow are left white, and so a rather remark able looking result Is reached easily. In Ger many, however, a print is sometimes used for the Easter present Instead of the eggs them selves. Iu one old thing of the kind three hens are represented holding up a basket containing three eggs which have representations illus trative of the resurrection. Over the center egg the Aenus,Dei, with a chalice symbolizing Faith, while the other eggs bear the emblem of Charity and Hope. Under all comes a rhyme nuivu may ue translated tnus: All good things are three; Therefore I present you three Easter eggs, faith and Hope with Charity. Never lose from the heart Faith la the church, hope In God And love Him to thy death. Blessing; Eggs In Church. A religious and social observance In Italr Is described by one old writer thus: "On Easter eve and Easter day all the heads of families send great chargers full of hard eggs to the church to get them blessed, which the priests perform by saying several appointed prayers and making great signs of the cross over them and sprinkling them with holy water. The palest, having finished the ceremony, demands how many eggs there be in every basin. These blessed eggs have the virtue of sanctifying the entrails of the body, and are to be the first fat or fleshy nourishment they take after the ab stinence of Lent The Italians do not only ab stain from flesh during Lent, but also from eggs, cheese, butter and all white meats. As soon as the eggs are blessed every one carries his portion home and causeth a large table to be set in the best room in the house, which they cover with their best linen, all bestrewed with flowers, and put around it a dozen dishes of meat and the great charger of eggs in the midst Sometimes there are no less than 20 dozens in the samo charger, neatly laid to gether in the form of a pyramid. The table continues In the same posture, covered, all the Easter week, and all those who come to visit thenvin that time are invited to eat an Easter egg with them, which tbey must not refuse." Sport tor Small Boys. Easter" eggs have sometimes been used to toss like a ball in play, but the great sport with them is knocking them together to see which would break. Tnls has been very popular, es pecially in England, although It has perhaps entirely disappeared now. The play came chiefly Easter Monday, although it was some times continued for many days, the boys pre pared by getting as many eggs as possible, and played by simply striking them together. One was inevitably broken, the winner stood np to strike with the next Doy, and so on until ho whose egg broke not at all took the whole lot In this, the egg which broke another was called "a cock of one," and so on until it might be "cock of a dozen" or more, and of course be came highly prized. As this breaking was In evitably accompanied by eating the wrecks and the eggs were all boiled hard. It Is to be hoped that the sport somehow provided more sxercise for the boys than appears on the face of things. Face Egzera In England. A popular name for the Easter egg in some parts of England is "pace egg" a corruption of "Pasque egg," and they are given to boys and beggers who go about after tbem and are called "pace eggers." The old custom Is said to hold to this day in some of the out of the wAy nooics, ana nero is tne Deginning oi one oi the songs tbey sing in their rounds: Here's two or three Jolly boys, all of one mind, We have come a pace egging and hope you'll prove kind; I hope you'll prove kind with your eggs andstrong beer, And we'll come no more near you until the next year. THE EEEDIKG OP THE LILT. It Costs $235 a Week to Satisfy the Appetite of Mrs. Langtry. New Yobk, April 18. The secret of Mrs. 'Langtry's beauty is out at last It is all in what she eats, as Is shown by a lawsnlt she now has on her hands. GustavBrocbe, French chef, undertook to cater to her tastes a couple of months ago for the modest considera tion of $15 a day, and he soon dis covered that he had a bigger contract on his hands than he had imagined. His arrangement as he understood it, was that he was to supply what was necessary for the table of her household out of his 815, and he was told that his own profits for bis services would be $5 a day at least He found the Lily hard to please, and when anything jlld not suit ber bad to get what was ordered and thus lost money. The result was that when the end of the week came around the chef figured np his accounts In this way: For his own professional services at their lowest value, S33; paid to "help. $7: paid in cash for groceries, $29 82: due to fish dealers, 28; due to the marketman for