S-1 I' for & Tn-Mnrrnw'B DiBpatcfi TVTLL CONTACT ; Twenty PegGB. SHIRLEY DARE, author of the "Ugly Girl Papers," will begin a series of articles on Beauty and Health la this issue. DON'T JITSS TO-MORROWS MAMMOTH NUMBER. NEXT SUNDAY The Dispatch will be gin the publication of a powerful -story from the pen of SIDNEY LTJBKA, author of the "Yoke of Tborab," "Mrs. Peixada," "As ItfWas Written," etc. Read the opening chapters. (jt Mpx ESTABLISHED FEBRUARY 8, IMS. Vol.44, No. 79. Entered at Pittsburg Postofflce, November 14, 1SS7, as tecond-class matter. Business Office 97 and S9 Fifth Avenue. News Rooms and Publishing House 75, 77 and 79 Diamond Street. Average circulation of the dally edition of The Dispatch for six months ending April 1.18S9. 27,986 Copies per Issue. Average circulation of the Sunday edition sf The Dispatch for March. 1SS9, 46,423 Copies per Issue. TERMS OF THE DISPATCH. POSTAGE rBEE IS Till UNITED STATES. Daily DisrATCH. One Year S 00 Datlt DisrATcn, Per Quarter ZOO Daily Dispatch, One Month 70 Daily Dispatch, Including Sunday, one year 10 00 Daily Dispatch, including Sunday, per Quarter 2 SO Daily Dispatch, Including Sunday, one month SO BO-day Dispatch, oneyear. ISO Weekly Dispatch, oneyear 1 3 The Daily Dispatch is delivered by carriers at 15 cents per week, or including the Sunday edition, at 50 cents per week. POSTAGE All persons who mall the Sunday Issno of The Dispatch to friends should bear In mind the fact that the post age thereon Is Two (2) Cents. AH double and triple number copies ot The Dispatch require a 2. cent stamp to Insure prompt delivery. PITTSBDRO, SATURDAY, APR. 27, 1SS3. TWELVE PAGES A NEW TAX COMMISSION. The resolutioa creating a commission to prepare a plan of local, us well as State, taxation, which went with a rnsh through the legislature yesterday, is commendable as an effort to obtain a thorough settlement of a vexed and difficult subject. But, as it simply resorts to a method that has been tried several times and only postpones the final settlement of the question of taxation, there is room for doubt as to whether it will attain its purpose. If we are not mistaken the resort to com missions for schemes of fiscal taxation has been made till it is threadbare; and the re sults in securing a permanent and satisfac tory scheme of taxation can be stated by a cipher. Perhaps this commission may do better; and the hope that its difference in constitution will produce a difference in re sults may be well founded. But when we find that every other revenue commission has been doctored into unrecognizable shape by the legislature, the guarantee is lacking that even if the new body solves the insolu ble problem of getting up a scheme of taxa tion that will satisfy diverse and conflicting interests, its recommendations will be adopted. It is useless to blink at the fact that an always difficult -question, and one so far which has proved too tough for our states men, has its difficulties immenselv enlarged in the task set for the new commission. After the question of State taxation has been wrestled with for 25 years and won -every bout, it requires a sanguine spirit to believe that the body created by this reso lution cannot only conquer it, but overcome the lar greater difficulty of uniting with it a uniform and equitable scheme of local taxation. Since it is decided to begin the whole question all over again, we can only hope that the commission will prove itself ade quate to its heavy task and wish it a happy deliverance ont of its travails. CONSTITUTION AND POLITICS. A very remarkable feature of the present Legislature awakens the protest of our con servative cotemporary, the Philadelphia Ledger. It refers to a statement with refer ence to a bill recently brought up in the House, of which the correspondent says: "This is the bill to which Senator Quay has given his consent," The intelligent for eigner or the future historian who might study onr State institutions would, upon reading this remark, refer to our Constitu tion In order to find out what provision of it endows a Senator from this State with the power to consent to or withhold his consent from State legislation. It would be hard to discover any such power in the Constitu tion; yet the perusal of the political records of the time would reveal the general impres sion that the junior Senator of the State has the power of approving or disapproving of legislation which takes precedence over the Governor's veto, it being exercised in ad vance of the passage ofla ws. The presence of this power in politics, and its entire ab sence from the Constitution, may create the impression among outsiders that this State is not governed in accordance with its writ ten Constitution. And it is not altogether clear that the impression would be entirely wrong. THE PENITENTIARY REPORT. The ieport by the Senate Appropriation Committee of its investigation of the River side Penitentiary bears out the impression already stated in The Dispatch, that the charges of corruption and crooked manage ment were not sustained. The report dis misses these serious charges with slight cere mony, but it proceeds to a criticism of the penitentiary management upon points of im portance, no doubt, but much less vital than the actual dishonesty which was charged. These criticisms bear upon the discipline of the prison, alleged lack oi order and clean liness in the hospital, the centering of too much power and responsibility upon the "Warden, and some looseness in the book keeping accounts of the penitentiary with the various counties. The criticisms are rather in the line of recommendations than of arraignment, and will doubtless receive their proper attention and result in improve ment But the claim of the committee that the completion of the new wing of the peni tentiary is not necessary is more in the na ture of argument than a report upon testi mony actually received. The committee's logic that the Huntingdon Reformatory can W m relieve the penitentiary of a large share of its inmates would have much force if the Huntingdon Reformatory was complete. But in view of the fact that the other institution is still uncompleted, it would be bad econ omy to refuse the slight sum of money necessary to complete the 'almost finished wing of the penitentiary, and thus postpone the relief it would give to the already crowded penal institutions of the State. SENATE AND SYNDICATE. The Senate made a rally in defense of the Soldiers Orphans' School syndicate yester day by its amendment to the House provis ion excluding that politico-commercial body from further participation in the ap propriations. This indicates the affection. of the Senate for the syndicate; Srofit will not save the latter from its fate. The effect of public opinion and of the repeated revelations concerning the syndi cate schools was shown in the overwhelming Tote of the House on this very point It is not likely that the latter body will be per suaded to go back on itself and public opinion at one and the same time by re versing one of the most independent actions it has taken in this session. But the evidence of the ties that bind the Senate and the syndicate is touching. In life they were like brothers and - in death the Senate seems to think that they must not be divided. A CASE FOR INVESTIGATION. It is probable that press reports from Ok lahoma have given especial and possibly undue prominence to the disorders and suf fering that have arisen in the rapid settle