x "iyp. k .. -X- JW7 JTSE xixxoDUAw i xj.jtxxj.vjca, jLUJxai-'&.j., ' jjjjMimxjxtf --'i,u, iooy. K'&, pe Biafeg P ESTABLISHED FEBRUARY S. IMS, VoLH Ho.. Entered at Pittsburg rostofflce. November 11, JSS7. as second-class matter. Business Office 97 and 99 Fifth Avenue. News Booms and Publishing House 75, 77 and 79 Diamond Street ' .Eastern Advertising Office. Koom , Tribune Building, .New York. TERMS OF THE DIkPATCH. rOETAGE FBTJS IN THE nNITED STATES. Dahy DmpatCH. One Year. f8 00 UAttv Dispatch, fer Quarter ZOO UAI1.V D6IFATCU, One Mouth 70 UAIIT UIBPATCH, Including Sunday, lyear. 10 00 Daily Dispatch, IncludingSunday.Sm'ths. 2 50 Daily Disr-ATCH, Including Sunday. 1 month 90 Sunday Dispatch, One Year 2 50 Weekly Dispatch, One Year 1 25 The Daily Distatch is dellTercd by carriers at 15 cents per week, or Including fcunday edition. at 20 cents per week. PITTSBURG, TUESDAY. DEC. 10, 18S8. "WILLIAM KIDDLE'S DEATH. The death of William 2f. Eiddle, as an nounced by telegraph elsewhere, 'will pro duce a universal feeling of sorrowful retro spect anions hundred?, if not thousands, of people who knew and admired the dead man in his successful career, and who, whether sufferers or Merely impartial lookers-on, mourned the almost tragic dis aster which overtook: him ten years ago. Hardly any recent life presents more re markable contrasts, or typifies more strongly both the virtues and vices of American character, than that -which is thuB closed. Up to 1883 a better example of the success which can be won and the character which can be self-made in this country could not be presented than "William Eiddle. Start ing as a poor boy, at the foot of the ladder, he fought his way by energy, faithfulness 3nd unconquerable courage to a position of high trust and ample fortune. His liber ality and good humor won him the widest popularity, and even his eccentricities of habit and conversation endeared him to the many friends to whom he in turn showed lis ready friendship. Bnt the equally prevalent error of drift ing into speculation made him at once a victim and offender. Ve believe his asser tion to have been truthful, that he went into the speculation! which wrecked the Penn Bank, solely with the wild idea of recover ing losses that had been made by loans on oil security. But the fatal error of judg ment grew into the most reckless dissipation of other people's money in order to recover the lost ground, with the results of a terrible crash, broken fortune, and the ruin of a pre viously unspotted career. The moral is so obvious and so familiar that it need not be repeated nere. The mere repetition of the facts is a sermon. In this hour, we can afford to forget the errors of the dead man and remember his many and shining virtues. "We can mourn the man as we knew him at his best; and re member that even with all bis faults and failures in the balance, many a worse man than William N. Eiddle has died sur rounded by the cloak of the highest respect abilitv and success. SPRECKELS STAETS. Clans Sprectels big sugar refinery started yesterday, and it is announced that the work has already commenced for the duplication of his plant This will give a capacity sufficient to supply forty per cent of the con sumption of the United States; and promises a blow more close to the vitals of the Sugar Trust than any it has yet received from the courts. It is beyon-i doubt that Spreckels intends to fight the trust at present: and even if he should come to terms with the monopoly which he de clares that he will not do that combination will have to bear the burden of an immense addition to its already idle capacity. The new refinery carries with it the promise of cheap sugar for the people, and the proba bility of a demonstration that the trust de vice in the end, hurts the monopolists more 'than anyone else. COLONEL ANDREWS' IDEA. Colonel James Andrews is prolific in new engineering ideas; and that which is pre sented in our local columns, has many points about it which are worthy of public attention. The idea of a free bridge be tween Pittsburg and Allegheny will un doubtedly be a popular one; while the pro ject of dividing the expense between the two cities and a traction company indicates a feasible method of lessening the cost Nevertheless there are objections to the plan which would be likely to be developed, if the project were seriously taken up. In the first place there is a more pressing duty for Pittsburg in obtaining free communica tion between the parts that are under the same municipal government than in estab lishing the same privilege with another city. As a question of jnstice between corpora- lions, also, it may be asked why the cities should go into partnership with one passen ger railway company for the building of a bridge rather than with another which has already commenced work on its own bridge. It would seem as if the same public policy should apply to all bridges, which are to be used by traction or electric roads, or at least, that any bridse in which the cities have an interest must be open to the use of all such companies upon the payment of reasonable trackage royalties. The proposition shows that the free bridge idea is working, and indicates that we are moving steadily toward the time when that will be the rule over both rivers. PROMPTNESS IS HEEDED. Progress was made toward getting the House in shape to do business by the an nouncement of five committees yesterday. The Chairmen of these committees are about what was to be expected, McKinley having the Ways and Means, with Burrows and Bayne next in order, and Cannon the Ap propriations Committee. Kelley, Powell and Lind have the chairmanships of the Committees on Manufactures, Election and Mileage, of which onlv the second is of political importance. This progress having been made in the first week, it is to be hoped that Congress may get in shape to do busi ness before long. "There are a number of pressing matters that should be disposed of promptly this winter, and among them the location of the World's Fair should be settled before the holidays. This session is a good one in which to eschew the legisla tive vice of dawdling. HIE STEELS' LAST LAYS. Good authorities in theatrical matters re gard the dismal failure of Mr. Dockstader's theater as the death-knell of negro min strelsy of the burnt cork variety. Sock stader's Theater in New York City was the only one in the country given up entirely to minstrel entertainments. Its failure is disastrous and complete. In New York Gity everybody seems lb agree that the day of negro minstrelsy has gone by. It has been noted in Pittsburg that the 'two or three companlei'of minstrels which JTe appeared here of 'late years hare not played to very large audiences. Througb out the country the popularity of minstrel shows has been manifestly on the wane. It is true that several organizations of burnt cork artists are still on the road, and if any reliance could be placed in the reports and flaring advertisements of their managers we should suppose they were making a great deal of money. The probability is, how ever, that the minstrel companies in ques tion have been benefited by the general prosperity of theatrical business every where. The people, when times are good, cannot be kept out of the theater by any thing. The cause of the decline and fall of burnt cork negro minstrelsy, after flourishing more or less luxuriantly for a quarter of a century, is not hard to find. . The minstrel performance of to-day is, as a rule, nothing more than a variety show given by black faced artists. The burnt cork on their faces, the bones and tambo as end men, and the man in the middle have been retained as a ma'tter of form. But the faithful portrayal of negro character is no more seen in these nondescript productions. The spirit that made colored minstrels popular is dead; there is no good reason for postponing the counterfeit's departure from the stage. THE PRESIDENT AT CHICAGO. Chicago yesterday gave an exhibition of its impressive style of doing things by al most mobbing the President and his famil in the