game, meat and vegetables, 5125 80; total, S225 7L Under his contract tbe amount coming to him was tl05, or 20 less than he needed for his butcher's bill alone. Ho spoke to the Jersey Lily on the subject but the only satisfaction sho gave him was to say that she consid--ered him too expensive, and that be would have to leave and take his (105. He appealed to Mr. Gobhard, and tbatgentleman threatened to kick him out Finally Broche applied for a Summons against Mrs. Langtry, but with great adroitness she eluded service oy going to Bos ton. Not to be outwitted the chef last evening servsd a summons on ber through ber man servant and notified her by mail. So ths mat ter stands to date, and future developments are anxiously awaited. - Helping Ireland's Causo Along. Xom the New York Press. 1 The bailiffs and stewards of the Irish estates are really Gladstone's allies. Every cruelty strengthens his bands and swells the chorus of his adherents. Evictions are no doubt doomed In the near future; but the custom dies hard, and tbe Irish tenants must suffer still awhile, though their very sufferings will hasten their deliveranoe. A Liberal Offer. East Palestine BevclUCi The fishing season is open and several parties have already gono out The editor of this paper would like to go on one expedition, and if some one -rwlll find -the conveyance he will trvtrffriralahbait - ' H HEW I0BK NEWS K0TES. Tim Campbell Makes a Squeal, xnxw" Yoasr bubxao- srxciALs. 1 . HEW Yobk. April 18. Ex-Congressman Tim othy J. Campbell has sued John E. Brodsky, Johnny 'Brian's lieutenant in the notorious Eighth district for (3,100, The papers were served late last nlgbt Mr. Campbell contracted with Mr. Brodsky a few days before the No vember election for enough votes to return him to Congress. The consideration was the $9,100 which Mr. Campbell now wishes to get back. Mr. Brodsky failed to deliver the goods on election day. Mr. Campbell's tickets were not even bunched by the Brodsky workers in thsElghth, be claims, and John Henry McCar thy, Tammany's candidate for Congress, got a tremendous majority. The opinion of theboys in the Eighth is strong against Mr. Campbell's case, because he "squeals on being steered against a brace game." Sals of Secretary Traev'a Stnd. The Marshland stud of Secretary Tracy was closed out at auction to-day. Abble, a 12-year-old bay mare, sold for 5,900. Loretta brought fl,000; Cavalier, $1,500; Blush, daughter of Ken tucky Wilkes, SB,100; Wanatab. J8.200i Delta, (4,600; Audacity, a 3-year-old Ally, $2,000. An Edgar Allen Foe Relic Sold. Edgar Allen Foe's cottage and grounds at Fordbam were sold this noon, at the real estate exchange, to William Fearing GUI, for (3,487 60. The building is Irregular In plan, the dimensions being approximately 20 and 30 feet It Is solidly built and la good repair. Poe first occupied the honse in the summer of 1846. His wife Virginia died there some ten months later. In the small sitting room of the Ford ham cottage Poe wrote "Annabel Lee," "The Bells," and "Literati of New York." Colonel Dudley Score a Point. The Supreme Court to-day denied the appli cation of the Evening Post to strike out the complaint of Colonel W. W. Dudley in the famous "Blocks-of-five" libel suit Lawrence Godkin, counsel for the J?ott, made this appli cation some days ago, btcause Colonel Dudley, when examined before a commission in Wash ington, some weeks ago, declined to answer questions as to the authenticity of the letters upon which the Indiana, authorities sought to indict him. In denying the motion Judge Beach said the argument that the questions upon the subject of handwriting which Colonel Dudley refused to answer were relevant could not ba true, as at the time of the examination there was no such issue. Therefusalof the-Porf counsel to permit the letter produced before the Commissioner to be annexed to and re turned with the commission disposes of the point of handwriting, because without the document all evidence regarding it would be stricken out The Post published the letter, which materially differed from the one before the Commissioner. Even if substantially simi lar, the letter couldonly be admissible under a plea for mitigation of damages. Mrs. Friend Wants to Get Out. The lawyer of Mrs. Olive E. Friend, of Elec tric sugar fame, asked the Recorder to-day to reduce her ball, which Is S7.00O. He said that Mrs. Friend bad lost ber health in the Tombs already, and was growing worse dally. The Re corder consented to think about it, and took the papers. The Anarchists Coming to Life. The Anarchists here have taken a fresh start They have organized a new Agitators' Club, which