nt?rxtmsm?i f ' r " frljt Bigpafrlj. ESTABLISHED FEBRUARY 8. IMS. ' Vol.44, Ho. SOS. Entered at Pittsburg rostomce, Movember H, 1887. as second-class matter. Business Office 97 and.99FifthAvenue. News Booms and Publishing House-75, 77 and 79 Diamond Street Sutern Advertising Office, Boom , Tribune Bunding, New York. TERMS OF THE DISPATCH. POSTAGE TBIE IN THE UNITED ETATES. IlAnvrDisrATCH, One Year..t-. 8 W HaltT DISPATCH, FerQferteT - 2 00 I1AILY DsrpATCH, One Month... 70 DAlLTJJIBrATCH, including Sunday, lyear. 10 00 Daily Dispatch, includingBunday.Sm'ths. 2 50 Daily Dibfatch, Including Bunday.lmonth SO Sukday Dispatch, One Year S SO "Weekly Dispatch, One Year I SS TTBE DAILY DISPATCH Is delivered by carriers at 35 cents oer week, or including Bunday edition, at 20 cents per week. . PITTSBURG. MONDAY. DEC. 9. 1889. AH JKEFFECTUAL COMBIHATION. The reported combination of the sup porters oNew York, Chicago and S,t .Louis a. the site for the "World's Fair against "Washington, is not one that is likely to demonstrate any great cohesiveness. It has no merits in the natural conditions of the issue, and it -will be certain to go to pieces at the first stress of jealousy between the . commercial cities. In the first place the claims of "Washing ton rest up on a very different basis than the advocacy of either of the other cities. The real choice is between locating the exposi tion at a commercial center or at the center of. government If the majority or Congress deem it wise to make the exposition a na tional afiair of such character as to keep it under national .control, all the combinations of the other cities will not prevail against its location at the national capital. On the other hand, even if a majority of the Congressmen should not take this na tional view of the enterprise, the jealousies of the contending cities increase its chances. "Whatever comuinations may be made, a majority of the CLucagoans would rather see "Washington get the Fair than New York, and most of the New Yorkers would rather see it at the capital ,than at Chicago. St Xouis does not count for much either way, but its advocates would xote to locate the expo sition anywhere, if by"1 that means Chicago can be beaten. The combination is not likely to do much unless it be to delay matters, and that would be a great injury. The time is none too long in any event Congress should settle the matter promptly and let the chosen city commence operations. A JAMUIAB ASSUEAKCE. It is pleasant to be assured by the new Haytian Minister to the United States that the people of the recently revolutionary island are wholly contented with their new Government; that there is no danger of any further revolutions for many years; and that the few dissatisfied persons are those who lave been removed from office. But the perfect reliability of these assertions is some what lessened from their exact resemblance to the deliverances of the people who obtain ofnee under any administration. Even in our own peaceful land, it is the regular thing for the happy holders of offices to take a roseate view of the political situation un der any and all circumstances, and that the only people who are not contented are the miserable minority who have been kicked out of office. It is natural to sup ' pose that the Haytians have had enough revolution to last them a lifetime; but more impartial testimony than the Haytian Min ister is needed to make us certain oi their utter and idyllic content UNIQUE HISTORY. It is rather interesting to read in the cable dispatches of the historical learning dis played by the young German Emperor, on bis visit to Anhalt-Dessau, and then to perceive in an extract from his speech a reference to the old Prince of that house "who was the teacher of the Prussian army under my great ancestor, Frederick the Great" It will strike most of those who have read the history of the third Hohen zollern king as very remarkable history to call him the ancestor of the third Emperor of the same race. All previous histories nave credited him with dying without chil dren, and leaving the kingdom to his nephew. It will probably be no more than just to credit the Kaiser with having used the German word for "predecessor," and to suppose the word "ancestor" to be slipped in by the translator. But, in the connection, the statement is almost as unique as the semi-occasional newspaper references that we see in this country, to "direct descend ants of George Washington." THE SILVER 1HXLST0NE. There is one side of the silver question to which neither the Secretary of the Treasury nor President Harrison have adverted, and 'that is the intense unpopularity of the silver dollar as a circulating coin. If there are good reasons for continuing the mandatory coinage of this ponderous inconvenient coin and Secretary Wmdom, in his last report, expresses doubts of the utility of the coinage there can be no sound reason for forcing silver dollars by the ton into circu lation. The people feel this imposition of an out-of-date coin more than the weightier evils pictured by Secretary Windom as likely to result from the present system of mandatory purchase and coinage of silver "by the Treasury. If dollars must be coined wholesale let them stay in the Treasury vaults, and their equivalents in silver certificates pass out into circulation. The burdens of life are heavy enough, without adding to them these millstones of silver. Paper money is a modern requisite. ELECTRIC DISPUTATIONS. Cincinnati, Boston and Cleveland are all experiencing trouble with the overhead Vires for electric street railways. In two of these cities the trouble has taken the unique form of a contest with the telephone companies, which reveals the usual corpor ate idea of their exclusive privileges in the public streets. It seems to be pretty well demonstrated that telephone and uninsulated high tension wires cannot occupy the same streets in peace and harmony. As the very nature of the overhead electric railway system re quires its wires to be bare, and as they naturally occupy the leading avenues this plays hob with the telephone wires. The result is that the telephone companies claim the right to shut the electric railway com panies off, and the electric railways claim it as their privilege to relegate the tele phone wires to the back streets. The prac tical assertion of each particular electric company that its rights in the public' streets are paramount, after pooh-poohing the rights of the public to keep the streets safe .and free from obstruction, ought to make Kthmese interests IKat they hare no fighUj at all in the street except what the public toleration chooses to accord them. The practical solution of the difficulty, of course, lies in the burial of the wires the high tension wires in one conduit and the low tension in a separate one. If the under ground system is not available for the rail roads, they shonld turn their.attention to the improvement of the storage battery which when made a little more serviceable, promises to be the complete solution of sur face transit in cities. At least the over head dangers should be removed, not for the sake of preserving the interest of rival cor porations but for the welfare and good of the public AN OLD BAIT. . It is a singular but interesting fact that in the investigation of the Greene county busi ness complications, the old ten-per-cent-a-month bait to catch gudgeons finally comes to light It was to be supposed that, by this time, every one except children and persons deficient in natural understand ing, was too well informed to be victimized by such a shallow device; but it seems to have been one of the successful inducements by which the Greene county folk were brought to invest more money than they had, in cattle enterprises .of which they could know little or nothing. Of course, this is only a new illustration of the way in which the specious promise of large gains is readily snatched at by the public. It is not much more remarkable than the disposition to surrender hard earned fnnds to the tender mercies of trust speculators, corporate stock waterers, or oil or gram manipulators, except that it is more threadbare and easily seen through. But it has been so often proved to be a mere deception that it almost seems as if anyone who is caught by such a shallow promise must have been ambitious to figure in the character of an easily-deluded victim. It is to be hoped that, as is reported else where, no one