endeavor to prove bow welcome they were to that city. .Always bustling and hustling, Chicago is at this time specially effusive to every public man, in the hope of extracting some quotable opinion favoring that town for the World's Fair; so that if, in the President's progress yesterday from the railroad station to the carriages for his party there was such "rushing" and ''tackling" as would have done no discredit to the late Princeton-Yale football match, it is sup posed to be all taken in kindness, and as a mere spontaneous outburst of the patriotic solicitude which Chicago now feels for every distinguished public man who can help along the World's Pair cause. Of course the energy and earnestness of the great mercantile city by the lakes are undisputed. Prom now on, until Congress awards the golden apple of discord, each of the competing cities will be prone to make the most imposing display of those charac teristics which each for itself conceives to be powerfully attractive. New York Is ding donging away upon its list of millionaires, its cosmopolitanism, and its general bigness just as arduously as Chicago is displaying its unbounded energy in its own wild, West ern way. Meanwhile, Washington is very quiet. Yet the conviction is slowly but clearly enlarging that the placid and beautiful city on the Potomac, which is the nation's capi tal, is growing in interest for the public; and that Congressmen will not be the less susceptible to its claims for holding their World's Fair deliberations in the midst of its attractions. REPUBLIC OE DICTATORSHIP! The further details of the revolution in Brazil, and of the events which have fol lowed it, justify the policy of waiting till the course of the new Government has. shown itself to be a true Republic, as has been suggested to be wise in these columns. The statement of the cause of the revolu tion may be tinctured with monarchist prejudices; but as it is the only explana tion of its rise which has yet reached the outside world, it has to be given some weight nntil disproved. This account does not afford ranch foundation for faith in the new Eepublic Constitutional and demo cratic institutions are not, as a general rule, securely founded on a military mutiny; and a Government placed in power by'insubor dinate troops is likely to be the reverse of careful of the liberties of the people. The statements as to the acts of the new Government since its establishment are calculated to strengthen that opinion. The Provisional Government it has already been announced, has prescribed a suffrage quali fication. Now we hear that the E10 Legis lature "approved a construction of the constitution on the basis of thorough democracy,"' while General Fonseca, "is officially styled President" This Is a fine way of saying that some one, without either calling a full constituent body, or holding an election, has undertaken the job of making a constitution and naming a Presi dent Add to this the apparently undisputed fact that the transmission of news from' Brazil has been placed under a censorship, and it begins to get rather plain that the enthusiastic people of this country who welcomed the new Bepublic before they knew anything about it, made a brilliant record of leaping before they looked. Certainly the burden of proof is on the Brazilian Government to prove that it is a genuine Bepublic, and not as it is under just suspicion of being, a dictatorship in a democratic disguise. THE DAHQEB OF CIVILIZATION. The sentiment of the old sailor, who conld never, after a slight experieffce of railway travel, bear to subject himself to the awful hazards of travel on land, is parallel in a good many respects to Emin Pasha's experi ence. The perils of the head of the Nile he had braved and found them unable to injure him. Tropical suns, rebellious soldiers and fanatical engineers all had attacked him and been repulsed. But the first contact with civilized dangers, in the conjunction of the festive board and a second-story balcony proved better able to conquer the Governor of Equatorial Africa than all those from which Stanley spent two years to rescue him. This is all the mare striking in view of the reluctance the "infatuation" as Stan ley called it; which made the Pasha linger and hesitate long before he was induced to abandon the province which he had held so long. It is not likely that he had any pre vision, however dim, of that inglorious balcony at Bagamoyo. Probably he did not even formulate any distinct idea that it is better to endure the dangers that we know how to meet, than fly to those of whose existence, even, we are ignorant Nevertheless, in view' of the unfortunate sequel, it is permissible to question whether the infatnatiou was really such, or whether it was not an indefinite feeling that the perils which a man has proved, where his duty lies, are likely to yield a more honor able issne than those which, being unknown to him, overcome him before he recognizes their existence. A HIGH STANDARD FOB SMOKEES. The removal of the smoking cars from one of the Philadelphia cable lines, recently, appears to have taken place for a novel and fastidious reason. Inquiry of the president of the line revealed the fact that it was be cause the smokers are not sufficiently high toned. "If they would all smoke as good cigars as this," said that official, referring to thePerfecto which he waa smoking at the time, "there wpuld be no objection to the sraokiug compartments." But the travelers bj the line were, matur of Hum. obstinate 1 economical in the nicotian- tastes. Some of them consumed noxious Connecticut leaf, while others even went to the extent of in troducing the vulgar, pipe. This last touch was too strong for the fastidious company, and it made haste to remove the smoking "compartments in time to save them from that last stage of defilement typified by the Pittsburg toby. With no sympathy at all for the idea of the persistent smokers that .they cannot divorce themselves from the weed long enough to go from their work to their homes, we must say that the standard set by the Philadelphia cable president is rather unique. It has muoh the same senti ment as the inquiry of Marie Antoinette why the French population, which was starving for lack of bread, did not eat cake. Poubtless the Philadelphia populace whose pipes and cheap cigars are so obnoxious, would gladly consent to smoke Havana cigars if the cable line president insisted on. throwing them in with the five cent trans portation. Or, it is safe to say that the vast majority would gladly give bonds, if some one will furnish them with the income of a cable road proprietor, to smoke even better cigars than his standard. But in smoking, as well as sartorial matters, the law is supreme which compels people to cut their coat according to their cloth. There Is something millenial in the sug gestion by the corporation magnate of the time when the whole people can smoke Per fecto cigars. But we fear that it is a long time distant Until then there is a certain justice, as well as a lofty standard, in the decision of the Philadelphia Cable Com pany that smokers of pipes, 'tobies and Havanas alike must enjoy their different brands of nicotine elsewhere than on the cable cars. Mast interesting features attend the Stanley expedition, but none are more char acteristic than the way in which he discovered the correspondents who were sent out to dis cover him. This is another triumph for jour nalism of Stanley's kind. Some very justifiable fun is being en joyed by the Louisville Courier-Journal in connection with a statement in Secretary Win dora's report that "the tax on wool is 200 per cent less than the tax on alcohol." It is cer tainly interesting to the wearers of wool to be informed by the head of the national fiscal de partment that the tax which they pay is 100 per cent of the tax on alcohol less than nothing. The Treasury Department should go tbroueh a common school course on percentages. The statement from the mint that the de mand for pennies and nickels is increasing can readily De explained. New York's World's