will publish an anarchistic pamph let every month. The club has already dis tributed many thousand copies of a blasphem ous four-page tract entitled: "An Address to American Workmen; or, the Answer to the Lord's Prayer Anticipated." a pamphlet en titled: "A Hundred Years a Republic," will be published this week. A Bride Suicides Because of Jealousy. Mrs. Elsie Kavanagh, of Newark, a bride of six weeks, swallowed two doses of parts green to-day. She will probably die before morning. Mrs. Kavanagh has quarreled with her bus band ever since she married him. She thought he flirted with Newark shop girls. WHICH B0T DROWNED FIRST? Title to a Fortane Dependent on tho Solu tion of tbe Question. Brooklyn, April IS. There is a suit pend ng in the Supreme Court ia which the title to (200,000 worth of property depends upon which of two boys, who were drowned together, died first Tbey were the sons of Osmin Atkins, who resides at Mfddletown, Conn., ana were drowned In December, 1881, while skating. The property consists of real estate In tho Twenty-sixth ward of Brooklyn, which Os min Atkins deeded to bis brother, Thomas J. Atkins, who also is wealthy and lives In Middletown.. Osmin Atkins died, and then Thomas made known the fact that Osmin bad conveyed the property to him in trust for his (Osmin's) wife and two sons providing tbat If they 'lived to be 21 years of age it should be deeded to them, subject to their mother's right of dowry, and that if they died before reach ing the age of 21 years it was to go to their mother. Sbortly after this the boys' mother died, leaving the two boys and a brother, Frank R. Knowlton, of Illinois, surviving ber. Tbe dispute now going on is between Thomas Atkins and Frank Knowlton, both of whom claim the estate. Knowlton claims tbat tbe property all belongs to him as tbe maternal uncle of tbe boys, who Inherited the title from their mother, while Mr. Atkins claims the prop erty as the paternal uncle of tbe boys. Even should this be so, counsel for Knowlton claims that he would Inherit half the property, because the question would then arise whether one of the boys died before the other. In case tbat were so, the one who survived tbe other would Inherit his share of the estate and that share would be divided between the uncles. It is claimed that Osmin, the younger boy, fell through the ice first and tbat Bertie attempted to rescue him and was also drowned. On the strength of this and other circum stances, it is claimed that Bertie survived Osmin at least a few seconds, which Is suffi cient to establish the fact that he Inherited his brother Osmin's share of the estate. The matter Is now pending before a referee, and Judge Cullen has issued a commission to take tbe testimony of Jerome H. Markbam, now residing in Colorado, who saw the boys drowned, regarding what he knows as to which of the boys fell Into tbe water first and which was first drowned. Milvraakee Acquisitiveness. From the Chicago News.j A Milwaukee man fell into a river and was nearly drowned, but when he had been pulled ashore it was found that he bad caught a fish in bis moutb.T A man with sucha talent for acquiring things ought to scrapeup a big for tune in short order. THE OKLAHOMA E00M. Chicago Inter-Ocean: The man who visits Oklahoma without an accident policy is short sighted. Chicago News: It is probable that the first crop m Oklahoma will bo a bountiful one and win consist mainly of mortgages harvested by Eastcrn men of capital. Fbovidence Journal: It is getting to be a very serious question If Oklahoma Is big enough to hold all the people who are stand ing about the borders trying to get into it Omaha See: If the adventurer, fortune hunter and desperado wero weeded out of the Oklahoma boomers the United States would need very few soldiers to keep the handful of bona fide settlers out of the promised land. ST. Louis Globe-Democrat: To nearly every able-bodied citizen In tbe West and to many In the East: We are abundantly supplied with Oklahoma correspondents, and shall not need any more until about 50 per cent -of those al ready at the front are killed off. Milwaukee TFbcontin; Milwaukee will furnish her quota of pilgrims to Oklahoma In search of great riches easily gained. Not many months hence Oklahoma will be furnishing her quota of pilgrims to Milwaukee in search of a comfortable and sure livelihood in return fur honest days' work. Memphis valoncAe. "What fools these mortals bar' could not be more aptly applied. Ia nearly every case tbe boomers are leaving; better lands than those they will find In Indian. Territory. There is not a State in the South which does not furnish a better