connected with the Greene county troubles has been guilty of actual dishonesty. But it is necessary to point out the fact that if there were any pledges of 10 per cent monthly profits out of corporate enterprises, they furnish proof presumptive of a swindle. SEOET HAIR IN FASHION. While it is true that popular attention, as evidenced by the popular songs ot the day, has been diverted from man's hair to his hat "Chippy get your hair cut," having retired in favor of "Where did you get that hat?" considerable interest must be taken, in the proceedings of the Barbers' Conven tion nowbeine held in Detroit We are not as fully informed as to the doings of the tonsorial artists in convention assembled as we would wish to be but one result of the deliberations' is clearly announced and it alone is of immense importance. It is a resolution ot the barbers to keep American hair short The resolution arose from a fight caused by Figaro Louis Lassange's effort to have the fashion of wearing the hair long in dorsed by the convention. Mr. Lassange is a cultured barber of Boston, and he argued for a return to flowing locks on aesthetic grounds. "When some one suggested that a barber who proposes long hair throws half his income away, Mr. Lassange rejoined that any falling off in hair cutting would be compensated for by the increase of sham pooing which he reminded his hearers was their greatest source of profit But all these arguments fell fiat, and the short-hair ad vocates carried the day by a vote of 28 to 8. For the honor of Pennsylvania we are glad to note that the delegate from Harrisburg, Mr. Eastern Pittsburg does not appear to have been represented voted for esthetic- ism and long hair. It will still be impossible to distinguish a statesman from a pugilist by the cut of his hair, the study of phrenology will be fos tered, and the national head will not need an enlarged hat yet awhile. Queen Isabella's exclamation, "The good God is no more on our side," when she heard of the Brazilian revolution, does full justice to the Deity, although it is hardly fair to Dom Pedro to rank him on the same side with the modern Messalina. "Thk fact that Thb Dispatch inclines toward Republican administration ongbt to satisfy it with corporation preferences and In dulgences." The above rather ill tempered re mark from the Philadelphia Hecord may be ex plained by the fact that its ties to a party or ganization under the leadership of that self confessed corporation representative, W. L. Scott has satisfied it with corporation prefer ences and indulgences to that degree of reple tion which Induces dyspepsia. Senatob Moody, of South Dakota, has made himself a record early in his career by getting his son appointed a pate in the Senate at a salary of 12 50 per day. Bo far the youth constitutes the most significant page in his thrifty sire's record. The latest phase of the attempt to shut out dressed beef Is reported from "Virginia, where a proposition Is pending to prohibit by law the sale of fresh meat thathasbsen slaugh tered more than 21 hours. As this is, of course, inspired by the local butchers, it give's a new insight into their methods to know that they do not intend to let their customers eat any beef that has hung a day. Taking out a child's brain to remove epileptic disease and replacing it successfully, as is reported from Philadelphia, seems about as far as medical science can go. But we shall have to wait a good many years to see how the brain pans out. The discovery of a European scientific man that the baccili which attack the hair fol licles and produce baldness can do foiled by using a mixture of cod liver oil and onion juice, permits the remark that a stndy of the conti nental hair oils points to the conclusion that the usefulness of such obnoxious unguents was discovered long ago. Most civilized people will prefer baldness. The statement that whisky is worth $25 per gallon in Alaska makes it pertinent to sug gest to our. friends of the speak-easies that they will find a splendid field for their enterprise by moving to that far-off part of the country and never coming back. It looks as if there might be some relief from the electric light wire peril in the decision of the Louisiana Supreme Court that the com panies are liable for damages' caused by loose and derelict wires. It may not bo any special mitigation to the people who are killed, to know that their heirs can get compensation; bnt it win tend to make the companies de cidedly careful. The new detail that the Brazilian revo lution was brought about in the interest of the army has a Praetorian smack about it that does not promise a truly representative and consti tutional republic. Intelligence comes from Mexico that the municipal head of an interior town has pro claimed that since the new railroad is finished and strangers are likely to visit the place, the male inhabitants are commanded to wear breeches! No wonder the untrammeled Mexi can feels that the importation of United States customs is interfering with bis dearest liberties. predicted for 8rtw.s;lTeetSu'coteJ 5 Xthe on its way and been grabbed in company with the vanished boodle. THfe statement that the ballot-box forgery business will be Investigated by Congress is satisfactory. If there is any public crooked ness It ought to be brought out; and It not the investigation may at least be expected to stop the cross-Ore of controversy between Foraker and Campbell. PEOPLE OPPfiOillNENCE. Elijah Haifobd, Private Secretary to the President, has recovered from his recent ill ness, but is obliged to be very careful about his diet and habits of work. Governor Forakeb is anxious to take a long rest before he begins, the practice of law. after his term ot Governorship expires. He contemplates a trip to Europe. Gladstone's 80th birthday will be cele brated in England with considerable rejoicings. It comes on the 29th of this month, and it is curious that the venerable statesmen shonld keep his golden wedding and bid Kith birthday the same year. By the death of 31. .Eugene Bersler Paris loses one of her most famous pulpit orators and France the foremost pastor of her Reformed Church. Pastor Bersler was well known in the United States, where he spent the earlier years of his career, and was surrounded by a large circle of American acquaintances and friends at Paris. Mbs. Maby H. Hunt, who, as the head of the educational department of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union, received and pre sented to the XLlXth and Lth Congresses over 4,000,000 petitions for Federal aid to public schools, has written to President Harrison, thanking him in behalf of these petitioners for his recommendation of this measure in his re cent message to Congress. Princess Christian, the second and most popular daughter of Queen Victoria, is on the eve of entirely losing her sight She has been suffering for some time past from an affection of the eyes similar to that which afflicted her great-grandfather. King George lit of En gland, and also her first cousin, the late King of Hanover, both of whom were totally blind during the last 40 years of their lives. The Bev.W. H. Millburn, the blind Chaplain ot the House of Representatives, is a native of Philadelphia and was born in 1822. He lost the sight of one eye when quite young, and the other soon became practically useless He mas tered the blind alphabet, and at the age of 20 was ordained a minister. After that he trav eled over 200.000 miles, filling appointments to preach! in all the Southern States. Within the last SO years be has preached in nearly every State in the Union and in some European countries. He has been Chaplain of the House since 18S3 and can. in all probability, hold the place indefinitely. BEAR-HUNTING IK JEESEI. Brain Scares Bit Pursuers, Bnt Is Treed nod Then Shot Dead. Bridgeport, N. J., December a The farm ers of Bridgeport have been annoyed all the winter by the depredations of some strange animal destroying the yonng pigs, and a watch has been set by half a dozen farmers along the railroad, but in vain. Peter Schlagg, the Jus tice of "the Peace for Logan township, rode over last night after Charley Maloney, at Woodbury, late Assistant Collector of Internal Revenue. Mr. Maloney had a double-barreled Parker, loaded with No. 7 shot for rabbits. Magistrate Schlagg had the good sense to load one barrel with buckshot which later brought in a supply of bear meat for both families. By dawn yesterday