Fair guarantee fund has been actively urged for subscriptions during the past few days. Ix is interesting to learn that while American bison, orbuffalo.bave become extinct in the United States, vast herds of the same kind of animal are roaming the plains of Northern Australia, which are the descendants of some specimens taken there sixty years ago. We shall presently have to go to Australia to see this truly American big game, just as we now have to travel to Minnesota and Dakota to study the New England Yankee In his most vigorous activity. Senator Vance has introduced a bill to repeal the civil service law. Senator Vance and Senator Farwell are professedly of dif ferent parties, bnt they both really belong to the same army of professed spoils hunters. Colonel Elliott F. Shepard has been repeating his old story that the New York and West Shore Railroad ran Sunday trains and was driven into bankruptcy by the Lord. It is natural that the truly good Colonel cannot understand that the West Shore was driven into Dankruptcyby runningthe practise of issu ing bogus stock values to a phenomenal degree; but did he never hear of any solvent roads, which ran Sunday trains? It is repbrted that a sharper has victim ized several Washington lawyers, but it is hard to believe that any such shock has been given to the old proverb about the existence of honor in a certain class. The ordinance presented in Councils re quiring all lot owners to construct sewer con nections of terra cotta drain pipe, has a super ficial appearance like a strike in favor of a special make of sewer pipe. Perhaps, however, the term may be construed so general as to be all right "An ordinance requiring efficient sewer pipe connections for all houses is no more than the public interest requires. The statement that two children have been found in this city, one dead and the other dying for want of medical care, while the mother is insane, does not speak very well for our civilization. The young woman who was married on November 11 and now intends to get a divorce because her husband tried to get up a dramatic show on false pretenses, has learned by experience how to Improve on the proverb about marrying in haste and repenting at leisure. She repents in haste also. Path expects to make 5500,000 from her present American trip. She evidently wants the world, and regards it as her oyster patti. Jay Gould is bulling stocks, according to the face of the returns; but Jay's smart offspring is reported to bj making large sums nnloading stocks on those whom his sire talks into buying. It is sometimes better than a serpent's tooth to have an undutiful child. PEOPLE OP PROMINENCE. Amelia Bloomeb rises to remark that she didn't invent the "Bieomer" costume, and hasn't worn it for 30 years. Mr. Parnelii is ilL He will not speak at the meeting at Nottingham to-day, as was pre viously announced. The Czarewitch greatly enjoyed his visit to Athens and the somewhat democratic life of the royal family of Greece was a source of con stant astonishment and surprise to him, accus tomed as he is to the thraldom of Russian court etiquette. To see King George walk about the streets of Athens unattended, or to jump into a surface car when late for break fast and in a hurry to get borne, was an extraor dinary novelty in his eyes. Chief Justice FrjiXER is a man of small size, smaller even than President Harrison. He wears long, flowing hair, which is almost en tirely white white. He is, however, of a very energetic temperament, and rarely sits per fectly still for a minute at a time. Heaturns over the pages of a brief in a hurry, whispers to an associate, or sends a page on an errand. He is always active, even when his colleagues ap parently fall into a doze under the spell of some earnest but tedious barrister. Congressman Goodnight, of the Third Kentucky district, enjoys the distinction of looking very much like Postmaster General Wanamaker. His face is smooth, has that pe culiar clear complexion, and his features are not at all unlike those of the head of the Post office Department. In another respect Mr. Goodnight is very much like Mr. Wanamaker. The Kentucky member is very much interested in Sabbath school work, and there Is no gath ering of this kind in his section of Kentucky but he takes a prominent part in the pro ceedings. Senator David Turpie, of Indiana, is in appearance a typical Hoosler. Disdaining fine apparel, the Senator wears an old-fashioned roomy coat and a big broad-brimmed stiff hat, which sets well back upon his head. His vest is partially unbuttoned, and he keeps up a con stant chewing on a comfortable quid of to bacco. Senator Turple's face is a strong one, with big black eyes set very deep, looking out irom under overhanging brows. io wears a short, full beard, crisp and grizzly gray. He Is credited by the other meaberaof the party with being a grettory4eHc Mi a very !es- temtalng cwemtteBa-Het THE TOPICAL TALKER. A New Stars and Stripes for the KecraltlBg Station Mr. WamsraakerM Experience The RIs Mentation a Little Dog Made ConcrrM Need Protection. It would be a patriotic deed to present the United States recruiting station on Penn ave nue with a decent national flag. The old piece of faded muslin which masquerades as the Btars and Stripes outside the melancholy build ing in question is enough in Itself to discour age recruits. It seems to be a part of the policy of Congress toward the regular army to stint it of all the pomp and circumstance In color which is really essential to the cultiva tion of the military "spirit in time of peace. Probably lack of appropriations for such pur poses is at the bottom of the exhibition of such a miserable old rag outside the recruit ing station. Perhaps the Jr. O. U. A. M, micbt see its way to coming to the rescue of the Federal Govern ment in this instance. Considering the gener ally unattractive appearance of recruiting sta tions and the soldiers one sees about them, it is more of a wonder to me that anyone enlists than that so many enlisted men desert at the earliest opportunity. V BE HAS NOT BEEN XUGKT. Good Mr. Wanamaker says There's no such thing as luck; Tls Industry, be thinks, that pays When linked with care and pluck. Postmaster John has learned all this Ere yet a year has flown. The moral is: "Stick to your bis! Let politics alone!' ' V A week or two ago some friends of mine lost their little Skye terrier; bo was stolen by one who will never bring him back, no matter what reward maybe offered by one who will steal you and me some day Death! When a Bright brown Dandle Dinmont Skye terrier has lived with you upward of ten years; when be has "begged" prettily for scraps of food at every meal through all that period; when he has barked with Joy at your return home every night, and has been a companion in your walks abroad summer and winter,wben you have found bis affection unfailing and his fidelity unshakeable, it is a mighty bard thing to see the poor little fellow die. I am free to confess that very few deaths have moved me as poor old "Skye's" in the summer of J879 he had been playmate and chum to me for 11 years, and almost as he closed his eyes for the last time, racked with pain as he was,' bis eyes had a loving look for me and he feebly tried to wag his tail. ' Bat there, I've wandered away from my story. Soke days after the death of their faithful old "Bough," a good-sized basket came to the house of my friend Blank. A note was deliv ered with the basket, From this it was learned that the basket contained a dog which a certain amiable lady hoped would serve in some sort to fill the vacant place In the house hold. Mr. Blank read the note and handed it to his daughters young women who l$ve a dog better than a dudeany day ana being privately rather alarmed at the notion of new dogs, hap pened to go upstairs while the question of "who shall cut the string and let the dog outf" was still under discussion. The basket, it was true, was not large enough to house a huge mastiff or bound, bnt it was not so small that a healthily developed bnlldog couiu mate nimsen quite