BV.WSWWM, j TJ"- r i I t'4 Wije Bi$al& XSXABLISHED FEBRUARY S; 1S. Vol. 44, 20.249. Entered at Plttsburc Fostofflce, November 14, iS7, u eeeond-class matter. Business Office 97 and99 Fifth Avenue. News Booms and Publishing House 75, 77 and 79 Diamond Street. Eastern Advertising office, Koom Tribune EuUding, JicvrYork. Average net circulation of the dally edition of "The Dispatch for six months ending September SO, 1S8D. as sworn to before City Controller. 30,095 Copies per Issue. Average net circulation or the Sunday edition of The Dispatch for four months ending Septem bers 188 54,188 Copies per issue. TERMS OF THE DISPATCH. rOSTAGE FEEE IN THE tnOTED STATES. JAJLTDisrATCH, One Year. I 8 00 Daily Dispatch, Per Quarter SOO Dailt Dispatch. One Month 70 Dailt Dispatch. Including Sunday, lyear. 10 00 DAH.TDisrATCH,lncludingbunday,Sm'ths. 2 SO JJailt Dispatch, Including Sunday.l month to hcxDAT Dispatch, One 1 ear ISO U EEKI.T Dispatch, One Year. 115 The Daily Dispatch Is delivered by carriers at lEcents per week, or Including bunday edition, at K cents per week. PITTSBURG. MONDAY. OCT. 14, 1SS9. THE LAST "WEEK. The last week of the Exposition opens to day with every prospect of terminating the first effort of the society with a success that surpasses all expectations. It is, of course, too early to estimate financial results; but ihe crowds that have visited the buildings during the past three weeks, and the attend ance, which there is every reason to expect lor the next six days, indicate that the re turns will be such as to warrant an import ant increase of the scope and features ot the Exposition for the future. Such a gratifying result will fully reward the labors of the gentlemen who have worked for years to provide the magnificent build ings and put the Exposition on an assured basis. "While the response to their efforts lias, at times, seemed so slow as to almost discourage the friends of the project, the persistence and energy which carried it for ward to its present success have been fully vindicated. The plans for next year's Ex position can be made with a surplus in the treasury and an assurance of publio support such as will indefinitely enhance the attrac tions and public usefulness of the exhibi tion. The last week of the Exposition should be utilized byPittsburgers in visiting the show and seeing what can be done by public union in aiding the managers to spread the fame and credit of Pittsburg's industries. SHOULD HOT BE ABANDONED. The discontinuance of the Signal Service stations at the headwaters of the rivers in this section is a step which can only be satisfactorily explained by complete ignorance on the part of the authorities, concerning the importance to river com merce of early and accurate information of the state of the river at those points. Not only the preparations to ship hundreds of thousands of tons of freight, but the safety of the coal ready for shipment often de pends on the warnings of rising witer which come from those stations. Of course, if the Government discontinues the service, the rivermen will be obliged to find some means of maintaining it at their own expense. But it is hardly creditable that a rich Govern ment like ours should abandon a service of such importance after having undertaken if. If it does so, the inquiry will inevitably be made as to the nature of the extraordinary expenditures which have exhausted the ap propriations before half of the fiscal year lias expired. REFORM IH SLOT MACHINES. We are pleased to observe that steps are being taken to arrest the slot machine in its mad and criminal career. At the first in stitution of these novel contrivances they appeared to be a beneficial as well as unique invention. The ability to deposit your nickel in the slot and get what you expect, without being talked to death by an urbane clerk, who insists on selling you what you do not want, or without having to miss your train while waiting for the article to be wrapped, docketed, the rhange made, and the whole thing returned by a cash railway with a hieroglyphically marked slip, took the guise of a boon to a long-suffering humanity. But the slot machine soon evinced a dis position to develop the worst features of commercial immorality. A machine which calmly receives yonr coined money and then stolidly omits to disclose your weight or shell out a dime novel, is doing little better than obtaining money under false pretenses. Even when it makes a pretense of fulfilling the contract, but iu lien of a glass of cold water gives you a draft about the temperature or lukewarm tea, or informs you that you weigh two tons and a half which is a man ifest libel the beguiling mechanism is en gaged in no more houest business than the stock waterer who sells the public millions of dollars worth or stock on hundreds of thousands worth of property. The simili tude is not decreased by the fact that it is impossible to put the slot machine at mak ing barrels in the workhouse or mats at the penitentiary. It is therefore with great pleasure that we note a reform in slot machines. An En glish inventor has devised one which, when its internal economy is out of order, will honestly reject the coin and roll it out at the bottom. This is a disposition towatd honesty in slot machines which we com mend to the emulation of more animate and a good deal bigger business agencies. ABANDONED EASTERN PABKS. With regard to the abandonment of New England farms, which is becoming a rather prominent subject of discussion, the Phila delphia Press offers the following explana tion: The causes which have led to this wholesale abandonment of New England farm lands are easily stated. The first is the ease with which the neb. prairie lands of the West could be ac quired and their greater productiveness. A steady stream of emigrants has gone out from New England to build up the great Northwest and make its progress the marvel of the nine teenth century. Another cause is the tariff, which has bniltup the manufacturing indus tries of New England and drawn to the towns much of the young blood of the farms. This has made farm help dear .and rendered it im possible for the Vermont and New Hampshire farmer with a sterile soil to compete with the products of the Minnesota and Dakota farmers. Still another cause Is the summer boarding business, which has proved more profitable than the old methods of farming. This explanation commits the logical er--ror of confounding effect with cause in the first point and of alleging totally inadequate causes in the other two. The emigration from New England farms, when the latter are totally abandoned, is simply due to the fact that Western profits are greater. But kyijP-Wr' what is the reason 'that Western farmers can pay for one to two thousand miles of transportation and cause the entire extinc tion of New England farming? It certainly cannot be the building up of factories by the tariff, for while that may make labor dearer, it should more than compensate in the increased demand for farm products from the farms at the doors of the fac tories. The summer boarder plea as a reason why the New England farmer abandons his farm is rather severe on the summer boarder; but its alleged profits certainly do not explain the unoccupied lands in the Eastern States. The fact is that the explanation is one to which people generally close their eyes. While the farms of New England, Hew York and Pennsylvania are at the very doors of factories and mills, and within two to four hundred miles of the seaboard, the policy of railroad rates is to take away that advantage, and place them as far or farther away than the Northwestern farmer, in the matter of freight charges. The much be rated long and Bhort haul clause of the Inter-State Commerce law, checks this prac tice to the extent of forbidding the railroads to put the Pennsylvania larmer farther away from the seaports than the Kansas farmer; but as one is charged as much as the other, the latter has all the benefit ot cheap and rich lands, while the latter is deprived of his legitimate advantage of