ment of that territory. It is natural that the correspondents .should accentuate the sensational features of that ' remarkable movement; but when we consider that 25,000 or 30,000 people have in less than a, week moved In and settled a section of territory as large as "Western Pennsylvania, the amount of collision and the mischances lrom lack of supplies appears remarkably small. With a full investigation, it is probable that the settlement of Oklahoma will appear in its true light of a triumph of American good order and capacity for self-government But there is a necessity for sharp action on the part of the Government, if the pledges of the Secretary of the Interior, that the distribution of the land shall be conducted on a fair basis, is to be redeemed. The charge is openly made that a large portion of the most valuable town sites has been gobbled up by collusion with the officers placed in charge of the territory by the Government" It is specifically charged that. United States Marshal Needles supplied his friends with bogus commissions as deputy marshals by which they were allowed to go in and take up lands in advance of the body of settlers. This assertion is corroborated by reports from various towns in which, it is stated, that the deputy marshals took up the majority of the to wn lots. Other United States officers are charged with complicity in acts of the same sort. All of them are in direct violation of justice and a practical nullification of the good faith of the Gov ernment The administration should investigate these charges and, if they are true, take off some official heads with great promptness. It would be a very severe impeachment of the present administration if its earliest ap pointments should become implicated in land jobbery at the cost of actual settlers, and go unpunished. THE MILE TROUBLES. The milk dealers and producers are still tussling with the problem of forming a com bination. The dealers yesterday submitted an agreement to the producers which com prises the essential features of a pool re striction of supply, pledge against ship ments direct to retailers or consumers, and the other details by which it is hoped to protect the profits of the middleman against competition. That any claim of superiority for the milk producers' organization in this respect would be a pot-and-kettle affair is suffi ciently shown by the debate at the meeting. "What is more important, the futility of the methods of restriction and arbitrary prices applied to this trade, is shown by the fact that they have already produced insubor dination among the shippers on the one hand, and on the other lost the dealers a considerable portion of their supply. "When our friends in the milk business perceive the fact that competition cannot be shut off, they will also see that, intelligently applied, it will keep down the charges of middlemen to a fair level and insure good supplies for the trade. At present they are chasing a shadow and hurting themselves more than anyone else. AN UNLAWFUL ATTITUDE. The labor dispute at the Dnquesne Steel "Works shows the necessity for both law and intelligent public opinion to assert their power. Both are practically defied by the attitude to which that contest has been brought Whatever wrong there may have been in the inception of the trouble, the laws of the land and the public welfare are attacked when any men or set of men proceed to the length ot declaring that they will enter a mill and take ont by force the hands who go to work. Unless the reports have slan dered the strikers and the reports of such threats appear to come from sources friendly to them they have arrogated that; power. This is destructive alike of law and liberty. There is no protection for any man and no liberty for labor, it a self-constituted body of men can exercise the right of prohibiting a man from working, or of threatening force if he' disregards their pro hibition. The strikers have the right to use peacea ble arguments to persuade others not to accept reduced wages; but they should un derstand that they cannot usurp the power of forbidding work; this could not be allowed to government in a free land. A LITTLE CREDIT DUE. The defeat of the grade-crossing bill in the State Senate1 on Thursday is one of the acts of decency with which we must credit our legislators. A measure professedly framed for the protection of life and prop erty has some claim Upon public considera tion; but when that is used as a cloak for shutting out new railroads from the princi pal cities of the State, and protecting the corporations already in the enjoyment of grade crossings, it certainly has deserved de feat When a newspaper so favorable to the existing corporations as the Philadel phia -Ledger recognizes this characteristic in the bill, and declares that it should never be passed, it is plain that the consideration of the bill should never have gone so far as it did. If any further proof of the influences which inspired it were needed, the circular recently published, in which the Pennsyl vania Railroad officers exercised their influ ence in its favor, should be sufficient to rank it as a corporation measure.. ' It is satisfactory to give the credit that is. "'' - THE due to the Senate for its action on this meas ure. While the Legislature has been very remiss in failing to pass legislation for the enforcement of the Constitution and the pro tection of the industrial interests of the State, we are ready to concede that it hastat least refrained from the leading measures designed to increase the power and privi leges of the corporation. Prominent ex amples of this sort are the bill designed to perpetuate the monopoly of the existing steam railroads and that to perpetuate the monopoly of the existing street railway cor porations. Even such small favors as the defeat of these measures in the interest of the public will be thankfully received from the Legislature. The persistence of the trust combinations is causing the growth of the feeling, which is expressed even by the protection news papers, that, in the next session of Congress, it may be well to salt the Sugar Trust, and to take the sweetness away from the Salt Trust, by abolishing the duties on bojh staples. The reduction of railway fares to New York on the Pennsylvania Railroad to ?10 50 is a grateful evidence that notwith standing Trunk Line Associationsthe forces of competition are still at work. Pittsburg has heretofore had fb pay higher railroad fares than any other city of its importance. Protest against it has done little good; but the influence which does correct such in justice is apparent from the statement of a railroad official in regard to this reduction, that "the Pennsylvania Railroad now has some opposition from here to New York and this is the reason the fare was re duced." It is almost inevitable that the course of events at Harrisburg should cause compari son to be made between the vigorous and clean administration of Governor Pattison and the prevailing policy. Comparisons are odious to those who suffer by them; bnt they are made just the same. THEreport that Baron Alphonse de Roths child lost $15,000,000 by the collapse of the copper combination will cause few tears, except those which may flow from the Bar on's own eyes. The number ot people who can lose 15,000,000 in that way is so few that Rothschild need expect little of the sympathy that flows from fellow-feeling. The world at large will not see any