the two gunners, with two beagle hounds, were pursuing the fugitive cotton tails a mile below Bridgeport. They had bagged half a dozen rabbits, and as the hunters passed the edge of an impenetrable cedar swamp the evening train went rattling by. The dogs came to a halt at the foot of a fallen oak tree, and half way up the tree Sohlagg discov ered a black bear. Bruin was as badly scared as the hunters and tried to get further away from the badly-frightened Nimrods. A' hasty council of war was held and Schlagg insisted on Maloney firing a load of rabbit shot at the bear to bring him down the tree. Maloney reluctantly fired and left the scene. The dogs followed in rapid transit Mr. Schlagg stood his ground, and as the bear came at him open-mouthed he stepped aside and let drive with the barrel loaded with buck shot, aiming behind the bear's shoulder, with fatal effect. Bcblagg fixed the other barrel in the air, and Charley Maloney returned. Bruin weighed 180 pounds, and the two hunters carried their trophy into Bridgeport. In Great Eire Harbor. Atlantic county, there have been traces found of three or four bears, which inhabit the swamps near Ejrg Harbor City. Senator Gardner, Mayor Hoffman and Justice Albert Irving will organize a bear-slaying party in this locality next week and expect to return with at least one bear skin. NO SUCH THIKG AS LUCK. Wunnmakor's Word of Wisdom Addressed to Sunday School Pupils. SPECIAL TELEGRAM TO THE DISPATCH.! Washington, December 8. When it was announced that Postmaster General Wana maker was to make bis first appearance in this city in the role of Bible class leader to-day it was naturally expected that there' would be a large attendance on the occasion. As a matter of fact, however, this was not the case. When he stood up at 3:30 this afternoon to deliver an ad dress to the Sunday school connected with Gurley chapel, there were only a few present who were not regular attendants, and there were a number of empty benches. Probably the reason for this is the fact that Gurley chapel is a comparatively obscure place of worship, situated near the outskirts ot the town and the meeting place for the residents of that suburb known to Washingtonians as Le droit Park. The Postmaster General was warmly wel comed by those present He took as the sub ject of his address "The Four-Leaved Clover," and. after telling his hearers about the won derful properties formerly supposed to be pos sessed by this plant, and the good fortune which was expected to follow its discovery, he went on to assure them that there is no such thing as luck in the world, and that the only sure road to success was by industry and econ omy. It was a good address, business-like in its tone and Presbyterian in its doctrine, and no stranger' would have imagined from the mapner of its reoeption that the speaker was the Postmaster General of the United States. Mr. Wanamaker expects to continue his Sun day school work during bis residence in this city, but has not as yet determined upon any one place to which to devote his energies. BTEAKGB SCENES IN A MIEE0E. Remarkable Effect of a Tragedy Upon a Large Looking Glass. New Yobx, December 8. There is a large mirror hanging on the wall of the store at 10 Fulton street directly over the spot where Stephen Pettus fell after he had been shot by Hanna B. Soothworth on the morning of November 22. The mirror i3 6 feet long and 4 feet high, and Is set in a stout black walnut frame. It has been there over a year. During that time its polished face remained the same. Since Pet tus' death a change has taken place in its gen eral appearance. The quicksilver in the back has cut up pecu liar antics. It is liquid in parts, and inflowing about has formed the most weird figures and pictures. At times it becomes unusually bril liant in pans and floats about like clouds in a moonlit sky. One day the quicksil ver "evolved Itself into a handsome landscape; the next day the out lines of a warrior on horseback could be' de tected with a little imagination. More funereal looking sights occasionally assert themselves. One morning this week when the foreman opened tho store in the morning he was greeted with a battle scene in quicksilver. Yesterday the picture of a Christmas tree glistening like diamonds attracted a great deal of attention. The clerks in the store look on tho mirror with awe. CENTENNIAL OF THE PEESIDENCY. Celebration of the 100th Anniversary of Washington's Inauguration. Washington, December 8. Wednesday at the Capitol will be devoted to the programme of exercises commemorative of the centennial celebration ot the inauguration of George Washington. The Senate and House of Rep resentatives will assemble together in the Hall of the House, and there will be music, a prayer by Rev. J. G. Butler, Chaplain of the Senate; an.address by Chief Justice Fuller, and the benediction by Rev. W. H. Milburn, Chaplain of the House. These exercises are to be attended by the President and his Cabinet the Supreme Court delegates to the Pan-American and Inter national Maritime conferences, now in session in this city, and all the principal officials of the Government in Washington. At the Grock Calends. From the ducasnMaiLl An English company has asked a charter from the French Government givUig it the right to bridge the Eng1rchannel. The En- fglteh chftBMl wWIjIsk) Wfed ; aboBt the was ef '.I.1Bfl bJ.IUXMbbbB IsBBBBBfcSmsW VBbbM bMNssSI HJ2 ri sw STM'Sfig vi pittsburg DISPATOH,: THE CRITIC'S REVIEW. Currant Articles by Messrs. WcstInEhoase and Carnegie Divorce, by Gladstone Other Magazine Contributions and tho Varied Ideas They Suggest. The Critic, as a loyal Plttsburger, begins his reading of the December magazines with the North American Review, and cuts, the pages first at the articles by Mr. Westinghouse and Mr. Carnegie. Mr. Westinghouse contributes "A Reply to Mr! Edison;" Mr. Carnegie sug gests -The Best Fields for Philanthropy." ' Mr. Edison contended in the Meview last month that the only way to secure safety in electric lighting is to prohibit the use of the alternating current. This prohibition would be' extremely interesting to Mr. Edison, for bis plants are constructed with reference to the continuous system. It would not, however, be nearly so agreeable to Mr. Westinghouse, for the alternating current happens to be exactly the current which he uses. Mr. Westinghouse, accordingly, comes to the de fense of the alternating system. He says that by the Edison system, which is patterned after the manner of gas distribution, the same ten sion which lights the streets lights the houses also. This tension has to be pretty strong. It is so strong that a tension of less than halt the number of volts, If it happened to De turned into a good-sized piece of beef, would roast it completely in less than two minutes. By the alternating system the voltage in the street mains and In the house mains is quite differ ent. A high voltage can be used in the street, and an "absolutely safe" voltage in the house. As a matter of fact, the extension of the alter nating system as compared to-day with the con tinuous system is in the ratio of five to one. Mr. Carnegie suggests several excellent uses to which rich men may put their money. They can establish orlmaintain observatories, as Mr. Thaw did, making possible such good work as Prof. Langley's and Mr. Brashear's. They can found or extend universities and technical schools. They can provide libraries, like Mr. Carnegie himself. They can build or furnish hospitals, medical colleges,laboratories, schools for nurses, music halls, swimming baths. They can provide parks, like Mrs. Schenley, or con servatories, like Mr. Phlppa, They can build churches in poor neighborhoods. There are two things which Mr. Carnegie objects to. He has small regard for post mortem benefactions, ac counting as of minor value what a man gives away because be has no further use for it And he decries the kind of -giving which leaves nothing for anjDodyelse to do. Let the man of money give the start,and then let everybody who is interested help. . The "Question of Divorce" is still under f ruit fnl discussion in the Meview,ilT. Gladstone con tributing a brief but weighty article. 