rw - ;' " - 3?Va' i 10 Fa house ok stilts. . iGail Bamilton Describes at Length Her Attempts at Esthetic HOUSEKEEPING IN THE TEOPICS. Ferdinand, Miranda and Ariel Earing a Perpetual Picnic TODIE THE SWATIXG ALGAEOBA TEEES rwKrrrKS fob ths cisrATCn.1 So the tempest is over, the kings and the dukes are gone, the rightful heir is in pos- session and the trouble now is -with my household gods and the fire onmyhearthl I am all frivolity and leathers! Poor Ferdinand! I know it I sometimes, yes, often, think I am not half good enoueh for him; bnt I try, and think I do improve a little, little by little, and anyway I take good care of Ariel. I am sure of that. She grows strong on her feet yes, she my tricksy sprite like to a nymph o' the sea ay delicate ArieL To-day she stood on tip toe to kiss Eerdinand'a picture and then came quite across the room to kiss mamma too before I knew what she was about, and when I arrayed her for breakfast in the lovely Qretchen gown, she was wise enough to bedelighted with herself. The truth is the looked just a beauty and I could hardly eat for watching her. All the men were charmed at her coquettish way of smiling shyly at them and even our dear old ogre was fairly bowled over into exclaiming "Well, well, if you aren't sweet this morn ing!" Worthless I may be, but I am at least come to the right place. In these summer - isles of Eden lying in dark purple spheres of sea and in pink and green and a thou sand colored spheres of sea, people enjoy themselves. It is their business. They sit quietly and let the full beauty of the scenery impress itself upon them. Even the usual 'enthusiasm is abandoned, and only the look of complete happiness tells the blessed enjoyment of pure air and perfect sunshine such sunshine as we never see at home a cool wind blowing over the moun tains and the grass like velvet. It is the dry season, but it rains every day not like American rain, tor it is either a flood or elsea pretty affectation of a shower out of a clear sky, a dainty little dimpling Ariel of a shower! I do not wonder that many, many Americans who come here are so fascinated by the climate that they never care to return to the States, though, as I write, the mosquito rages and an occasional flea, or one or two cockroaches, generally give a little tone to the occasion. But every "thing is so deliciously fresh and green that twhen the cool breeze blows there is little (left to be desired. The thermometer is 'nothing to go by. It sticks at 85 degress, )and hades itself would have no effect upon it. Miss Clare last evening spoke regretfully iof missing the twilights. I think folks must have to hunt for things to complain of! THE HEAVENLY HOLOKUS. "Missing the twilight," when each day's decline is made a lovely, lingering exhibi tion of rarest color in a pale bine sky ! Superb color pieces every evening, and at dawn a magnificence in the east that is never to be fully grasped by one who has no baoy, and so probably never sees the dawn. Just at this moment a glance shows me through the branching semang tree a vision of loveliness, the green mountain "Tan talus" seen over the swaying algaroba trees in the foreground, and a mist of rain blown in from sea by the winds, clear sunshine overhead. Miss Clare, who ravished my susceptible heart with her lovely dress white, with corn-colored ribbon sash, a lovely white hat with corn-colored flowers, and white gloves. I do not see but people dress as well here as in the States, which speaks volumes for foreign missions. Good clothes are good Christianity, as far as they go. I should like a haft-dozen holokus and eight or ten frilled and fluted and laced and hand-embroidered white gowns, and then I could keep clean, per haps. It takes lots of clothes to keep decent here, and more than lots to look well. I shall be said to be "slangy," because I say "lots." If I say "loads" it will be quite the correct. thing; but there is no moral or aesthetic, or any but a capricious, difference between lots and loads, wherefore it takes lots of clothes. But I shall never cease to feel a profound respect for the Kanaka character, because of the tenacity with which they cling to their heavenly holokus. It was surely a stroke of cosmicai genius to hit upon that comfortable compromise be tween the costumes of the torrid and the temperate zones. Still, Jeremy Taylor would not have said, "Going out were never so good, but staying home were better," if he had seen Miss Clare talking climate in the climatic harmonies of her costume. As for work, there is verv little done. Even washing day is like a &ew England picnic in this blissful country. Eia, guilt less of shoes and stockings and arrayed in a calico Mother Hubbard, carries her tin tubs out to the brookside under the spreading greenwood tree, and draws water from a pipe nearby by means of the hose; and there she stands all day leisurely rubbing away in the nice cold water, throwing it down the hank into the mountain stream when she wishes to draw more. TVOKU IS A PLEASTJBE. I think I work as hard as anyone. Workl as if I ever did anything else. The prevail ing fiction relative to my drone-like exist ence is no longer to be received. I work, and ceaselessly. I am always busy, writ ing, reading, mending, marketing and ever lastingly attending to the teething and colic Ariel, tricksy sprite, makes work, but does none; always has a spell of something when she suspects me of any design in the way or writing. I presume the present "rush of business" may be a sort of providential veDgeance wreaked on me "because of the past years of wilful enjoyment; bnt I don't care. I am glad I had a good time once, even at the expense of the present vaccina tion and all the rest "Well, and with all of it I neier, no neter, had such a good time as I am having now. I believe italics are womanish, so I will keep at it; and a "good time" is distinc tively American as against English; there fore I love it, as Browning did his star. We are under our own vine and oleander bushes, and we are just about the happiest creatures alive. It is quite "sweet simplicity" style, very comfortable and only a little disreputa ble. The house is