SDNESDA.T, MA.T 29,- STABL1SHED .FEBRUARY 8. 1&K3. Vol,, No. 111. EntcreCatrittsbnrgrostoaice, oyeinbcrH, 1SS7, u second-class matter. irisiiiessOfflce--97aEd 99Flfth Avenue. News Booms and Publishing House 75, 77 and 79 Diamond Street. Average net circulation of the daily edi tion of The Dispatch for six nionlbi ending May 1, 1SS9, 28,051 Copies per Issue. Average net clrcnlatlon of the Sunday edi tion of Tiro Dispatch for April, 1SS9, 46,143 iplts per Issne. TEBJIS OF THE DISPATCH. POSTAGE FltEE XX THE CK1IED STATES. artrr Dispatch, one Year. ? S 00 ailt Dispatch, Per Quarter 2 00 'ailyDisfatcu, One Month 0 JAH.T Dispatch, Including bunday, one rear 10 00 Oailt DlsrATCH, Including faunday, per quarter. , , 250 ailt Dispatch, Including Sunday, one month SO CXDAY DISPATCH, oneyear 2S0 .'jtEKLY Dispatch, one year 125 The Daily Dispatch Is delivered by carriers at icenls per week, ormcludlngthebundayediyon, liOccnU per week. PITTSBima. WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 1SS3. POLITICAL CE0SS-QUESTI0KS. Pointed questions were the order of the iy in the English and Prench Parliamen ry bodies yesterday. The questions af ded the opposition in each case an oppor lity for prodding np the Government with iarp stick; but in each case, also, the vernmenf s faithful majority rallied to support, and vindicated its course by the answerable logic of the heaviest parlia ntary battalions. .n the English Parliament the question .as why the English Ambassador at Paris bsented himself from the opening cere tomes of the French Exposition, which slebrates the French Revolution. The re ly was an excuse that the Prench people re divided as to the event which was cele irated. This was the best excuse that could ie : given; but as the Prench people's Gov rnment, which has been placed in power by he people, conducted the ceremonies, it would appear that the English Govern ment's care for the susceptibility of the minority is somewhat excessive. In the Prench Chamber the irrepressible minority wanted to know what was being done in the Jtoulanger trial, and, as the Government ad absolutely no answer to make, it refused ) permit the question which produced the sual result of uproar. This practice of parliamentary questions i one that is wholly foreign to onr system, ometimesa minority in our legislative odies asks for information by a resolution, hich if at all uncomfortable is quietly shelved. The opportunity for political cap ital afforded by such queries is entirely ab ent here. As to any result from the ques ons the two examples afforded yesterday tow their practical uselessness. It is just as well that this form of inter jgatory cannot be grafted upon our system. f our statesmen had this chance for the reduction of campaign ammunition thev ould never do anv business at ali. ALMOST AS SLOW AS TOCLE SAM. .Early next month the Baltimore and Ohio "Railroad is to open with a show of ceremony its new Pittsburg depot. Pittsburgers will hail with pleasure the commodious, even if slow, recognition by the road of the patronage of this quarter. The older gen eration, however, can hardly fail to reflect now long it takes for railroad promises to ftjear fruit. It is nearly 20 years since the B. & O. people promised, on the extension to Cumberland, a new depot and many other attractive features to this city ; and lol it is at hand only a neck or two ahead of the gea new postofHce. But then the great ennsylvania line has also a tew unre eemed pledges of the same sort still ont--acdlng. Despite the best efforts of the nagination of the city reporters that oft iscovered, frequently promised Seventh avicnue depot is still very much in futurity. G00D FOB THE SMALL OPERATORS. It is interesting to observe the revival of that report about a combination often lead ing firms in the coal business, who are gpine to bny up all the little operators at an tpenditure of about twelve million dollars i nd secure a monopoly of the river coal " "ade, by which they can dictate prices to 1- ie consumers all the way down the river. lis story reappears in some of the journals , the East, and naturally the low tariff apers make sarcastic remarks about the cessity of a duty of seventy-five cents er ton on soft coal to make such a combi ition possible. But the fact of the matter is that such a imbination is not possible now, and it is nlikely that it ever will be. Although -lie example of successful trusts makes some people bf short-sighted business views anx ious to follow that policy in the coal trade, -veryone cf moderately good foresight hows that such-a policy is impossible. The ily effectf such a combination would be i brlng'in thousands of square miles of un sveloped coal territory and to make the arket ,xery active for firms who could art small coal mines for the purpose of dling them to the combination at high rices. The cost of a river coal trust would Jl almost exclusivelv on the people who ould pay 512,000,001) for property with the ew of forming a monopoly. The prci ould go to the small operators who might 'bought out. THE CBOKIK MUEDEE. Tie mystery of the Cronin murder in hlcago, is reported to have been disclosed y a confession from Sullivan, alleged to j ave been one ot the participants in the ime. Chicago confessions are not always i be regarded as the most indisputable evi ence until they have undergone the test of adicial examination; but if this one proves j contain the disclosures as reported, it is .satisfaction to know that there is every irospect of speedy justice for the assassins. Jhe general "theory that the crime was the outgrowth of internal feuds in the Irish revolutionary organization only makes the necessity of enforcing the law more urgent. If any society leads to organized assassina tion it is time to have a practical demonstra tion of the supremacy of the law; TOKECESSABY begulatiok; The Xew York life insurance interests are rejoicing over theysnactment or a law which forbidsalifeinEnranceagent to share his com missions with a prospective policy holder, or, in6th'er words, to offe- a practical reduction ofjfales in older ta t eenre business. This niU, it is though., ceik the practice which has lately come Into rogue. The argument fcsx been advanced on be ftaff "of this prohibition that it i for the I nrDOSe "of brcventinir discrimination inst I -o-like the prohibition of rebates on rail road charges. It would be difficult to find a more shallow argument than tie one based on that comparison. ( It was necessary to prohibit railway rebates because the exclu sive privileges in transportation granted to the railways by the State enabled them to crowd disfavored shippers out bf existence and build up a favored class. No such grants and no snch powers have been given to the insurance companies. Just as in the case of private traders, they can exercise the privilege of making rates and conces sions freely without danger to the public If a man cannot get as low rates from pne company as another can, he can try else1 where, and is not obliged to take a policy at all. The fact Is that the prohibition Is a feeble effort to prevent a reduction of the cost of insurance to the public. The fact that in surance agents are ready and willing to do business by sharing their commissions jith their customers, is a tangible evidence of what the pnblic has for some time expected, that the cost of insurance is kept at a high figure by (excessive commissions. This action of the leading companies in securing the passage of this law practically avows that they are ready to continue the gap between what the customers pay and what the companies receive. The agents may draw big commissions, bnt to let a part of the commissions go toward reducing the cost of the insurance to the policy-holder would be" violation of the traditions of insurance and is therefore not to be thought of, Of