reason for going into mourning if the Baron should keep on going into combinations and losing $15,000,000 every time, until he is forced' to retire from such enterprises on a pittance of , a few millions. The reported intention of the licensed saloonkeepers to raise. the price of beer to ten cents a glass, and that of liquor .in pro portion, would, if carried into effect, indi cate that the liquor-selling interest is anxious to beat the record of the horse leech' 8 daughters. Mb. Whebby'b outspoken course in the Legislature evokes from the Philadelphia Press this sarcasm: "As the list of meas ures out of which he can coin political capi tal at Harrisburg decreases, he assumes a new role, that of a phenomenal objector." Mr. Wherry doubtless .perceived long ago that he can assume no better role, nor one which will more clearly earn the approval of the people, than that of constantly ob jecting to jobs in the interest of corporations or measures that are prejudicial to the pub lic welfare. Mb. Cleveland says that he has no country place except Oak Yiew, that he wants no" other and would not take one as a gift Perhaps Mr. Cleveland thinks that 1892 may bring Oak Yiew into demand again as a retreat from the White House. Whek the people of the Northwest op pose the dressed beef combination by in telligent measures to revive competition in the dressed beef industry, then they will do some good. But the attempt to establish high priced beef in the interests of the butchers, and to decrease the principal de mand for Western cattle, is a gigantio ex ample of .biting off the nose to spite the face. If it should prove as reported that the walls of the new postoffice are out of plumb, it will generally be taken as evidence that the politics which controlled the erection of that building were not exactly upright The action of the anthracite coal roads,in reducing the rates of anthracite coal to the mills and furnaces of their section, looks like a practical confession of the assertion made in these columns, that the burden of excessive railroad rates levied upon the I iron industry of Eastern Pennsylvania by the anthracite pool has been the cause of the failures in that industry. It is a healthy and commendable en thusiasm which is tnrning that old sea-dog, Captain Murrell, who rescued the passengers of the sinking Danmark, into the lion of the cities of the East It is not pleasant to notice the reappear ance of yellow fever in Florida; bnt there is some satisfaction in observing that the people of the State have learned that it does not pay to hush up the existence of an epi demic and let it spread, -for fear that meas ures to suppress and isolate it will deprive them of the revenue from Northern visitors. The statement that enough stone is here and on the way, to finish the new postoffice is pleasant; but it is rather too strong a draft on the public credulity. . The Allegheny Yalley'Railroad denies that it is actually run in the interest of the P. R. R.; and the Pennsylvania Railroad would deny, if it was brought into court, that it secured the suppression of the South Penn project. What wildly mistaken ideas the publie does get concerning the purposes of corporate management i PEOPLE OP PKOMINEflCE. MubatHaxstead's health is steadily im proving. M. Coqueltn, since his return to Paris, has been outspoken in bis admiration of the ap preciation of humor shown by Americans. THE Chinese Minister at Washington has a great admiration for American women. He says they are the most beautiful in the world. Secretary Tract returned to Washing ton from New York yesterday morning. He will leave again to-day. and will probably be absent a weak. Secretary Blaine was feeling very much better yesterday. In fact, he has almost re covered from his indisposition, but did not go to bis office, owing to the heavy rain storm. Walter W. Ecorr, Principal of the Phil lips Exeter Academy, at Exeter, N. H., f orhe $ast five years, has resigned to accept the man agership of the literary interests of a large publishing house in Chicago. General Clinton B. FiSK, the late Prohl bitlon candidate .for President, emphatically denies the rumor that lie .Intends to leave the Prohibitionists and j61n the Republican party. He claims that the Prohibition party was never in better condition than now. '$ PITTSBURG DISPATCH, ' THE TOPICAL TALKER.- The Star Fungus Haste's Advance Tennis, a la Female A Queer Contrast The star f uncus, or as the learned gentlemen of the Microscopical Society Called it at their meeting on Thursday, the GeasterHydromata cus, is one of the queerest looking things ot vegetable growth that I have ever seen. The specimen which Mr. Kennedy presented to the Microscopical Society was. found near the reservoir which supplies Sewlckley with water. In general appearance and size it is like the star"fisb, but in color It is a dark dun with specks of allghter tint upon Its points. It is always found, they say, on damp ground. Its sensitiveness to the influence of moisture is remarkable. When dry, the points of the star curl up, upon the corolla as it were, but set for a minute in a moist place they' uncbrl again and so long as wet remain extended. The fungus grows, as has been said, in swampy-neighborhoods, and is usually found clinging to the earth close to rocks or trees. It seems to be anything but common, and, as far as I can hear, has only been f ound'in one place, near Sewickley, in" this region. When the fungus is taking in water or drying ous its movements would convince the unlearned ob server that it belonged to the animal Instead of th e vegetable Kingdom. V "Little Rhodt is to have her first musical festival of any importance at Providence next week. It will extend over Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, and is dosigned to celebrate the first anniversary of tho Rhode Island Choral Association. They are to have acnorus ot 500 voices, and Carl Zerrahn will be the di rector. Harper's Weekly, commenting on the Provi dence concerts, sees in them a sign of the de velopment of the national musical taste. It is Pittsburg's pleasant knowledge that her musi cal taste Is improving rapidly, and that a great step forward is to be signalized shortly by the Hay Festival on a grand scale in the Exposi tion building. A ratheb unique experiment was made re cently in the tennis courts at the Ponce de Leon, Bt Augustine. Four young Northerners,, who enjoy the distinction of being the best tennis players at St Augustine this Season, de termined to try how much their fair opponents were encumbered by their dresses. Tbey ac cordingly borrowed garments from their sis ters and other fellows' sisters, and, arrayed In these, played several games of tennis to the in tense delight of admiring crowds of friends. The young men asserted after the- trial that they had not f onnd the skirts, etc., in the way. One of them said that he gotalong all right In his peculiar toggery, but found a fan which hung from his girdle a confounded nuisance. The sight of those four stalwart young ath letes rushing abont the courts in a very much mixed assortment of feminine garments must have been very amusing. Luckily the scene was perpetuated by some of the spectators, who possessed photographic cameras. The ladies, however, objected at the time, and do still object that the test was not a fair one. To discover the disadvantages unuer which young women labor in playing tennis to their full extent, it is claimed that the