built on stilts, about six feet above the ground, with a lattice-work ritticoat. There is a barn somewhere, but have not seen it, and we have hens, be longing to the neighbors, it is true, butthey lay their eggs under our house, so what is the odds, and when they begin to respect property rights I shall buy some hens of my own. The rooms are of good size, and the big yard is a park of algaroba trees beauti ful, feathery trees, which somewhat Tesem ble our willows, though not suggestive of sorrow, like weeping willows. If we think of trees like Buskin, the algaroba all might be some wayward, frolicsome, winsome lassie, so cheery do they look, tossing their light, graceful branches low to earth, and again lifting themselves airily to heaven. They are the embodiment of all that is ligl, cheerful and happy. They furnish us with firewood as well as sentiment, for they grow rapidly and need a good deal of trimming. HOUSEKEEPING TJNDEB DIFFICULTY. We have boueht an ice chest, mc.it raT and stove of the late occupants, also dining table, koa and some kitchen utensils, also the China boy, Ah Chang, who serves as cook, and serves well. I have sewed like a house afiie for a week, and am how the proud possessor of lour table cloths, a lunch c.oth and doylies, a dozen white napkins, besides a dozen given me on the way out. a dozen crash towels and eight glass towels. Xunch cloths and doylies are a good 510 a set, so my long cherished conviction that no housekeeper should be without n dnzpn jtx , is quietly sat upon (slang), and an ordinary .red carer does duty instead, wjthao napkins, in the kingdom to match it, and I bemoan myself. Oh! why did I not bring "my things?" Why did I lose the golden oppor tunity when every opportunity here sizes up to diamonds in value, and it we don't just have to come downl Still it is lovely for Ferdinand apd .me to sit rocking inelegantly in our own -wicker rocking chairs in the reception room or par lor, or one might even call it a drawing room, if that sounds more grand and aesthetic, and also costs nothing. And we have all the other aesthetics what, if it were not for art. we should call poverty stricken. Straw matting on the floor, washed-out papers on the wall, all soTts of makeshifts christened "effects, my lovely felt table cover, really pretty though it is testhetic, lounges and chairs in goldy brown, f rost-bitten-fern-with-the - western-sun-shin-ing-on-it brown, scrim, curtains, plain, lovely quality, hemmed and drawn work all by hand, to be looped with ribbons of old gold (when I get the gold!) and all the decent pictures we can muster. Our bed room ought to be an elaborate parlor, but we had not the elaboration, and we wanted the airy, beautiful room to sleep in and the view to look at when we awake Punch Bowl sweeping around Tantalus and Bound Top, queer and shapely. The sunrises are beautiful in the mountains. Ohl every thing is beautiful here. Ariel plays con tentedly on the veranda all day long. There are boards up to prevent her from falling down the steps, so she can do as she pleases, and in consequence she pleases to be very happy about it," JUST TOO .ESTHETIC. Wc have nothing testhetic here except the scrim curtains, which are a good deal scrim mer than the others, and I made both pairs and a bran, fire new redwood "Cheffaneer," the hnilder called it, but I call it a prettv tough looking chest of drawers. It is cer tainly ugly enough to be high art and cost like everything, in this fair land no not everything, for each day I buy vegetables and fruits at such queer little "bits" of prices. We get all the strawberries we three aesthetics can eat at a meal for 10 cents, let tuce for 5, more than we can eat, and a big bunch of bananas for S. One dining room is too esthetic for any thing. It is just Eastlake and Morris to gether, squared off for a square meal. In one corner is a sideboard, shabbv but useful, to be disguised somehow when I get to it, four dining chairs, homely but 'strong, a chair for the angel, all the glass, silver and china necessary to keep us from starving, 'and such a list of groceries! Pickles and preserves mostly, for wc did not know what else to begin with and must lay in something just for the look of the thing. And now we wish we had ''our things," yet know we must wait months for them to come sailing round the Horn. Our inestimable blessing is the good Ah Chang, whom we took with the house, who cooks plain things nicely. Of course I do the fancy! ! Jnst fancy! ! ! There, I must not waste so much ink on exclamations. Besides, that is a foolish feminine trait. But if I don't exclaim I shall not puntuate at all, and I like to make 'em !!!!!! The iact is, poor Ferdinand, whose house hold gods are gone out and has no fire on the hearthstone, is as happy as larks- with his frivolous, good-for-nothing butterfly Girl-of-the-Period wife. We are indepen dent and go-as-you-please and paddle youf own canoe and all the rest of the slang. But then we have our periods oi perfect pro priety. At ihe table it is: "My dear, can't I help you to some beans?" "Yes, madam, you can." And then when I sing out in elocutionary tones. "Ah! Chang!" there is a mildly re proachful : "My dear, the bell!" And I hasten to retrieve the error by ringing vigorously in Ah Chang's face, who seems to appear by magic, being barefooted. Gail Hamilton. BOOillKG THE T0W2J. An Arizona Editor Who Docs Not Believe In OrcrdolDt the Thing. Detroit Free Frees. The last issue of the Arizona Kicker con tained the following: Explan atoby The absence of our so ciety column for the last three issues seems to call for an explanation. If we happened to made a five-line announcement that Mrs. Colonel Dash expected her brother-in-law direct from the California penitentiary on a certain date, and only a four-line item to the effect that Mrs. Judge De Soto imported her bustle direct from Zanibar, there was an ill-feeling which stirred up the entire community. We Boom While the towns about us have been bragging of their progress, we "have kept quiet and got in our work with out kicking up a cloud of dust Brag is all right in its way.TJut we don't propose to come out with a