opportunity to those who are as much in earnest as those who are going to Oklahoma seem to.be. The Cimarton may rise and roar. The mud may gather and tbe rains may pour. Bat we're going for the Land o Promise shore. In opening Oklahoma; In hundred thousands were rushing along, Some of us good men gone very wrong. And this Js. tbe bowl ana burden of our song: m "O, Oklahoma!" - s - M - -New rorkBwt; CU110US COMTSATIOKS. One of Chicago's new Aldermen is 6 feet 4 inches high. John T. Price, confined in a Colorado penitentiary for horse stealing, has fallen heir to 5100,000. Ho formerly lived at ClrclevUle, O. A Chicago negro put in an hour in a cold storage room to see if It was what it .claimed to be. His frozen nose and ears are proofs that it was. An electric fire engine is a new invention. It can be started at foil speed. Is much lighter than the steam fire engine, and possesses vari ous other advantages. "TJnxawatawny," Is the way the name of that lively Jefferson county borough, Punx sutawney, appears after It has been carried to Kentucky by telegraph and printed in a Louis ville paper. John Shane had bis red mustache dyed a beautiful black in a Cincinnati barbershop two months ago, but now he has none at all. His lips were poisoned and are being slowly eaten away. Edward E. Iilttell, of Oaas county, MicK, is 100 years old, has been three times a widower, is the father of 23 and counts his de scendants by the hundred. Ho is as hearty and as active as a man of 60. He served in the. war of 1812. The annual brass band contest in tbe northern counties of Jbngland is about to be gin. Hundreds of brass bands will compete. The worklngmen of Yorxsbtre and Lancashire practice steadily during their leisure hours, and make immense efforts to win the jsrlzes, In an opinion written by the Chief Justice of the Indiana Supreme Court It was decided that a municipal corporation in that State has the power to'compel liquor selltn engaging In the saloon business within two miles of the corporate limits to pay a license fee. The oldest war horse is not dead, after all. Itls alive at the age of 34 and is owned by A. W. Barrett, of SteartsvUIe, Ind. This ani mal Is a mare, mown as "Old Fly." She went into the war In July, 1861, and served until Sep. tember, 1864. She waa in several big battles) and numerous skirmishes. While Parmer Yan Dyke, of Muncr Hill J, near Willi amsport was ploughing a few days ago be dropped bis pocketbook contain ing (600. It fell Into tbe furrow, and on tho next trip he made around the field it was plowed under. Since the discovery of Ms loss the distracted farmer has been replo wing the Held over and over In the hope of turning up his lost property, but up to the present time he has not been successful. Dennysvilie, way down on the Eastern Maine coast is one of those "old towns with a history." The town has no debt; the village has not had a dwelling house, barn, store, church or school house destroyed by fire for more than 80 years, and at the late town meet ing Peter E. Vase. Esq., was re-elected Select man and Treasurer, after a service of 27 years in the former and 23 years in the latter position. During al these years no person but Mr. Vose had ever written a word or made a figure ia any town book (excepting the Town Clerk' book) or drawn an order. There is in Port Valley, Ga.f in the per son of little Dellie Harris, aged IS months, the greatest prodigy of the present day. She not only talks and articulates well, but knows the infant catechism by heart; also the county She was bomnn (Crawford), the town she Uvea in. the county site, the names of the President and Vice-President, the Governor and tbe mayor of Fort Valley; can count up to 50, and says the alphabet with great rapidity. Beside all this, she is bright In many other things which any one would doubt did they not see and bear her talk. An old man whose hair was as white as snow and who looked as if he had been per sonally acquainted with George Washington, accompanied by a blooming female companion who had seen 63 winters pass over her head, walked up to 'Squire P. N. Rountree. at Nash ville. 111., and asked him if hs was a Justice of the Peace. 