locality. The subject is a difficult one; but it is well to see its actual presence and recognize the results inevitably involved, when it is thrust in our faces. CONTRASTS IN INTEREST BATES. An example of the discrepancies which appear in the rates for loans, even between localities very close to each other, Is fur nished by the report that the building and loan associations at Johnstown find the de mand for loans so great that they are selling their money at 28 per cent premium in addi tion to the regular interest At the same time the similar societies at Pittsburg and Philadelphia find it hard to get any premium at all; while first-class morteages in both cities are negotiable at 5 per cent or less. Of course there is some difference in the security of the high-rate loans at Johnstown and the 4 or 5 per cent mortgages in the cities near to it But the marked difference between the building society rates is un doubtedly due to the very great excess of demand at Johnstown. But this brings out a peculiarity in the money market, as dis tinguished from markets for mercantile commodities. If an especial demand for grain or iron springs up at any one place, so as to enhance1 the price, the supply from other markets flows in so quickly that the only permanent difference in prices, is the cost of taking the staple from the supplying markets to the points of distribution. But the cost of transferring money from one point to another is almost infinitesimal; yet we have constantly such contrasts pre sented as that between the rates for secured loans at Johnstown and those at Pittsburg, or Philadelphia, as well as that between mort gages at the East and at the West. Experience with the latter suggests the fact that the reason for these difierences is the difficulty of exact and personal informa tion for the lender, as to the character of the property on which the loan is to be secured. Nevertheless it ought to be possible for modern ingenuity to overcome the diffi culty. In a case like that at Johnstown, for example Pittsburg and Philadelphia, capital ought to be able to find some means of making loans to assist in rebuilding the town, with full assurance as to the se curity ot the loans. It would be both for the advantage of borrower and lender, to have the rates which the latter is paying re duced and those which the former is. getting advanced. That single case illustrates a need of our financial system. The device which will bring together borrower and lender, from different parts of the country, so that the former shall be assured of his security, and the latter obtain the advantage of lower interest rates, will be a great gain to both. A WEAKENING INFLUENCE. The rather small-sized straw which was furnished by the defeat of the President's party in his own city is given more than proportionate significance by the explana tion of Congressman Thomas Browne, of In diana. He says that there are 12,000,000 people in the country eligible for office, and 9,000,000 of them want appointments. In stead of that they get disappointments. This, he declares, defeated Cleveland, and he strongly intimates that it is the trouble at Indianapolis. But hold onl The very foundation of the argument forgiving offices to politicians is the assertion that it strengthens the party, and is therefore es sential to political organization. Yet here we find one of the politicians declaring that the disappointment caused in the distribu tion of patronage defeats the administration. According to the statements of Mr. Browne, the best thing to strengthen a party would be to make it. impossible to distribute the patronage as a political reward. The true friends of party organization in that view must be the hated Mugwumps. The kind of wire that is causing so many deaths in New York was long ago recognized to be dangerous. The first report of the Board of Electrical Control said: "Under writer's wire is a wire covered with tape saturated with white lead, and a certain amount of usage renders it susceptible to moisture. After being in use still longer the tape rots away and leaves the naked wire exposed." Are we to understand from our Pittsburg electricians that none of this class of wire is now suspended over the Pittsburg streets? The Government officials who are turn ing up their noses at that African scientific expedition probably are of the opinion that science Is only of valae when applied to setting up the wires for carrying Congres sional districts or States. The chief cook at the White House is reported to have retired because his lofty soul could not brook the interference of Mrs. Harrison in kitchen affairs. Mill ions of American people will stand ready to support the wife of the President on the platform that the mistress of the White House, like every other competent Amer ican woman, shall be mistress of her own kitchen. The police raids on the "speak-easies" yesterday, will knock the profits off several months operation of those institutions', and make the business decidedly less attractive for the future. The speak-easies must go. The last six days of the Exposition should bring iu every one who has put off visiting it, in order that he may not miss the oppor tunity of seeiog-what can be done when the public works together for the credit of the city. Those who have been there already, will not need urging to make them take the last last chances of seeing the exhibits once more. JEFFERSON Davis has a hundred thou sand .acres of land for sale. However attached he may have' been to the Lost Cause, he does not want any Confederate bonds for it. The report that the Pennsylvania Kail road people are boasting in Philadelphia that they have captured the committee ap pointed by the Board of Trade to advocate the Belt Line project, indicates that the big cor poration is disposed to repeat, with regard to that enterprise, its tactics against the South Penn project. Ix is hoped that after election day is past in Ohio the politicians will consider it consistent with their patriotic duties to stop slinging mud and take mutual baths. The United States Supreme Court begins its annual term at Washington this week. Being able to hear about 400 cases in a term, and having 1,325 cases on the docket, the anxious suitor must possess his soul in patience until Congress 'helps the court or the court helps itself by holding longer terms. Bev. T. DrvviTT TaIiMAOe's tabernacle has gone up in smoke for the time being; but Bev. T. Dewitt Talmage's talk still flows on. The test of the dynamite guns on the Vesuvius having demonstrated their ability to sling 1,500 pounds of dynamite per min ute at the aggressive foreigner, this nation can consider itself entitled to claim a place in the front rank of civilization. PEOPLE OP PROMINENCE. Peesidekt Eliot, of Harvard, has declared himselt a Democrat. Mr C'laus Spbeckels, the sugar manu facturer, has removed most of his personal property from San Francisco, and will make bis home henceforth at Philadelphia. Mks. Austin Cobbin, Miss Corbin and more than a score of their friends are making an autumn tour in the White Mountains. A few of them are In carriages and the rest of ' them on horseback. Mks. Benjamin Habrtsox will go to New York within a fortnight to order several recep tion costumes for the winter. Both she and Mrs. Robert McKee will have their work done by the tailor who made their inaugural cos tumes. The bronze statue at Vienna of the composer Schubert, who was a short, insignificant man, with coarse features, represents a gentleman of great elegance, tall and stately form. Seated on a heap of stones, with his elbow resting on a tree stump and a pencil in his hand, as if writ ing ma large book upon his knees. He gazes into the air with a rapt look. The announcement comes from the Pacific coast that ex-Senator Fair proposes to take up his residence in New York, and will probably secure a large house and entertain conspicu ously during the coming winter. MissTessie Fair, the Senator's daughter and heiress, has a wide popularity at the West, and is quoted as a very charming