double-leaded, scare-head article every time a citizen hangs a new front gate. Booms are good enough in their way, but there must be merit behind them. With no disposition to claim this as the only growing town in Arizona, and with no desire to kill the growth of rival towns, we humble call attention to the fact that since January 1, 14 new saloons, three poker rooms and four retail tobacco stores have been opened in this place, and at the present moment 18 men are engaged in building a jail capable of accommodating 30 prisoners. We have done this without any brag or bluster, and we propose to keep right on in the same quiet fashion, leaving the outside world to judge foritself as to where it shall seek new homes and in vest its capital. THE EDITOE'S APOLOGL And He Docs His Best to Explain tho Trcth of Thlncs. Editorial Sauk Haplds (311ns.) Sentinel. We apologize for mistakes made in all former issues and say they were inexcusa ble, as all an editor has to do is to hunt news, and clean the rollers, and set tvpe, and sweep the floor, and pen short items and fold papers, and write wrappers, and make the paste, and mail the papers1, and talk to visitors, and distribute type, and carry water, and saw wood, and read the proofs, and correct the mistakes, and hunt the shears to write editorials, and dodge the hills, and dun delinquents and take cuss ings from the whole lorce, and tell our sub scribers we need money. We say that we've no business to make mistakes while attending to these little mat ters, and getting onr living on gopher tail soup flavored with imagination, and wear ing old shoes and no collar, and a patch on our pants, obliged to turn a smiling coun tenance to the man who tells us our paper isn't worth $1 anyhow, and that he could make a better one with his eyes shut. ni Opinion. Tommy (who has been brought in to call on the revolutionary centenarian) Did George "Washington kiss her? His Mjother Xes, deaf. Tommy Well, if he didn't lie about it be vu a bLaned tnnl rvtMrr J" r- THB YANKEE DAREDEVILS. Their Recklessness, andContenipt for Danger Fills the World's Eye. THE LATEST FOOLHARDY FEAT. A Cincinnati Boy Plunges From the Highest Bridge in America, 285 FEET, INTO 12 FEET OF WATER rCOBRESPOXDEXCEOJ' TUX DISPATCH. Cincinnati, April 27. There are some practical minded people who have ques tioned the utility of that fatal ambition which prompted Longfellow's young man to go up higher with his Excelsior banner. Some of them even execrate the young woman who made an honest living at coun try fairs all over this broad land last sum mer by climbing into the empyrean in a balloon, and then sliding earthward on a parachute. They say it was a pity that Steve Brodie did not break his neck instead of his ribs when he made the champion leap of his life from Poughkeepsie bridge last November; and when Prof. Odium was taken out of the water of East river, dead, after his jump from Brooklyn hridge, their verdict was "served him right." But the time has come when the most un-enthusiasticfclevel-head must admit that these leckless and dangerous feats are yield ing a utilitarian harvest of wholesome fear, coupled with admiration, in the minds of foreign governments for a country which The Scene of the Jump. produces in such numbers people who will risk death for fame or notoriety. When Mr. Bayard gathered; the slack of Sackville-West's trousers in one hand and his coat collar in the other and heaved him beyond seas into the bosom of Mother En gland, the British lion was astounded; but instead of making a fuss about it he roared as gentlv as any suckling dove; the popu lar verdict being that a nation which could produce the parachute voider, (at about that date the latest American sensation in Lon don) had a right, through the might of its Undoubted courage, to be decisive and flat footed in diplomatic matters. EXCITED THE BBITISHEBS. No one who was present at one of Bald win's parachute descents in England last summer needs to be told what a sensation they created among the phlegmatic natives. The first descent made there this, year was made the other day by a Cincinnati man, Mr. C. W. Williams, and a copy of the London Sporting Life just received gravely chronicles the fact 'that nothing will satisfy the spectators but that Mr. Williams shall have a gold medal. It is because of the new reputation which Jonathan is acquiring, as an individual and a nation, for absolute contempt for personal danger that Bismarck has pulled in his horns and practically relinquished plans which all the world knows he had ma tured for the seizure of Samoa. Great oaks from little acorns grow, and last Saturday's London Spectator is au thority for the statement according to a cablegram that the iearlessuess and gener osity exhibited by a crew of American sea men have washed away all traces of bitter ness that the Sackville incident left in British minds. These men were the crew of the Trenton. As the British man-of-war Calliope worked her way in the face of the late disastrous tornado ont of the harbor of Apia into the open sea, which was her only chance, she passed the disabled Trenton, and to the surprise of her officers and al most disheartened crew she was greeted with a cheer from the whole force on the doomed ship. That cheer, under the circumstances, was an evidence of a courage that knows no fear of death, and the Britons know it. Hear what a late issue of the London Tele graph says: , "Consider the scene, and the matchless hero ism and generosity of this Yankee crew. Al most sure of instant death themselves, they could see the Queen's ship fighting the hurri cane, and appreciate the gallantry of the effort with the generous pleasure of true marines. Wexlo not know in all naval records any sound which makes a finer music upon the ear than the cheer of the Trenton's men. It was dis tressed manhood greeting triumphant man hoodthe doomed salutjng the saved. It was pluckier and more human than any cry raised upon tho deck of a victorious hue of battle ship. It never can be forgotten, never must be forgotten, by Englishmen speaking of Ameri cans, That dauntless cheer to the Calliope was the expression of an Immortal