men should have donned ladles' attire in its entirety. As it was they wore their trousers and men's under clothing under the feminine disguise. V A clergyman told me the other day of a peculiar contrast he observed in the house of one of the poorest of his flock. "The man I speak of," said the clergyman, "is a fair example of the class who do not pos sess much money and do not get the full benefit of what they have, but waste their means in silly and I might say childish extravagances. His home is exceedingly humble a mere frame hut in fact but when I called there the other day it happened to be raining by tho way the first thing I noticed was a pair of lace curtains hanging in the window. He called my atten tion to them when I had talked to him and his wife a while, and informed me that he was buying them on the installment plan for $7 50. Now several panes of glass in the windows which these curtains screened were broken, and to catch the rain which blew through these holes a series of pots and pans were arranged along the sill. The contrast was really com ical." A PAMILY op centenarians. A Brother and Three Sisters All More Than One Ilundred Years Old. Washington, O. H.,- O., April 2d, The remarkable-, longevity of many people in Ohio is a matter of great interest at the present time. Mrs. Margaret Arnold, of Pickaway county, is undoubtedly the most aged person in the State. Mrs, Margaret-Arnold was born near Rich mond, Va., July-4, 1777. Her father, Robert Eiser, had a family of 12 children, four of whom are still living. Margaret was a handsome girl, and while very young married Mr. Frederick Arnold, who has been dead more than half a century. She came to Ohio in the year 1818, and settled in Chillicothe. From that place she removed to a farm in Fayette county, Ohio, and presently to Illinois, where she remained 23 years. Sho made her living at the tailor trade until age crept upon her, when she returned to Ohio. She has been living for a number of years with her son, Mr. Henry Arnold, on a thousand acre farm through which runs the dividing line of Fayette and. Pickaway coun ties. Mrs. Arnold, began about 70 years ago to smoke tobacco and kept up this practice until six months ago. She still occasionally calls for her pipe, bnt when it is lighted and brought to her she cannot smoke. There are four living members of her father's family, and each of them is 'over 100 years of age. The eldest sis ter, Mrs. Elizabeth Hillard, is living in Lynn county, Iowa, having been twice married. She is 115 years of age. The other sister, Mrs. John Bailey, is living in Dakota at the age of 109 years. Henry Ar nold received a letter from Mrs. Bailey's daughter-in-law only the week before last which stated that tne old lady was in good health and able to walk about the yard, her sight be ing good. Willi lliam Kiser. the only living brother, who was thonght to be dead, is still Uvingat the old home place near Richmond, Ya., aged 104 years. William never left the scene ot his childhood, having spent more than a century on tne same oiu larui. If there is a family in the United States that can show as remarkable a record for longevity as the Kiser family it has not been made public THE AMELIORATION OP LABORERS. " A Conference of European States in the In terests of Worklngmen. Washington, April 23. Information has reached the State Department that the Swiss Government has invited European manufac turing States to send representatives to a con ference in the Interests of the working classes, to be held atBerne next September. The subjects for consideration will be: Pro hibition of Sunday work; limitation upon the age and hours -of employment of factory chil dren; limitation of night work, and prohi bition of the employment of minors and chil dren in peculiarly dangerous, and unhealthy in dustries. ' Comparisons are Odious. From the N ew York World, 1 When Cassar crossed the Rubicon he took, the most important step of his life. When Bonlanger crossed tho Channel he was seasick. Therefore but draw the conclusion to suit yourself". Italian Hogglskness. From the Chicago Times. Now it is reported that the Italian Govern ment Is prejudiced against American pork. A government that can't raise any sort of meat but macaroni oughtn't to say anything. Hard to Understand. From the New York Herald, l How Mr. Cleveland's Postmaster General managed to find so many men incompetent .to run a country postoffice is one of those myste ries which can never be explained. . An Did Saw Discredited. from the Detroit Tribune. When Washington was Inaugurated, In 1789, did anybody hear-him say: "It won't make any difference a hundred years from now," etc.? Look at the racket in New York. No Wonder He's Expert From the Public Ledger. General Harrison is declared by the Wash ington Star to be an expert physiognomist He has had big opportunities of studying cheek. DEATHS OP A DAT. II. B.'Spoffbrrt." Rutland, Vr., April 2.-H. B. Spofford, the historian, of Clarendon, died yesterday. Be was a well-known historical writer, and a poet of more 4UUVU1U RWMAftJ SATHEDAT.-APEIL "271889. TOO MANY TURNIPS. A Reform Inaugurated In the Department of Agriculture. From the Nebraska State Journal.'! Jerry Rusk found on entering the Agricul tural Department as a member ot the Cabinet -that the chief industry of the department for the past four years has been sending out turnip seeds to the constituents of the 800 odd Con gressmen. Mr. Husk is a practical agriculturist himself and admlresrthe turnip as a nournlshing vege table that takes up comparatively little room on the farm and grows quietly to the best of its ability and without making any hurrah about It But he thought that if the depart ment was undertaking to introduce the turnip as the principal. If not the sole, crop of the small army of honest agriculturists in the country who depend on their Congressmen for seeds with which to plant their broad acres,the market wonld be so glutted that a turnip trust would be inevitable with all the distress and heartburning and newspaper denunciation that the word implies. So he proceeded to question the chief clerks and messengers of the Agricultural Depart ment as to the cause of this singular discrep ancy in favor ot turnip seed in the annals of the department The answer was soon forth coming. The demand for place among young men and women residing In the District of Co lumbia and along the borders of Maryland and Virginia among the seed distributors of the de partment was so overwhelming to the sensi bilities of Commissioner Colman that he con-' eluded that it was necessary to spend as little money as posslblo for seeds and as much as possible for packers of seeds. So the turnip was called upon to furnish seed ot low price, bnt which would go a long way on account of its smatness, toward planting a man's farm. Turnip 'seeds then became the staple seed of the bureau, and a very large number of young men and women were hired out ot the saving to put them up in little pa pers, label them with the names of every im aginable variety of turnips, and mall them to the constituents of the three hundred and odd Congressmen who wanted seeds of some sort to show that they were recognized by the Gov ernment and were not very particular what they got so they got seeds. Governor Rusk has discharged about 100 turnip seed packers, and will let his fund rest and recuperate awhile, and then be will give Us a rest on turnip seeds and send us material for