and sensible girl. A portrait painted by Van Dyck, which he thought so good that he took it about with him on his travels as a sample of hi3 skill, is that of Cornelius von der Geest in the National Gal lery, London. No picture in the gallery Is so often copied. A crack has made its appear ance in this masterpiece, running up from the bottom of the plctnre about four inches and showing the ground on which it was painted. Colossi. Fbaxkijit FAntBAHKSj President of the Fairbanks Scale Company, will give to the town of St. Johnsbury, Vt, his entire col lection of birds, minerals, shells and curiosities, and erect a suitable granite building for a mu seum. His collection of birds is one of the finest in this country. His other curiosities in clude rare and costly articles from all parts of the world. The museum will contain working rooms for students and a scientific library. A PHAHTOM CHILD. A Ghost Aypcurs Id the Roadway In Broad Daylight. New Yobk, October 13. The people of Pleasantville, Westchester county, are debat ing among themselves whether they have or have not a ghost in their midst This state of mind has been brought about by a statement made the other day by a gentleman who does not wish his name to appear in print. He says that recently, while riding In company with his wife along Hillside avenue, after passing the residence of Ira Nodine. tbey reached a Elace on the old road when his wife attracted is attention by exclaiming, "Don't run over that child!" Looking in the direction pointed ont by her he says he distinctly saw a child standing In the road near the head of his horse. Ho turned aside as quickly as possible, but not quick enough, for the wbifiletree seemed to both ot them to strike the child. He imme diately stopped his horse, when they were sur prised to discover that no child was there. It had vanished from their sight, leaving no trace. There were no bushes or other shelter of any kind whatever in which it could have hidden. This occurred in broad daylight and at a point where there was nothing to obstruct the vision, and any object could be seen for a long distance in either direction. It is said by some of the oldest inhabitants thereabout that in early times several vision similar to the above were reported. Still, this gentleman is neither a believer in ghosts nor a Spiritualist. THE FASTEST OP MAILTEA1NS. The Canndlnn Pacific Propose to Cross the Continent In Fonr Days. Bangor, Me., October 13. The Canadian Pacific has perfected a time table for the run ning of a mail train which for speed will eclipse anything known in the history of railroading. No passengers will be taken, and it is to run from Vancouver or Port Moody, B. C, to St. John, N. B. from the Pacific to the Atlantic in four days. It was requested by the home Government for the speedy transit of the English mail which passes between that country and China, Japan, Australia and ports in tho Indian Ocean where there are English interests. The experimental train will be given four days. Fourteen locomotives will be run, each doing abcut 250 miles. These or some of them are now ready for the rail, and will be distin guished by having red smokestacks, driving wheels and ranning gear. Though not of extra weight, the capacity of the tender will be double that of ordinary machines. It is quito likely that the train will be put on as soon as the St. Lawrence freezes over. TAK156 0DT TEETH IU TEXAS. A Cowboy Dentist Who Used a Mallet For nn Antithetic. From the ew York Star. J Henry Dixey 3ysthat he was once playing In a small Texan town during his early stage days, and having suffered tortures with an aching tooth, at last decided to have It out On inquiry he learned that the only dentist there was an alleged Indian doctor, whose office was located in a tent oc the outskirts of the town. The fellow was an Indian only In dress, how ever, for in reality ho was a type of the un tamed cowboy of the plains. My tooth has been paining roe dreadfully," began-Dixey, as he seated himself on the only camp stool in the tent, "and I want you to give me ether, doctor." "Ether." roared the cowboy dentist, as he swnng a huge wooden mallet around his head. "Ether be blowed; we stun 'em here." Ways of Getting Office. From tbe Oil City Blizzard. 1 An exchange observes that when English men want office they "stand" for it. The Americans "run" for it. Both occasionally "lie" for it more or less generally more. Tbe Only Persons Excited. Prom the Chicago New.! Tbe wild-eyed rumor about Canadian press rations for war will doubtless cause a great deal of subdued excitement among the irre pressible horse marines; t Nor Much of a Fait. From the "H ew York Herald'. 1 , A correspondent asks if Btrateriger's down fall will kill him. No, ae was so near the bot tom when be fell this last time that he wasn't much hurt. THE-CRITIC. The Sermonizing Novelist of To-day Dlt cusae'd Bret Htirto and lbs Short Story Monopolies and the People Chronic Despotism and Chronic War Compared Nationalism as a Remedy Tho Jackdaw ol Rhelma. "There is to be taught wax works of all sorts fruits upon trees or in dishes, all manner of confections, flesh, fish, fowl, or anything that can be made of wax Phllllgree work of any sort. Japanese work, painting on glass, sashes for windows upon sarsnet or transparent pa per, straw work of any sort, as horses, birds, or beasts, shell work in sconces or flowers, quill work, transparent work, puff work, paperwork, tortoise work, gimp or bngle work, silver land skips, a sort of work in imitation of Japan; tape lace, cutting glass, washing lace, pastry of all sorts, with tho finest shapes that's used in London; boning fowl without cutting the back, bntter work, conserving and candying; all sorts of English wines, writing and arithmetic, mu sic ana the great end of dancing, which is a good carriage, and several other things." This, in the year 1703, was the course of stndy in a young ladles' school. We havq changed things somewhat since that. Mr. Morgan's paper on "Ladies and Learn ing," In the Atlantic Monthly for October, is followed by an exceedingly clever paper by Agnes Bepplier on "Fiction in the Pulpit." Miss Reppller is not pointing her sharp pen at preachers who tell lies, bat at novelists who preach sermons. The trouble, she says, with the novelists of our day and generation is that they all want to attire themselves in gown and bands; they all want to preach sermons. When Coleridge said to Lamb, "Did you ever hear me preach?" Lamb answered, as everybody knows, "I never heard yon do anything else." It is undoubtedly true that the most notable of recent Action writers are among those who, if wo cannot say that they never do "anything else," do manage to write a good many sermons. "Great is the company of the preacher." "Mrs. Battle," the essayist remembers, "re laxed herself, after & game of whist, over that genial and unostentatious trifle called a novel. Fancy Mrs. Battle relaxing herself over 'Dan iel Deronda,' or the tOrdeal of Richard Fev erH,' or the 'Story of an African Farmf " Mrs. Reppller maintains that Mrs. Battle's idea of the purpose of the novel is the right one. In which opinion, no doubt, the young ladies ot 1703 would have heartily coincided. The bust- nessof the novelist la to please. Nobody asks him to teach. Nobody wants him to preach. We ask him to give us two hours' pleasant en tertainment. And, "to beguile us into tho pleasant shades of fiction, as Jael beguiled Blsera into the shelter of her tent, and then, with deadly purpose, to transfix us with a truth as sharp and cruel as the nail with which Jael slew her guest, is a dastardly betrayal of confidence." Well, so it goes, one on one side, and another on the other; 1703 and 1889; the novel with a purpose, and the novel whose purpose is to please. The truth is, we want both kinds. Let the writer write his book: and whether it turn out a song, or whether it tum out a sermon, if it Is genuinely good, if it is worth either the singing or the preaching, what does It matter? Only, do not make us read too many sermons! No