HBSE?dl m?&w s? wsm M3F, ' ffmtw. f'fr' , ? i $ Mf v. THE PITTSBURG UISHA.TOH, 'SUNDAY, JUNE 23 1880. Ss5SBB f x- As Biptl 0 ESTABLISHED FEBRUARY 8, ISM. Vol., No.130. Entered t Pittsburg Postofflce, November 14, 1SST, as seeona-class matter. Business Office 87 and 99 Fifth Avenue. News Booms and Publishing Eouse 75, 77 and 79 Diamond Street Eastern Advertising Office, Koom 46, Tribune Building, J,cw orfc. Average net circulation of the dally edition of ZEX DiBrxTCU for six months ending June 1, 1839, 27,824 Copies per Issue. v Average net circulation of the Sunday edition of Tux Dispatch for May, 1839, 47,468 Copies per issue. TEKSIS OF THE DISPATCH. POSTAGE FEE IN THE C.MTED STATES, DAILY Dispatch, One iar (8 00 Dailt Dispatch, 1'er Quarur 2 00 Dailt Dispatch, One Month 7u Dailt Dispatch, including feunday, lyear. 10 oo dailt DlSPATClLlncludlnx Sunday,3m'tlia. 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All double and triple number copies ol The Dispatch require a 9-cent stamp to insure prompt delivery. PITTSBURG, SUNDAY, JUNE 23, 1SS9. SEVERITY "WAS BEQUIBED. Judge Stowe's response to the plea for a light sentence in the case of H. F. Voight, the defaulting cashier of the Farmers' and Mechanics' Bank, was more pertinnt than favorable. Instead of taking the lenient TJew, the Judge declared that it was a case lor severe punishment, and carried out that opinion by a sentence of six years in the penitentiary. The view of the Court was certainly more in accordance with the public requirements than the plea for leniency. The latter was the usual one, that the cashier was led into peculation and inlly expected to return the bank's money. But if there is any class which oucht to know that to use fiduciary funds to speculate with lor the hope of pri vate gain is a breach of trust, it is that to which this defendant belonged. To treat snch offenses lightly and to punish severely the man who steals small sums would be, as the Judge said, a parody on justice. This sentence of six years to the peniten tiary will be likely to put the practice- of speculating with other people's money out of fashion, for a time, among bank officials, at least. AH EXAHPLE TOE OuH CITIZE1TS. The supply of a number of public drink ing fountains to Pittsburg by an eminent and apparently philanthropic citizen of another city, makes good the lack which has long been prominent, but not especially creditable to the Iron City. The fact that the utter lack of public fountains here has been remedied by extraneous aid might stimulate pur home capital to efforts in the line of supplying the other lack in which we hare undesirable prominence, namely, the total lack of parks and boulevards. "We hare abundance of practical sites for parks in the ranee from the Point, orer the hilltops, to the open spaces of the East End; bnt so far the money for improving them has been lacking. "When New England capital gives us fountains might not Pittsburg cap ital give us parks, or at least a start for one on condition that the city will undertake the work of improving it ME. HUNTIHGTOITS PHILAHTHEOFT. The statement that Xing Leopold, of Bel gium, in order to secure the construction of a railroad from the 'West African coast to the Congo region above Stanley Pool, has obtained irom Mr. C. P. Huntington, of this country, a subscription to the stock of the railway of 500,000, creates a good deal of interest. Mr. Huntington is reported as 'saying that lie subscribed for that stock purely out of philanthropic motives. This may be the case, but an intimate acquaintance with Mr. Huntington's phil anthropic principles in the matter of rail road investments, strengthens the opinion that Mr. Huntington is confident of getting a very good and material return for his philanthropy, and not after many days. The scoffers will be likely to incline to the opinion that the opportunities in the con structions of the Cod co Railroad, for rich returns in the line of construction contracts and stock watering operations, will permit those who get upon the ground floor of the enterprise to make their $500,000 worth of philanthropy yield them about 50,000,000; which is about the proportion of profits on philanthropy which Mr. Huntington and his associates considered the correct thing, in the matter of that other philanthropic enterprise, the Central Pacific Railroad. The Congo Ilailroad will be a great benefit to Central Africa; but we would not like to guarantee the Congo traders and shippers against the chances that they will have to pay large-sized dividends on Mr. Hunting ton's philanthropy. OuTt BELLIGERENT POWEBS. The regulaticn corporate warfare has broken out in Jersey'City, between the Erie and the Delaware, Lackawanna and "West ern Railroads, orer the question which shall occupy certain streets in that city, which were originally dedicated to the use of the public It is instrnetire as well as wonder iul to observe how exactly these fights uuplicate each other and how invariably they all terminate in the levying of petty warfare by the corporations. In this case, as usual, one railroad dis covered that it wanted to occupy certain streets with additional tracks, and obtained permission of the City Councils to do so. Ot course as soon as that permission was granted the other railroad discovered that it wanted the same street itself, and pro ceeded by the use ot municipal influence to obtain the same permission that the other railroad had got. Consequently when one of them set its men to work laying tne track, the other turned Up With a gang, and a small sized riot was the result Each corporation is strengthening its forces and continuing its policy of hiring a class of W men that will be ready to break out into acts of riolence, eTidently for the sole pur pose of taking what it wants by the strong arm without regard to law or rights. "This Is the unirersal rule of corporate action. Something either in the character of the legal advice that the corporations ob tain, or in the influences which control their executive policy, seems to make it necessary for them to fight first and go to law arterward. The result is that when ever two corporations want the same right of way, or one wants the right of way and the other does not wish the first to have it, both proceed to the levying of armed forces with all the industry and about the same disregard of public right, that character ized the feudal barons in the early part of the dark ages. Some comment was made the other day upon the fact that a Chicago corporation proposes to undertake the governmental function of execution. In this connection it seems no more than fair to say that when corporations undertake to levy war the addition to their powers of that of killing off criminals, is somewhat unimportant. MB. FINK'S TBOTBLE. The pending resignation of Mr. Albert Fink, the father and executive of the trunk line pool, creates considerable talk in rail road circles. It may be pertinent in pass ing to observe that the sensation is rather out of proportion to the importance of the erent Mr. Fink has before this developed the habit of sending in his resignation when the trunk line pool does not run to kuit him; but the railroad presidents hare generally been able, by renewing their promises of good behavior, to persuade him to keep on drawing his