'The New Method of Voting" is considered by Sena tor Saiton, the originator of the Saxton bill, by the Governors of Massachusetts and Connecti cut where the plan has been tried, and by Gen eral Mahono. Marion Hariand has a sensible paper on the "Incapacity of Business Women." There is a declamation by Colonel Ingersoll upon the same old subject; set forth in the familiar phrases, and accompanied by the usual gestures. Mr. Ingersoll's utterances are getting to be like the soup at second-class hotels, where tlas cook is said to have a barrel of "stock," to which he adds a spoonful of this and calls it vermicelli, and a spoonful of that and calls it consomme. The Atlantic begins in Boston, with Mr. Bynner's pleasant and sketchy recounting of the history of "The Old Bunch of Grapes Tavern," where Governors and parsons, patriots and Puritans dined in days gone by. Bradford Torrey, who reads his last year's diary of "De cember Out-of-Doors," does not venture be yond the sacred boundaries of Massachusetts. But "presently we get as far away as Delphi, whose scenery is graphically described and its historical associations noted by William Cran ston Lawton. who tells how the ancient fight between a new and an old religion lingered in the legends of the place. John Fiske tells the stories of the massacres at Wyoming and Cherry Valley, and notes the important posi tion which Fort Pitt occupied, as the key to the Ohio. N. 8. Sbaler thinks that summer schools of science make the best way of spending too longvacation. Henry Van Brunt has a thought, f ul paper on "Architecture in the West" The "vernacular1! art of the West is in a' transi tional state at present, he says. He looks for a distinctive American architecture. We are in a position here to appreciate his comments npon the attitude ot the United States Government toward architecture. "The profession of architecture," he says, "is not recognized by the genera Government" The characteristic of Government buildings is that they are "easiest to design and most costly to execute." Tolstoi's Shoemaker Martin finds a counter part in Sam Kimper, the hero of Habbertou's "All He Knew," which leads in lAppincotVs for December. Sam Kimper learned shoe making in tho penitentiary, where he also picked up "all he knew" about the Christian religion. The story shows how he knew enough to keep him in the path of a good life, to reform his family, and finally to "revive" the whole town, even the deacon! William Henry Bishop, in the same number, describes his visit to Avignon, where the literary present attracts him more than the ecclesiastical past "Leon the Exile," is a little contribution to the literature of the Siberian banishment system. Charles Morris, in a paper on "The Power of the Future," believes that wo will get a deal more work, one of these days, out of the sun, the moon, the water, the air, and the lightning, than we do now. There are short stories by'Robert Grant and Roswell Page. An excellent engraving of Deviie's bust of Thackeray aged 11 prefaces the charming pa per which Thackeray's daughter, Mrs. Ritchie, contributes to this month's BLUicholas. Let ters and drawings, reproduced from photo graphs, illustrate the article on "The Boyhood of Thackeray." "The White and the Red," by Alice Maude Ewell, is a Christmas story sup posed to be told in the light of a Virginia hearth-fire on Christmas eve in 1652. There is a pretty picture by Birch of the Indian Simon carrying the little girl Lillian across the brook. "Little Avilda" is a Norse nursery tale told by Prof. Boyeson. "By-and-By" and "An Autumn Revel" are delightfully illustrated Frederick Remington makes the pictures, for Theodore Roosevelt's article on "Buffalo. Hunting." Nora Perry's serial story makes a good begin ning. Outing is as breezy as ever, and carries the reader into many latitudes. The amethystine trout of Mackinac, and the gentle alligator of Florida, bicycles, cameras,guns, sails and snow shoes claim a readily-given attention. "Fly catcher" is proving an interesting serial. "Wabun Anung" is the name of a capital guide up in the Georgian Bay regions. W.R. Hamilton discusses the "Merits and Defects of the National Guard." "The Game of Curling" is attractively set forth by James Hedley. R. M.Hurd reviews the history of scientific row ing at Yale. Margaret Bisland has a practical paper on "Women and Their Guns." ,. Two fine portraits of the Duke ot Welling ton are given In the Century, wlth""Selectfons from Wellington's Letters." The "Iron Duke" got his name, it appears, from an iron steam boat, which was called after hlin, and not from any' severity of character. The letters here given are pleasant revelations of the familiar and social side of the great captain's character. His fondness for children and theirs for him seem to have been strongly marked. 'When they become familiar with me," he writes, "they consider me one- of themselves, and make me a sort of plaything! They climb npon me and make toys of my hair and my flngersi" "Joseph Jefferson's Autobiography," "Friend Olivia," "The Merry Chanter" and tho "Lincoln History" make progress, grave and gay. Prof. George P. Fisher begins a series of papers on "The Nature and Method of Revelation." Alfred Stevens and Henri Gervex, the painters of the notable "Panorama ot tho Nineteenth Century." which was exhibited at the Paris Exposition, give a description of their work ,They conceived the idea of making a colossal panorama, which should be a review In picture of thelast hundred years of French history, "a veritable tableau-vivant of the great men and the chief events of the century, evoked from out the past with all the witchery of historical reminiscences." The portraits of a thousand or more of the notabili ties of France appear in this remarkable work. Illustrations accompany the sprightly descrip tions. V Pittsburg Is made to serve as a fearful ex ample in an article In the Popular Science Monthly on "Governmental Aid to Injustice." The particular Injustice in question is a (IS tariff on steel rails. The Pittsburg business" man, according to 'this reasoning, gets 137 per ton where in all the rest of the world he could get only S20. The Pittsburg shop girl, who buys, ten yards of calico and pays 10 cents per yard would need to pay only 9 cents, but the shopkeeper bad to pay , extra ' freight, be cause HBe"raarod, had.,.W'Wiy !n ,ektr priee fer steel rHs.r Thitfomttbur busr new m gets riefc at Ww WQ,ottlKi Pjtuj -:, MONDAY, DECEMBER" burg shop girl. '"We cannot believe," says the writer of this ingenious argument "that Amer. ,ican manhood will not sometime rise above the unparaueieu meanness ot tne protective tarin." In this tariff town this article makes quite in teresting reading. Willard B. Farwell, in "New Phases in the Chinese Problem," ques tions what can bs done with the Chinese who are here already. Not only is exclusion very difficult, as the President suggests in his late message, but those who are now within our boundaries afford a sufficiently grave problem, Mr. Farwell does not believe that any reforma tion can reform a Chinaman. Dr. Abbott has an interesting paper on the days when the mastoaon was wont to chase the palaeolithic man across the frozen surface of the Delaware river. A useful article Is reprinted from the Jftneteenth Century on the "Mental and Phy sical Training of Children." The miseries and iniquities of tenement house life in New York are described in the in itial paper of the December Bcriimer's. "How the Other Half Lives" is the title ot the articMt Jacob A. Riis, police reporter of the Associated Press, is the author. Two cent restaurants and 10-cent lodging houses, over-crowded buildings and open drains, the Italian quarter, the Jews quarter, the Chinese quarter, with their indis cribablo abominations, are set forth with pen and pencil. No remedy Is suggested. Indeed, there is but one remedy, and that is an awak ened public sentiment which will bring fear, if not shame, into the hearts of the rich men who own these breeding places of disease and crime. What the thing needs is just such a showing up as Mr. Riis gives, it Mr. Bunner, in "Mrs. Tom's Spree,'' writes a queer little story tiith an entirely unworn plot Brittany and the Bretons are delightfully described in Mr. Northnp's paper on "The Pardon of Ste. Anne D'Auray," the description being rein forced with pictures bv Howard Pyle, Kenyon Cox, Will H. "Low and others. "Contemporary American Caricature," as exemplified more -particularly in Fuck and Life, is appreciatively treated by J. A. Mitchell. The "end-paper." by Mr. Phelps, is entitled "abb Age oi woras. xoo many speeches, too many books, too many newspapers, is the burden of this clever essay. The national printing machine at Washington turning out "long-drawn-out and ostentatious reports of what nobody wants to know; endless 'docu ments' that nobody reads; tables unlimited of useless knowledge; Congressional speeches that had no hearers and could find no readers; no library could contain them, only the paper maker has use for them" is taken to be a good symbol of an age ot words. 