one, I think, will be likely to suspect Mr. Bret Harte of being a novelist who is trying to ascend the pulpit stairs. Indeed, there are some who wonld like to argue the assertion that he is even a novelist. His novels have not won very conspicuous success, at least Mr. Harte's strength is in the1 writing of a short story. That he can do admirably. And so he it American not only in bis subject, bnt in his style; for tbe short story is the peculiar con tribution of this conntry to recent fiction. The best writers of short stories live in that part of this round earth whicfi was discovered by Co lumbus. Mr. Harte has gathered several capital short stories into The Heritage of Dedlow Marsh (Houghton, Mifflin & Co.) Beside the title story are three others: "A Knight Errant of the Foot Hills" and "A Secret of Telegraph Hill" and "Captain Jim's XTriend." Bret Harte has no need to put his name on the title page of this book. We would have recognized it as his property if. we had discovered it with the backoff and the front pages missing in the dustiest cupboard of the library of the Convent of St. Catherine In Mt Sinai. These people are old friends of ours. Here are tho same simple-minded and remarkably tender-hearted miners whom we have known of old. Here is the same well-dressed, handsome gambler, with his astonishing coolness and his extraordinary courtesy, such a bad fellow, and yet such an amazingly good fellow, tool We have been introduced to him more than twice before. Mr. Herbert Bly, a member of a San Francisco vigilance committee, has been out all 'day on a man hunt The vigilantes aro after several no torious gamblers and desperadoes. Mr. Bly comes home'pretty tired, opens the door of his room and goes in, and there is a strange man asleep upon his bed. The guest opens his eyes, "Well, Johnny, what's your name J' " T am Herbert Bly, of Carstone's bank.1 '"So! And a member of this same vigilance committee, I reckon,' he continued. "'Yes.' '"Well, Mr. Bly, I owe you an apology for coming here, and some thanks for the only sleep I've had in 48 hours. I strucK this old shebang at about 10 o'clock, and It's now 2, so I reckon I've put in about four hours' square sleep. Now look here.' He beckoned Herbert toward the window. 'Do you see those three men standing under that gas-light? Well, they're part of a gang of vigilantes who've bunted me out to the hill, and are waiting to see me come out of the bushes, where they reckon I'm hiding. Go to them and say that I'm herel Tell them you've got Gentleman George George Dorn ton, the man they've been hunting for a week in this .'room. I promise yon I won't stir nor kick up a row when they've come. Do it, and Carstone, if he's a square man, will raise your salary for It, and promote you.' He yawned slightly, and then slowly looking around him, drew the easy chair toward him and dropped comfortably in it, gazing at the astounded and motionless Herbert with a lazy smile. This Is delightful. It is thoroughly In Harte's style, and the whole book carries one back just as charmingly to the days of Poker J,at- It is not easy to think up any particular con nection between The Heritage of Dedlow Marsh and Mr. Charles W. Baker's Monopo lies and the People (G. P. Putnam's Sons, H. Watts & Co.), unless we find It in the fact that the Inhabitants of Eureka Gulch were after gold, and that that is what the monopolies are after, too. And crushing the people to get It, some will say, as the miners crashed the ore. Mr. Baker is one who says that, but he says it very temperately. There is no loss of temper nor lapse from fairness in his book. The largest revelation which most readers will find here Is the number and extent ot the monopolies which surround us. Monopolies in manufacturing interests, monopolies of mineral wealth, monopolies of transportation and com munication, municipal monopolies, monopolies In trade, monopolies depending on tho Govern ment monopolies in the labor market these are titles of some of Mr. Baker's chapters. And each of these includes the many varieties which form a class. And each of these varieties has a hundred illustrations. The web is woven pretty closely. Take municipal monopolies, for instance. We hardly realize how dependent we are upon tho monopolies which belong simply to our existence as dwellers in cities, or suburban passenger traffic, street railways, tho water supply, the gas supply, the telegraph, the tele phone, monopolies in. the ground over which we walk, monopolies under the ground Some times In more senses than one! Mr. Baker is not blind nor dnmb as to the evils due to monopoly. Wealth gets into the hands of a few, and, with wealth, power. Small competitors are ruined. Over-production causes lack of work. Men are kept in idleness. There Is an essential relation between monop. I olies and poverty. And yet, on the other land, competition Is very little better. The choice between chronic despotism and chronic war presents a most uncomfortable alternative either way. Each side of the dilemma has a very unpleasantly sharp horn. What then? Why this, Mr. Baker says, tbe proper remedy for monopoly Is not to get rid of It and put competition in its place. "The proper remedy for monopoly is not aboli tion,' but control," But who shall control mo nopoly? The Government, Mr. BakeT answers. Or, in other words the State being; as Prof. Sumner reminds us, singly ail-or-us the people. That is what is meant by the title of the book, "Monopolies and the People." The last chapter sets forth practical 'plans for the control of monopoly; These" plans' are worth reading and, thinking about. 'Bat this is "state socialism;" this Is "nationalism," if anyone wants the technical name set to it. This is the "way out" which Mr. Bellamy has suggested in tbe opening pages of "Looking Backward." This is what the Nationalist societies are aim ing at This Is simply the postofflce system, and the inter-State commerce law, and several otlier significant eatures of our present social state carried out logically. After all, why not? The millenium would be here to-morrow If we could dispose of monopolies, and poverty, and ot despotism and war, and of all the other ills which vex society, after tbe sorry fashion of the "Cardinal Lord Archbishop of Rbelms." When that impudent little Jackdaw made off with his turquoise ring, you remember how. "He called for his candle, his bell and his book." and proceeded to curse tbe undis covered thief, with such an elaboration of In genious and comprehensive malediction, that one remembers that "digest of curses" In Tris tram Shandy, at tho end of which, good Uncle Toby, drawing a long breath, declared that he wouldn't curse tbe devil himself with a corse so hard as that The Cardinal's curse discov ered the criminal instanter. The poor little, rascally Jackdaw's feathers were turned the wrong way. Nothing was left him but the necessity of confession. A good round curse would be a good plan, if It wonld work so speedily and well as that A bell, a book, and a candle would become useiul articles in every Court House. The Jackdaw of Rheims is published, with pictures which are almost as good as tbe text, by Raphael Tuck fc Sons. We expect good work from that house, but this is a better piece of work than common. It is a pity that the artist who made these spirited and fitting pictures should not have his name upon the title page. It is almost like having the pleasure of reading the poem for the first time to find It with such graphic interpretation. From tbe front cover, where the Jackdaw stands with his bill in tbe air, beside the red-robed cardinal, to tho back cover, where, with a halo around his head, he is pictured as a saint in a stained window, the pictures are charmingly done, everyone of them. There is some difference between 'The Jackdaw of Rhiems" and "The Recluse," by "William Wordsworth. One difference is that tbe "Jackdaw" Is about a hundred times more interesting. Tho interest of "The Recluse" is attached not so much to tbe poem, as to what it tells us about the poet "The Recluse," coming