salary. But the cause which erokes this resigna tion of Mr. Fink is of especial interest to Pittsburg. Being the apostle of the scheme to suppress competition, that gentleman's resignations hare always been evoked when the forces ot competition prore too much for (he pool. It is now stated that the re duction in iron ore rates for this section is what has soured Mr. Fink's existence. The Pittsburg public is informed that iron rates are "out of plumb," and that the old rates will hare to be restored, presumably tinder the penalty that if this is not done Mr. Fink will decline to take back his resignation. Possibly Pittsburg can reconcile itself to the latter alternative. If Mr. Fink's life in the pool is not worth living, unless Pitts burg pays double prices for its transporta tion, this section will be able to consent to Mr. Fink's retirement, and still to cherish the hope that the railroads will be able to wriggle along without his presiding genius, as they did in days of yore. THE PBOPOSED SHIP-CAKAL. The renewed agitation lor a ship canal from Pittsburg to Lake Erie contemplates a reversion to old ways of carriage that may excite some surprise; but the real cause for surprise is that the project has not been taken up with more vigor heretofore. In this, as in many othei things, the people ot "Western Pennsylvania and the Ohio Valley have rested only too content with the nat ural advantages to hand, easy of develop ment. The waterway to the south and the opportunities of the immense stretch of navigable lake waters hare been almost 1 wholly unimproved. "But the day for these means of trans portation lias not departed. As the inter ests and commercial undertakings of the country multiply many plans must arise for the facilitation of traffic in the interior. The ship canal from Late Erie to Pittsburg, a preliminary survey of which the State has already authorized, is one of these. The transportation of the country is now taxed uncommonly every year to pay divi dends on water in the capitalization of the railroads. At first sight it clearly looks as though there would be an abundance of freight, in the carrying of which time is no special object, to meet interest on the cost of an ample waterway between Lake Erie and the Ohio. Incidentally such an enterprise would inevitably lead to important better ments of navigation the whole way down the river lo New Orleans. It is right that the State and its represen tatives in Congress should take a business hold on this matter. In place of fighting over petty patronage or factional or partisan advantage, what would well become men of brains and ambition in public and business life is to seize hold of their opportunities to benefit their locality. Rivalry in such good works would be welcomed by the public. AN ANAECHISTIC EVASION. Judge "Williamson, of Chicago, has given anarchy a serious set back. If he had not sent Anarchist Ducey to jail the other day for declining to serve as a juror in a rob bery case because he did not believe in con victing people of crime, it is very likely that the ranks of the Anarchists would hare been swelled considerably. Everybody knows how great are the ob jections of many of our best citizens to serv ing on juries. Many of them are able to escape jury service, but some get caught, and in spite of piteous excuses are cribbed in the box. We can readily imagine bow such unfortunates as these would hare jumped at Mr. Ducey's conscientious plea that his principles would not permit him to convict a man, if Judge "Williamson had sot decided the excuse invalid and changed the irksomeness of jury service to the disgrace of a night in jail. It would have been a very amusing sight to see the bloated bondholder, and the crushing capitalist, and millionaires of all sorts and sizes standing on the plat form of anarchy and proclaiming their in ability to conrlct any fellow man of .crime. GEAMMAB AND AGBIdTLTUBE. We regret to observe that the students' of the Michigan Agricultural College are not disposed to accept the broad and liberal view of elastic grammat ical rules that appear from some in dications to be characteristic of the day. They demonstrate this lact by petitioning the Governor Qt that State for the removal of one of the professors of that institution be cause he habitually uses such terms as "I hare saw," "I've came" and "you wasn't" The objection seems to be a pertinent one as against a college professor,; aud yet whether it is so vital as to force his removal, depends very largely on the chair he holds. If he undertakes to instruct the students on grammar and rhetoric, with such examples ol the applied science, it is plain that his grammatical heresies are as much out of place, as the doctrine of a modified hell would be in a Presbyterian theological seminary. But it is well to remember tlit a great many men have occu pied high places worthily, and yet maintained exactly such strained re lations with the rules of Lindley Murray. "We are acquainted with lights of the banking and business world who follow the custom of the Michigan pro'etsor on ''I have saw" almost as religiously as Southern society adopts the rule of the Missouri Uni versity against souuding the "r." 2a6h Chandler, John A. Logan, Uncle Daniel Drew and Solon Chase are eminent exam- pies of the fact that great men call fracture the English grammar and still be great If this Michigan professor, therefore, holds a position in the instruction of agri cultural science that does not bear directly on grammar, he may be still permitted to hold his position. For instance, if it is his duty to instruct the rising Michigan agri culturist on the scientific method of clean ing out stables or killing hogs, his gram matical eccentricities may be not only over looked but even tolerated as in harmony with the subject Some of the best lights in the agricultural world on the subject of slaughtering hogs or shearing sheep take exactly the view of grammar that he does; and the practical results in pork and wool are not a whit injured thereby. These considerations should induce the Michigan students to take a liberal view of the grammatical question. The rules of grammar may not be elastic, but their ap plication in practical life generally stretches them a good deal. PINCHING THE"BBEADWIHHEBS. The industry of the .Northwestern millers in putting up the price of flour beyond all relation to the price of wheat, is shown by the fact that they have succeeded in ad vancing their asking prices for flour 50 cents per barrel within the past two weeks. An attempt has also been made to adrance wheat on the report of short stocks and un favorable weather, but notwithstanding all efforts of that sort the price of wheat has continued to decline. The millers' combi nation, however, continues to screw up the price of flour Until it is now between SO cents and $1 per barrel higher than is indi cated by the relative price of wheat. Of course, the inevitable result is that con sumers will buy less flour, and that the mill ers who sell their products at a reasonable margin will hold the market until the Northwestern crowd begin to see the advis ability of a decent respect for the laws of trade. In the meantime, the supply of breadstuff's is artificially enhanced in price, and an attempt is made to impose an exces sive charge on the