course the effort is a very weak one and will defeat itself. Even if it could be en forced, its only effect would be to make it plain to some sharp insurance manager that the surest road to large business wonld be an equal reduction bo thof commissions andrates The enactment of the law is therefore unim portant ; but its gravest aspect is the very shallow comprehension of economic law, which it discloses among the managers of the great insurance corporations. "With that policy kept up by the insur ance companies the public will find it very easy to adopt the resort of putting its sur plus savings into savings banks and real estate in vestments. OTHERS MAYBE RESPONSIBLE. On the surface of the case the defiance of the law at the Braid wood, III., coal mines looks like extremely lawless and high-handed proceedings on the part of the laborers. Of course the rioting, destruction of proper ty and defiance of the authorities assumes that characteristic; and .the law must use all its powers to restore order. But, perhaps, if the full facts of the case were laid before the public as widely as the single fact of the rioting has been, it might be seen that the responsibility for that unfortunate state of affairs is not confined to a lot of ignorant miners. If we are not mistaken, the operators in these mines some time ago refused to pay wages which American miners generally re ceive, and after a strike, filled the mines with Italians. 2fow it is understood to be the case that the Illinois operators, having rejected the inter-State scale, are beating down their miners still more. They have filled their works with foreigners having no knowledge of America.-! laws. The. men have no stake in the country, and.no idea of any method of supporting their cause except that of force. The natural result of filling an industry with labor of that class and trying to keep it down is disorder, and it will be revolntion if the policy is kept up long enough. Theonly hope o' maintaining self govern ment is in the enforcement of the lair. It should be understood that when employers favor the proletarian and ignorant class ef labor because it is cheap, they put the causes at work which produce just such effects as are reported from the Illinois coal mines. A GLADSTONE WAHTED. Every now and then that wonderful old leader of men, "William Ewart Gladstone, -astonishes the world by some evidence of the juvenility of his spirit. He cannot do anything by halves. If he takes up a job he finishes it out of hand if possible; but, anyhow, sticks to it untifit is completed. His last exploit s his capture of the driver of the cab who drove over him on last Priday night. He did not call npon anyone to help him, but saw to it himself that the fiery Jehu was arrested. His efforts for Ireland show precisely the same spirit. He will pull off the British lion from the oppressed isle just as he called down the impetuous cabby. , It is a pity that some of our public men do not emulate Mr. Gladstone's ever-green energy. Here in Pittsburg, perhaps, some one is needed to urge on rather than restrain the drivers of cabs. But, for what the cab bies lack in impetuosity, the drivers of ice ahd beer wagons, in particular, more than make up. The cable car is not so relentless as the ice wagon; the wheels of Juggernaut not more death-laden than those of the beer wagon. We fear there is small hope for a local Gladstone to arise, but he will receive a hearty welcome if he arises. C0BEUPT POLITICAL METHODS. Senator George P. Edmunds deals a gentle blow at corrupt political methods in The Forum this month. It is not a blow that will make the politicians who walk in ways that are dark tremble, neither will their faces blanch with terror, norrepentance come to them on the heels of fear; but a good many people who are not dealers in corrupt politics and who do not believe that bribery, perjury and other crimes are incidental to not a few of our elections are apt to ponder upon Senator Edmunds' qniet words of warning, and to be deeply moved by them. What the Senator from Vermont says about the prevalence of bribery and kindred crimes in politics is not remarkable lor its novelty. He does not pretend that he has anything new to say. Still the position he takes on the question is rather novel. Though he is shocked by the mani fest corruption of politicians on both sides, he thinks there is no reason for despair or discouragement in the hearts of those who believe that truth and justice and virtue are as essential in social and political affairs as they are everywhere agreed to be in the personal intercourse of men. There should be rather a hope and confidence inspired, he thinks, by the knowledge that corrupt prac tices can be brought to light and that it is possible for persistent, unselfish and brave patriots to make those well as odious. practices futile as The means by which political crimes can be prevented, Senator Edmunds finds in im proved registration laws; elections under provisions securing the privacy of the voter and the secrecy oflhe ballot; public canvass of the votes and publication of election ex penses; severe punishment for bribery, at tempts to register or to vote illegally; large limitation of foreigh immigration, and many other cognate measures. The value of Senator Edmunds' sugges tions is principally that they help to keep this great question before the people. The neonle fan and will rnr t the evil if they are brought to an understanding of its enormity. , When it is asserted by General H. B. Boynton, the Washington correspondent of the Cincinnatti Commercial Gazette, that the administration has been so busy with the distribntion of patronage for its first three months, that it has not had time to consider qnestions of policy, it is cogent to ask whether there is any hope that the great Issue of spoils will be disposed of in time to let Congress consider the tariff question this winter. The doctors who cut up Bishop, the mind reader, find some difficulty in establishing the fact that they did not do it,prematurely. There Is talk that they may be put on trial for manslaughter; and naturally, they are now themselves a good deal cut up about it. The report that the Oil City -Derrfcjfc will be removed to Toledo, following the move ment of the other Standard Oil prop erty to the Ohio fields, is hard to credit. We can hardly imagine that the esteemed Derrick would be available in its regular role bf assuring the people out in Ohio that reports to the effect that the Standard Oil Company may refine Ohio oil, are baseless inventions of a mendacious imagination. It is annonnced that Senator Biddle berger, of Virginia, is writing a novel. Senator Biddleberger's previous achieve ments render it a foregone conclusion that the novel will be a realistic one, and that the reals will be very vividly portrayed. Bismaeck's idea of advancing the Ger man interests by, running the St. James Gazette as a German organ in London, is only useful as a proof that he does not un derstand the Anglo-Saxon view of a tree press. An official organ of the German Government, published in a free country, is injurious on account of the valuable white paper uselessly destroyed in printing it. The indiscretion of passing that resolu tion calling for information about the use of city employes in municipal elections, proves not to have been irreparable. The resolu tion was headed off in Select Councils, by a voteof21to7. The report that Christine Nilsson has just paid ?10,000 in Paris for a painting of theJIadonna, is perhaps none of our bnsi nesss, but as this is accompanied by a re port that Madame Nilsson will soon make a tour in the United States, the American public may be pardoned for intimating that if it has got to pay for the painting it ought to be consulted in its purchase. , The big volume of ore receipts is an