0D2 MAIL fOPCfl. The Nun of Kenmare Quotes Dr. Hutchinson In Her Defense, To the Editor of The Dispatch: The conversation which your reporter had with tho Roman Catholic lady "who visits the1 Ursuline convent every day," is curious. It is rather hard to be pronounced insane because I have said what the doctor of the Dixmont In sane Asylum has said, that Sister Gonzalez' troubles bave been the cause of her insanity. If Sister Gonzalez' family were insane, there is all the more reason why she should not have been subjected to treatment which has ter minated in insanity. I know the rales of con vent life very well, and if the Sisters received her under such conditions they made a mis take. I am not responsible for what Mother Gertrude or "a lady' has said, I have simply repeated whatlwas said to me by Mother Al phonse in the presence of a friend, and what as said to me by the French Sister and also by Mother Gertrude's own sister. The lady says that the Sisters who are under censure get "the greatest freedom about the place." Bnt later she says that "their meals are carried to them." This shows that they are not allowed to associate with the other Sisters, and proves what' Mother Alphonse told my friend, that they are not allowed the same liberty as the others; that they are, in fact, "sent to Coventry," to use the mildest term.. As I shall enter on these subjects fully on Tnesday, 1 shall say no more, except that I be lieve what was said to me by the three .Sisters whom I conversed with, and who have a better right to speak for themselves than any lady who speaks for Mother Gertrude. I knew Mother Gertrude's father, the well-known London bookseller. I was not aware who Mother Gertrude was until after my visit or I would have asked to see her and told her who 1 was. M. J. CTJSACK, (The Nun of Kenmare.) PrrTSBTrnG, December 7, 18S9. Buy J. Whltcomb Riley's Poems. To the Editor of The Dispatch: Can you Inform me how or where I can get the poem entitled "The Frost on the Pumpkin and the Fodder in the Shock t" I think I saw it published in Tub Dispatch some time ago. S. McKeesfobt, December 7. An Old English Penny, To the Editor of The Dispatch: What is the value of an English penny bear ing the date 1740? . MAC. Kennebdell, December 7. The catalogue of a New York firm quotes, such pieces in good condition at 40 cents each. Because it Is Not Abridged. To the Editor of The Dispatch: Why is Webster's Unabridged Dictionary so . calledT Twenty-seventh Waed. PlTTSnuEG, December 7. Gradual Emancipation Provided for 1780, To the Editor of The Dispatch: In what year was slavery abolished in Penn sylvania? ' Whjus. PrrrsBUEG, December 7. Republican. To the Editor of The Dispatch: Was thelast Ohio Legislature Democratic or Republican on joint Dallot? H. ' Avenue, December 7. In July, 1S74. To the Editor of The Dispatch: When did the Butchers Run flood occur? J. K. Pittsbpeg, December 7. THE CONGRESSIONAL PE0GRAMME. Subjects to Come Before the National Legis lature This Week. Washington, December 8. The recent de falcation in the Sergeant at Arms' office, and the consequent loss or inconvenience to many Congressmen, have been the engrossing ques tions of interest around the House of Repre sentatives during the past few days, and little thought has been given to the course of busi ness in the coming week. If the committee in vestigating the defalcation completes its work in season to make a. report to the House to morrow, it will undoubtedly give rise to much discussion, but the committee does not expect to be able to finish its labors until some later day. It is thought that a joint resolution will be introduced and pressed to prompt passage to provide for the payment of the lost salaries, though there are intimations that this will meet with determined opposition. The Committee' on Rules has not yet held a meeting, and when the House reassembles to-morrow, it will be governed merely by parliamentary practice. In former years it Was the custom to permit Representatives to introduce bills before the committees were appointed, but this led to such confusion in the docketing of measures, that in the FlftieibJCongress the practice was discontinued and it is hardly probable that it will be re-established. There is reason to believe that instead of waiting, as usual, to complete the entire list, Speaker Reed will announce several of the more important committees this week, in fact, be has indicated to one or two members of the House a strong probability that he will do so. Until these are announced, however, short ses sions and long recesses may be expected. It is not expected that any business of importance-will be completed in the Senate this week. Bills will be introduced and referred, and some of the committees will begin their regular wort. To-morrow the Republican Caucus Committee on Committees will meet, and they expect to conclude the work ot re arrangement at that session so as to report to the caucus on Tuesday. Senator Voorhees will, probably this week, call up bis resolution, in accordance with the notice given at the'tlmo it was introduced, declaring in favor of tariff reform and make a speech in support of it Action will probably be taken upon the nomi nations sent in by the President last week. These number 133, all recess anpolntments, ex cept that of Judge Brower to be an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court The holiday recess question will probably come up this week for settlement- It Is be lieved in the Senate side that the recess will begin December 19 and end January 6. J. W. HARPER MARRIED. Tho Senior Member of the Weil. Known Publishing Firm Wed Bliss Brown. rSPSciJLL TELEGRAM TO THE PISPATCH.I New VobK, December 8. It was a notable wedding yesterday at the house of Mr. Freder ick T. Brown, at 673 Madison avenue, where lfiO members of the Harper family, of this city, and. of the Brown family, of Boston, met to celebrate the marriage ot Mr. John Wesley Harper, senior member of Harper & Brothers, and Eleanor Emmons Brown, daughter pf Mr, Frederick T. , Brown, The bridemaids were Miss Nina Onitlvla and Miss Margaret Brown, sisters of the bride. The Rev. Dr. Edward Everett Hale, of Bos ton,who married Mr, and. lip. Fre derick T. Brown, married-Miss Brown and Mn Harper. Br. Hall made a brief addM, ad ttfed a farm of semes f0fuui m wm m,vt sepc ec . e- Mtt HMtKaTX WHim.1W.W M - ' r$gpv 9, " -1889. NOTED PUBLIC MEN. Frank G. Carpenter's Pen-PIccares of New Senators and Others A Rich Statesman Viam the Black Hllls-Mlnlslcr Palmer Likely to Resign Other Probable Va cancies. tCOBEESPONTKtCSl OF TEE DISPATCH;! Washington, December 7,-The Senate has a new millionaire this session in the person of Watson C. Squire, of the Btate of Washington. Senator Squire Is worth t2,OQO,000, and his In. come is $10,000 a month. He can spend S00.CO0 a season in Washington and never miss it, and 1 am told that his entertainments will be fre quent and liberal. He will live at the Arling ton Hotel, and his family will be among the leading figures in Washington society. Sena tor Squire was born in Ohio, has lived in New York, and has made his fortune in Washing ton Territory. He married into the family of the Remingtons, the noted gun and typewriter people, and it was some years ago that he moved to Seattle and began to speculate in real estate. He now owns bouses and lands, and bis property increases in value every year, and his buildings bring him In gold galore. He looks more like a New York club man than one of the newest ot the Western Senators. He has the tastes of a club man, too, and bis well filled out front will not be out of place among the fat goldbags of the Senatorial cham ber. He is a good talker, and a man ot ability. I asked an Indiana Congressman, who knows him well, to-night what kind of a man Squire is. He replied: "Well, ho is a curious kind of a fellow. He Is full o( good nature, has the accomplishments of a man-abont-town, is a good story teller, and is a combination of gen erosity and the reverse. He will be ugly with you as to the difference of 25 