cost of life for the benefit of the few, by the stereotyped trust method. AN EMBLEMATIC BLOSSOM, The suggestions for adopting a national flower for this country have occasioned a great deal of discussion throughout the various parts of this country. An immense varietv of tastes has been displayed, ranging from the sunflower, which is naturally the choice of that shining luminary, the New York Sun, to Minneapolis XXX, which is regarded by the great Northwest as about the best flour that this country produces. All these seleetions practically come to nought in view of the obvious fact that the one flower that can typify the characteris tics of this nation completely is the modern daisy. Some objections may be made to this selection of a national flower from the fact that one of the effete countries of the older world has selected that flower as its emblem. But the daisy selected by the other nation is the modest, unobtrusive and not particularly imposing bloss.,m which has been known for centuries. It seems hardly necessary to remark that the daisy which typifies the United States is. not that kind of a daisy. The blossom to which we refer is of the vociferous and enthusiastic character known to baseball fields and otherwise trumpeted forth by our national slang. This is an en tirely distinct daisy from the modest rariety known to Scotland. The United States should adopt its own daisy as a national flower, because this country is a daisy. The information giren by the New York Herald's cable special, that Mr. and Mrs. John "W. Mackay are going to institute libel proceedings against some of the Lon don papers which persist in saying unpleas ant things about those bonanza millionaires is interesting, but the further declaration of the Herald's special that "Mr. and Mrs, Mackay's past is as pure as the origin of their fortune," is open to criticism from the standpoint of the Mackays. Inasmuch as there is little to their past except the origin of their lortune, the certificate is rather equivocal. It is rendered still more so bv some of the remarkably shady proceedings which attended the acquirement of the mil lions of all the bonanza kings. General Jdbax, Eabitx"s renewed and passionate declaration that he hoped he may be struck by lightning if he ever, de serted his faith in the Southern Confeder acy, shows that the doughty General is willing to take almost as big chances as the buyers of tickets in his lottery have. The Statement of the esteemed Chicago iVetM that an Arkansas man permitted a mad dog in Missouri to bite him the other day.and that the result was fatal to the dog, would be very interesting scientifically, if corroborated. "We fear, however, that the esteemed News has been imposed upon by an exceedingly antiquated item. The inci dent to which itreferred was reported in the last century by that standard journalIst,Mr. Oliver Goldsmith, in his very lively publi cation entitled "The Vicar of "Wakefield," in an item as follows: The man recovered ot tho bite The dog it was that died. The report that there is a scheme On foot to convert that Bed pond out on Center ave gue into a lake probably finds its sole found ation in the ill success which has so far at tended the efforts to unmake the lake which has already created itself. In connection with Mr. Carnegie's cruise to the North Cape, the New York Telegram says: "His Homestead workmen are cruising around for a square meal." This shows that the esteemed Telegram is not acquainted with the Style of living of the Pittsburg workmen. One of the last things done by Mr. Carnegie's Homestead workmen was to contribute a large sum to the Johnstown sufferers, and they are now cruising around to treat with their employ ers on the subject of wages for next year, on equal terms. The practical evidence that the President has resumed the work of distributing the foreign missious and consulates conveys re newed assurances to the Republican wheel horses that this administration is not going to be a failure. The home rule prisoners in British jails are forbidden the newspapers by their jailers, which soma of the imprisoned prt fess to regard- as the refinement of cruelty. In point of fact, however, they would find so little in the London papers fair to them selves or generous to their cause that they do not miss much com i or t There are bnt two daily papers in London which cham pion the home rule. Those which are against it recognize no limit to their virtt lence. The report that Hippolyte Is cow the conqueror of Hayti is calculated to impress the outside world with the remarkable mili tary abilities displayed by the Haytian war- riors in winning victories through the press discatches. The surprise of the St.-Louis Olole Hemocrat that Minister Reid, in his speech to President Carnot, used the term United States in the plural, "after the manner of the States' Right Democrats," might be modified, if our esteemed cotemporary would study the fact that Minister Reid Used it after the manner of the constitutional fath ers who established this country. The reduction of iron rates from Pitts bure to New York is a sign that the rail road world continues to move, and may per haps furnish a reason why Mr. Fink hat to. The Dispatch's Johnstown correspond ent telegraphs that the report of 18 per cent as the profit guaranteed to the contractors by the State was an error either in transmit sion or printing. The margin is ten per cent That is a good large profit on a sure thing, but not quite as bad as that repre sented by the erroneous report ' The Allegheny team yesterday demon strated the fact that it has its usual grip on the bad luck which renders it familiar with the localities about the bottom of the list. The green midge, which is supposed to be very destructive to the wheat crop, ib now reported to be very numerous in the "Western wheat fields and on the boards of trade. So far as can beperoeived, however, he is much more tidmerous among the bulls on the boards of trade than he is in the wheat fields. The weather sharp who predicted some thing unique and Dhenomenal in the line of weather for June 22 has been vindicated, It was a pleasant day. The Alger and Piatt parties have started for Alaska. The opinion of the adminis tration is that if they can be persuaded to stay there and absorb the politics of that far-off territory, the purchase Of Alaska will be vindicated as the best investment which a Republican administration ever made. PEOMISENT PEOPLE, Mr. Brush, of the arc electric light, owns a million dollar house in Cleveland, O. He was a newspaper reporter oh a salary of SIS a week less than 15 years ago. Mb. Richard Mansfield sailed from Liverpool on the steamer Adriatic Wednesday, and is expected to arrive in this country in about a week. Mr. Mansfield will rest until October, and then begin on his season's tour Willi "Richard HI." Representative S. S. COX has gone west on another lecturing tour. He will lecture in Youngstown, O.. East Saginaw, Mich., and St. Paul. On the Fourth of July he wilt orate in Dakota, and before his return will visit the Yellowstone Park. Colokel R. Ricketts, who won fame' as a battery Commander at Gettysburg, lives in Pennsylvanla,and was a candidate for lieuten ant Governor "of that State in 18S6. He still preserves his military bearing, but rarely talks of war