evi dence that the low prices for iron are relied upon to produce their natural result of en hanced demand, and in course of time stim ulate activity and better prices. The fact that a Legislature is to be elected in KewlYork this year is made the subject of an appeal by the Press to the Re publicans to see that Republican legislators are elected. The record of that body makes it more cogent to 'appeal to the public, to see that an entirely new breed of legislators is elected, without regard to party lines. Once more the long-expectant, but never theless grateful, public receives the pleas ant information that work is resumed on the new postofiLc building. Pasiob Schobb, who committed suicide at Baltimore did not add anything to the dignity of the occasion by leaving a letter putting all the blame on a woman who jilted him. If he wanted to be revenged on the alleged faithless one he should have lived and pretended to perfect happiness. mSOVAL GOSSIP. THE sixtieth birthday anniversary of Prof. Billroth was elaborately celebrated on May 6 by the doctors and medical students of Vienna, The genial "Bob" Burdette will deliver the annual oration before the Fhilomathean So ciety of Pennington Seminary, New Jersey, next month. , M. Caesot, President of the French Repub lic, in his youth served a regular apprenticeship in a carpenter's shop, and Is a clever craftsman at that trade. The New York Fress says: If you care to know the meaning of Nacirema, the odd name of General Felix Agnus' beautiful country home near Baltimore, spell the name of his newspaper backward. A quaint fancy, surely. An Ambassador once asked Prince Bismarck how he managed to end an interview. "Per fectly easy," was the answer. "My wife knows pretty accurately when people prolong their visit beyond the proper time, and then she sends me a message that I am wanted." He had barely finished speaking when a footman knocked at the door, and informed his master that the Princess wished to speak to him. The diplomat, blushing and confused, beat a hasty retreat; without stopping for the ordinary for malities of leave-taking. BenAtoeBvarts is about to start for his country home In Vermont to spend the sum mer, says tho New York Sun. The senior Senator of the State gives famous dinners to the guests, and always stipulates that on these occasions big crystal pitchers of milk shall adorn the table. Then he can get off the joke which delights him, and brings a smirk to the guests who haven't heard it before. It always pops out when the champagne bottle is plumped down on the table by the milk pitchers. "Heln Yourself to enamnat-nB or C.PJUf ILh',1PS2!JS milk," says the Senator, looking at a guest and he quizzically adds, '-They cost the same." And then the Senator tells of some ot the'de lights and expenses of fancy farming. I Feom his childhood, even when spoken of aj "the wondrous child" at Glasgow when tlAe panels of the doors belonging to the concelit room were torn out in the rush to hearhiml Carl Bosa always confessed that the aim of his whole life was the attainment of a place las leader of an orchestra. He had been eminently successful in his career. His marriage "ith Mile. Parepa was signally happy. He hadfAllen desperately in love with tho beautiful Gvree'k, and traveled with her all throngb America with the Bateman company. During the jounfney he talked so Incessantly to persuade her tj listen to his suit that at last, as she would say.l "1 was forced to accept him, or I should hare gone mad for want of sleep." From the mcment of " his marriage everything went prosperously with mm. IIGHTHING STRIKES A PrLPITf Knocking the Preacher Down fnd Render lne Hiln tJnconscioni DANVHiE. ILL., May 28. Rev J. C. Mvers. of State Line, ind., on request of Rev. Mr. Steele, of New Liberty Chrisftian Church, Fountain connty, Indiana, filled the pulpit In that church Sunday. Durinz th e evening ser vices, abont 8 o'clock, a small cloud was no ticed to overcast the eky am i Immodiatelv pafterward a blinding bolt of lightning de- scenaeo, sctuck ana aestroyec the church chimney, following along the stc vepipes which ran around the room, crushed t ie two stoves into fragments and tore up th floor. After leayihg the chimney a portion of the bolt sepa rated and ran down the cbandellier oyer the puipit, suuuuk mr. myere. wuo wis preaching, in the back of the bead. He turr ed a Somer- sault, fell heavily to the floor and was thought tobeaeaa He lay in an unconscious condition for more man nail an nour. several of the varee con gregation were shocked to insensi tjility, but soon recovereu. ,un tne Dack or Aljr. Myers1 ueaui, wfjeiu tug Uuiuill BtraCK 1 braised nlace about the size of a rim pirn. Is a face appears burned and bis sight nt strayed. He was brought to this city 1 sar. 1111 any de- or treat- meat wis. morning anu toe oculist, Dr.' fears that the loss of vision will be pei acta complete. iPoland naaeat THE TOPICAL TALEER. A Few Sketches of City and Snborbnn Life Taken In Yesterday's Snnshlne. The dnst was aggravatlngly thick on Penn avenudahrl, Sntler street yesterday morning, bnt it didn't prevent a good many pilgrims, la den with baskets of flowers, from trudging Out I to the cemeteries of Allegheny and St. Mary. xtaraiy a came car mat went out irom town yesterday but ooro a party of women and chil dren bound npqp the gracious, kindly work of decorating graves In the great kingdoms of the dead. r The Allegheny cemetery is looking its best. The constant rains have made it more profli gately green than usual for Decoration Day. If to-morrow is fine, those who celebrate the day by visiting the cemetery, will enjoy a de licious feast on the congregated beauties of the country side. Already yesterday the minia ture stars and Btrlpes waved over many a grave, and hundreds of decorating parties were scattered among the tnrfy mounds and imposing monuments. By contrast with the park-like scenery of the cemetery the massive but not striklnsly beau tiful gateway recently erected on Penn avenne and now surrounded by a waste of sandy soil, looked more ont of proportion and taste than it will no doubt when the approaches to it are laid out in drives and lawns. There does not seem to be much disappoint ment felt by the doctors of the Mercy Hospital staff over Governor Beaver's veto of the ap propriation. They have been accustomed to see the appropriations for-their hospital vetoed often before. One of them said yesterday that he didn't ex pect to see a bill for the Mercy's benefit get past the Governor's hands until the State choso a Pittsbnrger to fill the Governor's chair. A Pittsbnrger could be relied upon to understand the unsec tarian character of the benevolence dispensed by the good sisters in the hospital, and to favor any attempt to pay the debt owed, by the com munity to a splendidly conducted Institution. ... j "A lady whose bebevolent disposition and adipose tissue were both very well developed, wasted a large amount of sympathy yesterday morning, at the Twenty-eighth street crossing of the Allegheny railroad, on Fenn avenue. The gates were lowered to allow a locomotive to cross the street, and the old lady I hare men tioned was one of those who were checked at this point. AS the gates rose and the old lady started to cross the track she chanced to; glance to the left she was cross he city. ward and she saw a party of children standing about a little girl who lay tlth her head npon the rail. The position of tie Child was enough to excite curiosity. Bu I the old lady jumped to the conclusion atone s that tho small girl had been run over by the 1 comotiye. She rushed toward the child with of "Ohl" wild cry When she was about five feet from .the sup posed victim of level crossings, the latter jumped up In alarm and with her companions made off. Bhe had been merely listening (to the vibra: tion or the rail caused by the retreating loco motive. Not everybody understood why that old lady frowned as she boarded a cable car and did not exhibit a benevoleit symptom all the nay Into town. THE FIRST SIHCEAHE WAS.