'Upon his answering In tbe affirma tive, ho said they wanted to get spliced, and they wanted the jab dons immediately, which was promptly done. Tbe groom was Mr. Wm. A. Aldricb, aged 70, and the blushing brlds Was Mrs. Catharine Hartllne, who is just 02. They were as bappy as two young docks when the ceremony waa concluded, and went their way rejoicing. Their home Is In Ashley. The New Haven men who endeavored! to have the Legislature prescribe by law the weight of bread made an unconscious effort to revive some of the early laws of the colony. In the code of laws ordered printed by tbe Gen eral Court of New Haven. October, 1665. It was ordered that each baker have a distinctive mark for his bread ana the weight of the bread was defined. There Is only one copy of these laws now in Connecticut That Is In the Btate Library, and 1- times its weight In gold was paid for It The code remained in force 100 years. These early laws were founded on Scripture, and the little volume contains many references to tbe Bible. Death was the penalty for witchcraft. Sabbath breaking, blasphemy, the worship ft false gods and other offenses. The pillory and the branding iron were among tbe instruments of punishment While a Frenchman name Pommes was digging a well at Gainesville, Tex-, he found tbe bones, vertebra: and ribs of an animal, and toward the end of the remains. 17 rattles, ths largest six inches across. Attracted by tbe strange find, the neighbors gathered, and the work of unearthing the monster was prose cuted with vizor. After laying bare 19 feet of the remains of the monster, imagine their con sternation at nnaing tne sgeieton oi a man in the stomach of the skeleton of the snake. The remains of the man and serpent so far as tbe serpent has been exhumed, are as perfect as when first denuded of flesh, and were doubtless coved by lime and gravel soon after death. Dear the bones of the man's right hand Is a rude stone hatchet, which a local geologist of some repute says is the handiwork of paleo lithic man. Trjejargest jiair of black bass ever caught in Missouri, waters or in any waters of the Upjted States, in fact, were caught by J. W.Peters and Son, of St Louis, in Peter's Lake, Pemiscot county, Mo on March 3 last They weighed 11 pounds and 12 ounces and U pounds and 10 ounces, respectively, seven days after tbey were taken from the water. The larger fish was was 23 inches in length from the lower lip to the extreme end of the tall, and 1&3 Inches In circumference at the largest portion of the body. It was at least three pounds heavier than any one specimen of black baas ever caught in the United States before. The heads' of these monsters of the black bass school have been beautifully mounted in ele gant frames and were given to Captain H. C. Wesr, tbe Fish Commissioner of Missouri, who in turn will present one to President Harrison and the other to ex-President Cleveland.: They will be exhibited In a Broadway show window for three weeks. LITTLE PLEASANTRIES. The man who lost his shadow was being looked for by our able detectives. Puck. The critic is the barber of letters. He lets his own face go, and lives by shaving other men. Puck. Sylvanus We can not use your joke about the brakeman being the non-conductor of the lightning express. Go to thunder! Pus. Equally dangerous "Have you ever beest through the St. Lawrence rapids?" "No; but I married my third wire list week.' Judge. Mr. N. Peck I never spoke cross to raj wife but once. Thompson Quite remarkable, that. x Mr. N. Peck Not so very. See this scarf Tort Haute Exprett. Philadelphia art dealer-i"Live in New York, eh?" New Yorktr (proudly) "I am sa Alderman In that city, sir." "OI James, show the gentleman our new stock of birroom vlv tures." Philadelphia Record. "O. for the colden, aee of letters!" said 5 the comic editor. t'The. past contains all, the Ji replied Cynlcust "and that Is why you print only sixteen century Jests, I presume!" liarvet Bazar. Needless regrets Jawkins (sadly) "And so Chatty and bis wife have been separated for a year. What a pity It Is that they eannotbe happy?" Hogg-"Why, bless your soul, they are?" Judge. .? THJt MM ZSD OF XT. .jb Brother Toa " Why do you let that little cad pay you so much attention? I told you he waa nothing but a frlpplsh dndel" J Miss Curllnghsm Heavens, Tom, I thought you said British duke I and I've about promised to marry him. Judge. "Por shame, William, io cobs home to your wife so late. Last night It was 12, and now it U actually zo'elockln the morning." Well well, my darling, don't be angry. Supposing I had come home early It would have-been 2a?clock now just the same."-Scranon. Truth. Not his "decliuing years." "You say you have no confidence In yourself. What do you mean? I don't understand you." "I have no assurance whatever. 1 once held the ofice of treasurer ofscorporaUo fee seven years because 1 didn't have the courage to (testae' ns ' eleetle setfon aersu. t !yifv' TlatlTilfff - . - . ...! eAv HHiv JttflfWll1irflirifrllsa1r-' f 'lJ:flaaoM''aiSilTiT1iTnf ili fMtfMfMJS i,iii,1a8iMa!saaWliaTsssaB tPji.S''isssgs-ssTl yffi-Wjj-MsAH'-W . (sr - ' -