except to intimate fliends. He has ex tensive interests In the lumber trade. Mahshall P. Wilder tells the following story In his book, "The People I've Smiled With." Because he has been a public man and politician a great many years, Mr. Blaine is supposed by some people to be very thick skinned, but it is impossible to be with him a little while without seeing that he is nothing of the sort He is quite as sensitive as any other gentleman, and any rude remark grates un pleasantly upon him, even If it has no personal application. Tho only time I ever heard him speak of himself, was one day when he brought me a caricature of myself which some one aboard ship had drawn. ''There, Marshall," said he, "how do you like that?" "Great Scott!" I exclaimed, making a face at the picture, "does that loot like me?" "Well," said he, "that's exactly the question I ask my. self when the illustrated papers caricature me." The Grentrst Hand at All. From the New York Herald.3 The hand of j our best girl may rest passively in yours, With the assurance that it is yours until death or divorce; the hand of Time may rest lightly and lovingly upon you: the hand of the clock may point to the dinner hour: you may be the handsomest man at a beauty show; yon may be handy enough with your revolver to get the drop on a train robber, but nothing can equal the quiet ecstacy of a hand of four aces when the jack pot Is large and Increasing. IlotV Sparrows Mny be Utilized. From the Louisville Conrier-Joarnal. A Chicago man traps 300 English sparrows in'a day, and as they are fat and healthy he gets a good price for them at the restaurants. It is said that the feathers of the sparrow make a comfortable bed. It may be that Providence has sent the sparrow to feed and warm the' rapidly growing cities of America. "We may all come to love this little Englishman some day. A Poor City for Monuments. From the Chicago Tribune.! Christopher Columbus is about to be hon ored by a new and elegant fmonument in New York City. A proposition for. fDesigu for a. , Pretty llnrd on College. Front the Chicago Kews. j It is estimated that 40 pet1 cent of the Mem bers of the last two Congresses were college men. This is a pretty bard blow on those insti tutions, but perhaps they Will be able to weather It - - finnans' New Railroad. From the Chicago Tribune.: A new railway in Kansas bears the name ot the Hutchinson. Oklahoma and Gulf, and will doubtless become known to fame as the Route H. 0. G. or Die. Poor Chicago. From the St. Louis Kepubllc There are at least ball a million people for whom sheol has no terror. They livo in Chica go and summer has come. FOOTGEAR OP AATI0NS. IK tho ninth and tenth centuries the com mon form of shoe In Europe was tne wooden shoe. The Egyptians had shoes or sandals made orddlnarlly o( leather, bat sometimes ot palm leaves or papyrus. Chinese persons of rank wear boots with thick soles and leg Of fine cloth or silk that reach halt-way up to the knee. The Japanese in their houses Wear light shoes or slippers, with woven soles, without heels, Or else go in their stocking' eet, Wooden shoes, or sabofa, art worn now among the peasants in many countries in Eu rope. Their advantage is in their cheapness and durability. Amo.n'Q the Southern Indian, where no pro tection is needed from the cold, a shoe is made consisting simply of a sole of thick hide bound on the feet by thongs. These art a variety of boots and shoes used in China. The common shoe is made of thick, heavy felt, with a still thicker sole made of woven straw or layers of felt In the sixteenth century boots were gener ally wotn In England and France and the boots of the cavaliers were made with enormously wide tops that Mere rolled or folded oyer. i DEATHS OF A DAY. John H, Ueedt Special Telegram to The Dispatch. Tarentoh. June 22. -John B. Beea, one of Tarcn turn's oldest citizens, died this morning-. JIUIU IUC SUCVil V BU BJPyVMCVUV ftbCWHO rCCclVd tfunevt THE T0PI0AL f ALKEU. Justice ' to fa Toivnsmnn Horace Phillip' Need of Mascots Bits About the Ball Gntne. A nfpoORAratOAL error in this column1 yesterday gave a very ungracious color to some remarks about Mr. Hemmlck, the sow Consul at Geneva. The concluding paragraph should have read: ''Altogether Pittsburg can heartily congratulate Mr. Hemmlck and herself at the' tame time on being to well represented in the beautiful Swiss city by the lake." The word "heartily," bowever,was Ingeniously changed into ".hardly," and thus a fine piece ot sarcasm made nonsense ot the friendly words preceding It " If the Hustling Horace Phillips does not hire .half a hundred mascots, consult a witch or two, or in some other legitimate way compel Dame Fortune to smile, the Allegheny Base ball Club might as well disband at once. Look at that first game yesterday. With its 12 Innings full of admirable playing by all the Allegheny team, and its conclusion In a sick ening derea: of 1 to 0. It is evident that the Doys, in the very penitential garments Of gray, are, in the language of what the easslcty jour nals would call the ''trottolr" decidedly "'down on their luck." Anybody possessing a healthy mascot, sound in wind and limb, and warranted not to reverse its action under any circumstances, is requested to send it, carriage paid, to Horace Phillips. This request is official,-ot course. By the way, are the privileges of selling pea nuts, bad' cigars and chewing gum, of all things in the world. Oh the grand stand so valu able to the Allegheny club that they cannot be dispensed with in the evident interest of msthetlclsm and true baseball? At such a moment for Instance, as at tne end of that inning in which the Allegbenies bad the bases filled and looked like winning the game with runs to spare, what could jar upon one's feelings more than a raspy boy's voice yelling In one' ear, "MUckaranChewingGuml" It would not have ever occurred to one to look for gum chewers, masculine at that in the benches of a ball field. All the same, no less than four young men within speaking distance of the writer had their jaws partially glued together with gum. This fact lent a glutinous obscurity to their enthusiastic yells. V One of the delights in reaching Recreation Park is that the shortest way is via the Union line of combination dust carts and streec cars. These cars are not crowded on a fino afternoon when the Allegbenies are playing at home. Not at all. Crowded is not the word. Passengers fill all the seats, lie under the seats, hang on. to the roof, sit on the roof, stand wherever they can on the platforms and depend trom the same In a very precarious fashion. The car I was packed in yesterday carried 70 people, less 2. The conductor's register showed these figures. Capacity of the car, probably 24 HEPBCRX JOuitS. AN INGENIOUS DEVICE. The New Blennl to Warn Tralm of Another One In Advnncc. Special Telegram to The Dispatch. New York, June 22. Frank Robinson, Superintendent of Motive Power of the Maine Central, at Bangor, has invented a railway signal to warn one train when another has just preceded it. Mr. Robinson's signal, one of the ordinary kind, is set by the passing of a train, the wheels operating upon a strong spring placed alongside the rail, and after a given number of minutes (the time can be regulated to suit) It Is returned to its original position by torce of gravity. This