the production of beets, parsnips, vegeta ble oysters, egg plants, beans and peas, and so on, so that the farmers will have a greater va riety of crops with Vhich to bless their cattle, their wives and children, and the stranger within their gates. CLEVELAND IS A CANDIDATE. He Emphatically Denies That He Is Out of the Next Presidential Race. Charleston, S. C, April 28. Some time ago there appeared in an obscure little North Carolina weekly what purported to be an inter view with ex-President Cleveland. In the in terview Mr. Cleveland was made to say that he would positively not accept the Democratic Presidents! nomination in 1892; that his public life was at an end. To a member of the edl- ' torial stall ol the Charleston World who for warded the clipping from the North Carolina weekly to the ex-President Mr. Cleveland has written as follows In regard to this particular matter: I think it la very unprofitable to attempt to run down the errors and misrepresentations of a news paper Interview. I return the clipping you sent me, purporting to contain a part or an interview with me during my recent trip to Florida. Ton ask me to say whether or not It Is correct. I shall content myself in this case with hereby saying that the report of the interview contained in the clipping is very inaccurate and I misleading. Yours truly,' OrtOVZH CLEVXIAND. In thelichtof the recent prominence which has been given to Mr. Cleveland in New York, and the continuous linking of his name with the Presidental nomination in 1892, 'it is re garded as strikingly significant this denial on his part of the correctness of an Interview in which occurs the positive statement that he would not accept a renomlnation to the Presi dency four years hence. AN OCEAN ROMANCE. Marriage of n Swedish Heiress Who Was a Danmnrk Passenger. St. Paul, April 28. One of the trains from Chicago, arriving this morning, brought Miss Frankie Bjornson, a young lady who was one of the passengers of the lost steamer Danmark; she informed the authorities that she expected gentlemen to meet her at the Union depot but no one came. The young woman was much worried, being entirely alone and without friends in this vicinity. She finally determined to wait at an uptown hotel, whither she was directed. Soon after a train front Aberdeen, D. T., ar rived, bringing a young man. who at once in quired for a young lady answering to the de scription of Miss Bjornson. In a little whllo that lady appeared to renew her inquiries for the man she wanted to see, and the two met. It was learned that Miss Bjornson is a Swedish heiress who had come to this country to meet her lover. Hans P.Nelson, a prosper ous young physician of Aberdeen, after years of separation, daring which he had laid the foundations of a home in the West She is handsome and highly educated. The two were married this evening, and to-morrow leave for their future home at Aberdeen. CAUSE OP THE BLUNDER. Two Judge Whites In the State How to Identify Pittsburg's Jurist. From the Philadelphia Press.! Considerable curiosity has been displayed since tbe announcement was made that Judge White, of Pittsburg, was in this' city. He has been confounded with Judge Harry White, of Indiana. Hon. J. W. F. White, of the Com mon Fleas Court of Allegheny.Connty, is not the kind of a man one meets every day, as a thousand or so liquor dealers ot Pittsburg have reason to know. He Is a slender man. a trifle under medium height about 60 years of age, and dresses in the prevailing style ot 40 years ago, including the "shad-belly" coat of that period. His face is a good one. lighted up by a pair of piercing gray eyes. He wears a fall beard, rather gray and straggling. Jndge White is in the third year ot his second term. Ho is a member of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and occa sionally fills a pulpit in the absence of the astor. His son, Hon. W. H. White, is a mem er of the present House of Representatives. AGAIN AT THE FORE. N Massachusetts Prohibitionists Renew Their Perennial Attack on Liquor. Boston, April 26. With the smoke of the recent battle still lingering in the air, the Pro hibitionists, undaunted by defeat, are again at the fore, renewing their perennial fight for Constitutional prohibition. This morning the Committee on Liquor Laws at the State House gave a hearing on petition of 'Rev. A. A. Miner for the 'enactment of a prohibitory statute, and a number of persons addressed the committee in favor of it Unhappy the Head That Wears a Crown, From the Harrisburg Telegraph. During the last century there have been 27 cases of insanity in the Bavarian royal family. Excuse us from being a king. PENNSILTANIA PRODUCTS. Frank Herdic, of Willlamsport caught five trout that measured six feet when laid end to end. A Jamestown baby was photographed 83 minutes after it was born. The happy father took tbe picture. A citizen of Bellefonte lost his pocket book containing $190, broke bis little finger and at tended his mother-in-law's funeral all on the same day. Dr. Swartzlander, of Doylestown, Pa., has made a new Up by plastic surgery for a patient whose upper Up had been torn oft by an angry horse. A house near Macuugle, Pa., occupied by two widows was visited a few nights since by thieves. The widows blew a horn, the neigh bors rallied, and the thieves got off precipi tately. A Tioga man hid a two-gallon jug of whisky in his oat bin. Somebody found it took a drink, and in returning the jug to its place, carelessly spilled its contents. Next ahorsu broke out and ate enough of the oats to make him drunk. Caleb Wetdner, teacher of a school near Allentown, having lost ten days by sickness, "made It up" at the end ot the term, after all the children had left school, by daily going through all tbe forms as If they were present thus drawing the full salary. AT Monongahela City a big catfish has been seen in a pool in the river for several years. Last year Will Wheeler Baw Jt and struck at It .with an ax; Lou McDonal got it once on his line; several of , the, fishermen have seen the monster, which is described as about six feet long with a head on It like a grain shovel. This year there will De an organized effort to cap ture ltr ODE MAIL-MUCH. A Plea for Parks. To the Editor of The Dispatch: I see the park question is mooted In your issue of the 24th. Why can't Pittsburg have a park, or rather small parks? This question is asked in good faith and In no cautious spirit If she has not the necessary legislation, then why not procure it at once and thus begin the good work? I do not view parks so much from an aesthetic standpoint as do many I look upon them as a necessary concomitant of a city, and especially of a city of workers and producers like Pittsburg. We should have places owned by the people, and for tbe people, where each could resort and enjoy free air, rest and shade during the houis of freedom from toil. The man of wealth has his own private park, but its enjoyment Is restricted to its owner's use. Why should not tho city provide the means for Its wealth producers to share in such luxuries, or rather such necessariesT Look upon our streets any fine Sunday morning and see the crowds of people who wander forth, some carrying children, others leading them and others pushing them in smaU wagons through and along the dusty streets and ave nues,almlessly wending their way with no place to Btop and rest without trespassing upon some body's domain. Now had we, not a grand park, but several