cents, and will spend $25 ill champagne in explaining the mat ter to you. They tell a story of a letter of in troduction which Nicholas H. Owens once gave Squire in introducing him to a friend of his. This letter read: My Dear Governor: This will Introduce you to my friend Watson C. Squire. You will find him a hog In little things and a prince in big things. Signed! NICHOLAS if. Owxxs. "This story, however, is probably unfair to the Senator. Like all good business men, he has to watch the corners closely In his money transactions, and he does not believe in mixing up business and charity. I am told he Is one of the most generous and charitable of men, and that he believes in snendimr as well as making fortunes." S Senator From the Black Hills. Another bright Senator from the new States, who is considerably well-to-do, is Gideon C. Moody, of South Dakota. Moody's home is at Deadwood. in the heart of the Black Hills. He is the leading lawyer of his State, and a good share of the metals that come out of this mineral region drop into his pocket in the way of fees. I am told that bis income is at least 10.000 a year from his practice, and he is pos sessed of lands and stocks. He is a straight broad-shouldered, well-fllled-out man of about SO years of age. His hair Is as white as newly slacked lime, and there are silver strands among the gold of his full beard. He tells me that he was born in New York and that he moved to Indiana at manhood, intending to re main there for 10 or 12 years and then come back to Washington as President or Senator from the wild and woolly West Indiana, how. ever, did not need new Senatorial timber, and he never got higher than the Legislature. He was in the Legislature at the beginning of the War, and in the stirring times of 186L he showed himself a bold and fearless statesman. He left Indiana for Dakota about 23 years ago, and when he settled with his familv on a farm Inst outside of Yankton his neighbors in the village thought him foolhardy on account of the danger from the Indians. There was no house between him and the north cole, and the only signs of civilization were in the town near by. This farm of Senator Moody's is now di. videdup into building lots. He paid J3 an acre for it, and it is now worth more than S100, 009. I don't know that ha owns any of it bnt he undoubtedly made a good thing oft of its sale. When he left it he went to Deadwood, and this was 14 years ago. I met him first when he was here at Wash ington three years ago as one of the Senators from the then organized State of Dakota, which was planned by the people, but which was not recognized at Washington. Senator Moody had, by the courtesy of the Senate, a place in the chamber while the question of the legality of Dakota Statehood was pending. On its being decided illegal be went back to Da kota and bided his time. He now comes to Washington with no cloud upon bis title, and he has taken quarters just across from the Capitol, where bis office windows can look out upon that great marble building In which foe the next six years he will bave a chance to make for himself a national reputation. Minister Palmer Homesick. Senator Palmer likes nothing in the world better than to play at being farmer here in his 812,000 log cabin. He pines for the forests of Font Hill, the name by which he calls his farm, even under the sunny skies of Spain, and lam informed by very good authority that he will return to the United States next July and will probably resign bis mission at this time. He has Immense interests here and his salt wells, lumber yards andpine forests in Michigan are worth millions. He has a great deal of real es tate in Detroit, and this farm is only four miles from the city and is at the end of an electric railroad. This railroad brings it within close communication with Detroit, and the city is rapidly growing toward it It may be advisable to divide it np into lots at an early date, and the Senator's Jersey cows and Percheron horses also need nis attention. He wants to be back in America also to see about his Washington property, and bis big brown stone bouse on McPherson Square is for sale. This bouse has nine mahogany bath rooms, and its kitchen and lanndry are in the attic, while there is a fine stable sandwiched on to its rear. It is finished in the finest of wood, and is the house for which the Senator was charged 45,000 more than his contract price with the architect for building. It cost him, he once told me, $85,000, and he now offers it for sale, with the lot adjoining it, for $12000. He does not want to rent it and as It is not sold, the probability is that it will stand vacant this winter. Probable Diplomatic Changes. Speaking of Palmer's probable resignation of the office of Minister to Spain, there will prob ably be a number of changes when the spring opens: Colonel Denby, President Cleveland's appointee as the Minister to Pekln, will not be removed before that time as it would be impos sible for the new appointee to get to his post before the opening up of navigation on thePel h'o river. Minister Childs, of Bangkok, is still In office, and there has been, as yet no change of appointment in Korea. Thomas Byan, the Minister to Mexico, was here a few days ago, and be has gone back to Mexico to spend some months there at least From a private letter from Japan I learn that our new minister at Tokio is very popular there and that he pro poses to entertain on a more extensive scale than did Governor Hubbard. This letter states that Governor Hubbard, according to Tokio gossip, is said to saved S40.000 during his four years' service at the Japanese capital. The Min. ister's salary is only $12,000 a year, and it cannot be possible that Governor Hubbard was able to keep np his establishment on $2,000. The Widow of Hon. S. S. Cox. Mrs. S. S. Cox is in the city looking after her property here, Mrs. Cox, though not rich, is left in comfortable circumstances. Mr. Cox had, at the time of his death, four houses in Washington. His widow will derive a comfortable income from these alone. The bouse on Dupont Circle which Sunset Cox bought originally for 30.000. and he sold on his departure for Turkey for $50,000 and considered it a good bargain. I It was a gooa .uurguiu. vjpvu uu iumuo bought the same house back again for about 10,000. In addition to this Mrs. Cox has the residence on New Hampshire avenue, which she and her husband built a few years ago. This is a combination ot Moorish and Ameri can architecture. It is full of Oriental con ceits and it cost something like $20,000 to build it Mrs. Cox and ber husband planned the tinmn while thev were in Turkey, and they hoped it would be their home for many long) .years, iurs. iua. win uui o; -m..-,.v miu she will hold it as her winter Washington home, spending part ot the time hero and part of the time at her home in New York. The relations of Mr. and Mrs. Cox were of the closest matrimonial order. Their honey moon lasted from their wedding to the day of Mr. Cox's death, and they were closely asso ciated in everything. Mrs.Cox knew all of Mr. Cox's plans and she aided bim in his literary work and in the furthering of bis political as pirations. She guarded bis leisure and his working hours, kept the bores away from him and prevented his being annoyed by the office seekers and lobbyists. She accompanied him in all his travels, and I have a picture of Mr. and Mrs. Cox taken by the light or the mid night sun during their travels in Norway. He dedicated all his books to her, 'and she was his best literary critic. Feane G. Cabfenteb. Some Good 9fny Yet KssuU. From the Chicago Times. The members of the House ot Representa tives arsnowsaldtobelhoroughlyaliTetothp importance of making an extradition treaty with Canada so that Silcott jaayfee seat bask., JX trwy IS W JOSltiOi. jsmawa iaHwmm it' 'will ijt jjM,MkMlflajWSMrC J WILL WOETfl EBADIKG. Twenty Poses of Choice Xiteratore la Yesterday's mammoth Dispatch. The-good features of yesterday's triple num ber of The Dispatch were many. Besides the interesting news of the day; tersely and well told, there were contributions from a score or more of eminent clergymen and column after column of choice original matter from the pens of writers of wide reputation. J. The cable sews from Europe contained an account of the trials that have thickly beset various royal personages. Deep snows cover Austria-Hungary, and drifts have blockaded railroads and highways. Kaiser William