comfortable therein. But fears of this sort were dismissed after the weight of the basket had been tried. This operation was croing on in the hall when I happened to call. It was one of the funniest of sights two charming young women were gently balancing the basket in the air. Then tbey set it down, and one with a pearl-handled pen knife sawed away at the string which kept the lid down. The crucial moment came when the lid was gradually raised and enough daylight let fnto the basket to show a tiny fox terrier pup peering upward through the straw. The puppy must have been awfully scared at the enthusiasm his revelation called forth, but when 1 last saw him he was lapping milk with tne cairn assiduity 01 an unterriiied torn cat V CONGEES3 MUST BE PROTECTED. Wnen gay cashiers to Canada Fled with the people's money, Did Congress lose a wink of sleep ? You bet ft didn't, sonny. There was no hurry, so they said, ' , Ifor extra legislation; In time some treaty might be made To fortify the nation. But 811cott flees -all Congress howls For some new way to reach him. Hit hard a statesman's privy purse j! or mat's tne way to teach him. B. J. A MAEYEL0US JIEM0EX. Jefferson Davta Never Forgot Names or Faces of IHea He Diet. From the Philadelphia Inquirer. Jefferson Davis had a memory for faces and names that has probably never been excelled by that of any public man in the United States. It has been said of General Sherman that when he meets a man who was introduced to him 20 years previously, he will recall his name and the circumstances of the introduction, and will talk over the incidents of their first meet ing. Both Grant and Lee possessed to a great aegree the same faculty of remembrance, but neither Sherman nor Grant nor Lee could do what Mr. Davis did. At his office-in Richmond, as President of the Southern Confederacy, and in his visits to the front of the army, be treasured up in bis memory the names of every officer and soldier with whom be came into contact, and he never forgot them. While he was at his Beauvoir plantation last winter, there came to him a worn-out and broken-down man who made a claim on his charity as having been a lieutenant in a certain Mississippi regiment. Davis taxed his memory for a moment, and then told the applicant that be was a fraud, and that a man bearing an entirely different name was the lieutenant of the company which the mendicant had speci fied. The beggar made a quick exit from the house, and was never seen around it again. BECAUSE INDUSTRIES THEITB. That Is the Benson Leading Financiers Ad vance for a Rosy Outlook. New Yobk, December 8. Henry W. Clews 4 Co., In their weekly financial circular to-day, furnish some very interesting pointers. They say: "From the general aspect and symptoms of the market, we should judge that while there is no disposition to start at present any active movements, yet there is a steady laying in of stocks in preparation for a future campaign. This, however, does not so mnch depend on the prospects of the new-year de mand for the reinvestment of earnings of capi talwhich has in late years been so much over estimated as an influenco that it has now almost ceased to be considered as It does unon considerations of a more solid and substantial nature. As usual at the close of the year, the course of business is likely to be that of dull ness and neglect, perhaps favoring the "bears" quite as much as the ''bulls." in spite of the en- rnnrarHnflfereral Conditions. "Reports from all the leading branches of industry show not only an unusually active state of trade, but also a healthy and satisfac tory state of prices. The activity of current business is shown by tho fact that the clear ings in all the clearing houses of the country, for the month ot November, show an increase over a year ago Of close upon 15 per cent," Taxes la Turkey. From the Detroit Free Press. J Taxes in Turkey are calculated to be just high enough to prevent any poor man from getting enough money to leave the country on. The exact sum is left to the collector to de termine, and ho has power under the taw to give any citizen 50 blows with a stick. Rhu barb and rugs come from Turkey, but that's all the good there Is in her. DEATHS OP A DAY. Prof. William F. Allen. Madison, Wis.. December 9. William F. Allen, professor of history in the Wisconsin Uni versity, died suddenly this morning-. He was born in Northboro, Mass., September 6. 1830, and graduated from Harvard in 1831. in 167 6u wis elected to the professorship of ancient laneuazea and history in Wisconsin University. He has always been a great favorite with the students, Harvey Kranedr. NEW Yobk, December 8. Harvey Kennedy, one of the oldest and most prominent operators on Wall street, was taken suddenly ill at the Union League Club at 8 o'clock this morning, and died lu a few minutes. Colonel W. W. GrlSs. ,1 W. Griffin, President of the First Mstlonalianr, rand ChalrmWof the JtesublioinTtf ritorlat Con. 3.5 jY10'"' aieanere vesieruajf, j IEIBO0KN WON'T WEAKEN. Ho Yet Insists That He Was to Dave Bank Blessed br tbo Pope. New Yoek, December ft In conjunction with Us denial by the Vatican's Secretary of State,, Cardinal Bampolla, there is published here to-day a reiteration by Colonel Leybourn of his chimerical universal banking scheme, to have the benediction of the Pope, in addition to 1100,000,000 capital. Colonel Leybourn, in this connection, says; "Inquiry on this point was not mdeattbe proper department of the Vatican. Cardinal Bampolla is the Secretary of State, which is an office that was great when the temporal power of the Pope was fully recognized. Now only a few countries Recognize the Pope's temporal power, and the office is not a great one. Bam polla is better known as the Minister of For. eign Affairs, and as such he has nothing to do with the granting of benedictions and knows nothing about what has been granted. Your correspondent may be a very smart one, but no correspondent can find out what is going on In the Vatican. Why, one department, and there are seven or eight, does not know what is done in any of the others. 'What do I care what you print! Can that alter facts? I tejl you that Bampolla knows nothing of the granting of the benediction to the Universal Association Bank. Cardinal Laurenzl Is the man who obtained it from the Pope, and his seal is upon it. Did I forge that seal? No. Well, why don't you cable to Lanrenzl and ask him about )t? He is the one. Count Galatari, the editor of the Papal news paper, knows all about it also. If you should Show me such a dispatch from either of these men I might be startled, but from Bampolla : never, because, of coarse, he knows nothing." ; THE FOUNDER OP A GBEAT 0EDER, Hon. Justus H. Rathboue, (he Originator or the Knights of Pythias, Doad. (6FZCIAL TELKOBAK TO 'Till CISPATCB.1 Lima, December 9. Hon. Justus H. Bath bone, founder of the order of the Knights of Pythias, died here atU o'clock this afternoon, after three weeks' illness, suffering frpman immense carbuncle on his back. His two daughters. Misses Lnlie and Sara, were at his bedside, and his sister, Mrs. J. O. Pease, of Uennantown, Philadelphia. These were all the relatives present. Several members of the locar lodge, and Franklin Ellis, Grand Chancellor of Ohio, were in the room and witnessed the demise of the noble founder of the order. He has been un conscious since yesterday and he passed away peacefully without a struggle. His remains were immediately taken charge of by the un dertakers, who embalmed the body and placed it In an elegant casket. This evening-bis remains were removed to the lodge room of No. 91, where they will re main until to-morrow night, when tbey will be taken to Utica. N. Y., for burial beside those of his wife, who died some threo years ago. Hon. Howard Douglass, of Cincinnati; John G. Beeves, of Lancaster; Frank Sanborn, of Cleveland; Grand Vice Chancellor Beatty, of Toledo; John Q. Burns, of Mansfield, all officers and members of the Grand Lodge, have been telegraphed and are expected to act as escort, with the addition of Grand Chancellor Ellis, who is