small parks, to which these aimless wanderers eould resort, where shade and seats could be found, how differently would a walk out be en joyed? I speak more especially for the laborers and mechanics of small means. I do not advo cate sweeping .carriage roadway quite the r verse. I mean a resting and recreating place for those who seek and deserve something of tbe kind. What a pleasant feature Philadelphia's small parks are? Blot them out and cover tbe space with brick and mortar I care not bow grand and imposing in style they maybe it would not compensate for the loss and the absence of sparking fountains, cool shades and comfortable and inviting seats where the weary may rest Let Pittsburg but once enjoy such privileges and nothing would induce her to retrace her steps. Pro Bono Publico. Pittsburg, April 28, A Little Boy's Questions. To the Kdltor of The Dlspatcn: Please teU me how long It would take to count 81,000,000, counting eight hours a day and one at a time. Also, please tell me who is the richest man on earth and how much money he has, and oblige a little boy. . W. Pittsburg, April 26. A good deal wonld depend on how fast you counted. We never tried to count $1,000,000. You should seek information from people of more financial experience. And our acquaint ance among millionaires is rather limited, too. We know that the Rothschilds, the Yander bilts. Jay Gould and others have enormous for tunes. Just how much they have we don't know, and possibly they don't know them selves. We're afraid, WUUe, you are trying to get us to answer questions that have been asked you at school. That Isn't fair. About Steamboats. To the Editor of The Dispatch: 1. When were steamboats first invented? 2. What year did the first steamer cross the At lantic? W. ' Putnam. April 26. Several attempts were made to propel vessels by steam very early, bnt it can hardly be said that any of them were particularly successful until Robert Fulton began experimenting in 1803. John Fitch, James Ramsey and others worked at the problem before Fulton. The Savannah sailed from Savannah, Ga., to Rus sia, via England, in 1819, and was tbe first to cross the Atlantic, although many shorter sea voyages had previously been made by steam ships. ' Kempluskl's Case. To the Editor of The Dlspatcn: Will you please state whether Herman Kem pmski, tbe Bridgeport citizen, has yet been lib erated from the Russian prison in Poland? You had astatement about Kempinski in The Dis patch March 23. Old Reader. Petrolia, April 26. We are unable to inform you. The report to which you allude was the latest information furnished the press on the subject You should remember that Poland is a long way off, and news does not come from" there very quickly. 1 Massachusetts' Yote. To tne Editor of Tbe Dlspatcb: Please inform me what majority Massa chusetts gave against the prohibitory amend ment and also how the State voted for Presi dent last year? W,X- PrrrsBUBO, April 26. Total vote for President November, 1SS8, 344,418. Total vote on amendment April 22, 1889, 222,000. Number not voting on prohibi tion question, 122,443. Republican plurality for President, 32,037. Liquor majority, 44,600. A 30 Cent Piece of 1819. To the Editor of The Dispatch: WU1 you kindly tell me bow much a SO cent piece of 1819 is worth, and where It can be sold? McKeespobt, April 26. S. There are two kinds of 1819 half dollars, one worth 83 cents and tbe other $2. We do not ad vertise coin dealers gratis, and therefore can not help you to dispose of it Nothing Compulsory About It. To the Editor of Tbe Dispatch: WU1 you please state whether or not the schools of onr State will have to be closed on Tuesday, April 30, and oblige C. West Nkwton, April 28. England. To th Editor of The Dlspatcn: Which country, England or Russia, has the most man ot war ships? Constant Reader. Youngstowit, April 26. TBE YINE'S RETRIBUTION. It Grows From a Gravo and Reveals a Double Murder. PabxebsbuboW. Va., April 26. The skel etons of two men in a sack were found beneath the roots of a vine in the woods near James town, on the Kentucky side, not far from the W est Yirglnia line, by a boy at play. Two ped dlers stopped at the home of Harry and John Hill some months ago, and were not seen after ward. Pieces of flesh were fonnd near the premises, and the two Hills and their house keeper, a woman named Berger, were arrested. The woman turned State's evidence and told a revolting story of the butchery, telling how she was compelled by the Hills to murder one of the men: bow their bodies were hid in the cel lar and finally burled in tbe woods. The men compeUed her to catch the blood in a pan and empty it in the road. The Hills claimed the woman was their enemy, and as the bodies were not found the men were discharged. The discovery of the bodies has led to their rearrest, and to-morrow they will be arraigned for tbe crime. The evidence is so satisfactory that there is talk of lynching. The Good Old Days. Puck.3 The "good old times," Georgy, were the days when your great-grandfather was working 14 hours a day to get a corned-beef dinner and pay the mortgage on the farm yon have cut up into city lots. Cincinnatus was a better man than Nero; but he didn't have so much fun. The Duty From Points In Canada. Washington, April 26. Assistant Secretary Tichener has notified all persons interested in the question of the dutiable chaiacterot car rying merchandise between points in Canada and the United States that they will have a bearing on tbe subject at the Department, on tbe 14 proximo. Martinique Increases Its Tariff. Washington, April 26. The Treasury De partment is informed that the Government of Martinique-has increased by 20 per cent the du ties imposed by the tariff of 1887, both specific and ad valorem duties. Lucky Dog! Minneapolis Tribune. A dog need never pawn any 'of his property, for he can always carl up and make both ends meet TO A COQUETTE. She knew her eye bad power to lure Derated hearts to wear her chain, Who would her fleeting smiles endure Nor hoped to win a thing so rain. But still she twined her airy wiles Close around each captive heart Soothed their fears and waked their smiles By turns, with all a woman's art. But some there were"! oo proud to bow To fickle beauty's tyrant chain. Who scorned to ask a heartless vow And would not love a thing so vain. . . AIKEN, S. C. April 2V OBUS COLIBv GOSSIP OP GREAT GOTHAM. He Was a Stranger la the Land. IJTEW TOOK BDBZAU BrICIAI.S.1 New York, April 28. Thomas O'Connor arrived here from Dublin, Ireland, yesterday morning, and this morning was arraigned: at the Tombs Police Court for raising a row. As soon as Mr, O'Connor got out ot Castle Garden he wrote a letter to a friend in the old country. A fellow Immigrant told him to mail It as tbe first little iron box he found on a telegraph,, pole. Mr. O'Connor did it He put his letter In a fire alarm box on lower Broadway, and pulled the hook, which he supposed would summon the postman. In a minute three steamers, two trucks and a water tower dashed up. Mr. O'Connor became frightened and took to his heels, but was stopped by a policeman who saw him pull the hook. Mr. O'Connor, pale and trembling, told his story in court this morning and was discharged. George Franeis Train Keeps Up His Fast. George Francis Train has finished the eighth day of his fast and" the four hundred and twenty-first stanza of doggerel poetry. To-day ho wrote "The ElephafiTine Shrinkage of Blaine," "Crack of Doom" and "The.Begin ning of the End." The longer he fasts the more pessimistic he grows. One week from Sunday be will tell tbe people in Chlckering Hall about the Civil War, financial disaster, and black death which are abont to overwhelm tho country becanse it contains too many fat citizens. Mr. Train says he has his autobiog raphy 'Of 1,000 volumes well under way. Sev eral doctors have tried to indnce Mr. Train to cease fasting, as they fear he will kill himself. Mr. Train persists that Psycho, his guardian spirit, has hypnotized him and won't let him stop. Washington as a Letter Writer. An evening dally will publish to-morrow sev eral original letters of George Washington, which will give Americans anew peepatthe private life of the Father of his country. These letters hare never been published be fore. In one of these letters George Washing ton tells the London tailor to whom It Is ad dressed that no tailor in Virginia knows how to make clothes for a gentleman, and what a terrible job he had found it to take his own measure, which he enclosed. In another he di rects the selling of a slave to the West Indies, bnt is particular to advise buyers that the ne gro Is "a rogue and a runaway." A hogshead of rum would be taken In part payment. In two letters Washington explains his pecuniary embarrassments to his creditors in England, at considerable length. In two others he remon strates with a debtor who, while owing him 500, asks for his indorsement on a note for 500 .more. Tbe Women Don't Want to be Lett. At to-day's session of the Woman Suffrage Society's Convention, held in the Masonic Tem ple, resolutions were passed In honor of tbe memory of the women of 100 years ago, and protesting against women being overlooked in the arrangements for celebrating the Wash ington centennial. Wants Her Broker to Settle. Mrs. Gertrude Rhlnelander Waldo, of the wealthy Rhlnelander family, has sued Charles H. Schlefnln, a well-known lawyer, for 812,000. The suit has made a pretty big stir, because Mr. Schiefflin has been a prominent figure in Murray Hill society for many years. He is very able in his profession, and is a member of several fashionable clubs. Notwithstanding all this, Mrs. Waldo claims that he- got hold of her 512,000 by falsely pretending to invest for her in Wall street She says he always excited het with all sorts of stories about her stocks jumping every which way, and then got more money out of her before she regained her com posure. Mr. Schiefflin denies all this. Mrs. Waldo's yearly income is $20,000. Noted Crooks Out of Harm's Way. Another batch of crooks whom the police caught In their centennial drag net last night were in the police courts this morning. The most notorious rascal arrested was William Johnson, the "Count," who served 15 years for stealing 64,000 from the Adams Express Com pany 20 years ago. William F. Brown, alias "Bill the Brute." an English bank thief, who wears silk underclothes and diamonds, was also arraigned. James Mnllin, confidence man, who wrote "The Ups and Downs of Crooks," while serving five years, and crowds of petty thieves were given a short hearing. They were remanded until May 3, when the most of the centennial rush will be over. Phil Daly's Badgers Set Free. rt The Judge in the Court ot General Sessions to-day suspended sentence In the case of Addle Stanton and. Ella Hammond, who played the badger game, upon PhU Daly, the gambler, some time ago. The women were then dis charged. They had been In the Tombs since last December. The Only Dwelling on Broadway. The building 716 Broadway the last home of tbe Ferris family was sold by order of the Su preme Court yesterday. The, house is prob ably the only real dweUing house on that great business thoroughfare and has been a land mark for years owing to its peculiar style of architecture and the strangeness of, its loca tion right in the heart of the business world. The sale attracted a great' deal of attention. The building and tbe land upon which it stands were sold for $76,500. ' CHINA'S HEW CAREER. A Vision Before the Celestials of Many Needed Improvements. Washington, April 26. Consul Smlthers, of Tientsin, reports to the State Department that the Chinese Government has recently au thorized an extension ot the Tientsin and Tongshan Railway, which will make" it- possi ble to reach Peking from Tientsin in about three hours, whereas It now requires as many davs. The Consul says that the opposition of the Conservatives having at last been overcome. China may now be said to have fairly entered upon a career of railway construction. The Vintage of 1SSS. Washington, April 28. Ad vices received by the Department of State from Marseilles place the vintage of 18S8 at 3,010,751,152 gallons. Italy led all countries, with 80,214,000 hectall ters, and France was a close second, with 30, 105,000 hectoliters. California produced 750,000 hectoliters. - A Change for the Worse. Chicago Journal. J A Western physician named Plllsbury asks tbe Legislature to change bis name to one less suggestive of bis profession. How would Phil grave do? Changeable as a Chameleon. From the W'heeUng Beglster.3 m Bonlanger, tbe cable informs us, is a Uon In London. He was a lamb in Belgium, and a jackass in France. ' Superabundance of Soup. Minneapolis Tribune. With 3,500 applicants for consulships it looks as though the administration would have to provide a larger tureen. PHILOSOPHIC PARAGRAPHS. Merchant Traveler: The blacksmith ought to be able to give a shoer tip on horses. Boston Herald: A designing person the millionaire who built the Easter bonnet Glens Falls Republican: The moon Is most silvery when it is on the quarter stretch. -Binghampton Republican: Debtors wonld please creditors if they would emulate nature and liquidate what' is dew. " Baltimore Herald: A Pullman porter Is not necessarily dishonest because he is in the habit of going through the sleepers. Detroit Free Frets: Yes, it is true that the rich are growing richer. They work hard, live economically and never go on a strike. Texas Sittings: Some of ns fret Inwardly and some outwardly.. The former Is the better plan for our friends, but the worst for our selves. Minneapolis Tribune: The oil ot black birch brings $80 a gallon. In the halcyon days of youth the ordinary black birch used to bring tears, usually. v Washington Critic: A K-street man last week came very near getting his wife arrested by leaving $3 in counterfeit change in his vest pocket over night. SLPAUL-GIofte; BabyMcKee'a papa was In St Paul yesterday. He is a nice gentleman, and not a bit spoiled by his good luck la be - coming the son-in-law ot a republic j?. CDII0US CONDEHSATI05S. James Galligan, of Laporte, Ind., died recently, and 34 children mourn his loss. A. copy of the first folio edition of Shakespeare sold st auction in Hew York for $1,400. Mr. and Mrs. John K- Brown, of Peru, IniL. have 19 children. Including two pairs of twins. Miss Laura Jacobs, of Wappapello, Mo., was married Tuesday evening and eloped the same night. John Miller, living near Goshen, Ind., has a family of 21ohlldren. There have been no deaths and only one pair of twins. D. Stump, of Burnt Cabin, York county, Pa., can put a large goose egg in his mouth and close his lips without crushing the shell. English as it Is written Omaha: "Own? ers of dogs must register them before the lOtli of May, or they will be shot by the poUce." A young lady of East Nottingham, Pa., In strolling in afield the other day. found 8S