out now for the first time a hundred years after Wordsworth wrote it, affords a text for Prof. MInto's paper In tho September Nineteenth Century on "Wordsworth's Great Failure." Wordsworth, it seems, was not contented to to be a poet of nature: ho wanted to expound "a final philosophy of life." He made a good many attempts, and left some very dreary Eoetry as the result, but in this, his great ideal, e failed. It was as a poet of nature that he succeeded, and especially as a writer of short poems. And yet he wrote some of the longest pieces of poetry which any poet ever Imposed on his ad mirers. So little are men conscious, some times, of their genuine aptitudes! Wordsworth wrote verses for nearly 60 years. Bnt all that will likely last of his poetry was written during ten years ot tnat time. The consequence is that Wordsworth appears at his best only in a book of good selections. Such a book is better than the most comprehensive "Complete Works" even though that include the poem "On Wilkinson's Spade." Mr. Rolfe has made a first-rate presentation of Words worth in his "William Wordsworth's Select Poems." (Harper & Bros.; J. R. Weldin & Co.). This little book, with its pictures by Abby and Parsons, its paragraphs from Wordsworth's autobiography, its quotations from Matthew Arnold, and its careful annotating and editing, is the very best shape in which tbe general reader can have the work of this really great poet V Perhaps it is the fault-finding spirit of the "Sandal Maker of Babylon" which possesses the critic as he reads Will Carlton's City Le gends (Harper A Bros.: J. K. Weldin & Co.). At any rate, the pictures In the book have the look of being clumsily done, and some of the poems are not much better. "Tbey pummel each other rhythmically with the remaining manuscripts. One of them (the manuscripts) files open and reveals still another dialect poem upon still another humble subject. This ad ditional calamity unnerves them, and they fall into each others arms, sobbing poetically." These poets have been comparing poems. The poems are in tbe book. The reader may ven ture, if he will, and see if tbe poems affect him in the same unpleasant manner. Let us except, however, "The Sandal-Maker of Babylon." He Is worth all the other people In tbe book. BLAINE AT HIS NEW HOUSE. The Secretary, Apparently Well and Strong, Supervises tbe Moving. Oath, In Cincinnati Enquirer. Mr. Blatne, the Secretary of Btate, has been so often described as having his month drawn down at the corner, having a mysterious white-of-an-egg color, indicative of devastated kid neys, etc., that I was pleased to see him at tbe work of house-moving, which will break down a man of iron health. I was passing from Pennsylvania avenne toward the new Arling ton Hotel, which is being?1 more than doubled in size, when 1 saw the old Rodgers-Seward mansion in a new coat of dark red paint, and I observed to my companion that these old houses stood well up among their new cotem porarles. A wagon was at tbe door, and as I came nearer 1 read upon the cases the words, "James G. Blaine, Washington. D. u. Glass. This side up with care." The simplicity of the address of so great a functionary provoked a 6mile, and turning to the open door of the old mansion it was seen to be unoccupied. "Let us go in," Said my friend, "and see what it looks like." As we were about entering the door a man with a bat on advanced from one of the side parlors, and we found the Secretary of State doing his own moving. In view of the fact that this gentle man at this moment Is giving an international party an excursion to representatives from most of the other American States at a cost of more than S100,000-it seemed republican sim plicity in the highest degree to find him alone directing the furniture men where to put the various articles. Why Field Goes Abroad. From the Washington 1'ost.l Mr. Eugene Field, the gifted Chicagoan, has sailed for Europe. We understand his pur pose in going to the Old World is to keep an eye on Mr. Charles A. Dana, in order that the able New Yorker may not bring undue In fluences upon Mr. Christopher Columbus rela tive to the location of that eminent Eyetalian's qnadricentennlal fair. A Sad Day Approaching. from the Baltimore American, t Edison is perfecting a machine for telephon- lng a phonograph. The sad day may yet come when a person can have no possible excuse for going out between the acts to see a mau. ODD ITEMS PfiOM ABEQAD. The latest Parisian novelty In gloves has a small purse Inserted in the palm, wherein women can carry their railway tickets and small coins. Waiteb Scott was the peculiar object of the late Wilkie Collins' worship, and he prob ably never passed a day without taking up one of the Waverly novels. The Rev. Baring Gould, who is a musician as well as an author, has organized a company of amateurs, who have had great success in sing ing old Cornish and Devon ballads through those counties. M. Nantet reached the Paris Exposition af ter a seven days' journey from Brussels in a phaeton drawn by a pair of dogs. He is a hu mane man, and when bis dogs were tired he went between the shafjts while they mounted tho box. General Faishebbe. who died recently in Paris, was almost tbe only French Commander whoi in the war of 1S70-71 gained distinct un deniable advantage over the enemyr ana quite the only one who in a pitched battle caused the Germans to retreat THE Duke of Edinburgh bas practically ex patriated himself, and will hereafter visit En gland only occasionally. His disgust with the Prince of Wales for permitting tbe Princess Louise to marry tho Duke of Fife is the cause. He 14 a cantankerous person, and has never been popular in England. On the day of the general election the French. it would seem, allay their exe'tement byvheavy eating. On Bunday, September 22, they ate 432,800 pounds of oysters and 152,000 pounds of fowls. On the previous Sunday, a very fine day, they consumed 100,000 pounds less weight of oysters and 8,000 pounds less weight of fowls. A Fbenoh statistician has just ascertained tbata human being, of either sex, who is a moderate'eater, and who lives to be 70 years old, consumes during "tbe days of the years of bis life" a quantity of food which would fill 20 ordinary railway baggage cars. A "good eater," however, may require as many as SO. A HAN,' Mr. John LeVCrsha, appeared as a plaintiff In a breach of promise Suit In Hand btittt Australia, during last month. He claimed 1,000 from Miss Sarah Wrang. hamV Hi was H years of ae, The de fendant pleaded that she was an infant when the promise was made, but the jury found for the plaintiff, and awarded him a Shilling dam-ages. KW1 ofe'MAIL Mcfl. mistakes of Unbelievers. To thfl Editor of The Dispatch:. In list Monday's issue of The Dispatch ap peared an article over the signature of "J. H. Y" which X thought wonld have received notice from some ot the leading clergymen of Pittsburg, but not having seen anything from that source, I ask for space for a brief retort One of the mistakes of infidels Is in suppos ing every man who dares advance some theory against the Bible to be an intellectual giant ready to say to every one who wonld defend it "Come to me and I will give thy flesh unto tbe fowls of tbe air, and to the beasts of tbe field." "J. H. Y.'i mistakes widely if he thinks Sir David Hume said anything that trouble tbe friends of the Bible. His syllogism, to tbe effect that miracles (especially the resurrec tion of man from tbe dead) are contrary to the universal experience of mankind; that men will lie, being in accord therewith, and that it Is easier to believe that 12 men lied than that one man rose from the dead, needs no answer. It is simply a truism. The tronble with it Is, that It is not broad enough to cover tbe testi mony on which the miracles and resurrection of Jesus Christ rests. Men are moved to lie by motives of gain or advantage, and for men to lie against motive is as contrary to tbe experience of mankind as for one to rise from the dead. This the wit nesses to Christ's miracles and resurrection did, unless