force is obtained by means of two Iron bulbs or globes, one of which is tilled with alcohol. Connected by tubes and unerenly balanced upon a horizontal shaft. The action of the spring In setting the signal brings the globe tilled with alcohol to such a position above the empty globe, which is the smaller ot the two, that the liquid begins to run Ihto the Utter tbrrogh a small tube, the air thus displaced passing to the upper globe by means of a large tube. When the smaller globe has received the greater part of the alcohol it swings by its own weight and required momen tum around the axis to a point above the larger globe, thus turning the signals, when the alco hol quickly runs back to its original receptacle through the large tube and the two spheres re sume their original position, i Itloilier Earih'a Tncuum. From the Chicago Inter-Ocean. I The amount ot coal gas and oil that is now being drained from the interior will produce something of a vacuum in Mother Earth sooner or later. The present supply of gas is enor mous. Statistics for oil show that in 18 Pennsylvania produced 16,491,033 barrels: Ohio, 10,010,!s68 barrels: West Virginia, lly,3 bar rels; California, 704,619 barrels and other States 20,000 barrels. Just how long such a draft can be made and every year increased, and the walls bold, no one can ear. It is pos sible that the supply will be equal to the de mand, and there will be no collapse. Science knows but little of the machinery down toward China. THE NOBLE RED MAN. The Indian agencies are 61 In number. Numbee of houses occupied by Indians, 21, 232. Estimated number of Indians in Alaska, 30,000. ' Number of Indians Bring on and cultivat ing Ian is is ",612. THE total Indian population of the United States is 247,701. NOhber of Indian church members in the United States is 2S.663. NUMBER of Indians in the United States who can read Engl sli is but 23,493. NUMbEE of Indians' in the United States, who wear citizens' dress is 81.621. Number of citizens in the United Slates who can read In dian languace is 71,100. These are ten Indian training schools lo cated in different parts of the Union. EllYME AND KEAS0N. "Busted, all my money s cone, , Shall t pafrn my dtatnond ring? Uo.li binds me to m Jack, And 1 will do no such a thing. But sortie" money I most raise, Ob, for a friend On whom to call, Something, something must be pawned, " So she put up bar parasol. Smart? WhatiSthegreatestgastrononilcal feat ever performed In the world? lluinbley-Eatlng a young wife's mince pie. SmirtT-No. Uumbley Well. I give It up. Smarty Eton, England. Wated-A female stenographer; call or tend photograph. BunOTJNDT That was a frighttul accident that happened to the man who writes the funny column in the Prohibition Journal. , JJaddy-Whatwasit? Burgundy Why, he sat down on his MS. Daddy-Well. Durguntlr-And the sharp points gave him a frightful Jg. Daddy 1 on idiot, that won't hurt him; he's always more or less jagacd. Gossip Did you know MiS3 Rapid sued llarrr Bnullulk for libel because he said the was a lemon? Another OoSsIp-Jts that so? When doerthe case come np? UoMip-H was called yesterday and h was e quitted, Another Gossip-On whose evidence? Uosslp-bdUie dude's, who testified that tliii Eapld was entertaining. When strawberries first to market come, One dollar a quart we pay. And nf course the laboring man don't buy, For the price Is out of his way. But just as soon as the prices fall, And the berries brim in saucer and cup, The laboring man's wire will first miki the Start To again put the itaWbirf y up. Mr. Hayseed (to city chap)-I believe I am going to hare. a great deal ol trpubla with my corn this year, City Chap-Well, why don't you go to a chirop odist? I had a letter from my iflve, It came acroii the deal) blue tea, And It does prove beyond a doubt. That slta is thinking still of me. She says "My love is growing more, I'll always beyourlovlng Dinah, And I will write again to you, The moment I reachDresden, China." bXXSS&l, , OUR BROKEN TOYS. ' The Lrgend of the Tin Soldier Tho Iilmba of Lost Toys A Good OlilChrUllan Cut loih The flayibtti of the t'oor. Hans Christian Andersen tells lis that when his little tin soldier, who loved that airy, fairy ballerina (who was only cut out of paper) was tossed into the fire by a careless boy, be slowly melted, and melted, and melted away, until nothing was left of him but a scrap of metal which the housemaid swept away next morning molten into the form ot a tiny heart. Not ail the broken toys that annually go where do they go, one would like to knowT can boast of having made such a ro mantic end as that. Nevertheless, they have all an interest ana a pathos of their own, not only on account of their nature and life-biStory, but also by reason of the mystery which invariably surrounds their ultimate des tiny. For, as we asked before, where do they got The Passing of Arthur himself Is Hot more mysterious than the Passing of Punchi nello when his cap Is off.'bls Dells broken, his finery stripped from his wooden carcass, and his very spinal curvature his priJoand boast has been flattened by the bullets of outrageous fortune into the semblance of an orthopaedic backbone. The admirable scene painter who executed the brilliant "Hall of Tois" in tne last pantomime at Old Drury might, had be been given the chance,'have painted a pendant to mat pretty picture, abtl called It the Lliuco of Lost Toys. The travelers to that bourne from which no traveler returns (txcept occa sionally as a special favor to the Society for Psychical tlesearch) are not more myMerioua In their booking arrangements than are the in habitants of the toy box. What becomes of our old playthings? They are as lost to us s most of our old playfellows. Tbo latter one does meet sometimes in after years. The little puny boy, one who used to lag In sudh lordly style at school, turns up occasionally in after years, a strapping fellow, full of strange oaths and bearded like the pard, a good six niches taller than oneself, and often a bril liantly successful man when hU senior has long sirfce concluded that destiny has hot dealt him the elder trumps in the game of life. Where Do Thex Go? But our toys return no more. Does any cynic assert that it does not matter? If so. be is as stupid iu this connection, as cynics habitually are. If, instead of gradually disappearing nobody knows as we outgrow each of them in succession, our own toys, our very own, would only reappear when we are well on the way to second childhood, it is more than possible that they wonld bring us back somethingof our own childhood, besides themselves, along with them. The unsuccessful General, tha naval officer Who has managed to sink an Ironclad and half a million of public money with it, the unsuccessful gentleman farmer, would possl- bly find surcease of unpleasant recollections if tbey could only drill their old lead soldier, or sail their old toy boats, or arrancre the Swiss fjrmjard with the impossible trees and the little wooden pens full of sheep grazing con tentedly on the pasture of the nursery flour. And there must be manr a wife and mother who would not refuse to be comforted for some of the cruellest of the disillusions of life if she could onl) clasp Dolly to her heart once more, as she Used to do. and uour ber troubles into the sympathetic ear