con. tinues his Self-appointed task of gaining the good will of all classes. An American land company has made a good deal of money by swindling the British. Miss Caldwell was. interviewed in Paris regarding her broken en gagement with Pnnce Murat, and said bis de mands were unreasonable. By tba strike among the gas companies' employes South London is threatened with nights of total darkness. Governor Foraker made a statement con cerning the charges that have been made about his connection with the ballot box forgeries case, and pronounced them all false. Frank W. Leach hopes to see Delamater nominated for Governor ot Pennsylvania and intimates this is also Quay's wish. Four New York long shoremen were burned to death while trying to save property from a burning pier. Rt Rev. John Tuigg, BUhop of Pittsburg, died at Altoona, aged 68. Manifestations of sorrow for the death of Jefferson Davis continue through out the South. A staff correspondent gave an account of the latest developments in connec tion with the Waynesburg failures. The ab sconding Cashier Silcott is found to have been a forger. The names of 30 Congressmen are said to have been wrongly used by him. rx. The Americus Club talks of a new clubhouse. The Eighteenth Regiment will convert the Fifth Avenue Market House into a $50,000 armory. Judge White sentenced the colored murderer. Smith, to be banged. James L. Orr was sent to the penitentiary for four years and ten months. Chatswithprominenttitizens and minor interesting items of local news were found on the second and third pages. President Nimick has written n interesting letter on the baseball sitnatlon. Other 8portingnews and gossip were given ample space. m. "Should Preachers Smoke?' This question was discussed In the second part by the follow ing prominent clergymen: Rev. Dr. Talmage, Rev. Dr. Lyman Abbott Rev. Dr. Austin Phelps,-Rev, Dr. Thomas Armitag3.Rev.Dr. R. Heber Newton. Rev, Dr. Robert Collyer, Rev. Dr. Borcbard, Rev. Newman Hall, Rev. Dr. O. li. Frothingham, Bishop Coxe, Rev. Dr. W. H. Fnrness, Rev. Joseph Cook. Rev. Thomas K. Beecher, Rev. Dr. Storrs, Rev. S. F. Smith, Canon Farrar, Rev. Dr. William B. Alger, Rev. 'Hbward Crosby, Rev. Theodore L. Cnyler, Bishop Potter, Chaplain Mc Cabe and others. L. G. Sanford contributed an interesting article on whaling. Wales described the Pittsburg telephone sys tem. F. S. Bassett furnished a readable paper on proverbs and riddles. Mrs. Leslie discussed marriage. Justin McCarthy's novelette, "Er rant in the Rockies," was a fascinating little story. George W. Williams wrote of the or ganization and government of the Congo State in Africa. The noted novelist, W.Clark Rus sell, contributed a pleasing ssa sketch. Prof. Georg Ehers' "Joshua" was continued. There were also the usual newsy departments, and original contributions from Clara Belle, James C. Purdy, "Redhlrd," Claire A. urr. iiumnaio, W. F. Pond, Rev.George Hodges, Hope Glenn, Mrs. Grundy, Jr., A Clergyman, Ernest H. Heinrichs, Ivan Smirnoff, Bessie Bramble and others. LOADING A PIN0E'8 FAMILY. A Hard Task to Get Albert Edward on a Train. Paris Letter in New York Times. Apropos of princes, the sight of the departure ot the Prince of Wales and his family from Pari3 at the beginning of the week was a some what amusing one. Strange to say that on this occasion the usual precautions had been neg lected, and that everybody wno listed was allowed on the platform. There was quite a miscellaneous crowd by the time the royal party came up. Up till then amusement had been found in staring at the portly valets arranging the traveling rugs and cloaks in the salon car. On the table was a gigantic bouquet, with a neatly written copy of verses attached, sent for the Princess by some friend. Jnmmy, the Princess pet dog, was there In great state, running all over the carriage. It is a fat over fed little brute, and with the innate snobbish ness of dogs seemed to know who and where it was. The royal party were fearfully mobbed when they did come up, and the valets had all their work cut out for them to get a passage clear. It was not until, actlog on a brilliant idea, the station master sent a trolly with hot water bottles straight through tho crowd that the Prince and party, following in its wake, were able to get up to the entrance to their car. It was a most amusing sight to see how the servants got the Princess and then the Prince into the train. One could not help thinking of -the old days in Spain when to touch the Queen or one of the Princesses was to incur death, as one watched the footmen hoisting the Princess into the carriage. Tho Prince gave them more worlc One footman gripped his right arm and another got his two hands firmly planted against the Prince's back and one, two and away. ' It seemed that it would have beenvery much simpler to have had a stepladder. When all had been shot in the doois were closed and the royal party stood at the windows like wax statues to be stared at The Prince took up a most peculiar attitude, crouching so that hU head only appeared above the window sill. The faces of some of the crowd were a study. Most ot the people had their hats off.and many wore a devotional air such as one sees in a church. Nobody loves a lord more dearly than does the French bourgeois. SHOES SEINED BY STEAM, The Urchin Bootblack Has a Nickel-Plated Successor. Trom the New York Times. The day has long since gone by when a man, to have his shoes made things of refulgent beauty, was forced to lean against a fence or balance himself on one foot and have a youth of tender years prod his bunions with a well worn brush. Of late the shinee reposes in a luxurious armchair in a room cooled by revolv ing fans in summer and heated by a rotund whitewashed stove in winter andhasamanof mature years and good judgment coax his boots into ebony loveliness with an oiled cloth and a well-kept, long-haired brush. The quality of the shine itself has wonder fully improved also. The unaffected and funereal black polish that faded generally to a pale and mottled-gray tint before the boots it covered had moved two blocks away has been succeeded by a glittering and attractive ebony luster tbit lasts sometimes for two days. It would seem as if in this line of trade "im provement could no further go," but an enter prising firm of colored gentlemen in Sixth avenue went "one better" a few days ago when they flung to the winds in front of their parlor a sign reading: I SHOES BHINED BY STEAJf. j -. WmLX You Wait." : 'Theproc'ess of shining now occupies but a minute, all told, and a shine is put on one's shoes that is mirror-like in its refulgence and almost everlasting in its effects. The motive power comes from the trenches of a steam beating company and the mechanism that controls the brushes is nickel-plated and glittering to a degree. The blacking still bas to be applied to the shoes by hand, but the pwner of the establishment is formulating a scheme that will render that act possible, by steam power also. Dfrs. Siddpns' Reading. The sale of seats for the Mrs. Scott Slddons entertainment opens this morning at R. 8. Davis & Co.'s bookstore at 9 o'clock. The en tertainment will take place at Lafavette Hall on Friday evening next December 13. It will includo readings and recitations in costume from Shakespeare, Bulwer and other eminent authors and playwrights. In a Horry to Get Away. From the Philadelphia Times, 2 'Silcott mnst'bave closely read the President's message. When he came to that part which said that a new extradition treaty had been made with Great Britain he skipped across the border so quickly that be forgot that $30,000 in the safe. Goad Edhers Needed. Jfrom (he Baltimore American. !, -One good way to BMapartef the surplus would M tetorolw a si tmm tot fee Cmtrtt- 'asj JIM. Booool sBasf ji W(4bo1 ft flPsM oT 14 CURIOUS CONDENSATIONSI -! Rufus Thompson, of "West Swanzey, N. HI, the father of the actor, Denman Thompson, was married a few days ago to Mrs. SaraJi''A Walker. of Westminster West, Vfc -Mr. Thompson is 83 years of age, and the bnde is eight years his junior. The French professor of chemistry, De Millefleurs, recently exhibited before'a meet ing of Parisian scientists several bricks of petroleum which he has discovered how to solidify by an original process. The petroleum bricks were hard enough t be handled without inconvenience, yet soft enough to be cut with a stout knife. They burn slowly when touched with a lighted match. Milleneurs