already here. An Indianapolis dispatch states that General Carnahan has ordered the draping o( badges of officers and members of the uniform rank for 60 days. He will take charge of the funeral ar rangements. A DEAR PLACil TO DIE. Paris, Municipally and Ecclesiastically, Exacts High Fees. From New York Star's Paris Letter.', Paris is generally considered an expensive place to'Iive In. It Is certainly a dear place to die in. Yet 67,786 Interments took place In the year. Should a touriat have the misfortune to die when in Paris his relatives will have to pay heavily for it. The town draws over $200,000 a year from a funeral tax and obtains half a mil lion from cemetery charges. The church also makes a little pile out of funerals. Funerals in Paris are undertaken by a monopolistic company called the Pompes Funebres. The amount of mourning which the dead receive is regulated by the amount of money which the relatives of the defunct are prepared to spend. There are nine classes of funerals, and the church supplies nine classes of ceremonies. If the deceased is bulled under class No. 1 the cnurcn wui oe pang with crape, there will be an impressive funeral service, and a whole reg iment of ready-made lachrymose mourners. Bat first-class f nnerals are luxuries, and .only 27 took placo during the year. Ot the 57.780' funerals. 46,107 took place with Roman Cath olic services; and although 19,000 ot them were In class nine, where the ceremony is short, plain and cheap, the churches made S450.000 out of them. There were 1,037 Protestant funerals and6S6 Jewish, and 15,885 people, or 21 per cent, were buried without any religious ceremony at all. This represents the free-thought element. PITISBOEG LEADS THEH ALL. Her Gift to the Pnn-Amerlcnn Delegates the Finest la the Lot. From the Washington Post.; Every delegate to the Pan-American Congress has a trunk packed with the souvenirs of his excursion about the United States, At least every delegate could have a collection of that size if he took as much pains to preserve bis collection as did Edmund W. P. Smith, an at tache of the Congress, who was one of the party of tourists The collection, when spread out in museum style, constitutes an exhibit of no mean order and testifying to the enterprise of American cities and American merchants when a chance to advertise themselves presents it self. Two hundred dinner and lunch menus, fully 150 gifts from manufacturers and merchants, and over two dozen presents from cities iu the form' of books descriptive of the beauties of the places, all elaborately illustrated. Pitts burg leads the cities in the elaborateness of its souvenir. Of the size of a double cabinet pho tograph album and bound in morocco, the 400 pages of the book are at least half taken up with photo-lithographs of every point of inter est in Pittsburg. Another book of 500 pages elaborates the ousiness facilities of that city, each of the volumes being elegantly bound in morocco. SPIDERS AS APPETIZERS. Crankr Notion of a Long Island City Pris oner as lo Menus. New Yoek, December 9. John Blake, one of the inmates ot the Long Island City Jail, eats black spiders. On the third morning of his imprisonment, during which time not a morsel of food had passed his lips, Mrs. Blake came to the jail, and asked to see her husband. When she was being searched a small tin box, containing about 60 black spiders, was found in her pocket. The warden refused to allow Mrs. Blake to take the spiders Into the prison. She said she had brought them for her husband and that he would starve to death unless be obtained black spiders to eat. The keepers laughed at her and came to the conclusion that she was insane; but they finally weakened and watched the prisoner try a brace of the buss, after which he said he was ready for other and ordinary food. Mrs. Blake has called at the prison almost every other day since her husband has been committed, and brought a box containing six or eight spiders. Blake for years has been a "crank" upon the subject of food, and always doclared that all food which the people of the present generation eat contains a certain amount of poisonous matter, and unless some thing is eaten to counteract the effect a per son's life will be greatly shortened. Sam Small Wants Co be Ordained. Atlanta, December 9. Rev. Sam Small has made application for ordination in the Protestant Episcopal Church. His application is being considered bya committee of ministers, and doubtless will be favorably received. Mr, Small has been a minister of the Methodist Church, but his family are members of the Episcopal Church. A Samsonlnn Combination. From the Phlladelphlalnqnlrer. About the most successful combine iu exist ence is that of the conflagration and the elevator shaft. It never fails to bring down the bouse. SOCIAL CHATTER. THE concert for the benefit of the Allegheny General Hospital this evening will be a very enjoyable one; It will be held at the Fonrth U. P. Church, Allegheny. IN Curry Institute Hall, this evening, local dramatic and musical talent will give a concert for the Allegheny County Association ot Union ex-Prisoners of War. The Waverly Euchre Club met at the rest dence ot Mrs. H. S. Patterson, East End, last evening and spent an enjoyable evening. The pnpils of Miss Anderson's school will give a parlor, entertainment to-night at their rooms, 6i Union avenue, Allegheny. The "Nun of ICenmare," Miss Frances Clare Cusack, will lecture to a crowded house In Lafayette Hall this evening. The Lincoln Club held a yery pleasant reeep. tlonattketeclab room J'LwrceTHelK 'firenubT, . ; - ' y.' THE THEATERS: A Gold IQine Clara Harris' ' Ketarn Other Attractions. 'There can be no question of the popular -'jnc-cessof Mr. Nat O, Goodwin and his brilliant company In the new comedy. "A Gold Mine," which was produced at the Grand Opera House last night. A large .and most appreciative audience laughed heartily the whole evening, and applauded both play and players gener ously. And it may be said in the first place, that Nat Goodwin shows in the choice of "A Gold Mine" as bis play, and In his impersona tion of a leading character therein, a tremend ous advance upon such worthless trash as "Turned Up," and the vulgar and offensive un dertaker1. The step forward Is unmistakable, and as The Dispatch last year urged Mr. uuuuyviu bu i, we aijJiauu ic "A Gold Mine" is one of the latest additions to the swelling list of American plays. It Is a comedy in three acts by Messrs. Brandis Mathews and George H.Jessop. The story is or the simplest character. Silas K. Woolcot, of Grass Valley, California, visits England with a view to selling a gold mine. He meets an En glish widow in London, or rather on a train flying tbitber, falls in Iovo with her, and gains an introduction by chance to her in the house pf her brother, to whom he Is trying to sell his mine. The American and the Ehglish widow clash at first. The former, however, wins her over to his side by helping her nephew out of a financial hole Woolcot to do this sacrifices his mine to the widow' brother or the exact sum needed for the erring youth's salvation. The English widow, with entirely unnatural acuteness, ob tains the mine from her brother, and when Woolcot in due time proposes she gives him back bl3 mine. All the other details of the play are auxiliary merely to the story. Mr. Goodwin, as Wogtfot, gives us an Ameri can of no extraordinary elevation, but an American all the same, a Yankee of positive character, shrewdness and warm heart. For me most pan jjir. uooawin nas laid aside bis weJl-knpwn mannerisms, reserving only a ten dency to wink at the audience and to open and shut bis mouth with a snap. His comedy is ex cellent, and the truth and tenderness of bis pathos in the recital of a wild brother's tramc history, make that incident the brightest Jewel in the play. There Is a deal of sparale and dash in the first two acts, and na turally Mr. Goodwin shines in the interchange of eavage repartee with the charming widow. The charm of Mr. Goodwin's lovemakingin the last act is largely its novelty. Nobody ever knew, we fancy, a man-to otter his heart to a grown woman in such a fashion. We take-it that it is a high compliment to Mr. Goodwin's art to say that be made that love scene appear natural. To take Mr. Goodwin's work in de tail is neither possible now nor fair to the yery clever actors who played with him. The fact is that one of "A Gold Mine's" greatest merits is the number of good parts it contains. The star has no field to himself In the play. A truly artistic and unusual charac terization is Mr. Paul Arthur's as a Home Bule M. P. and Journalist. Barely indeed does any one attempt to portray an Irish gentleman upon the stage, and rarer still is there a suc cessful portrayal. Mr. Arthur elves ns an Irish gentleman as we have known bun: a generous, courtly, spirited and very eloquent creature about the best friend a man can have in a pinch, and a princa of good fellows when goose hangs high. You don't wonder for a minute that the imDnlsive littln frniri0nYiai.