of that faithful companion and friend. All these, alas t have long disappeared into the Limbo of Lost Toys. Where can that be? There are many mysterious disappearances in lite besides those which the metropolitan police magistrates refer to "the usual courtesy of the Press' to give them publicity. It has been confidently asserted that no man has ever seen a dead donkey. The deathbed nf wild bird is usually a mystery even to those who most closely watch their habits. Most mysterious of all mysterious disappearances (except that of pins) is that of elephants, for It is a common place observation among hunters of big game that it is Only very rarely that the sportsman beholds the bleached bones of the mighty beast, which could not after all well escape being seen it one came in tneir way. utit wuere is the A villon of our broken toys? The dust con tractor's men could, and if they would, proba bly tbrow some light upon the subject; but dustmen are not, as a rule, given to the publi cation of fanciful reflections in connection with their calling. Besides, not every discarded toy Is reckoned to have sunk so low as to be submitted to the supreme indigulty of the dustbin. Sometimes they find their way into the wards of children's hospitals, and certainly the last state of such is better than the first, for they comfort the weary hours of the suffering little ones, who never before bad any better nursery than the gutter or the railway arch, or any plaything save an oyster shell or acabbage stalk. In some countries, nocauiy in x ranee, tuey oiten place a dead child's favorite toys upon the little grave, which is, Indeed, a good old Christian cutom. if we may believe the silent testimony of the catacombs, where the toys of forgotten children in old Home have been found in num bers. Specimens even of the toys of ancient E'ypt may be seen, gathered from similar sources, in some of the museums of Europe. Tots of the Poor. The toys of the poor have no great mystery abont them.e ither because there are.as was said juit now, none of them, or because they are, by reason of their scarcity and consequent value lu the eyes of theowners, played with until they are played out and drop to pieces of their owu accord. But how about the more solid and costly playthingsof Master find Miss? These, no doubt, frequently become the natural per qulslteaof servants.aud are by them transferred to their own small relations. There is some thing sad about that. An aristocratic doll, tor instance, by birth probablyaParlsienne, accus tomed to the refined social atmosphere of the nursery in a gentleman's bouse, must be keenly sensitive to the change of proprietorship when she is banded over to Nurse's little Sister. It is all very well to argue that the heyday of her youth and beiuty is over. Such reasoning only betrays a crais ignorance of the mental habit of the sex. A lady, as everybody knows, is never old or ugly. True, she may be a broken toy in the strictest sense of the terra. Gladys or Ethel may have smashed her aristocratic hose and emptied her elegant person of sawdust over the heads of brothers and sister", but it is not to be sup- fmsed for an instant that she Is any the more ikely for that to accept with resignation her position as the property of Polly or amy. rye snouia not, inaeea, De in the least surprised to hear, that patrician dulls which are the victims of such a WOful degringolade have a Way of their Own of letting their new ilebelan proprietors know tho difference between tho Classes and the Masses. With the lower animals tors as well ai "alive," it is different. The "high mettled racer" accepts the shafts of the erowler and even the knacker's final blow with patient submission, and no dobut the wooden steed, who is minus ills mane and similarly curtailed at the other end, is equally philosophical In analogous circumstances. There impatience, if not dignltv, in his appearance as he is dragged through the gutter at the heels of the "little vulgar boy." Whither, however, the little vulgar boy even tually drags blra remains a mystery. One is, perforce, compelled to take refuge in that theorv of a Limbo of Lost Toys, where Noah and his sons and his sons' wives recorer, per haps, the scattered members of their remarka ble zoological collection, and where the inquis itive little fingers are never at work with a toy as they always were in the nursery to "find out what it's got inside." But certainly no human eye has ever seen that lait resting place of our broken loss. London Globe. Tliet Had Brtter Chain It Down. From the New York Tclegram.3 Jay Gould is going "take in." the Paris exhi bition. Judging from the way In which he usually takes in everything he touches there won't be much left of the Eiffel Toner after he gets through With It The Sensible Thing to Do. Vrotn the Philadelphia Inquirer, It Is the season to wear a cabbage leaf in your bat. If fashion were-guided by cemmon sense it would be the season to wear the cabbage leaf and leave tne hat at home. Pnnklonnbte Freckles. From the Philadelphia Press.! Freckles of large Size and old gold hue are tbe proper thing this year. Tho old-fashioned tan aud sunburn are no longer popular. THE INTELLECTUAL LVFAKT. Harper's young People,! The youngster is realty a wonderful lad) Tho fact Is most easy to lee. Hi knows "Pepsy-WOjiiey'S" the name Of his Old, That his hone Is a woolly 'aee'gee." He knows thtt a trail! Is a big "Choo-Choo car," A "Dlng-doug," "Puff-puff, ' a ,Koooos' He knds that a rabbit, When squeezed, will cry "Alar!" That a cofr'i nothing less than a "ildb-o-o." Be Knows that a nanny-goat's naught bat a Na-a-ah," That duck'ia ridiculous 'Qusckt" He knows that a lambkin says nothing but "Ua-a-ah," That a donkey's best known as a "JLtak.' There's hardly a 'creature that's living to-day, Twist tw inty and sixty years old, That kuows all these thln--tfiat b,.I miy My, He doesn't unless he's been told, QQSSIP OP A GREAT 0ITT. Equal to the Emergency. CKXW YORK BtntXAtr SriCIALS.3 New Yobs, June 22. Some days ago a prac tical Jokersent Invitations to 60 persona in Nor watk. Conn., to attend the Wedding of James Gordon, in Bridgeport, this evening. This ar ternonn three wagon loads ot wedding guests alighted at Mr. Gordon's door. Now Mr. Gor don was not even engaged, and it took consid erable time to explain to him the job which bad been put up on htm and his Norwalk lriends. As be grasped tbe situation, nowever, he excused himself from bis surprise party. He b timed off to the house ot Miss Lizzie Emmons and asked her to become his bride in ten min utes. Tbe proposal was so sudden that it al most took her breath away, but she accepted and only begged Tor a half hour's time in Which to adorn herself in a suitable wedding attire, Mr, Gordon then rushed back to inform his guests of bis good luck. An Impromptu com mittee Started for refreshments, music and a minister. They came back presently with a caterer and an orchestra, but no minister. After considerable delay, a Justice of the peace, who was with the party, volunteered to perform the ceremony. The bride was ready in less time than she asked fori and the knot was tied. After an hour's dancing the guests started back for Norwalk and tbe bridal pair went on their wedding tour. ' Snlllvnn' Shoea On Exhibition. The shoes which John Ik Sullivan