they told the truth. They forfeited all earthly comforts and their lives for saying they had seen Him, talked with Him, eaten with Him, and touched Him after He was put to death. Not only 12 men, but hundreds did this when tbey might have saved all by simply telling tbe truth. It is easier to believe such testimony than to disbelieve it and tbe learned Hume doesn't toucb it "If weak thy faith why choose the harder side?" According to Darwin, Huxley, Spencer and their indefatigable co-Iaoorers, all credit for their industrious and fruitful research into the records of nature, and for their valuable dis coveries in tbe fields of science. Whenever they promulgate tbe theory that species have been produced by evolution, tbe humblest country parson should have courage to answer them, with the Bible in hlshand declaring that the Almighty God created tbe ancestral pair of each species and gave them power to reproduce their kind and nothing but their kind. Ho would be unworthy to speak in tbe name of the Lord if he did less, and until evolutionists shall discover the "Missing Link" they have no facts whatever with which to controvert this Bible truth; and believers have no fear that such evidence will ever be brought forth. From Tbales to Plato, Greece produced a long line of brilliant intellects who devoted themselves during more than 700 years to the task of finding out the mysteries of the creation. The result of their efforts was self proclaimed hi the inscription in the city of Athens, "To the Unknown God," and the philosophers of the present day are no wiser than were they who then sought by wisdom to find out God. There is nothing wrong with Pope's couplet when properly applied. For modes of Tilth let graceless bigots fight, He can't be wrong whose life isln the right. Bat his life can never be in the right who re fuses to learn what right is from Him who alone is the standard of right "He who hath ears to hear let him hear" what bis Creator says: "The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom." L O. M. WKixsBtraa, W. Va October 12. Should Clergymen Read the Newspapers? To the Editor of The Dispatch: I see in Saturday's Dispatch that Bishop Foss. in iis address to the class seeking ad mission to Conference, advised the young min isters to give scanty attention to the daily news papers. Let me whisper a secret, namely, that this address to tbe candidates is called the Confer ence "whip," for, though ostensibly for the can didates, it is really an indirect way of giving Episcopal chastisement to the whole Confer ence! But I must certainly disagree with this Episcopal dlctnm, for I think the wise reading of the dally newspapers is a symmetrical edu cation. While things slip in sometimes which ought to be passed by, tbe editors ot a great paper have the true Midas-touch, and know the gold of promise from the brass of profession. There is no noble sentiment, no true strain of poetry, no sonorons word lit to roll round the world, no gem of thought, but finds Its way at last into the columns of the daily press. The newspaper is a fresh photograph of human life oh! has it not depth, of meaning for tbe noblest sermon? I read often, even tbe advertisements of the paper, and find in them tbe wit power and also tbe pathos of life. I thank the daily press for tbe living sermons it bas given me. As on an autumn's day the wind shakes the tree ana the leaves fall down ana make an amethystine and golden floor, so this great tree, tbe press, shaken every day, sheds down Its white leaves upon tbe world leaves of knowledge, leaves of healing. I would advise ministers to read the speech as it comes hot from the eloquent lips of Glad stone rather than his treatise on "Theological Authority," and When I see a young minister who wisely reads the daily paper, I am snre be is growing in grace, at least on that spot where it is thought the average minister is sadly deficient J. O. Townsksd, Pastor Unitarian Church. PrrrSBtTEO, October 12. The Governor's Term. To the Editor or The Dispatch) For bow long a term is the present Governor of Pennsylvania elected? What county is he from? ' H. Salev, O., October 12. Four years. Governor Beaver is from Selle fonte, Center county. A WELCOME T1S1T0E. The Joy of n Parisian Fakir on Hearing Dls Native Tonsne Spoken. From tbe Philadelphia Inquirer. 3. C. Osborne, of tbe Lafayette Hotel, and his wife were in Paris recently doing the exhi bition. Mr. Osborne's French is' limited to "we, moslenr," and consequently he found things rather lonely, as he found very few people who could speak .English. At the hotel, on the street and, In fact everywhere he went the French jargon would greet his ears. Walking along tbe street one day be noticed an adver tisement of the Buffalo Bill Wild West and he saw in this a relief. He felt certain that be would find somebody who knew bis tongue there. He at Once made for the Exposition grounds. His dismay was great upon reaching the grounds to find the name of the great Wil iam over tbe entrance in French, French ticket sellers, French ushers and a French master of ceremonies. Nevertheless he took a seat All around him everybody was talking animated French, only as Frenchmen can, when sud denly his heart was filled with jqyteheara fakir sing out: "Here yer are. prize candy boxes, 1 frane a piece: prize in every box, dead sure." Mr. otborne knew bis man. and in a spirit of f enthusiasm yelled, "Rats!" ine laxur was equany nappy auu, iiuuiug toward Mr. Osborne, said: "Hello! Cully, glad to see yer. First civilized man I bave seen in a month. How.'s things on the Bowery?" , 1 i Tbe Cow Was There. Philadelphia Becord. The pupils at -a Green street kindergarten were instructed to draw a landscape, tho feat ures of which should be a bam, brook and two cows. Little Helen Highstrung handed in her sketch, and the teacher saw that she had for gotten one of the animals. "Where's the other cow. Helen?" she asked. "Why why-it's in the barn," said Helen. OCTOBEtt. t WHITISH TOB Tfflt DI8FATCH.1 October In Its solemn stillness dyes' The leavv world avarleitated crest; IU winds breathe but in melancholy sighs A requiem on the brown year's pulseless breast. Each fltral gust dcth scatter to the ground A wealth of colors klnftt might proudly wear; la every leaf a diadem Is found. On every tree a thousand fillets fair. On every bough a flaming torch Is lit That mingles with the sunset's linrlng rsy, Effulgent flood-and to extinguish it. To slothrul twilight slowly sinks the day. And even arler night her curtain drops, Pegasus sweeps the center of the sky, And lights again the blazing maple topi, With sparks that from his flery fetlocks fly. And when the mighty god of day doth soar. On radiant Wings, above the Eaiteru hills, Thin comes the sparkling flow of light once more, And all creation with Its brightness Alls. 'TIS in this ambient iiood of russet Ufcnt October rules, In somber mien, the day; A holy calm that follows" through the night Ber constellations as tbey tread their way. The lowly cricket ohlrps in peaceful bliss Upon tbe hearthstone warming into life; The happy child delays Its bedtime kiss; Through lengthened evening kntts the good housewife. Ahl tender days. Ohl happy go-between, The half-way bouse from summer to the snow. Weald that thy noonday and thy evening's ihe Ifrom out our Htm O, nevermore, could go Vf. COTTIX DoVRTOtO. furara ':T -K D1TIRARX imsr n Famished to Bbpatcfa Reader la Yes terday's Mammoth Triple Namber. Twenty pages of live news and good liter ature, furnished by some of the best writers of Europe and America, were placed before Dispatch readers yesterday. A complete record of important events In all parts of tbe world, together with scores of carefully pre pared articles, covering a wide variety of inter esting topics, was presented in a most attract ive form. The Dispatch believes that tbe best is none too good for its readers, and is constant in its endeavor to supply their wants. I. A startling- conspiracy has come 'to light in connection with the Cronin case. SIX per sons bave been indicted for