courage." BEATS THESI ALL. To come from the contemplation of a sub lime scene like this, to the antics of a boy who jumps into space for the mere reckless determination to beat the world, involves, of course, a drop; but that the boy has cour age developed in as high a degree as the sea men noted above no one will deny. "If the man really jumped from High bridge into the Kentucky river, he has beaten us all by 60 feet; and whenever he wants to do it again, he can make $1,000 by it," is the remark with which Steve Brodie, of New York, met the news that he is no longer the champion plunger of ihe world. A hundred miles south of Cincinnati, on the line ot the Cincinnati, Kew Orleans and Texas Pacific Bailway, one of the most won derful monuments to the skill of American engineers spans the Kentucky river. It is the highest bridge in America. Looked at from a distance it1 is a mere spider web. ! thrown across a chasm between two lime- l .. Li-ir- -J i-j l Stone uiuiis, uuu buppurieu uy tupenug masts, which reach down hundreds of feet to a couple of broad and solid stone piers. The river is broken above and below by bowlders of limestone, which jut above its surface; but immediately under the bridge's center span a pool 12 feet deep lies black and quiet At noon on the 11th of April, Mere dith Stanley, a wood sawyer, 22 years old, weighing about 115 pounds, and having the general air of a diffident school boy, jumped lrom the bridge, fell without a waver from the perpendicular line assumed at the be cinninn through 285 teet of air and splashed like a big stone into the pool. His canvas shoes rebounded lrom tne river s rocuy oeu, and when he was taken into n boat on the surface he coughed up some drops of blood. In an hour he had recovered from the shock, and now he is willing to make, the jump again whenever Mr. Brodie or his backers see fit to put up $1,000 which they have in formally offered for a repetition of the plunge. Brodie's greatest lean was from Ponch- ,1 ' ljJ-. -vtJ:-! e ,oUt..vj. A " PITT5BUEQ: DISPATCH, tance of212feet, in which he sustained a lracture-of two of his ribs. His next high est was from Brooklyn, bridge, July 23,1880, 148 feet. To the pedestrian who looks from the swell of the Brooklyn1 bridge, to the green water far below, it will seem incredi ble that the Cincinnati laborer could look calmly down upon a shallow 12-foot pool twice that distance below him, and then without a tremor jump down to it. BEADY TO DO IT AGAIN. That Stanley made the jump there is no possibility of doubt, the testimony of the bridge watchman, as well as that of two reputable gentlemen Mr. William H. Jones, of Covington, and Mr. William M. Johnstonlof this city who witnessed it, agreeing in every particular; and he seems to.be insensible to fear, being willing to perform the feat again, although he de clares himself positive that it would be cer tain death for Brodie. "I am willing to do it for S1.000 again, at any time," he said, "andjis I never want a favor that I am unwilling to grant to others, you may say for me that we will pay Mr. Brodie himself that amount when he duplicates the jump and comes up unhurt, as I did. He may wear shoe-weights- and body pads, or anything else in that line that ho maj- wish, while I jumped and will jump again wearing nothing but a pair of thin cotton trunks and. canvas shoes. But as I do not care to' have Brodie's blood upon my hands, please say for me that it will be better for him to discard his shoe-weights, it he accepts my offer, as they will make him gather such a momentum in his fall that the 12 feet of water in the Ken tucky river will hardly check him, and his legs will certainly be broken by the con cussion against the" river's bed. "The fact is, Brodie cannot make that jump and live. His method of bridge jumping consists in hanging from the bridge and then dropping. I am willing to make a head-first dive, if that should be required; but no money would tempt me to hang and drop as Brodie does. He is simply court ing death. "As everybody knows, the dangerous part of the business comes when we strike the water, and all that is needed is command of one's muscles when falling, so as to come down in a perfect straight line. Brodie de liberately robs himself of his muscnlar com mand at the start, when he suspends the weight of his body from his arms previous to falling. He goes away from the bridge as helpless as a falling stone, and should a current of air displace the center of gravity, he would strike the water like a log." H. A. W. A SOM OF A SHIRT. The Ravneeg lUndo by Laundries Upon Men's Underwear Chemicals Used by tho Chinese Which Hot tho Fabrli A Remedy Wanted. rwniTTEH FOB TSX DISPATCH.1 Those poor unfortunate individuals who, like myself, are reduced to the dire necessi ty of sending their white shirts to the laun dryI believe someone called it the "foundry" may have observed the dilapi dated condition in which they generally re turn. For sometime I was wont to send my shirts to the steam laundry. They usually came back stiffer than buckram and of a lively cerulean tint, strongly suggestive of Prussia. Had this been all I could have endured it. But they also came back as circumstances might determine with the one ivory button wrenched off and the .cloth to which it was sewed torn along with it.or else one or both sleeves were dislocated at the shoulder and left hanging by one or two stitches; or else the back of the shirt was split, as a sailor would say, "from clew to earing;" or else the wristband, or necks were frayed out in such a manner that the stiff, rough edges cut my hands or neck like a saw. All this, be it observed, with shirts new out of the shop. So much for washing by machinery. Disgusted with the above state of affairs I bethought me of trying the natives of the Celestial empire. I have no prejudice against the Chinese. For a considerable time my shirts came back in a state of tolerable preservation, and I- began to imagine that my troubles in this direction wereatan end. Bainbows! Too bright to last. Like all dreams of happiness on earth, I found this also vain. The Chinese I find are becoming civilized, that is to say