will wear in his fight with Kilrain, have hung from a small liberty pole before tbe store of a down town shoe dealer all day. On top of the pole is a little American eagle and a red, white and blue streamer. A crowd stood around tbe pole and stared at the soles of the shoes all this afternoon. OfTfor Europe. The P.ev. Dr. John HalL Mrs. Hall and Chevalier DeTavera, Austrian Minister at Washington, sailed for Europe to-day. Clips Players Kcilocpd to Beggary. At tbe close of the recent chess tournament, many of the unsuccessful contestants were al most penniless. They bad expected the mana ging committee to pay their living expenses here and their way home, out of the receipts of the tournament, but tbe receipts were so small that almost notbiug remained tor this purpose after the prizes were paid. Several ex-champion chess players were therefore obliged to beg money with which to pay their way home. Tanbenhans sailed for Havre in the steerage with a few dollars, which he had begged and borrowed. G.H.D.Gossip,tbe cham pion chess player of Australia, has been unable up to this afternoon to get 123 with which to buy a steerage ticket to London, He thinks that his rriends In England will pay his passage back to Australia if be can only get over there. Opposed'to Cbenp Fnneratf. It Is war to the knife just now between tbe Brooklyti undertakers and the United States Funeral Directing Company. A short time ago Liveryman Johnson Was boycotted by the" un dertakers because ha furnished carriages for the company's funerals. The company met this antagonistic measure by guaranteeing liv erymen whom it patronized as large profits from its trade as were yielded to them by the undertakers' trade. Now the undertakers threaten to boycott all firms which engrave the company's coffin plates. Beveral firms have, therefore, refnsed to do the company's work. Should the boycott be continued, the company Will have to get its plates engraved out of town, Tbe cause of the trouble Is tbe undertakers' opposition to the company's policy of lowering funeral expenses. Tbe Fitch Case Postponed. The verdict of the jury in tbe divorce case of Fitch against Fitch, when opened in Court, proved to be merely an announcement that, being Unable to agree at 11:30 o'clock, the jury nad concluded to give it Up and go home. Only Colonel Ingersoll, Mr. Dougherty and Mr. Fitch were in court. Mr. Fitch seemed cheer ful until he learned that the jury bad stood 10 to 2 in favor of Mrs. Fitch. Then he looked sad. The case was set down for retrial at tbe October term. Mrs. Fitch's suit against her husband for separation and alimony is on the calendar for the same term. A OAT'S LONG FAST. The Ahlmal Taken Front the Wreck Alive After Three Werka. tttLoyt a stArr roRttisi'oNliKrt.l JottKSTOwTf. June i&'-That a cat hath nine HVeS Is a proverb as ancient as the hills, and its truth was verified to-day. Tbe workmen un earthed a live cat in tbe debris near tbe Balti more and Ohio Station this afternoon. Itsbody was reduced to a shadow, but the animal was still kicking. Its neck was not any thicker than that nf an ordinary bottle. The animal was taken to tbe Bed Cross Hos pital where they are feeding it on bread and milk. Isbael. Having: n Hnrd Time. From the Cincinnati Commercial Gazette.: According to all accounts Hon. Mr. Mnldoofi 19 having about as pleasant a time in training Ron. JOhnL. Sul'lfan as the animal trainer would have with a bear with a sore head. Sign of the Times. From the Chieajro Mews. The toy pistols in the show windows and the long rows' of little white coffins In tbe under takers' shops indicate that the Fourtn of July is near at hand. A IllriV-oin Ileptlle. from the Chlcato Tribune, t A man in Waukeenab, Fla.. has killed 600 alligators this season. The alligator is a hideous reptile. Let nobody shed any crocodile tears over his remains. TKI-STATE TRIFLES. Harbisbtjro isa queer place to find a Texas horned toad, yet Frank Toner found one on tbe river bank the over day. It has been a noticeable fact that of the many bald old gentlemen who frequent a restaurant on Chestnut street, Philadelphia, there 1a one who Is never troubled with flies, although the others are worried into a perspira tion keeping tbe pesky things away. He ex plained the other day that he bathed his scalp with quassia water. Box tortoises have become scarce in Chester county, Pennsylvania, It is thought the mow ing maohines have exterminated therm A Clsartield, Pa., tramp who had stolen art umbrella was caught in the act of smashing tbo handsome handle to get tbe gold knob off. A-WAOOISH Prohibitionist of Philadelphia who lost a watch 6b the election paid bi3 bet with a Waterbury. It should have beea a Waterburied. HfltfSfewiTES everywhere are" curious to find out What is wrong with tbe pea crop this year. They all seem to cook bard. Roiie men have queer appetite?, ftgfe Is a Lehigh county, Penturlvanla, man who eats the ordinary red earthworms He has repeat edly eaten them In lots of 25 on a wager, with isemiflglya great i relish as if he was eating tubes of macaroni. David samel!, or Salisbury, near Allen town, marked a cornstalk a day or two since to see how fast it grew, and found that it gained 4 Inches in 33K hours. Ht r.. SASftrtl Slimr, of West Chester, Pa., in strolling through East Bradford Came on a tnottur 'possum and ten little ones. He caught the whole family, and will try to tarn them. A HA&RISBT7BQ, Pa., voter who invariably scratches his ticket from force of ' habit Scratched as uaal on Tuesday and made his ticket worthless. A Methodist church, near Joanna Furnace, Berks county, Pa was struck with a lightning bolt which l described as "a ball ol fire as large ai a spittoon." A .fsntmvrf fuberman, of Columoiana county, Ohio, says that artistic angling outfits are nothing more than downright tomfoolery and that he can land all the nth ho wants with a bent pin. And he does, AnAfiSithwhohad a spite against Henry ftambl, ot Preston county, West Virginia, dis figured him terribly by cutting his ehetk While snaring nun tne otntr aay. CURIOUS CONDEJSATI0B8L ', Nearly all the girls of Treemont, Mich., play ball. A woman and her husband are master and engineer respectively of a trading steamer on tbe Columbia rlter, Washington. A private soldier says that desertions from tbe army are largely clue to the tyranny of the younzer officers and the drunkenness of the older ones. As Will Durocher, oCEscanaba, Mich., was eating his supper a few nights ago a stroke of lightning violently removed his shoes and trousers, leaving him badly burned and shocked. A citizen of Virginia is seeking to have tbe sulphur sprinirs of that State indited as nuisances injurious to health. He has lived near one for three years, and be savs that strawberries and dead dpgs now smell alike to hint. In the Dutch portion of Borneo the natives used to adorn their huts with human heads, and they were ot particular whosa head it was. Over 4000 of them have bad to bo killed id order to pnt a stop to this practice, which is now absolute. There Is a larger proportion of the boys and girls if New Jersey than of any other State in the Union who go to Sundav school. It ap pears by statistirs recently taken that there are just about 280,000 children in the L997 Sunday' schools of New Jersey. The old Planters' House in St, Louis, which