four-leaf clovers, and some with fire leaves. A sparrow is making itself at home in a cage of flying squirrels, at the Fallon House. Lock Haven, Pa., and no jars hare resulted so far. New York has an organization known as the Handsome Club, made up of' 184 women, who are distinguished for beauty ot face and form. Stephen Richardson, of Harvey countyf Kansas, has planted three miles of peach treed on the public highway for the benefit or travelers. Out of 30 Justices of the Peace whom the Earl of Rosebery. as Lord Lieutenant t the county of West Lothian has appointed to the magistracy, three are workingmen. .Several years ago a piece of a pumpi stock was placed in a spring at Nerersink, Pa for safe keeping. It was taken out lately, and next day an eel two and a half feet long was found in it full of animation. Mayor Star enumerates the number of languages spoken on Main street Deadwood,as follows: English, German, French, Italian, Chinese, Norwegian, Swedish, Finnish, Scan, dinavian, Russian, Irish. Spanish, Hebrew, Sclavonian 14, with possibly a few over., looked. i The British Consul at Havre says that the complaints of British shipmasters against the British tars are constant. He has beard captains say frequently, "Give me Norwegians. Swedes 6r Germans, but no English sailors for me." Tney have their old-time ability assea men, but are drunken and insubordinate. Mr. Samuel Pries, residing near Steins-f vllle, Lehigh county. Pa., is happy in tbe pos. session of a beard measuring 4 feet and 9 inches in length the same extending considV erably below his knees. He is a man 71 years of age, well built weighing 235 pounds, and has been cultivating bis whisker croo for 28 years straight along with a success that probably stands unsurpassed. A game of baseball at Long Branca was suddenly terminated on Thursday by tha center fielder, in fielding a ball, falling head foremost into a nest of 32 garter snakes. He picked himself up, but again sank to tha ground almost prostrated by fright, and it was f ally half an hour before he recovered suffi ciently to walk. His companions, with their bats, succeeded in killing 26 of the ugly rep tiles, some of which measured three feet in length. A colored woman at Birmingham, Ala., removed to Memphis last falL She determined to leave her dogbehind. Just as sho was start ing the faithful animal came bounding into tha, car where she sat When she returned to Blrt mingham she did not feel able to incur the ex. pense of dog fare again and so left the animal in Memphis. Last week the dog; foot-sore and half starved, came bounding into his old home. He bad traveled 251 miles to rejoin his old mistress. Opium is gotten by cutting the capsule of the poppy flower with a notched iron instru ment at sunrise, and by the next morning a) drop or so of juice has oozed out This is scraped off and saved by the grower, and after he has a vessel full of it it is strained and dried. It takes a great many poppies to make a pound of opium.'and it goes through a num ber of processes before it is ready for the mar; ket In. a liquid state it looks like a dark strawberry jam. Chris Speicher, a wealthy farmer, enj joyed the distinction of raising the largest family in the northern section of Indiana. Mr. Speicher died several years ago, leaving 22 sons and three, daughters, all of whom are now living. He celebrated tba, marriage of each .child by givihg him a deed for 80 acres of land, disposing of 2,000 acres In this manner. The descendants of Mr. Soelcher are all the heads of large families. "William P. Stouffer is the proud sire of IS children, all living in tho vicinity of Wabash. At Rushford, Minn., the harvest of the wolf crop has lust commenced. It is reported that a Norwegian living on a 40-acre bluff farm on the Badgers, In Houston county, took in 44 wolf scalps, for which the county of Houston paid the sum of $308. On Saturday Lltile Gunderson took some young wolves to Preston and obtained $49. It is said that at Pilot Mound the boys have an old she wolf that has bred one or two litters a year till she is so old that her claws are nothing but stubs and she has not a tooth in her head. The boys feed her, and she is so tame that she goes for her food. While workmen at Gardiner, Me., were excavating for the foundation of a new build ing they came upon a liquor seller's outfit of a peculiar design. It was a large liquor cask buried six feet under ground outside of tho foundation wall to the building, the tap to it being arranged on the siphon plan, the end ot It provided with a faucet. This was concealed by a convenient brick carefully replaced after each drawing of tbe ardent and cemented in position. Above this opening a second tube connecting with the1 cask passed through tbe wall and It was through this tbe stuff was poured when the indicator ran low. The offi cers searched in vain years ago to discover that particular rum shop. Judge C. ,&. Garrison, of Merchant, ville, N. J., Is tbe owner of a remarkable hen, whose peculiarity consists in tbe fact that from the time she began to lay her first egg she se lected the little angle of the hall behind tha front door of the house as the place of her choice. As regularly as the family seated themselves at tbe breakfast table she would fly up fb the window sill of tbe dining room, re peat tba "gentle tapping" of "Poe's Baven,' and when the window was raised, betake her. self with a cluck to her favorite nest. When tbe egg was laid she did cackle until she was fairly out of tbe house. She then invariably ran as bard as her legs would carry her to tha barnyard and awakened the echoes with het triumphant notes. LITTLE PLEASANTRIES. On the tfrottoir. Why did you wink a) that girl tbat passed? "Force of habit. She's a soda water fountain girt. "To-day. A Logical Explanation. Miggs I hear a policeman was killed yesterday in the discharge of his duty. Biggs He probably didn't know It wn loaded, -Pue. v, Her Favorite Author. Mrs. Upper Te Who is you favorite author? Miss Van Aristocrat The author of my being. He gave me a diamond necklace last night CA1 cago Journal. HAPPY MAN I His youth has never ceased. Him Joy has never missed. Who could always kiss tho girls he pleased. And please the girls he kissed. ' Judgs. the psalm or stbue. Lives of plumbers all remind us We must make our bills sublime, If we wish to leave behind us Fortunes worthy of our time. Judge. That Was Just th&Xrouble. "What is it, dear?" asked his wife, passing her cool hand ove bis troubled brow: "What is on your mind!" . "Nothing," answered tbe poet, mournfully gazing at the blank sheet of paper before him, 'Nothing, I assure you." Puc. A Traveling Man. Mrs. Hashcroft I understand, Mr. Billings, that you are a much traveled man. Ullllngs-I certainly was last night. There must have been a dozen of them traveling on me at one' time. 1 think. Terre Haute xprcs. Probably a Case of Suicide "Were there any deadly weapons concealed about him?" In quired the Coroner. "Nothing but this, "replied the witness. And amid the profound silence of the spectators he placed a flask of Iowa whisky on the table. CM cago Tribune. At a Popular Book Store. Salesman You had better prder a big lotof "Mexico s It Is." I've had a dozen calls for it this morning, and we're all out. Proprietor-All right. I wonder what has started, up the sale! , - "Why, the Canadian Government. has passed the extradition treaty, and Amsricaa abscondar can't go to Caii."-CMcago XeraUti 1 --. --r ;."-