tbey have acquired the capacity for looking after their own interests, to the exclusion of those of the outside "barbarian." Civilization to them means supreme selfishness. This way of looking after their own interests may be somewhat short-sighted, but that is of no consequence. After two or three washings I found that my shirts became so tender that they would tear when the slightest strain was put on them. They were like the Irishman's shirt, "tinder as a chicken for as quid's 't is." How was this? Mirabile dictu the Chinese were actually bleaching my shirts with hypochlorite of lime, commonly called chloride of lime! How did I find it out? I sent a white handkerchief strongly marked with silver marking ink. When it returned the mark was obliterated. On examining the spot, I fonnd the mark converted into chloride of silver, easily re moved by an appropriate solvent. The marks on my shirts bad disappeared in a similar way. The chloride of lime had so weakened the fiber that it had no tensile strength. White shirts are usually made of cotton, all except the breast and wristband, which arc made of very sleazy linen filled up with starch. The cotton is more easily disintegrated by chloride of lime than the linen. Hence the cotton goes first. Is there no remedy for this state of af fairs? Must I wash my own shirts or em ploy a washerwoman? Or must Tget a wife? If the latter, of course I shall have to get a cheap one, since I cannot afford to purchase an expensive one. Or perhaps there is some other way out of the difficulty. De. G. Hat. TEEDICT IN A HOG CASE. The Judge's Brief Charge Enoueh to Con. vlicc the Jurors of Their Dancer. Brooklyn Eagle, s Little Judge Waring, of Gravesend, is noted for the brevity of his charges when he has a case before a jury, which does not frequently happen. In his efforts to be brief ne nas been Known to become obscure. Ac cording to one of his friends, he had before him recently a man charged with stealing a pig. The testimony was taken and Judge Waring turned to the jurors and charged them as follows: "Gentlemen you have heard the eyi dence. The indictment charges the pris oner with stealing a pig. This offense seems to be on the increase lately. The time has come when it must be put a stop to, other wise, gentlemen, none of you will be safe." Ihe'man was convicted. Only Following Directions. Irate Hotel Keeper I've caught ;you in the act! What do you mean by lowering your luggage, and thin sliding down this rone to the ground ? Departing Guest You told mi-yesterday that if I didn't pay up to-day, you'd fire me. Well, tberejs a notice 4n .my room which reads-' "This.rope td be use'd only in T 1.U.1 VI-H4S. ""-jr-i ., 1 - STJNDAT, APKID 38, PRATING FOR OFFICE. Tricks Besorted to by Seekers After Fat Official Positions. TALE OP A SENATOR'S WIFE'S PUP. Knowledge of Family History an. Aid to Office Seekers. LIJE HAIPOED THE COMING HUMOBIST ISrSCUI. TXLZGBAU TO Till DISPATCH.! Washington, D. 0., April 27. "I never in my life felt the wisdom of being a praying man until Ihe other day," said one Of the thousand office seekers who are in the city to me yesterday. "You see," he went on, "down in Arkansas we do more shooting than praying, -especially In poli tics, and its generally more effective. Over in Georgia it's the other way. Senator Col quitt comes from that State, you know, and he can give your man "Wanamaker points in the game and lay him out cold. Well, maybe you've met Bill Brown, who wanted a postoffice down in Georgia. He can beat all creation praying when heLjince gets started, and has something particular to gain by it. There were two or three other iellojrs after the place, and they had as good or better backing than he had, and it looked as though Bill would be knocked out. One dayat the White House he happened to catch the President when he wasn't pushed by the gang for a few minutes, and he cleverly turned the subject from office seeking to church matters. It cropped ont in a moment that he belonged to the same denomination as Harrison, and the Presi dent was interested at once and began to ply him with questions in regard to the con dition of the church in the South. Just as Bill was getting warmed up the game was interrupted by the entrance of a new player; but the President was so anxious to hear the end of Bill's yarn that he actually asked him to call that evening and have a long talk about church affairs in the South. AN OFFICE SEEKEB'S SCHEME. "You can bet Bill was on hand, and he entertained Mr. Harrison in great style for an hour or two. When he thought it was about time to go he suddenly broke out with immense religious fervency: 'Brother Harrison, I am told you have family pray ers morning and evening, and nothing would give me so much satisfaction as to join you before I go.' Of course Harrison could not object, and the game was started. The whole family was there, except the ba bies, who had been put to bed, and Bill was asked to lead. He made a grand bluff at first jump, and played some passage in the Bible that contained the words, 'What soever ye ask in my name it shall be given you,' and then he chose the hymn most ex pressive of his feelings, 'Plunged in a gulf of dark despair,' and then they all got down on their knees, and from what Bill tells me he made the greatest effort of his life. Of course he wouldn't be so profane as to repeat his prayer, but it must've been a corker, for from that moment he had a sinch on the postoffice, and a few days after got the appointment" THE SEKATOE'S PUP. "I know one which is pretty near as good as that," said another office seeker, who had listened to the Arkansaw Traveler's story. "Yon know Senator Blank; well, a friend of mine had to have his backing for a place, but the Senator had another man. My friend went there time after time to per suade the Senator that it wodld be to his in terest to espouse his cause, but the Senator couldn't see it,and my friend was in despair. Every time he went there a high bred little dog,4he,jet of the Senator's wife,. would come. into the reception room and jump up in his lap. He hated dogs, but he didn't dare to kick the phist out of the room, be