- Model and Description of the Maine, a Gennlno Ironead Teasel. Washington, May S3. Reports from the New York Navy Yard fare to the effect that nearly all the steel flames for the armored cruiser Maine are now in place, and that grati fying progress Is bein made'in the construc tion of the vessel. Tt give a visible evidence of how the ship will aprpear when completed, a most elaborate model about four feet long has been made at the "Warhlngton Navy Yard, and placed in Secretary! Tracy's office. It repre sents a vessel of ovefi 6,000 tons as fine in lines as Is consistent wJT.h Jthe great power re quired to bear up &ie enormous armament of about 40 guns, laukine from four great ten inch rifles down to soiall revolving cannon. Tho horsepower Jiff ill be 0,0UO, calculated to drive the vessel v. 17 knots speed, bnt the principal point otfinterest abont the ship is the fact that, aparf from the monitors, she will be the first vesseV built since the war that is really an ironclatV relvimr not on nrotective steel deflective Pecks, but on a sold belt or heavy steel a: or encircling her vital parts, lis of construction are most All of the act: cunningly wrou bt in miniature in the model, tan engines and the delicate even to tne ca machinery of t ie two 80-foot torpedo boats will carry on her decks. which the Main ATEAMPlPEDDLEE'B JFOETUiN'E. He Becomes a millionaire nod Slakes Sev- era! People Wealthy. Nashville. lay 23. State Representative Jones, of Benton county, passed through here this morning onl his way to Plalnfleld. N. J to look after a lance fortune left to some of his clients. Aboutj so years ago a man named Latimer was tramping through North Carolina with a peddlers pack on his back, when he fell in love with a poor girl narped Sarah Mitchell whom he saw fworking In a field. He at once proposed to hir father to work in the girl's place.f or his Woard if she would go to the house. In a few wee ks he married the girl and the two went to Plalnfleld. N. J to live. They prosperea f.nd five years ago Latimer died worth a mil Hon dollars. Half of this he left to bis relative! and half to his wife. A few we eks aeo the widow died, leaving something over $500,000. One half of this she willed to j the children of her brothers and sisters, wno had removed to Benton and Hum phries colunties; Tennessee, soon after she had gone to 3S'ew Jersey. Mr. Jones says the 250, 000 will vbomo to about 20 heirs in this county and Humphries, and will lift them out of pov erty into affluence. One of the family, A. H. Mitchll, is a trustee of .Benton county, and lCUl VY lUt) Hill ClUtUW. A TDETLE KING. The Monster Defying Expert Anders and Their Stronsest Tackles. ATCHOGTTE, L. L, May 28. The big turtle thrlt is monarch of Swan Pond here has shown hi'nself this spring as fast as ever, and on warm driys holds himself listlessly upon the surface of tljfie water to be admired by anglers. All at tic mpts to catch him have proved fruitless, and tihe old fellow is gaining added reputation for h!s elusive ability as to net. and trap. That a salt-water turtle can enjoy the fresh water and j thrive upon it is amply proved by the condition and liveliness of the Swan Pond sea reptile. I The turtle was captured in the Grpat South L5y several years ago. andatthat Umeweiehed ou ponnas. iie was locsea up in a parn not rar from the pond. In the night the old turtle managed to free himself, -and proceeded to walk out of the rear door, ana, crawling through a hole in the barnyard fence, made tracks to the fresh-water pond. His path was easily traced the next morning. Since that time the turtle has been frequently seen in the pond, and every year ho looks bigger, and evi dently has good feeding. No Wonder Tuej're Crnaty. From the Boston Herald. J No wonder sea captains are crusty when they are pilot bred. DEATHS OP A DAT. Pcleir W. Chandler. Special Telemm to The Diipatch. BoSTOlf, May28.-Hon. Peleg W. Chandler died this morning. Be had not beeq well In years past, bnt his death was sudden, being due to heart, fallnre. Mr. Chandler was one of the most dis tinguished members of the Suffolk bar of a gener ation ago, a man whose name was synonymous with professional learning, executive ability, and eonndjndgment of men and affairs. He was a co temporary of jemluent lawyers of the old school. Including snch men as Webster, Sumner. Choate. Oeo. 8. Hllliard, and Geo. X. lilgelow, and among the last survivors of that coterie or men whose lives are a part of the country's his tory. He was a life-long friend: of Governor An drews, they being at college together and former associates In tne Whig party, and during the civil strife he was frequently consulted By and ad vised with the great war Governor. Mr. Chand ler was therefore peculiarly fitted for the .task he undertook in his "Life of Governor Andrews." In his profession he achieved remarkable success, and between the age or TO and so years he per formed a wonderful amount of work; and It is said that for years he overtaxed his energies. He was very snccessfnl with Juries, and especlaUv with the Court. Possessing (rood oratorical pow ers and all the qualities which mark sound sense and level-head edness, he had a peculiar Influence overmen. He was 73 years old. Moses Johnson. Special Telegram to The Dispatch. MiksiNQTon; o.. May a.-Moses Johnson, col ored, living two mites south of here In Carroll county, died to-day at an advanced age. Be was a slave In Loudon county, Va., for nearlyTO years and was at the time of his death, according to tne record of the county. .103 years old.. Re purchas ed his freedom from his former master for K0 and immediately came to CarrolL, county, where bv industry and economy be acquired a- small farm where he died to-day, He was, the first and only colored man ever drawn ad a Juror In Carroll county. BEFOEE THE GOYEEKOB Appropriation BIIIi That Still Await His Slgriatnre-yieasHrcs Relating to Taxes and Insurance Proceedings of the Pardon Board. Special Telegram to The Dlsnatch. HAKEiSBtmo, May 23. The Governor has approved ail the appropriation bills except 16, which ask for the following amounts: Philadel phia Harbor improvement, J20O.CO0; removal of tho House of Refuge, Philadelphia, J70.C00; Philadelphia Institution for the Instruction of the Blind, $102,000; Hahnemann Medical Col lege, Philadelphia, 50,000; Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, $20,000; Veterinary Hos p!tal,Phlladelphia,i50,0u0; War Library and Mu seum, in connection with the Loyal Legion and Grand Army of the Republic, Philadelphia, K0,000; Wills' Eye Hospital, Philadelphia, $20, 000; Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadel phia, $100,000; Fitiston Hospital Association, $25,000; to pay off mortgages against the West ern Pennsylvania Hospital, Pittsburg, $50,000; Polyclinic College, Philadelphia, $20,000; 19 erect a hospital at Beater, 15,000; to erect a hospital at New Castle. $16,000; Home for the Friendless, Lancaster, $5,000; Pennsylvania In stitution for tho Deaf and Dumb, Philadelphia, $163,000; total, $960,000. Important Bills Not Yet Signed. The more important bills outside of those enumerated, that have not yet been disposed of by the Governor are the following: BUI pro viding for tho ordinary expenses ot the State Government, which in the aggregate appropri ates, including allowances for funds required to pay for public printing and other items, the cost of which cannot be definitely stated, about $8,400,000; the general revenue act, which in cludes among new subjects taxable the Judg ments and mortgages ot corporations, which, under a decision of the Supreme Court, cannot be taxed under