-At ingenue, Una Foxwood, falls in love with Gerald Uiordan, M. P. He can make love like a house afire, and coin compliments faster that the United States Treasury can great uely silver dollars. And this little 'ingenue. Mitt Una Foxwood, what a gracious illuminated plc ure of Eirlhood Miss Mae Durfee makes of her! There Is hardly time enough in the play to get a satisfying vision of ier. The little touches of force and feeling which accentuate the maiden's part were admirably dealt by Miss Durfee. ' Miss Isabella Coe as the widow who first fiehts, then admires and last loves the Ameri can was charming you can't apply another word to such a tempting glimpse at widow hood in its warlike and yielding models. Her lips were as ready to shoot sarcasms as tender words of love though the epigrams predomi nated, and better ones at that. A clever study also was Mrs. Cecile Rush's presentment of a retired actress a great JuUetin her day? Mr. John H. Browne and, indeed; all the company, even the too stiff and pompous city baronet Mr. Ince deserve praise. The scenery from the opera house stock fitted the nlav wn enough. oB wa7 nn;lne np we may say that MA Gold Mine" would be a great comedy if ail of it were as strong as the second act, if the plot which makes a good woman swindle her ujuuicr-eien u ne oe a swindler were changed so as to avoid this absurd inconsist ency. The dialogue is always bright: the wit is almost too abundant and to supply all of it somebody, authors or actor, has been led to pilfer epigrams and bon mots. Take it all in all it is a play well worth paying a good price to see, and Mr. Goodwin and his company are to be congratulated on their capital work. Emma Jnch's Vlslr. Miss Emma Juch and her array of lyric stars will be the attraction at the Grand Opera House week of December 23. English opera has no more devoted champion than Emma Jucb. She has given tbo stage many an artistic and well-remembered portrayal, and her high rank among prima donnas well warrants the taking of her name to designate this well known organization ot singers. Under the ex perienced direction of Charles E. Lock and J. Charles Davis, the Emma Juch Grand English Opera Company has made a notable record ot artistic successes in Boston, Philadelphia, Washington and New York, the various theaters in those cities being crowded with -the largest and most brilliant assem blages. In the company will be found Laura Bellini, Charles Hedmont, Marie Ruebert, Frank Baxter, Lizzie Macnichol, Franz Vetta, Susie Leonhardt, Aloazo Stod dard, Fanny Gonzales, WUHam Bott and L S. Guise. The repertoire for the week will be as follows: Monday, "Carmen," with Juch as Car men; Tuesday, "11 Trovatorej" Wednesday matinee, "Postillion of Lonjumeaa;" Wednes day evening, "Martha," with Juch as Lady Harriet Durham; Thursday, "Faust," with Juch as Marguerite; Friday. "Mignon," with Jnch as Mignon; Saturday matinee, "The Bohemian Girl," and Saturday evening, "Der Preischutz." The various representations will be mounted in the most elaborate and costly manner. The chorus will consist of powerful voices, . made up exclusively of young and handsome Americans, and the orchestra will be under the direction of Add Neuendorf. The sale of seats will open Monday, December 16. and there will, no doubt, be a spirited rush for the choice of seats. Bijou Theater. For the first time in three years Miss Clara Morris faced a Pittsburg audience last night, appearing in the dramatization of that powerful work of the younger Dumas. "Camille." There were very few empty chairs in the bailding,and as the ever-popular star madejber first entry she was greeted with a most generous burst of ap plause, which was often renewed during the evening. In the second and third acts, es pecially, the sympathies of the audience were with Miss Morris, and many persons were moved to tears. The versatility of the noted actress was well illustrated by the sudden transitions from frivolous gayety to the pas sionatealmost tragic portions of the charac ter. With one or two exceptions the work of the supporting company was fair. Mr. Frederic de Belleville, as Armand Duval, grows stilted in the longer speeches, and bis voice lacks feeling when that is most requisite. Perhaps be suffers more by contrast with Miss Morris than would otherwise be the case. Miss octavla Alien, as Maaam Pru dence, takes excellent care of the lighter por tion of the play, and m the supper scene, at least, doe some very realistic work. Made moiselle Mitehette,ia the hands of MlssBeatrice Moreland, is a very agreeable young lady, who caught the fancy of the audience by ber clever imitation of a lawyer's boasting sneecb. Be tween the second and third acts Mr. Samuel Barkell rendered the cornet solo, "Carnival of Venice," in such an acceptable manner that he was encored twice. Some confusion was caused by the curtain rising considerably be fore the announced time, and before a great many of the auditors had reached tbelr seats. To-night Miss Morns will appear In "Helene." Harris' Theater. Hartley Campbell's last play, "My Partner," Is being given at this house this week by prac tically the same company seen here last season, the weak parts having been well braced up, so that the company is exceiientiy Daianceu, Every character is now in competent hands, and the play moves along as smoothly as the action of a story. J. F. Pike is the same greats hearted, affectionate, upright Joe Saunders, and F. Chapman ft handsome Ned Singleton: Miss May Hoimer a pretty, trusting Mary Brandon, and Stella CoDgdon a very clever Grace Brandon, Charles Kay could scarcely be Improved upon in the Chinese character of Wing Lee, ana the other characters are all In as good hands as is needed. Large audiences Wltuessed both performances yesterday. The World's Moseuss. The attractions at the World's Museum In clude Crawford, the one man orchestra, the latest sub-marine torpedo boat. Captain Chit tenden's curios and a new vaudeville perform ance. Harry Wlirtems' Aeasessy. A much Jbetter prograrae is offered at the afeert house tWs week teas there wu 1 week; Letter A.-Ws' BfsclsJtf Oesswwy bMe AT teKdttd,M-ei!a some old I arsrites with sew work, Stediean's Kiino-Drome ad mon key carnival opens the perfonnance.followed by the Sisters Coulson, luster and Williams. Harry La Bose.am Devere, Imro Fox, Polly McDonald, Haines and Vidocq, the -wonderful Jatan, aBd concluding withSam Deveres "Bag Elephant," a very funny iaxec. GATHERED IS GOTHAM. 