gained hi-tnncal Interest from allusions in Dickens' '-American Notes." and from whose front balcony Andrew Johnson made on 9 of the opeeche-i that are Said to haVe led to his impeachment, Is to be torn ilorrn. A Pennsylvania editor has discovered several Centuries late that everything in nature1 is playful. He says: "Tne lightning plays, tbo wind whistles, the thunder rolls the snow flies, the waves leap and the fields smile. Even the trees shoot and the rivers and mreams run," News comes irom Toungu, Burmah, that Koh Pal Sab, a timber merchant there. has founded a new religion, which Is described as a sort of mixture of Buddhism aud Christi anity. The disciples who number several thousands, keep th Christian Sunday and ab stain from strong drink. A cat In Falkirk, Scotland, is bringing Up a brood of chickens. But the prize cat is to be found in the hamlet of Trinity Gask. Perth shire. Scotland. It is seriously related of her, that, having been deprived of her kittens, sba caught a nioue, which be adopted, and is now mothering With great tenderness For the convenience of those wishing to punch two big turtles that are displayed in front of a store in Punxsatawney, Pa., tbe owners have placed some large sticks beside it. It an noyed them greatly to See tbe expression of pain on a man's face who Stopped there to looli at the turtles and could not find a stick to prod them with. , Florida's topographical appearance Is exactly like that of a pistol. The PenaeoIa end Of the State would represent the muzzle. Ap palachicola the trigger. Fernandina the ham mer and all South Flohdi the handle of tho eapiin. Annexation to Alabama west of tha Chattahoochee river wonld cut off the muzzle and a good part of the barrel. It is reported at Beidsville, Ga., that last week a man m Tattnall county, while dip ping turpentine, was struck abont the corner of hii niiutb by a large rattlesnake. He seized thereptil and was struck on the arm. Ha then tried to tbrow the snake from him, and was aain struck on the thigh. It is said he died before reaching ahoue. A "Guide to the Churches of London" shows that thenumber of metropolitan churches have increased between 1883 and lSb9from 923 to 1,018. Altar vestments are now the rule in 59 churches as against 37 in 1E83. altar lights la 119 as against 64 in 1S1S3, and the "eastward position" in 890 as against Sol in 1683. In tbe same period the number of churches in which, the communion n celebnted in the evening has decreased from 2X1 to 27i An eccentric old gentleman who re cently died in Tyler, Tex., left a sum of money to be divided among persons now livinz lu tha South whose birth was coincident with bis ontn May 9, 1S35. If every person who Is entitled to a share puts in a claim there will not ba mnch for each one. There are in the United States at least 40O.U0O persons who wer burn in the United States in the year 1835, and of ttosd the number In the Southern States wouM be about 150,100. Assuming that the 9th of May of that year was au average one for births there are now living in the United States LlOft persons who were born on that day, and 4CO of them are residents of the South. ' . It appears that wood pavements have met with greater success in some ot tbe coun tries of Europe than in our own, tbe reason as signed for this being tbe fact of their having a foundation of concrete to rest upon in tbe for mer, at tbe same time receiving more attention therein the way of maintenance tban here. Owing to its hardness aud resinous qmlity, American yellow plne.lt is said, has become tbe favorite wood for Ibis purpose In Berlin and Hamburg, ami an official report says that Frederick's brlge, Berlin, which was paved m the spring or 1ST9 with the wood in question, is still In good condition, while the approaches, paved with granite blocks, have twice since re quired repaying. A Boston paper tells of an old burying ground in a largo southern New Hampshire town there is an interesting group or seveu tombstones. Each of six of them mark3 a little strip of earth where rests tbe remains of one of the wives of one man, and the seventh Is the gravestone of the B.ue Beard himself. The epitaphs or the wives are short and simple enougb, bnt tbe filth bears, underneath tha name and record of tbe woman's birth and death, these wurds: "The Peacemaker." Ona can only speculate as to what the circum stances were under Which she exercised her benevolent art: but no tlnulit she had to be a peacemaker to enable her husband to get along in any sort of romiort wi.h all bis deceased wives' relations. But the epitaph on tbe hus band's tombstone is a gem. It reads thus: : best! wEAitTpiLoniiL T CLIPPED BITS OF WIT. "Wibble "What do you think of this idea ofadoptlng the sunflower as the nttlonal fiowerf Wabble-Pretty good Idea, 1 thlnt. It is typi cal or quite a nnmerous class of Americans. It makeS a big spread all summer and is seedy In tba fall. Itrrs Hants hxyrtss. Fenderson I don't like your friend Brown. He is positively rude. He went so far laat evening as to tell me 1 was a JacXasi. It was entirely uncalled for. Fojrtr-I agree with you, my by. It was entirely superflil0Ui.''itm Transcript. "Where the "Work Comes In. Minister's Wife You haveht been oat or your study an hour tills week. What Is tliemi'tcr Minister Some oftbe congregation say my ser mons are too lob;, and I've been trying to write ithonone.-.Vtwror H'tfily. What Kept Him.Irate Mamma Good ness me! It's hairan boursinee I sent you around to the store to get those things, and here you are back without them. Little Hlcfe- "It wis such a long time before my turn came to be waited on that I forgot what it was you wanted," Then why didn't you come home and Bud, 0UH" "1 was afraid If I left I'd lose my tarn.'-iVrto Tor li(V. A Satisfactory Explanation. Distracted Mother (at her daughter's weddlng-Oht Oht (Mil What shall we dor The groom hasn't come, the guests are beginning to giggle, and my daughter is In a faint. Friend of the family "Calm yourself, madam. I saw tbe groom only two hours ago, entering the Great Dry Goods Emporium at the Corner. 11 Slid he had fbrkotted to get gloves.' Distraetcd Mother (suddenly breaking Into itsllssWUh, then It's all right. He's probably waiting for his change. " Sea Xnrk H testy. TOSE StISEBT. Now it is that Sol's insistence, from a salu tary dUtance, melts our linen aud apparel toihet'rogetltoui pulp. And we drench oar constitutions, with thesa bibulous ablutions, till It seems, almost, tile filter would be empted it a gulp. BUt this mild Incineration, has its ample compen litlon, for amidst the bltrulitlou, we to ar deutly Implore, We are spared that cry eternal, with lis tmphsiis internal, from tbe man who shrinks and shivers as he chatters Shut the door 1 1 1 PMlaUitphut Prist. Onlv Ona Plnea fnf 'Ffini.-.Prnminent Polltlcian-lhlve dons a good many favors for you, and bow I'd like you to put a friend of mtna & on your paper. , . Ufeat'Kdltor-'n'ouldba do for a reporter? , f "No.hebasn'tanylegs." 3&- "TJm-mlght make an exchange editor,-p v haps?" . ."Be couldn't read the newspapers. He's Mind "Poornnowl caahehear?" a.X'4 "Mo, deaf as a post lit Is a flaswrtter, though, aad he ha a lively Imagination. i& i -Ooodl 1 win appoint him La4fc oorrt sponaest.H-Acw lor nutty. f. f ti i mil mi i j. j . . - v t i . a , rffisitfrifriftl