present laws; the judicial Salary bill, which fixes the salary of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court at 510,000, Associate Jus tices at $9,000, Judges of Philadelphia and Alle gheny county at $8,000, Judges of Dauphin and xieoanon at o,uuu ana an uiner common juugea of the courts at $5,000. The Factory Insnranee Measure. Other bills which have yet to pass the Gov ernors scrutiny are these: Diverting a portion of the tax on premiums collected by foreign insurance companies in cities and boroughs to city and borough treasuries, for .the relief of disabled firemen; authorizing factory insur ance companies, conducted on the mutual plan, to transact business in this State. (This bill is strongly opposed by the Insurance Commis sioner, because it wonld enable; companies of other States to place insurance in Pennsylvania without paying a tax, thus discriminating against other insurance companies. To pro vide for the incorporation and regulation of friendly societies; to require assessors to assess all seated lands in the township or borough in which the mansion house IS situated; to pro vide for the erection of independent poor dis tricts; for the creation and distribution of a' fund for disabled policemen in cities of the second class; for the division of borouehS and the creation of new boroughs; providing that all imitations of olive oil shall be marked on the vessels or bottles in which it is contained; providing for the election of recorders In cities of the third class. HeorinA by the Pardon Board. The Board of Pardons held two sessions to day, but was unable to complete the large quantity ot work before it. In the caso of Ed ward Slattery, affidavits made by James Con way and Charles Reed were filed, In which they assert that Henry Meyers conld not have been killed by Slattery. There is also filed in the case a letter from W. D. Moore, addressed to William Sinclair, who it is alleged has declined to give information exculpating Slattery be cause it might result in his own pun ishment for connection with it. In this letter the following appears: "I am satisfied from my conversations with the District Attor ney that you will rnn no risk in making a full and complete statement as to the Meyers case, and I know that Major Montooth, or at least 1 think so, agrees with me. It is, in my Judg ment, your duty to Innocent men to make it?' In connection with this letter Is a statement, which the District Attorney was expected to slim. Dromlsin? tmmunitv from numshment to William Sinclair so far as his disclosure might refer to the murder of Henry Meyer. This statement, Mr. Moore says, the official failed to sign, and hence Sinclair's affidavit was neces sary. Slatterns mother, in a letter filed with the board, savs: "The world will be darker or brighter to me on Wednesday morning." A Strong Plea for Clemency. Edward W. Hays, who has taken great inter est in the pardon of Slattery and Edward Coyle,whose case is also held under advisement, in a letter addressed to W. H. Andrews, Chair man of the Republican State Committee, makes a strong plea for executive clemency in both cases. Mr. Hays says he felt that If ever tnere were cases deserving 01 recommenaauon of pardon the two boys ought to be pardoned, but he had come to the conclnsion that insistence and persistence and earnest and oft-repeated and importunate entreaties had failed to cause the board to break the conservatism with which it had been enveloped. Work of tho Afternoon Session. The entire afternoon session was taken up In hearing the case of George Clark, who Is to be hanged on the 25th of next month for the mur der of William McCausland, in Greene connty. The cases of Joseph Allen and Rose Hall, con victed of keeping disorderly houses in Pitts burg, were heard, as was that ot John K. Scott, convicted of felonious assault and battery. The case of Patrick M. Goldrick, conyicted of manslaughter in Allegheny county, was post- poned, and the Recorder uiri rected to write to jur. itanKin, THE C0UNTBT PAIE. A List of the Committees u Finally De cided Upon. The following committees have heen ap polntedto manage "the country fair" to be held atMrs. George Hailman'S' house, Shady lane. East End: President-Miss McKnight. General Managers Miss Sophie Pemrock, Miss Mary Holmes. Supper Committee Miss McKee, Chairman; Miss Rlcketson, Secretary; Miss Bpeer, Mrs. William G. Park, Miss Hegeman, Mrs. Bailey, Mrs. C. I. McKee, Miss Vankirk, Miss Will iams, Miss Louise Beggs, Miss Elizabeth Moor head, Miss Louise Dllwortb, Mrs. John Lyon. Aids on Supper Mrs. C. R. Dllwortb. Mrs. J. O. Home. Mrs. Thomas Blair, Jr., Mrs. R.V. Messler.Mrs. C. C. Beggs,Mrs. H. C. Beggs,Mis3 Daisey Dilworth. Gipsy Camp Miss Edith Hale, Miss Oxnard, Miss Hazelett. Flower Table and News Stands Chairman. Mrs. H. R. Rea: manacers. Miss Sara Stewart, Miss Marshall. Mrs. W. H Rea, Miss Nellie Wood, Miss Bessie Howe, Miss Nellie Reed, MrS. W. Ross Proctor; aids. Miss Louise Speer; Mrs.C.A- Painter, Mrs. G. A. Painter, Miss Byers. Mrs. W. W. Willock, Mrs. J. Stuartr Brown. Mrs. J. R. Djlwortb, Miss Sue Dalzell, Mrs. G. H. Howe. Amusement Committee Chairman, MrS. Frank B. Nimick; Secretary, Miss Guthrie; as sistants. Miss Olive Jones, Mrs. R. R. Singer, Miss Hamilton, Miss Sellers. Ice Cream Table Miss Julia Hardimrt mana gers. Miss Mary Watson, Miss Sawyer-Miss Zug; Miss Cbalfant, Miss Benney, Mrs. F. T. Moorhead; aids, Mrs. F. G. Kay. Miss Julia Phillips, Miss Mary Phillips, Miss Emma Suy dam. Miss Mary Cbalfant, Miss Harriet Wat son, Miss Metcalfe, Miss Crossman, Miss Julia Morgan. Miss Mary Graft, Miss Robinson, Miss F. McKnight , Lemonado Table Miss Hussey. Chairman; managers, aliss Benney, Miss N.Stewart, Miss McCormlck; aids. Miss Maide Seibeneck. Miss Alice Lyon, Miss Anna Robinson, Miss Maide Forsythe. A Talking- Major General. From the London Saturday Kevlew. It is Lord Wolseley's misfortune that he never can keep within the proper bounds. It Is a permanent weakness of Lord Wolseley's that be cannot speak about the army without launching into large assertions of the most doubtful accuracy, or, what is worse still, into gush. It has been necessary to point out before that, If Lord Wolseley is a modern soldier, then the modern soldier is a great deal tod fond of listening to himself, too self-conscious, too fond of talking abont things he ought to take for granted. But the Adjutant General has been told that often before, and has paid no atten tion. His genius is too strong for him, no doubt, and he will, in consequence, have to continue to be told It. AJnx Defied. From the Philadelphia Times.: If Ajax were alive now he might keep right on defying the lightning, but he would have to be mighty respectful to the electric light wires. A Cose or Hydrophobia. front the Minneapolis Tribune. 