conspiring to de feat justice by the attempted bribery of jurors. One of the accused has made a confession, implicating court officials. C. E. McGregor shot and killed J. M. Cody at Warrenton, Ga. Both were prominent citizens, Mrs. Ernest, the wife of a St. Louis merchant, jumped from a bridge, U8 feet high, into tbe river. In a fruitless attempt to commit suicide. Fire in a lumber yard at Horton City, Px, caused a aamage of $173,000. Senator Manderson's pen sion is alleged to have been declared Illegal. The International delegates visited Niagara Falls on Saturday., Doctors fear Secretary Half ord will have to quit bis duties on account of illness. The horrible death of a lineman la New York by electricity has aroused Mayor Grace to earnest warfare against tbe overhead wires. From London comes the cheering news that the cause of home rule for Ireland is making steady progress. G. W. Williams, an American negro, well known as a lecturer and author, is to marry a well-connected English girL Bis marck is trying to persuade the Czar that the present Enropean alliance is for peaceful pur poses only. The Russian ruler bas not yet de clared his intentions. ir. There is more discord among tbe musicians. It is understood that the Grand Opera House will withdraw from the Protective Union. Ten million ousbels of coal are ready for shipment wben the river rises. Rev. Colonel Danks has been suspended from the ministry far a year for threatening the life of another man. An interesting discussion of the League Brotherhood's plans was a leading feature of the sporting columns. The Allegheny team defeated the Wheeling club by a score of 2 to L The usual amount of sporting newsand gossip was given. in. . Part second contained the' continuation of Prof. Ebera' entertaining story of "Joshua," superbly illustrated. Brenan contributed a well-told ghost story that was full ot humor. Wales furnished a pleasing sketch ot rifle ranges of the local military organizations. A number of well -known literary women, among them Louise Chandler Moulton, the Duchess Mrs. Frank Leslie, Ella Wheeler Wilcox, Mrs. Mary J. Holmes and Kate Field, gave their viewB on the theme '1 Wish I Were a Man." The usual departments, and special articles by James B. Morrow, Rev. George Hodges, Bessie Bramble, Morton, M. M. Dilke, H.X McClel land, G. H. Sandison.M M., and other were also included In this part of the paper. In part third 8. O. R. described an Alaskan summer, giving an Interesting glimpse of the customs of the people of that country. "A Daugbter of the Slavs'' was the title Of a charming novelette by Sidney LusKa. "The Blind Prince," a pretty story for younger read ers, was Contributed by Ernest H. Heiurichs. HenryIaynie3 letter described the quaint old monastery of Grande Chartreuse. Other arti cles in pages 17 to 20 included "We Rank With Kfngs," by Theodore Stanton; "Cfoodby, Queen Anne,"B.W. Shoppefl; "The Dead Novelist," Hall Caine; "Guarding the Sale," M.Q.' Will iams; Clara Belle's Chat; "Why Women De ceive," Maud Howe; "Cooking a Fine Art," Adrien Tenu: "Sunday Thoughts" and "The Fireside Sphinx." It was a most excellent number. AIONG-LITEDEACE. Reports Showing That Centenarians Are TeryNameroo In Ireland. 1'rom the London Lancet. 1 The Irish report for 18S8 records the deaths of 16,611 .persons aged upward of 75 yean: the. 208 reputed centenarians were therefore equal to 12.5 oar 1.000 of tbasavhndlAl flhnmth .m of 75 years. If wq'measara the SO reputed cen tenarians in England and Wales in 1887 in tbe same manner we find that they were equal to Ll pef 1,000 of the recorded deaths of persons aged upward of 75 years. WO are faced, there fore, with two alternatives. Either we mast believe that of persons aged upward ot 75 years more than 12 times as many attain the age of 100 yean in Ireland as In England, or we mast decline to accept as trustworthy the statement of the Registrar General of Ireland that 268 un doubted centenarians died In that country dur ing tbe past year. Indeed, further ground for doubting the ac curacy of the Registrar General's report as to Irish centenarianism is afforded by the fact that tbe death rate in Ireland among persons aged upwards ot 65 years (stated by Dr. Qrlm shaw to have been 97.0 per LOCO In 18SS) has. In recent years, somewhat exceeded that whlcn has prevailed in England and Wales. If tbe mean death rate amine persons aged upward of 65 years Is hlgherln Ireland than In England, there is tbe best ground for disbelieving that the proportion of survirsrs to the age of 100 years is larger in Ireland than In England. DB. DEFEW MEETS A CH0M. A Newsboy Sixes Dp the Situation and Breaks Up the Proceedings. From the New York San. At about 2 o'clock yesterday afternoon a handsomely dressed, powerfully built man. with closely cropped side whiskers and a benev olent mouth, stopped in Park Place to examine a big colored portrait of Doctor Chauncey Mitchell Depew, which a street agent of the artist was exhibiting to tbe passing crowd. The man with the side whiskers and benevolent mouth inspected the pictute very critically. Hs took a dozen different positions before It, craned hi! neck to the right and left and for ward and backwatd. In the midst of this In spection a small newsboy happened along. He looked over the portrait and the big man be fore it Then he exclaimed: "Ho. see de chart a lookln' at his own rlcter." Two or threejmen who heard the small boy's exclamation passed the word along that bere was Dr. Depew, and a crowd catbered. Then Dr. Depew began to notice that be and bis pic ture and his admirers were blocking tbe side walk. "How much is that?" he asked the agent behind the portrait Twenty-flye dollars." "Uive me your card." The agen t hastily pulled a dozen cards Out of his pocket Dr. Depew took three of them and hurried off to the elevated station. As Far Back As They Remember. From thl Chicago Hews.1 The woman-suffragists of Boston are to give a historical pageant to-day. Tbe scenes will not go back further than tbe founding of Rome,as the managers have decided to limit the exhibits to matters within their own personal recollections. TKI-STATE TRIFLES. Two large black bears leisurely marched through the village of Woolrlch, Clinton county, Saturday, and then hied themselves to tbe woods, followed by a crowd ofNirarods. Old hunters predict bears will be unusually plenty this fall. A gbxsk mall agent on the Heading Rail road hung out the mall-bag catobex and hooked a reel of hose from a water-tank, Tnsns are 25 saloon keepers yet io be tried In Reading for violation of the liquor laws. Fbd Wrtsow, of Jefferson county, O.. had a coon dog that he wouldn't bave sold for 15ft Bnt last week the dog tackled a Coon tbat Was more than his match, got his eyes scratched out and had to be killed. A iaroe black bear was seen crossing the old plank road leading to WQmore, about four miles southwest of Ebensburg, on Thursday. Ho was I ollowing Greeley's advice, going West A fabmer in Brooke county, W.Vsw, has an old-fashioned pocketbook that his father , and grandfather used to carry. He estimates that more than 200,000 bas been In it since it was in use. Steel is being turned out of a Reading mill which is said to be superior to tbe Sheffield ptodact Ai Ohio saa has ised a, wealthy widow tor breach of promise of saarriage. Wt t. -tSf..; ' . Z j. r 4 ' 'Of fit ys- r. . -, i,." -,-r- f", jtocu, a BvoK)jn resiuest, SBV utucr aay osefcai as J-F m ynserei m uwt UUB, ' 1, xne squirrel UJer uaiway, Baraiegs m county, n. Y., has kiHed 5.1H9 sqameto this season. A man In Leg Aseies zested a oeJeuy of bees from under the eaves et bis boase last week, and extracted 9 pea of beaey. A beat anchored direetly over tbe wreak of the Pliny. oS South Elbenm. N. J., was filled by tbe two fishermen occupying it with blackfish of immesM i. Tn urn kuui tb 1 oaten was over 260 pounds. CaBtaiu Wahlberg, of the nfrirmirhfp H. A. Hartman. reports that on tbe ostward passage to Jamaica on September 2E. la tti. tude lOBgiwde 71.18, the f'veJran S4?a almost lifted oat of the water by the base aat