cause, you know, an office seeker's got to take anything, even from a dog. One day he heard the Senator's wife give instruc tions to the boy in the hall to be careful not to allow the dog to escape from the house, as she would rather her husband would lose the Senatorship than that she should lose that pup. A HAPPT THOUGHT. "A bright idea struck my friend. The dog was one of these little things, no bigger than a minute, and as my friend went out he stuck the phist in his overcoat pocket, and carried it off to his room. The next morning he saw in ihe papers an advertise ment oflering a large reward for the recov ery of the animal. When he called that day he found the Senator's house in mourn ing. Buttons had been discharged from tending door, detectives had been employed, and the city was being scoured for the dog. He said nothing. The following day he called with the pup, .inquired for the Sena tor's wife, told a romantic story of how he had in his anxiety about his appointment wandered down into the dismal region of Murder Bay, and had there recognized her dog in possession of an evil looking negro, and by paying liberally had got it back. Mrs Blank was bo overjoyed that she wept, and, what was more interesting, protested that anything myfriend wanted in the way of an office he should have, or else she would apply for a divorce from her husband; and you can bet my friend used the situation for all it was worth. He got the office he wanted and the other fellow had to take an other place." HE KKEW HIS MAK. "Well," said another bystander, "if your friend had known all about the Senator's family history he might have played an other game. There's young Elton, whojives in the Senator's district, and wanted a law clerkship in the departments. He called on the Senator and sent in his oar J. " 'If I am not mistaken, you are a son of my father's old friend, Judge Elton,' said the Senator when they met. " 'Yes,' said young Elton. " 'I am very" glad to meet you,' said the Senator. 'What can I do to make your stay pleasant?' " 'Well, Senator, the fact is, I am after an office, and I want your assistance. I re member a great service my father rendeied to yours once, and I thought you might be able to reciprocate.' "The Senator flusbed, hesitated a moment and said: 'I will do anything you ask,' and voung Elton cot the office within a few days, for, you know, Senator Blank can get- anytnmg ne wants lrom -the president. Young Elton's, father had defended the Senator's father in a case of depositors against a bank of which he was President, and which had failed under peculiar cir cumstances, and had actually prevented, through the law's delays, the imprisonment oftheold man for illegal nse of the bank's deposits. It's a nice thing to know your man." THE EETOBT COUETEOUS. On "the row" there is one of the wildest Bohemians of the press it has ever been my lot to .meet. He stops at nothing. He will greet a President or a Prince as famil iarly as he would a fellow of the quill. If snubbed, he accepts with such good humor, and often gives such a direct cut in return, that no one can feel offended with him for very long. , The other evening he called at the residence of one of the new officials of the administration, a high official withal and a vain one withal, and one whose orig inally swelled head had assumed an im measureably additional expansion the mo ment he received his appointment. The sprigof Bohemia unconsciously entered the arlor with a cigar in his mouth. The. em ndiment of dignity looked at him a mo-. men in speechless indignation, and then said,.sternly: "Are you not aware, sir, that It Isfiot mc iiivfM miuij w smoKC iuu gentleman parlor?" Quick as a flush, the Bohemian took In ilia mlfnniinn anrl anarfttraA a. Iim IiIa... 1im .,w W..VIH..VU mu Milan wsu.ua flO UJOtT .1TO Smoke from his mouth; "Perfectly, slrV I nevsrdo." ... , - . -! TheVetort was such a crusher that lie 1889. official invited the young man to sit down, and meekly told him all he knew. A COMING HUMOBIST,. " 'Lije Halford will come forth from the White House a humorist of the press, four years from upw, when the whirligig of time, brings about another change of administra tion." said one of the quill-drivers of "the row this morning. "Didn't you ever notice that he has the build of the profes3 sional humorist? Look how sad he Is con tinually, As Dickens said of Paul Dombey 'when that ronnf trp.ntl&man Tea nt awnv to school, he looks as though he had taken life unfurnished and the uphol sterers were never coming. Paul would have been the funny man of Punct if he had lived, that is admitting it to bepossible that by any mistake Punch should secure the services of a funny man. Lije is sure to blossom out as soon as he gets back to the sanctum. He has the divine melancholy -nhich make the whole country laugh as it is embodied in Bill Nye. The grave atmosphere of the White House is all that is necessary to complete his train ing, The sombreness of things there, the profound seriousness with which the drollest and most grotesque things political are taken, must awaeen the latent sense of humor that dwells in melancholy men, and which, once awakened, sheds its genial efflorescence over all that is hnman. Such environments must inevitably produce such result." E. W. L. PITTSBURG TO SEND 1,000. ShoWHI Contribute One-Third of the Chil dren for the Inaugural Jubilee Blore Teachers Going to Pnrin. Pittsburg will not send a very large quota of school children to the Washington In augural celebration next Tuesday at the Allegheny Parks. Less than 1,000 is the estimate. This number will be supple mented by 2,000 children from Allegheny. As far as the Pittsburg school children are concerned, their experience at the Allegheny County Centennial, and the distance for many of the schools, are responsible for the limited number who will take part in Tuesday's cele bration. The 1,000 who will go will be quite gayly ac commodated. They are all to meet at the corner of Sixth and Liberty streets, where there will be decorated vehicles to receive them. The procession is to be headed by the Great Western Band, thence to tbe parks. Should the weather