says they are non-explosive and inexpensive. This account of a Mississippiball ap pears in a Memphis paper: "The ball given by the young men of Benoit was universally scored a success by all in attendance. The heavenly spheres shone forth in their tran scendent beauty on tins Thursday night, seem ing in perfect harmony with the brilliancy of the event, and through mud and mire from Greenville to Rosedale the cre'me de la cremo of the Mississippi Delta came to participate in the terpsicborean fete. Charles Clark, a trader in Blackington, Mass., has a big brown horse that he drives in his delivery wagon. In his barnyard Clark bas a hydrant for supplying water for use about the barn and outbuildings. Some days ago there was some delay in giving the big brown horse his usual drink. The horse walked out of the barn, and, going to the hydrant turned the cock with his teeth. let the trough run f nil of water, and then turned the cock off the same way ba turned it on. Then be drank nis fill and returned to his nlace in the barn. Sines ' then he has performed the same act every day," A Washington dentist recently adver tised that he would give $100 for a perfect front tooth of a healthy young white man. The doc tor stated that the advertisement was no catch, but that he would pay $100 for a front tooth that would answer his purpose, and that is to replace one which he wishes to extract This is frequently done, the doctor says, but is a very difficult operation. Sometimes as many as 200 applicants who wish to dispose of a tooth will be examined before the exact kind will ba found, and when the right one is selected it is extracted and planted m the jaw of the other party at the same operation. A strange case of snspended animation occurred at the village of Knoxville, Frederics county, Jl.d. Samuel Garber. an aged resident of that place, was stricken with appoplexy a few days ago. but recovered. Thursday he suffered a second stroke and was finally pronounced dead. His relatives were notified of his demise, and an undertaker was sent to prepare the body for burial. It was laid on a cooling board and the arrangements for the funeral were pro ceeded with. Friday morning the supposed '4- corpse suuaeniy suowea signs oi returning me, and while still on the board Mr. Garber recov ered full consciousness. Later in the day he was reported to be improved. " A triangular bit of land just outside the borough limits of Stonlngton, ConiL, is an old family burying ground. The yard shows neglect, bushes are growing therein, while the j walls in many places have fallen down, and tho entire surroundings indicate that the dead quietly reposing there have been long since for gotten. One marble monument there has an inscription that shows that the dead deserved a better fate thantjbllrion. It reads: "When Rhode Island, by ber legislation from 1811 to 1850. repudiated her Revolutionary deb:. Dr. Richmond removed from that Btate to this borough and selected this as bis family burial plot, unwilling that the remains of himself and family should be disgraced by being part ot the commoa earth of a repudiated State." A Sandersville (Ga.) paper tells this story: A few days ago a gentleman was driving in the vicinity of Long's bridge. He firmly held the lines over a splendid mare, while the mare's colt contentedly trotted along behind. When Buffalo creek was reached, repairs being made on the bridge, the gentleman found that he would have to drive through the channel, which was unusually deep, almost swimming, and would swim the colt The mare was driven in, and the colt not desiring a test of his swimming qualities, reared up on his tender hind legs, gently placed bis fore ones on the box of the vehicle back of the buggy seat and was safely drawn across the muddy stream. When the opposite bank was reached he gracefully bounded off with a whinny of satis faction, Numerous items have recently appeared in the press concerning the pearls of the Sugar River, Wisconsin, which have not all been without foundation, since soma parcels have been sent to New York which were worth from a f ewdollars to" over $1,000 a par cel'To ;many''' who have read these accounts it may be inter- estlng to know that in the last 20 years, more" ',', than $100,000 worth of pearls bave been found in the United States in that family of mollusks known as "unios." or fresh water mussels, the same that abounded at one time in the rivers of Scotland. It was from pearls fonnd in this kind of shells that the name of "Scotch River Pearls" was taken. It was the fame of these which the historian Suetonius says induced Csesar to send his armies to Great Britain, and it was with the pearls which they secured that be bad a buckler made which he presented to the temple of Venus Genetrix. There is a hollow old oak tree on the town and county line between Lebanon and Columbia, Conn., that for several years distilled instead of sap, a very fair brand of oak-tanned "blnegrass" whisky. New England rum, and occasionally, in drouthy weather, domestic ales and beer. During all that time the officers of the law had remarked a phenom enal overflow of spirits on the part of the staid and pious old farmers of Lebanon who vote for prohibition, and they readily understood that somebody had a cache of balm somewhere within the town's limit but every raid they made on the premises of suspected persons was unfruitful. It was not until a low weeks ago ' that the secret of the hidden rum was laid bare by a deacon in the church, who accidentally stnmbled on the bank of exchange ana deposit in the silent and faithful old oak. As he was a man untroubled with no-license thirst he gave the whole thing away. Piece by piece the news transpired that the old oaken bank had been in the hands of a dexterons and thrifty receiv er, a Lebanon man, who twice a week filled the oak's till with rum. gin, whisky or beer from Norwicbjand nightly a stockholder or two came stealthily with a jug, or milk can,or tin pail and drew on the funds. In payment for the privi lege he left collateral security by the side of the deposit In the tree. Since the good dea con's fortuitous trip to the tree, the old oak bank has gone into involuntary liquidation. PANCIES OF FUNNY MEN. "Sand is a great thing in business." "That's so. Eat a house founded on the sand doesn't stay up long." Harper' t Bazar. A pup looks so mild and innocent that we sometimes think it will turn out better than others of it race, but it always tarns out a dog. Atchison Qlobe. , If the good die young it is very evident that death does not love a shining mark, for very few young people are bald-headed. Boston Herald. Way Up. "That last book of Marvin's Is a very lofty piece of work." "Well, it ought to be. It's his tenth story." Sea York Bun. When yon have a cold yon do not know how to cure It. All yo nr friends know how, and they tell you, bat that does not affect the cold. Sew Orleans Picayune. Co-education in college is a success, but it Isn't so much of a success as it would be if most of the girls who are co-educated in colleges were' better looking. SomervitU Journal. . 1TXK LETTERS. Ten years ago, with fond caress, I bid them In my trunk, man; But yesterday, I must confess, I sold them to thejankman. Seio lork Evening Sun. Mrs. Scrimp I do wish, John, that yoa would get me a new winter wrap; myoldoneisa light to behold. Mr. Scrimp-H'mt Can't you wait a little while longer, so It can pass as a Christmas present? Texas Sttings. Understood at Last. "I can readily un derstand, madam," said the tramp, as ne took the potted, torn, moth-eaten trousers the kina woman had given him. "how it happens thatit more blessed to give than to receive. " trousers explain it all." Harpers Basar. Wanted to Sell Out "Yon are the man-; ager of the British syndicate?" "Yes, sir." - . "Well, I represent the Associated Tramps or. Hew Jersey. What'll you give u ""' vt . . .. ... .... ... n-..- vA-fr Run. S woca uvui maosiryc "' - -- j THitnr's wif (2 a. M. JohnI John, There's a burglar in thehouie. I hear him down. stairs. O! do get up. .,... -'J j,t n,.ir ..v.ia hnr'lar? In this nouser Wife-Yes Liitenl Doo't yoa hear that? . r John (rolling over again;-!" " "T-f tear. Philadelphia Inquirer. - The Maiden's Prayer.-Tonng Miss -,wii.y. rru-Whcroirevou going, papa? Iter. Mr. Wllcus To the temperance meeting We Intend to inaugurate a movement to aaveltha yousgmen of the countrr- 3. Yiunr MUs Wlim-rr (W-f-s K TrflJ. pip. jtuUrJtUkttm,