maL Large fortunes sometimes grow frea queer begtentegs. A Gardiner fMe.) paper is respossible for the story that oseottM wealthiest ftrms in the. State began basiaesg on $5,060 wbiofl a sister of tbe partners get la a breach ot promise salt for damages agaJast a wealthy man. A man 30 years oW, wWh no hair oa hk head, no whiskers oa We faee, and bo eyebrows is under treataaeat ra a S t Leato h ooiHal. Xe comes from Texas sad eiaiaetefcave beea hairless from his birth.. He has bees saarried once, and another Lose Star belie bas agre4 to become his bride If the defects Is Ms make on can be remedied. Tfeae. ta wlrv ll wt Mmi .self in. the doctor's hand. Early last summer a yoang girl at 8mk raerside. Prince Edward Islasd, wrote her aae and address upon an etrtr. which rehanrra'tmtto- .found its way to Boston, Has, asaeag ether BBipsiBEts. ina parents of the yease todr visited. Boston recently, and, strange to sv. were introduced to the young Beeteasa wm had received the egg asd asked them tf Mm .y .Us J"-"b "ujr meir owm aaugaier. .Explanations followed and a correspoBdenee was opened. The wedding is to take place in December. J. E. Brown, of Delta, Ost, oa Mon day received a package by express whleh was found to contain a gold watch and ehafai.a geld ring and SS0 in money stolen from him fire years ago. Tbe sender asked that te receipt be acknowledged in tbe local papers and prom ised to send the rest of the mosey sielen if Mr Brown Would notify him of the a&eant The restitution is supposed to be the result of tho revival now being held at Kingston.. Two men are now serving sentences at the Central prison lor tbe crime. ,A man who lived near fidelity, He., died last Wedsesday, ad steee that tfee a steady rain bas been falling on the part of tho roof immediately above the ebaaher is wheh. he died. At first it attracted mt until It was notked that tfcere wag et a titwi in tbe have, and the ram eontferaea1 laf only in the one place. The neighhefs aoWeed it and became much exalted, asd. hnnrtnirtr people soon floeked to see the singular eoaar rence. An eye witness states that the HibHs at the rainfall are so exact that oae can hoM Mi hand in the rate and only get ft wet sa far as k introduces bis band. The deceased -ma a infldel. The Lodx Zeitung states tbat'aa esfcrs ordinary discovery was made la as oWleahor roomatLodx An old arm ohatr, whfch had belosged to the present owner's graadfattor, and had beea put away in as attie for want of room, was brought out the other darto be re covered When tbe old cover was takes off, a large packet was fused 'stuffed krta the seat of the chair, ooBtainto three bank notes of 1069 roubles e&ob, 860 roaMes in goM, a reoetet from the bask, dated 1897, for 8,5 reafciee, and sev eral bond. The ohalr has beea la the posses sion of the present owner for soae years, asd was looked open as a useless peee of old furniture.. The intelligence oobms frsa Park t&ai a subterranean river has jast beea discovered in the dtstriet of Miers, la' tho department of Lot "Two explorers found tbe river at the bottom of a genffre or abyss teows as the PR of Paderae. Retarnl&g thither with a folding boat made of sailcloth, thy worked their way down stream for a couple of miles threagfc a succession of wonderful grottoes sparking wish: stalactites. Tbey found seven lakes db thete way, and bad to shoot 37 oasoadea or rapids. The two explorers intend to start on free expedition to aseortaiH, if possible, tho oatfet ot thk unknown river. They cosjeetare that it Joins one of the, heads of tbeDoraOg&estx miles from tho abyss.' The builders tell a rather iatoraottay' 'story of a Bon'ato capitalist who wumotr ( saamarlly tafcea down for trying to sotjaW. 1 .fnnutli. muIb.u uLum in irfi.1 i.- self .up. a the end of all thisgs la whatwm hJj west into it, he teas have "an the . say a4 ae body else was aJrewtd even a sloe rework. Uwt loBfc ago bo baiH a tee brick hoate. la late uaaenakiBg, as is all others, be was best aaa all bands, dictating to baHdars. architects and. all without the slightest hesitation. At htac they grow very tired, of the browbeathse they had to stand, an let him bavenis way, wh other ltwasrightorwreag. Tho hoate was ftohHnd, and shortly afterward the owaor tot abeat building farnaee ares to tost Ms beaMsg ap paratus, wben behold, there wasn't a nhtninoy la the house! KliPalmiter ttraok a rich find wlafe excavating tn his. garden it Harbor Bariagt, Mich. He dog up three sketeteasia one gam, the moat of the bases betefrin a fair state of preservation, together with two steel toma hawks, a stone pipe, a- copper kettle with, cranehooks, and a silver breastplate as lte as a saucer. If there was ever any hMotlfKioa upon the breastplate it had been ohHtorated. There la an old Indian story to the MTeet that a chief or other important neraber of the Mho 'was murdered at Middle Village years age. The murderer and victim were brought to tho Indian village when Harbor Springs sew stands. Here another Indian constituted Mjb self Judge aadexeeatioaer, asd killed the mur derer. He was exeeated by the tribe, and the tnreewere onnea ra rag same grave. About three months and a half ago the schooner Mosquito, from tho Mosquito Coast of Central America, dropped alongside Pier U, in the East river, Ndw York, aad unloaded her cargo of rubber and coeeaaatsv The schooner carried in her dee oag a bacMt. containing two ssaaU boa ooastrteierswhMi some thrifty tailor had brought aleag as at private importation. Darwgthe dJsohajge.of the cargo this fateful and saakef nl barrel-aM tlppea over, and the two saakes, beUeviBg that the sailor's accident was tbetr Ofaertaatty, glided gently away and bW la the shadows under the pier. The other day two war katon on tbe pier were surprised to see a taako's head pop up through a orack. They lassoed it .with a piece of wire, drew tie reptile oat and killed it Its length was nearly tve feet Tho other snake 14 still at large. s CLIPPED BITS 6F WIT. It is very difficult to fiada key to wcceM that will work without a clique, BetUmoreAmr lean. A man arrested for stealing a helmet from the property room of a theater, said he was only taklaga knight-cap belore golagtobed. Tt&tt Sifting. The nights are getting longer, bat the young man wbo occupies half oi a. parlor chair with his alrl every eveatag doesn't realise it Xonkert Statement. Chief Have yoa got any clewsl" Subordinate No; but I've caught the criminal. Chief Welt yoa mast go out and get s few clews. It will never do to break established rules, you know. Terrt Haute Stprtte. "It's always a relief io me when iteoaes. time to pay Bridget" ! -Mrs- Hoasekeep. "Why?" inquired her basband. "Because that is Hie only time whea I feel positive that tho doesn't employ me." Washington Capital. Jones, a chroaie bore, telling about, aa accident In whkh a man was drowned, said: - "It happened Is less time than I take to tell It." '1 guess so; otherwise tfceman might have been rescued," replied a dugarted listener, yawning. Texas Sillngt, Encouraging a bashful ssaa. Hostess Won't yoa sine something, Mr. Greene? Mr. Greene There are so many strangers hers Hostess Never miadtsear they'll be gone be fore yoa get half through. ijweA. Johnny I wonder yrhy I can't make raj kite fljT , Elder Stster-PerhSps the cftsilat appendage Is disproportionate to the superficial area. I don't tfalak that's M. I believe there Isn't weight enough oa the UiLTtsas Sifllngt. Father Yoasrf mas. Ton have asked rao for my daughter la marriage; what maa r Ymur Min-VV ell. I hin nnnarttd her held OB my Shoulder ftr about two years, three night per! week, ana to her sattsrsettes. I naTo n the future. Kiarney Mnterpnte. "Papa. what. Is a doubtful State?" askei llMe Xreddy, who had been looking over the po litical news. -Marriage U doubtful state, my soa, " answered Brows, with a humorous twIMH la hit eye as he leaked at hit belter hair. Ds t yea thtak to, Mr. Mrewfr" "No, 1 don 't MK U'saaUtaat all." the Satwered. rroiaKi-i wan aeai4 Hk & trror-teTT." BSOWa. WaS -M raw.- j.. . tfollf r f i i i ..i-V -, if. IsfSfesSWa....-?; ted wmSM