3 A Kentnckian recently died of water on the brain, and his neiehbors' say it must have 1 gotten into his system during a rates tona. INVESTIGATING HOG HATES. The Inter-State , Commerce Commission In Session at Chicago A Railroad Presl- -dent Cornered by Somo Close Questions. Chicago, May 28. The Inter-Stato Com merce Commission resumed its session at the Palmer House this morning; hearing the coh tlnuatlbn of the evidence in the case ot the Board of Trade agamst molt of the Western railroads leaving the city. There were eight witnesses for the complainant and threo for the defense heard before 1 o'clock, when a recess was taken for an hour. The first witness was John B. Robertson, of the Alierton Packing Company, who was put on the stand by the complainants. He was asked if there was not an agreement between the packers stating that a portion of the packing-bouses should remain closed, and should receive a certain amount from those which were working during the time they re mained closed. Mr. Robertson refused to an swer the question, on the advice of S. W. Alier ton. Mr. Alierton was next put on the stand, and asked the same question, but also refused tp answer Jf c. Heightley, a packer, was put oh the stand and asked the same question. He answered that there was such an agreement. A Sensational Statement. After thls-statement, which created quite a sensation, it was agreed that the agreement would be presented as evidence during the afternoon. No attempts were made to bring out further evidence on this point. Secretary Stone, of the Board of Trade, read statistics showing that the output of the packing inter ests in Chicago had been decreasing, while those in Kansas City, Omaha and other West ern points bad been rapidly increasing: U. H. Miller, of the Pennsylvania Railroad; Albert Gates, in the cooperage commission: N. J. Inglehart, Jay Morton, a salt dealer, and P. A. Underwood, pork packer, were put on the stand by the complainant. The defense put on W. H. Hosmer. a packer, Charles B. Souter. a packer at Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and James H. Wisnerm, a packer at Des Moines, each of whom testified concerning the freight rates on different products charged them by the differ ent railroads. Other similar witnesses were E. D. Hawkln sou and H. D. Bogue, of Sioux City, and Benja min F; Britton. of Des Moines. One ot the most interesting witnesses of the day was Ueneral Manager Jeffrey, of the Illinois Cen tral Railroad. " Jeffrey on the Stand. "What do you consider a fair rate on hogs to Chicago?" he was asked. "About 50 cents or I cent a ton per mile." 'And for narldnp- hnnw nrnAntr "About 40 cent3 per 100 pounds." "Are the present rates lower or higher than in the pastf" "They are lower than they have been at some time and higher than they have been at others." The question was then asked Mr. Jeffrey why it was that the rate was higher on live hogs than oh the dressed product. After an attempt to evade the question he replied by saying: "I don't know. It has been that way for a long time." This being the vital point in the investigation, the, Commissioners themselves took a hand in the matter, and Mr. Morrison said : "Now, Mr. Jeffrey, let ns say that your road is able to transport the entire pork product of these estern towns to Chicago, what then would be the more profitable to your road, live hogs at 50 cents a hundred or the product at 10 cents?" Some Other Considerations. "Taking into consideration the faot that we would haul all the hogs to the packer" "I don't want you to take anything Into con sideration except my question." " Then I can't sav. Not nvnn n. rata Airt can figure out that problem. The question is too abstract" "No Indeed," Interjected Judge Cooley; "it is not an abstract one. To these Chicago people who have hundreds of -thousands of dollars at stake, it is a very practical one." wen, x cant answer it witnout figuring In the matter." "We would be glad theh,"said Chairman Cooley, "if you will take time to do a little fig uring." "But it will only be guess work." "That li Just what we shall have to do." "On cross-examination Mr. Jeffrey said his estimate was made at 1 cent a ton per mile, because in 1887 at a slightly higher rate the road declared a 7 per cent dividend on $30,000, 000, while last year at a less rate it hardly paid 6 per cent. A decision will not be reached by the Com mission until after the testimony Is written up. A HMDBED iNAK8 IN A BALL. The Wonderlnl Sight Witnessed try a Truth ful Goorgta Fisherman.' From the Atlanta Constitution. A crowd of gentlemen were seated in Ferret's restaurant at Milledgeville, telling of the won ders that exist in and about Black Lake, the famous fishing pond below the city, when sud denly the conversation drifted into a discus sion of the different varieties of snakes that abound there. Mr. Blank, who spends a great deal of his spare time in fishing, said: "Gentlemen, I am going to tell you something that you won't believe, but it's tbe truth if ever I told it In my life. I was at Black Lake last year fishing, and in company with another of our party, rowed our boat a considerable dis tance out in the lake. We heard a terrible hissing noise that sounded like a thousand blackbirds singing; the noise, apparently, was 100 yards from ns; neither of ns knew what it was and the sound was so distinctly different from anything we had ever heard before, we decided to investigate it. We rowed the boat up the lake about 200 yards before we came to the mysterious racket, I looked over on the bank of the lake and there I saw a ballot snakes as big as a flour barrel knitted and plaited together like the staves in a cotton "There were at least 100 big snakes in the roll. This sounds pretty big. but it's the truth if ever I told It, and I can prove it by Pete Fair. Ask him. and he will tell you that that roll of snakes was as big as a syrup barrel," and he walked off with an expression on bis face that convinced the crowd that be bad not only told the truth, bnt had modified it. to keep some body from accusing him of exaggeration. FOUR'bROTHERS WJ3D StSTEES. The Way Farmer Meyers' Sqnajnnd Farmer Klanlck's Dnnghtera Mated. Columbus, Iks., May 28. "Near the county line, 12 miles from this city; and near together, reside two prosperous farmers named Dempsy Kintilck and J. H. Meyers. The former's family seems to have run to girls and the latter' to boys, and they have manifested a remark able llkinc for one another, four of the sons of Movers having married four of the daughters of Kifinlclc Thev Should be Careful. From the Sew York World.l Some time ago a young man who had been reading one of Edgar Saltus' pessimistic novels committed suicide. Hb case is recalled by a recent occurrence In San Frincisco. Mrs. Wll lardC. Wright was reading Ella Wheeler Wil cox's "Poems of Passion" to her husband, when tbe latter pulled a revolver from his pocket and fired four shots at the startled reader. Fortunately his aim was bad and no great harm was done. Whetherhe was sud dcnlyseized with gynephobia at the thought that a jvoman had written the poems, or was simply trying to shoot the verse IS not known. At all events, Saltus and Mrs. Wilcox should be careful abopt what they write. The Men Who Got the Profits. From the Detroit Free Press.1 Tho New York hotels made littleor no profit out of the Centennial. The street railways, restaurants and saloons reaped post of the harvest, and the pickpockets and gamblers the rest. An American for Pope. "Sent York Herald Special Cabie. : Pabis, May 27. A Paris writer in the Matin indicates that the next Papal Conclave will be compelled by the drift of events to elect as Pope an English or American Cardinal. THE TROUBADOUR. Wlfhajannty cloak and swagger; Andajewel-hllted dagger; A guitar hung from his shonlders by a ribbon, bine at that; ' And his breeches never-bigger Than would show his shapely figure, And a fascinating feather In his funny tilted hat. So he wandered forth a-warrlng, And a-rhymlhg and gnttarlng. And In attitudes artistic tinkled many a tricksy alrt And the ladles all adored him And the balcbnles encored him, And bis tunes were legal tender for his welcome everywhere. Thus a-hummlng and a-strummlng, And a-woolng and a-cooing, ' Droning ditties by the dozen, Lisping sonnets by the score. Went the hero of our story Through Us glamor and Its glory. Ah! so mellow and so merry was tbe gallant . Troubadour. 