109 BIm to Stay In Anerlca. IHEW TOBX SUBA,U 6FECIiifl.l New Yoek; December 9. The dirtiest immi grants ever received at Castle Garden were landed there by the steamship City of Chester to-day. They were Itzlg Perlmutter, Itzlg Iiub chfn, Mendal Kahu, C. Sehg Splegleman,all Poles and bachelors. In the Garden they were avoided as if plague stricken. None of the other immigrants would pass through the same gangway or jit on tne same bench with them. They were turned over to the doctor in the Castle Garden Hospital, bnt bis steward re f nsed to go near them. Eventually the hose was turned on them, and tbey were locked up in rooms without furniture. Tbey will bo sent back. Faith CarWuLoekcd Up. Scores ot faith curists crowded a stuffy Brooklyn police court to-day, to hear the trial of their fellow believers, Jobann Jansen, Maria Petersen and Amed Jansen. The complaint against the prisoners was that they bad refused to give medicine to Mrs. Jobanu Jansen. ill of diphtheria, and baby Jansen, suffering .from scarlet fever and diphtheria together, and that they had broken tne quarantine set upon the Jansen family by the Board of Health- The prisoners were smiling .and full of faith. The jail keener said that they iad been praying all night In Scandinavian, and seemed to fully believe that the angel of the Lord would come down and unloose their bonds. None of them could speak, much English except Amed Jan sen, the nurse. She said tbey all trusted in the saving force of Jesus Christ, and that was enough for them. This did not satisfy Judge Tiebe, so be committed them all under 2500 bail each, for examination December 10, Tbey went back to prison without a murmur. Bunkoed a FclIow-CoDntr7man. Two Italians Introduced themselves to Fran?' Cisco Marono, a junk .dealer, Saturday, as An tonio Roma and Soverjo Secilano, old fneuds of the Marono family in Italy, iioveriosaid that 'he was soon to leave for his home in Naples, but before be could go he must have 1,500 changed to the currency of Italy. As he was a stranger here, be found it difficult to get this done. Maronp said that be would take the money to his banker, andSovcrlo gave him a soiled handkerchief, which he said contained the money. Roma .suggested that the junk dealer give some Sort of security, nd Marono handed over a roll ot bills amounting to J300. T,he men then parted, to meet a half-hour later. When Marono unfolded the handker chief, at bis banker's, he found nothing but a plug of tobacco in it He fell to the floor In a fit. When he recovered he reported his loss to the police, who arrested the bunko men late last night. To-day Antonio and Soveriowere arraigned audneld for trial. A Pi-Packer's Wife InTronble. Mrs. Sarah Holland, wife of the Rev. George O.Holland, of the New York City Colored Mission, was held in 8500 bail to-day at Jeffer son Market Police Court, because she Kept a disorderly house. The police raided the place last nigbf, and found there four colored women, four white women and Mrs. Holland. They arrested them all. The Bev. Holland promised to get bail far his wife, and she was sent back to her cell. The o'tber women were sent to the island. Arrested brvHIs Sweetheart's Annr. A small middle-aged woman created tremen dous excitement in the busiest part of Myrtle avenue, Brooklyn, yesterday afternoon by col laring a young man in his Sunday clothes and screaming: "Now Vre got you, you young rascal, I'm going to take yon to the station." The young man tried to break away from her, but the small woman held on to him and marched him to Myrtle avenue, toward the Adams street police station. A large crowd qnickly gathered and followed the young man and his fair captor. Several men in the crowd offered to help her, but she declined their as sistance. "I can take care of him myself," she said, as she tossed her head and garo her prisoner another yank. As she delivered the young man np at the station bouse she ex plained that be was Thomas H. Barnard, ex Mayor Grace's clerk; that he had broken his promise to marry her niece. Miss Beatrice Emery, and that for two weeks he bad been dodging a warrant, sworn out on a charge of breach of promise. Barnard was searched and a loaded revolver was found in his pocket He was locked up. To-day he was arraigned before Justice Walsh, who fined him $5 for carrying concealed weapons, and held him for examina tion next Friday on the other charge. MORE CAE8 P0E f HE KXPAN0. Some Important MadlSemtloBS U tho Lease to the Erie. Cleveland, December 9. The new bond of fellowship was consummated between the Erie and tbeNew York, Pennsylvania and Ohio Bail road Companies at a meeting of the stock holders of the latter company held at Cleve land to-day. The new lease, which has been approved, provides for a reduction of the rental after the rental of the 32 per cent of the $6,000,000 gross earnings annually has been ob tained. Another modification of the lease that is im- Fortant is the agreement by the Nypano to Ornish the Erie with two locomotives and 00 coal cars: also to furnish 600 additional coal cars should the annual earnings reach 6,500,000, 200 more when earnings reach 7,000,000, and 500 more for each 500,000 of earnings annually. LIQU0E DEALERS' KESP0N8IB1LITT. Saloonkeepers Not to Blame When Miners Falsify Their Agr. Dotlestows, December 9, A case in volving an Important point In the liquor laws bos been decided here. Two boys, both about 19, purchased liquor at the hotel of Charles B. Yost, declaring they were of age. Mrs. Yost sold the whisky. In charging the jury Judge Yerkes said that where the landlord issued in structions to bis agent or bartender not to sell to minors, to persons visibly intoxicated or to habitual drunkards and the bartender dis obeyed these orders, the landlord could not be convicted if the jury believed such orders to have been issued in good faith. In this case, the fact that Mrs. Yost had been deceived by the young men falsely claiming to De of age, added another extenuating circum stance. The jury rendered a verdict of not guilty. IEI-STATE TEIFLES. REABnro has a silent barber who has a large number of customers. He is deaf and dumb. A Chambebsbubq youth thought he ought to try some of his girl's cooking before mar riage. He ate a dinner which she prepared with her own hands and hasn't been to see her since. The largest sawmill ever taken to West Vir ginia has Deen purchased by G. W. Curtln & Co., and will be set np in Braxton county. It was made in Erie, Fa., and weighs 75 tons. It required 24 yoke of oxen to haul from the depot a part of the machinery. Pkteb SracLAiE, of Wanseou, O., on a wager, ate 24 pumpkin pics, a dozen doughnuts and drank three gallons of cider. Thomas Edwakds, of Erie, was walking along the street the other day when his dog came up, pulled his coat and tried to make blm retrace his steps.' He turned around and fol lowed the dog a short distance and picked up a fine revolver. The dog seemed to know that the weapon was valuable, although it was too heavy for Llm to carry in bis month. A pokchpine Invaded the home of a Bedford county farmer and was discovered sound asleep in the kitchen. It was killed without trouble, but not until a foolish dog had got bis mouth fun of quills. A man came into Bradford the other day and paid a bill of J1S In old-fashioned paper currency 5, 10, 25 and 60 cent shlnplasters, which he had kept since 186t Lawresce JAMM, ayonng colored man of Parkersburg, has just been returned to his parents, whom he has net sees since the war. Hi father sad asstfcw, who were slaves, we bekfHyiBgia Geetipjia, a4 were (Heovee4 lsH Mts&sl sssH ssstttsssMS ssssMssL CURI0UB C0HDMSAT10KS.1,- A wife in Vinalhaven, Me., left her husband because be wouldn't buy onions. At Pomona, Cal., four dogs that had been poisoned crawled to an undertaker's shop and expired on the steps. "Wildcats and wolves are numerous near Montfeeiio,Iii. Elijah Hariins and.hisdogs killed the largest wildcat ever seen In that re-x gion, the other day. A tramp 6 feet and 10 inches iu .height was locked np in the Auburn, N. Y, Jail for ten days recently. He cave his name as John Winar, but would tell nothing of his past his tory. A 6elma (Cal.) man went into a"'store last week and put a lighted cigarette on ..the edee of an aquarium. A goldfish seized it and. took a puff. For several days the poor thing, lay at the bottom or the tank and panted like sAJ, tired dog. Its color changed to a jet black; andr ' the owner of that cigarette has sworn off 'for" keens. A South Carolina man who was curious to know just bow much stuff an alligator could get away with when be felt well, fed out a hind quarter of a cow, seven chickens, x sheep, four eeese anil a hoe's head before the reptile backed