be unfavorable there will be no exercises by the children. The Pittsburg children will wear badges of pure white ribbon with an appropriate inscription. Yesterday the following named people de clared their intention of joining the Pans educational party and paid the necessary de posit of Sot): Miss M. E. Hare, Mr. J. K. Bayneand wife, Mrs. Petty, Emma Youne, Anna Flack, Susie Mltcbel, Emma Bridge. A circular has been received announcing a cliango in the route td that previously stated. Tbe ex cursion starts July U, The first destination will be Glasgow, tbecce to London, and then Pans. By paying $14 SO more the excursionists can re main a week longer in Paris. Next Tuesday the public schools will be open from 8 till noon. Were the schools to close on this day it would extend the date of -closing them to July 1. At tbe exhibition at ihe Birmingham school last Wednesday, Thursday and Fnday even ings, tbe school hall was crowded nightly. A pleasing and varied programme, in which over 400 children had some part, delighted the acdi ences. Too much credit can hardly be given Miss M. E. Hare and her corps of teachers for its successful issue. Educational Echoes. The Teachers' Guild will hold a regular meeting next Saturday. The Prosser benefit takes place at the Grand Central Kink to-morrow night. Next Saturday will have an added attrac tion to the city teachers. It will be pay day. The annual teachers' examination for Pitts burg will commence Slay IS at the Central High School, and will likely continue five Sat urdays. -Db. B. C. JH.LSOX, of the High school, will give "A Talk on oology" at the Pittsburg Central Circle of the O. L. 13. O. next Thursday evening. Mb. Robert McCabgo, a former teacher of music in the Pittsburg schools, but now of Franklin, is the latest candidate for Supervisor of Music, made vacant by the death of Prof. Prosser. Miss Eaton, of the Shakespeare School, Twentieth ward, is obliged to be absent from school duties just at present. A dislocated arm, received while getting on the cable car, Is the trouble, however. A minute, containing a glowing tribute to Miss Edith McComb, the lately deceased teacher In the 'Washington schools, has been prepared by hsr fellow-teachers. An engrossed copy will be sent to her mother. The Birmingham and Hnmboldt schools are the only two schools in the city that have a teacher, employed by the School Board, to give instructions weekly in calisthenics. Both schools are jnst being supplied with Indian clubs and other accessories needful. ,The six large trees In front of the North School have been removed, much to the sorrow of the teachers and the sparrows. The direc tors removed tho trees on the supposition that they were poisonous. Some ol the teachers would like awnings to take the place of the trees. The Seventeenth ward schools will receive visitors the threo latter days of this week. The Fortieth street school will be open to the pub lic on Wednesday, the Bayard on Thursday and on Friday the Main street building. Each room, in connection with the display of manu script work, will have a programme of music, biographies and select readings. The display ot manuscript work will be on exhibition at night. Br the recent action of the Legislature the appropriation for the maintenance of the pnbllc schools have been largely increased. Pitts burg, under this rule, will be benefited some thing over 810,000 what they had last year. This wilt be good news to the ward school teachers, who, according to all rules, are entitled to an advance, because the High Schools teachers and tbe officials In educational circles have al ready received an advance in salary. t Tho Centennial at Tombitons. Tombstone Epitaph. It looks as though Tombstone would cele brate the anniversary of the first inaugura tion of the first President of the United States. A game of baseball will take place in the afternoon between the boys of Port Huachuca and tho Tombstone nine, and a suitable observance will be held in the evening under tbe auspices of one of our local societies. GREAT AUCTION SAI.K. Lnco Curtains, Heavy Curtains, Portieres, upholstery goods, plushes, piano and table covers, easels, screens, shades, etc, for a few days only, at 2 p. M. and 7 o'clock in the evening, to close out onr en tire stock regardless of cost; now is your time for genuine bargain; private sales in the morning at H. Holtzman & Sons, 35 Sixth st. Catarrh Cured. A clergyman, after years of suffering from that loathsome disease, catarrh, vainly trying every known remedy, at last found a recipe which completely cured and saved him from death. Any sufferer from this dreadful disease sending self-addressed stamped envelope to Prof. J. A. Lawrence, 88 Warren st, New York City, will receive the recipe tree of charge. Never Too Lato to Blend. Mend what? you will say.- Why, your old clothes, to be cure, and Dickson, the tailor, of C5 Fifth ave, cor. Wood st, sec ond floor, is the man who makes old clothes look like new for a trifle. Telephone 1558. Pearson, the tender Of his profession. He is at the head el them all. His cabiriet photos are beautiful, ar tistic and true to nature. Don't BIUs tbe Special Sale Of velvet carpets and Smyrna rugs at Ed ward Groetzinger's, 627 and 629 Penn ave nue, this week. Smoke the best La Perl a del Fumar clear Havana Key West cigars. Three for 25c. G. w. uchmidi s, yo ana hi .cutn Ave. IlLltaE watches a specialty; low prices a I ieriWv at TJn.nph'w No. 295 "Fifth in. H " WIM . - x ? ' PKSTSrVwP r " TpSE? k, , TeT" NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. CHEAP FOR CREDIT j CHEAP FOR CASHfi Whether to Pay Spot Cash or Accept the Liberal 0 ! Terms of Credit PICKERING Offers is for "We have all kinds of Household Goods nentl OTtvamalir ltlavi1 ot,1 Afi.v n.vmBnt of seasonable goods is necessary. We are keeps the stock moving. So-it is always fresh goods that will allow any tempting .offer of jjreicr w give vuu jcxxhoi-uuiiao uuux'ij ai jjiich www .uau ju vwm..m iu.u - whereon CBEDIT, to get and keep your enstom, and don't want the reputation of a "CHEAP JOHN" in ourbusiness. , ' Hundreds of Rolls of Carpets. Everything from the cheapest Eag and Ingrain