'toHftriVi MagatiM, a "da? inhe ixmtcm, Father Deat Warned From Rome -, rxxw TOOK BUBXAU SrXCULS.I NEW.Yons, May ffll-The Rev. Franci3 Dent, the Franciscan monk who Is suing Vicar General William Keegan, of Brooklyn, and Bishop Stephen Vincent Ryan, of Buffalo, for slander, has received by letter same advice and warning from a high eccleslastio at Borne. Father Dent's correspondent begs him not to become a second Father McGIynn, hut to come to' Rome, tell the Pope all about the row, and let His Holiness fix up the whole matter. Father Denti however, says; "It Is too late for such nonsense." As his own attorney, he has maae preparations to convince 'the Brooklyn courts that Vicar General Keegan and Bishop Ryan should pay $25,000 each for slanderine him. He will then lecture against Bishop Ryan in every town in the diocese. General Hnrrlson Will Go to Brooklyn. President Harrison has accepted an invita tion to attend the Memorial Day ceremonies In Brooklyn. Ha will leave Washington to-morrow afternoon or evening, and will probably be accompanied by Secretary Tracy. He will be the guest of General Knapp, of Brooklyn, dur ing his stay. Grand Marshal Henry W.Knbzht will call on the President and escort him to the reviewing stand. After the parade General Harrison will be Invited to Join Grant Post, G. A. R, in their memorial visit to General Grant's tonrb. He expects to return to Wash ington Thursday evening. Secretary Tracy and Private Secretary Halford will accompany him. Tho Archbishop Had His Hnnda Fall. Archbishop Corrigan, with cope and mitre, made his annual visit to the Roman Catholic Protectory in West Chester; to-day. He in spected tbe departments, made a speech, and" connrmed SM boys and girls. Tired ofBelng Stared At. William Asslng (Ah Slngj, the city's only Chinese policeman, resigned from the force last night. He leaves a clean record. He has been one of the lions of the town ever since his ap pointment, five years ago. For a long time he enjoyed as great newspaper notoriety as Mr: Crowley, of Central Park: Every day he has been stared at and followed by parties of cu rious tourists: He became tired of this notori ety, and two days ago got an engagement to drive trucks. Trucking does not pay so well as clubbing, but Asslng says he prefers less money and more peace of mind. Mrs. Ayer Declines Housekeeping. Harriet Hubbard Ayer has given up her ele gant home in West Thirteenth street. The furniture, pictures, bric-a-brac and silver of the old Ayer house are advert! sed for sale. Engaged in Boycotting a Cbnrch. Miss Carrie A. Mahrenholz, daughter of a wholesale shoe dealer, died suddenly Sunday, and no priest could be summoned to administer the last sacrament. Her father, who is a Ro man Catholic, was refused a burial permit for Calvary Cemetery by tbe priests of St. Ann's Roman Catholic Chnrch, because she had not been shriven. This afternoon Miss Mahren holz's body was cremated at Fresh Pond,.L. I, The services were conducted by a clergyman of the Dutch Reformed church. Mr. Mahrenholz will remove the bodies of eight other members of his family from the cemetery, and will carry many of his friends from the church. He Insists on Sunday Opening. Morris K. Jessup, J. M. Constable, D. Willis James, Robert Stuart and Oswald Ottendbr f er, a committee of the trustees of the Museum of Natural History, called upon Mayor Grant to ask for the immediate Issue -ot the $400,000 worth of bonds authorized by the Legislature to build an addition to the museum. The Mayor Surprised the committee by pointing out tbe extent of the city's indebtedness, the new bonds that will have to be issued and the narrow margin between the total and the amount the city's indebtedness must not ex ceed. Bdt they wanted their money, jnst the same. The Mayor then said that he was committed to tbe opening of the museum on Sunday, and would In any event make this a condition of Issuing the bonds. The committee thought this conld not be done, but were willing to con sider it after the new wing should be built. This did not suit the Mayor's views. He thinks that the day on which the majority of the peo ple have their only chance of visiting the mu seum is one on which it should be open. I10 result is likely, therefore, to follow the com mittee's efforts. The Bishop Post Mortem. In the Bishop Inquest, which was resumed this morning, Depdty Coroner Jenkins testified to having, on May 18, examined the body of the deceased mind reader, reopening the incisions previously made. He found the body well pre served. In the chest cavity he found many vital organs and also the brain. The organs all seemed in a healthy condition, and in their ap pearance presented no cause for death. Por tions of the brain and of the vital organs were missing: however, so that tho witness could not speak with certainty as to the condition of the whole. Snch a Bold Assertion. From tho 2ievr York Tribune.3 The audacity of the press in forecasting fu ture events is one of its most marked charac teristics. Here, for instance, is an influential paper published in Madrid making the follow ing declaration: "We venture to assert in all candor that the United States will yet give the black men the right to vote at Presidental elec tions, if no more." Don't be Surprised. From the Chattanooga Times. Don' t make an (1) if yon meet a girl of the (.) bearing a huse parasol with a handle thatlooks like a (T), because they're fashionable. ODD TEI0LETS. Axabu bells are tolled for lost children in Altoona, Pa. . Mbs. John Wow, of Quakertown, Pa., has 40,000 silk worm eggs on the eve of hatching. A Houtzdale, Fa., youth stuffed an infant's mouth so full of dry mustard that it took a doctor to dig it out. The barn of Henry Taylor, of Fishertown, Pa., Bedford county; being built of pitch-pine was so gnawed np by worms that it has to be torn down. A little danghter of John Bartell, of Mount Washington. Pa., was sent after groceries with 25 cents, wMch she put in her mouth for safe, keeping. On the way she stumbled, and the coins fie w down her throat. While George White, of Drumore, tan caster connty; was asleep in bed recently he was bitten on the legs so extensively by a bee that he has to have medical aid. The limbs are still swollen much beyond their natural, size. A lAdt applicant for permission to teach in Ashtabula'county, Ohio, changed the marks on her blank civen by tbe examiner in geography from 75 to 95, and in history from 71 to 91. But her ink didn't match the examiner's, and she was placed In the humiliating position of being caught. A Slattnoton.Pa., man had fed his chickens and was going home with a kettle ot surplus corn, which also held raanyjeggs,when he came upon a chicken fight. He flung his corn at the combatants, and his jaw dropped with amaze ment as he saw them yellow-coated with a flash of the forgotten eggs. A West Virginia electrician has fnvented a wire flshintr rod with an electric bell which will ring for every nibble. There ought to also be a camera attached to the hook to photo graph the fish that wasn't caught and a phono graphic arraneement to tell the fish stories, then the fisherman could drink in peace. In a small town near Wheeling; W. Va., lately, a housewife was unable to churn her butter, andthefailnrawasattrlbntedtoa witch. Accordingly tbe husband fired a shot into the cream to kill the witch, but without avail. The wife was then atold by neighbor that by making a silver dollar hot and throwing It into the churn she would be able to drive the witch out. She tried It, and the butter came all right. Dayton, -O., has a woman under lock and key who is a case ior linguists and doctors. This is tbe second time sho has been locked up for safe keeping, having been found wandering aroqnd the streets. Persons have tried to get her to talk in Engksb, German, French, Italian, Spanish, and in feet nearly all the different languages, .but aettlng seems to awake in, her any ideas. No pefcon who flaSjei tried oua ttatMtoairttjj CUIIODS CONDENSATIONS. - Smallpox is said to be raging among tht Okanagon Indians on the Pacific coast. "European steamers carrie'd over 3,50O, 000 in gold out of New York on e day last week A rich vein of gold ore Is reported to have been -found on a farm near Gainesville, The cable cars on State street, Chicago, are