water. The cow and sheep and poultry had died of poison, but this didn't trouble the 'gator any. Two chairs that have been handed down fourgenerations go to help out on the furni ture used In the late Abram Sampson's bouse, In Coleman, Mich. The oldest one was bought In Boston. Mass., In 1749, and has now reached ' the ripe old age of 110 years. They also have a flour barrel in the bouse that was bon Eh t in New York In 1839. has been in 12 different States, and is good for 12 more. Among the treasures of the Kansas His torical Soeiety is a ebelv geography which was compiled in 1862 by General John H. Bice, then a prominent Georgian, but now equally prominent as the editor of tho Bepublican Fort Scott Monitor. Twenty-three pases of it are devoted to the "Confederate States of America," which are cited as "the best ex ample of a Republican form of Government." A friend of the lazy, in Bangor, Me., has invented a device by means of wbich a man can catch a fish without fishing. He attaches a small sleigh bell to a piece of barrel hoop, one end of which be inserts into a crack in the dock. After baiting bis line and throwing it overboard be fastens it to the hdop. puts his bands in his pockets and awaits developments. As soon as the bell is jingled bya jerk on the line, he hauls it in and lands the fish. Captain A- O. Paine, of Cocoa, FJa., has shells and pottery taken from the mound on the east bank of Indian river as the foot of Merritt Island. These shells and fragments were taken from the mound about SO feet be low the surface, the action of tne water having washed away a large portion ot the mnund, and leaving the strata exposed to view. From that portion of the mound used as a burial ground only conch shells were taken from among the skeletons, and the curious feature of the case is that in every eoncb shell a hole is broken in the same relative position. It Is supposed that the conchs were burled with the dead to be used as food in the happy hunting grounds-, and to facilitate the eating process each shelf was broken so the fish could be eaten without trouble. The shells and pottery may beseea at this office. A German chemist in Chicago has been experimenting for a number of years in the hope of discovering a process for purifying and refining milk and cream for the purpose of shipment to points distant from the place of supply, and he says be has found it at last. By this process mnch of the water is taken out, and the ingredients are left unharmed in their natural state. All disease germs, it is also claimed, have been destroyed, and. if there has been a taste of bitter herbs, it has been re moved. The milk, thus purified and refined, will keep sweet for fully 30 days, and can be shipped anywhere, and when the water has been replaced, is in as good, if not better, con dition as when it left the cow, and cannot be distinguished irom milk six hours old. The inventor is now shipping refined milk to New Orleans, where high prices rule, and some has been sent to Boston. The Museum of Antiquities at Dresden has come Into possession of an interesting marble relief from Rome, which represents an ancient butcher's shop, of oblong shape, and divided by a pillar into two unequal parts. In the greater stands the butcher, with a high chopping block, resting on three substantial legs, before him. while behind him bangs the steel yard and a cleaver, he himself being occu pied iu dividing a rib of meat with another , cleaver. On the wall above him, just s with " as. is & rowolhoolfs near to exctjsotlier. on"" which bang pieces of meat already dressed; a rib and leg of meat, a pork joint and udders a v , tit-bit of the Romans; also lungs and liver, and s last of all, the tavonte boar's bead. On the left, in the smaller division of the shop, the wife of the butcher sits in an easy chair, with ' an account book on her knees, engaged in as sisting the business of her husband by acting as bookkeeper. Her headdress points to the time of Antonine. Curtiss Hicks, an ossified man, who re sides in Racine, Wis., has been attracting a great deal of attention. He has been visited by many doctors and others who pronounce him a living wonder. At one time be was one of the most popular railroad engineers in the Western country. A newspaper man called upon him and found a man not over five feet high lving upon a bed in an apparently lifeless condition. Hearing soma one approach be roused up and conversed in a clear voice and in an intelligent manner for over an boar. His feet, toes, ankles, legs, knee joints and even the hip joints are in a complete state of oseificatlen. They were as hard as bone, and the sEin was of a reddish color, ine arms, nanoa, nngers ana an tne joints of the same were in like condition, and the man stated there was not a sintrio joint In his body that was not ossified. Hisiawsare set, and only a cracker can be forced between his teeth. His body is in a perfectly healthy condition, and bis mind unclouded. Still he is like a dead man, and has not been able to move or help himself for ten years. Mr. B. W. Cason, agent for the Pacific Express and United States Express Companies at Now Orleans, In an interview with a re porter, said: "l believe our companies have at last hit upon a plan which in the future will make impossible the robbing of express mat ter. All the ears are being supplied with sta tionary safes with combination locks, the com bination of wbich the express messenger in the car will be kept in ignorance. Hereafter when money is shipped a responsible representative of the company here will co down to the tram. deposit the valuables and money in the safe, check it with the messenger and then secure the safe. When the train reaches Memphis, Chattanooga, or any other point, another representative of the company, also acquainted with the combination, will visit the car and ascertain from the messenger if there are ,aay valuables or money in the safe for that point. If answered in the affirmative he will open the safe and take out the property. By this sys tem if an express car is attacked by tram rob bers they will be compelled to blow open the safe, as no matter bow much they might desire it the messenger will be unable to assist them." COMIC CULLLXGS. The Terror No, pans; I didn't lpiow it; but now that you've told me, I feel better. Fhiladii pMa Jnjuirer. He's a pretty tall man who stands six feet in his socks, even If the socks come np to LU shoulders. Philadelphia Inquirer. Balm to His "Wounded Feelings. Papa (after the seance in the woodshed) Do you know that It pains me more than it does you to hare to,, whin joat "Look here," said the, farmer to the; tramp. "Letmellstgiveyouaplnter " "Bui ' Idon'twantaplnter," replied the tourist. "It; want a quarter." Terrs HauttExprtt. Teacher What is a volcano ? PupU A cutaneous disease. Teacher How do you make that out 1 Fupll-Isn't it an eruption J Detroit Irta Ft tts. Wanted No Such Bisk; Agent Suppose you let me write a policy on this building. Owner Why, It's fireproof. Agent (retreating-) I didn't know that. Psrdoa me. I wouldn't tate it. Seta lark Sun. Florence (looking at some bonnets in the milliner's wlndowj-O, Jen' I aren't tbeyj. loveiy j , Jennie (looking arross tne street)-Yes, Indeed! Especially the one with the side whiskers. Xoit rence American. A California judge fined himself $50 forj getting druofc, and tcrned over the money toTil bailiff, with instructions that It be recorded lnlthe-l usual way. This Is a rather heavy flne forJ drunk, hut perhaps it was not the judge's flrrtj onense. unicago acraia. Living on the Old Man. McFingle-STj Bow are you, Bmlthf I haven't seen you fory ' long while. How's your son jacxr wnere'she beenkeeplnghlmseirrorthelastyear? . Smith (dolefully) Ho hasn't been kesplng htav selfl I've been keeping him. Aeio Xor Sun.-' Mrs. ToUngbride How does your breast, . fast suit you this morning; darling t s Mg1 Mr. Yoonghride Just right: I tell you,, Annie,' ' It may be plebeian, but I am awfully fond of calPsVr 'Mrs. Youngbrtde So ami. 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