np to the very finest Eoyal Wil-' tons and Brussels. We are better prepared than ever before to supply every want in i Carpets, ,and with plenty of light and plenty of the newest and freshest things in Car- pets, Eugs and Mattings of every kind, we know that your visit will be-both an enjoya- j ble and profitable one to you. . The Most Artistic Furniture in Pittsburg. f Anything you wish in Parlor Furniture Divans, Couches, Easy Chairs, Bookers, fnll Suits and odd Chairs, etc., etc. Sideboards, Wardrobes, Cabinets, Chiffoniers, :Hat Eacks, Hall Stands, Dining Eoom Chairs, Extension Tables, Mirrors, Parlor, Stand and Hanging Lamps, etc. etc. Beyond question there is no finer, larger, or cheaper collection in Pittsburg. Elegant Chamber Furniture at all Prices.. Office Furniture the most varied assortment. Things positively original. Work manship the finest. Shapes, Carvings to please the eye. Prices to please the pocket. Stoves, Banges, Ice Chests, Beirigerators, Ice Cream Freezers, Tinware, Clocks, Biic-a-Brac, Pictures, etc. AH for Cash or on Easy Payments. PICKERING'S OLD RELIABLE HOUSE, COE3STEE TZEHSTTIH: axLd. FEZnTIT READ THIS CARD. IP YOU WANT FURNITURE THE PLACE TO BUT IS DAIN & DASCHBACH. THE TIME HOW. To appreciate the quality and beauty of our Furniture, seo that displayed by all other reliable dealers of Pittsburg and Al legheny before calling on ns. COME POSTED. To gain the full value of the bargains we are offering, price the articles you want elsewhere, then see ours. We have the stock, guarantee perfect satisfaction, and we will sell you anything you require in our line at prices bound to please. DAfN & DASCHBACH, 111 SmitMeldSt, Pittsburg, Pa. apa-91-wrsu HOTJSBHOLD CHNA ! Decoratea Tea Sets, $4 00 an! Unwarfl DBcoraMDinner Sets,$12 00 anfl Uuwartl SMteflMer Sets,$4 50anaU5ward HAVILLAND'SFRENCH CHINA, THE J. P. SMITH LampiGIass & China Cn 935 Penn Avenue. I ap28-WT3U DON'T BE BY RELICS OF ANTIQUITY IN THE INSTALLMENT BUSINESS. They are Jealous of the success of W, H. TH0MP50N & 305 "Wood S-toeje;, "Who are now the acknowledged leaders in the business. Ther carry In stock line of dependable goods shown in this city, establishment in town. FOR CASH "WTien you are ready to buy come and see -SEE FURNITURE, CURTAINS, CARPETS, BEDDING, 27. B.With' each cash sale of'$5, or eaei I'oiwofllalwj'sCelWfttSlivKlMWalAwtlwtretailatllS. ' e- You to Sa- and Carpels, and they shall he onrs on" our PTTn if TTnTl W!lTlt them. Tt O STWMftl TnntlOrl np with the times. Our immense business and in the latest styles, we don't deal lajr specially reduced prices on PAPEB, but - DAYS OF MIRACLES IT PASSED, A Cripple of Three Tears Standing Cured in Fifteen Minutes By Dr. Smith, at 502 Penn Ave. Dr. Smith Is performing some of the most wonderful cures ever witnessed In Pittsburg. Scores and hundreds of invalids who have hitherto been unable to find relief, from their sufferings are being-restored to health in large numbers through Dr. Smith's strange magnetic power. It is exceedingly Interesting to seo and talk with tbe vast number of Invalids saf ferinjc from all manner of complaints'' who are brought to the doctor for his favor able or unfavorable opinion ol their diseases. It is also gratif jlns to observe tho change that takes place in many of these seemingly helpless cases.. Scores of invalids who are so weak and feeble that they have to be carried to the doc tor in chairs and on beds are restored to health in a short time. Some are cured by one. some by two magnetic treatments, wkile others re quire more. The following very interesting case was cured by our magnetic treatment: Mr. John M. Eakin, who resides at Eau Claire, Butler county. Fa. was a great sufferer for three years. Ho was carried to Dr. Smith, at No. 02 Penn avenue, in a hopeless condition He eould not walk or more without the aid of, two canes, and (or the past year he had not been able to bend over sufficiently to wash his face. "He was sufferins from what had been pronounced by 12 eminent physicians as psoas abcess. These physicians pronounced his case incurable, and told him that there was no help for him. He then consulted Prof. Scott and Dudly Allen, 31. D.,ot the Regular School of Medicine at Cleveland. O. Ihese imminent tnedicafmen gave him no encourage ment,as pus nad, in tneir opinion, aireauy formed. These are the statements given to Dr. Smith by Mr. Eakin when h came for treat ment. After one magnetic treatment of abonS 15 minutes' duration, Mr. Eakin was able to bend over and pick up a pin from the floor and was able to wait without pain and without the use of hl3 canes. Mr. E. remained in the city several days after receiving the treatment and was able to go about the city from day to day without never a sense of pain, weariness or lameness. He returned to his home, at'Eau. Claire last Saturday, and maybe referred to. Mrs. Gough was cured of dyspepsia and rheu matism by four magnetic treatments. Theso cures were performed without a single dose of medicine. Scores' of cases equally as interest rn" could he given if we had the time and space. Dr. Smith will deliver an illustrated lecture to ladies and gentlemen at the Grand Opera House next Sunday afternoon at 2J ,plock. The lecture will be free and every body is invited to attend. Dr. Smith cures all forms of female com Dlalin3 without the use of Instruments or ex bosuro f tne person. He also enres pOea and rupture without the use of the knife, or pain to' the patient, nor detention from business. He treats and cures cancers in less time and with less J?ain than by any other known Dr Smith fs permanently located at 503 Penn avenue, where everybody can go from 9 A. X. till 7 v. Jr. The doctor consults free and cures after all other means fall. He treats every form of disease Known to humanity. Goto HJ2 Perm avenue and consult him If you wish to get well. Letters of inquiry must contain two stamps. aPM 3 DELUDED at XOWEB PEICES than offered OR CREDIT, ns. "V7e will save you moMy. OUE OILCLOTHS STOVES? EScX l 4. xi. &. i oredii sale of 9&, w fivs frw' " cfcarg ?- CQff "SiIIbiiisiE thflSeSI byjaayj M ,i i.T.T "ITT,"- - - 'MZJ "afefcv5ft?.?.J J.3ft-C . . . ....x. iSW.