driven at the rate of 10K to 11 miles an honr. Thirty divorces were granted in one day during the recent session of the SupremeCourt at Manchester, N.H. A number of persons in Atlanta re sponded to a parrot's cry of Are" and discov ered that a house across the way was in flames- Several citizens of Greensboro, Ga.', are devoting much time to taming crows. The birds are verV in tellisent and can be easily taught. Charlie Robinson, of Xawfenceville, Ga., the other evening, by means of sticks, stones, ew, killed a coachwhlp that measured 8 feet and 9 Inches. In a hollow in a tree cut down near-Atlanta last week were fonnd eight muskets and two bayonets. It is supposed that they were placed there by soldiers during the Rebellion. Terre Haute permits hogs to run at large in the public streets. Mr. Jason removed the fences aroun d his bouse, the botrs came npon his grounds, and he has begun 119 lawsuits to recover damageo. Long Island has some very swell beg gars. Around Bellmore the beggars go around with horses and wagons, and it is not an an. usual thine to get as much as a horse can draw in one day's travel. An effort is to be made in Iowa to strip the law of its nonsense. Lawyers declare that deeds, warrants and all other Ieral papers can oe cut down one-nan in tne amount 01 ' ases and wherefores. A citizen of South Chester, Pa., ab sorbed in a street fakir's jests a few nights ago. and unheedfnl of a passing drum corp". was strnck on the nose by a baton which the dram major was twirling, and bad to be taken to a drugstore and fixed up wltn court plaster. Paris has taken tbe lead in bringing to time one of the greatest oppressors of tho traveling pnblic the cabman. Recently in that city 30 drivers were arrested and sentenced to one month's imprisonment for ill-treatment: of passengers. Some of them had assaulted foreigners who objected to being imposed upon. Intemperance has spead to such an ex tent among boys and girls in Austria that tha Vienna School Board is again moving to have a law enacted prohibiting the sale of intoxicants to children under 15 years of age. The appear ance of a boy at school in a state of drunken ness is said to be by no means a rare sight in Vienna. An old Indian squaw went into a dry goods store in Bangor, Me., tbe other day and bought some dress pattern, together with needles, thread and thimble. She asked to be allowed to eo Into a back room to sew a little. About an hour afterward she came from the room wearing a dress made of the material she had just bought, and went out of the store evi dently well satisfied with her purchase. A remarkable case of snake charming is reported from Greshamville,Ga. The mother of little Belle Hart saw her child standing; with a stick in hand, steadfastly gazing at a large coachwhlp snake, both snake and child looking intently at each other, and neither moving an Inch. The child was pulled away by her mother, when Belle, trembling from head to foot, began to violently cry. She explained that she had intended. Killing the snake, bnt it "caught her eye." Try as she would and hor ror stricken as she was she tried hard she could not withdraw her eyes from the snake, ana sue ieeis mat 11 sne naa noi Deen tasen away from the spot by her mother she conld not much longer have resisted an influence which seemed to urge her to advance to where the snake lay on the ground. In Prussia the State railroads make special concessions in favor of poor persons In ill health. On receipt of proper credentials such persons are conveyed to hospitals, baths and other sanitariums in third-class carriages at the "military" rate of L5pfening per kilo meter (abont six-tenths of 1 cent per mile.) Tbe same privilege Is extended to scrofulous children of tbe lower classes and their attend ants. The inmates of asvlums for the blind, deaf and dumb, and orphans, with their attend ants, are carneu ine same rate on vacatioi trips to the houses of relatives. One attendant is allowed to each unfortunate, and the redac tion in fare Is given to the attendants when ths. go for their charges or return home after Ieavf lng them at the asylum. Poor children who) are sent to the country In summer by societies or municipalities are also conveyed at the military rate. Furthermore, ail officers of benevolent societies and Institutions, whether sectarian or secular, when traveling In the interest of char, ity, are allowed the use of second-class car riages at third-class rates. Recently a colored swain of Jackson ville, Fix, was in the gall of bitterness because he had set the time, got the consent of tho Idol of his heart, and all was ready for the mar riage feast except one thing; It was the license, which required $3 to obtain. The groom-elect spent the entire day endeavoring to raise the necessary amount to pay for tho license, but toward the shades of night he was still without the required sum. He then made a last and pitiful appeal to tbe County Judge to help him in this hour of distress. The man who wanted to be married counted ont a few nickels, and declared that It was all that be had left after preparing for tbe marriase feast, and the time was short for the consum mation of the contract. He next began to beg for a few days' grace, and the Justice, wanting his supper very much, ended the man's an guish by drawing a note for the amount, which was readily signed, and-tbe colored bean de clared he wonld pay tbe note with tbe first money he got hold of. His moumlnc; was at once changed Into shouts of joy, and Sambo left the Court House amid shouU of triumph and laughter, as the night of jubilee bad come, and he would soon be the happiest man on earth. . REVERIES OF A PHILOSOPHER. A man knows all about the "all gone" feeling the patent medicine advertisements speaX of Jnst after he has lost all his money at poker. HAPFT T13TE. The air with scent the clover fills, Which glads the senses, And goats re eating circus bills From off the fences. SERVED Tmf EIGHT. A chief of the tribe of the Sioux Assaulted a heathen Hindloux; Into jail he was cast And he's there hard and fast And feeling, no doubt, verybuonx. The worst of these child's banks, said a fond father tbe other day, is that it takes so long to get tbe money out of them when you are la ay hurry to catch the train. POOR FELLOW S The man who in the suburbs lives Knows now some miserable hoars. For while he's at his work the hens Scratch up his growlnxplants and Sowers, TBUE HAPPISESS. In these enchanting days 'tis bliss Through country lanes to stroll And steal from Nellie's lips a kiss Beneath her parasol 1 The last time. "I thought, Henry," said) the wife reproachfully as her husband stumbled In abont midnight rather the worse for wear, "1 thought that you were not going to drink any more." "Thlsh'er lasht tlmem'dear." ''Yes, bnt you said before it was the last Ume.'l 'Did I shay sho before?" "You did." "Guessher mus' a bin drank then ble-and forgot er' bout It." A Free Ticket Day I managed to get a complimentary ticket for the theater out of Playfalr tne other day. Knight Is that so? How did you manage It? D.-Ob 1 1 treated him and some of his friends. K. Drinks, cigars and so forth? D.-Yes. K.-Jiow mnch did the treats cost? D. Ohl only about SJ. She Must be Beautiful. De Baggs YeH lowly, I understand, is going to marry a rich girl, De Caggs Ahi Is she beautiful? De B. Beautlfnl? Of course she is beautUal,-. Didn't I say she is rich? BLESSES SEASON. TJp from tbe sod the daisies peep, The frigid days are over; Th & wild rose blows and soon knee deel The klne will be in clover. The springtime to the meads and treer yaw gives a rich adorning; The songbirds with their symphonies, Awake tne goioen morning. - Hal hal we'll soon go ont of town , To see our country cousin: t The strawberry's here and eggs are down To M seats a dozen. " " ' 1 iiB jayfnftfTtr -im i ifiiia mil jj