THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH, SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 1890.' j MS, AHLISHED FEBRUARY 8, 1848, o' 45, o. 37. Entered at 1'lttsburg l'ostofiice. vcmber 14, lssT, as second-class matter. asiness Offlce97 and G9 Fifth Avenue. ."evr6 Rooms and Publishing House 75, 77 and 79 Diamond Street. Eastern Advertising Offlce, Koom 40, Tribune Bnlldlug, lewYork. TERMS OF THE DI-FATCU. rOSTAQE FKEE IX TUE rxiTED STATES. DAILY Dispatch, Onelcar. J s CO Daily Dispatch, Per Quarter SCO DAILY DISPATCH, One Mouth 70 Daily Dispatch, lncludinEJsundav, lvear. 30 CO Daily DisrtTcn, InclndlnRbnndajr.Sm'tUs. 2 50 Daily Dispatch. includlngbunday.lnionth SO SLJvDAi Dispatch, One "Year :50 "W cthLY Dispatch, One ear l S5 U1IE DAILY Di6PATCIl Is delivered bj carriers at t cents per week, or Including bunda) edition, at CO cents per -week. This issue of THE DISPATCH contains 20 paces, made np of THREE TARTS. Failure on the part of Carriers, Agents, Newsdealers or Newsboys to supply pa trons with a Complete Number should be promptly reported to tlifijis oce. Voluntary contributors should keep copies of cuticles. If comvcnation is desired the price expected must be named. Tlic courtesv of re turning rejected manuscripts uill be extended when stamps for that purpose ai e enclosed, but the Editor of Ike Dispatch will under no ci cumstances be responsibleor the care of un solicited manuscripts POSTAGE AH persons who mail the Sunday isue of The Dispatch to friends should bear in mind tho fact that the post nee tLrrcon Is Two () Cents. All double and tiiplo number copies ot Tho Dispatch require a '--cent stamp to insnre prompt delivery. PITTSBURG. feUNDAY. MAR. IB, 18901 3-0n or nbout April 1 the BTJIVE"S OFFICE of THE DISPATCH will be le moved lo Corner of Smiihfleld and Diamond streets. AN ALLEGED LABOR CONFERENCE. The opening of the Labor conference at Berlin yesterday was attended by formali ties and speeches which were mainly char acterized by glittering generalities. Never theless the beginning of that assemblage is sufficient to suggest doubts as to its pro ducing anything of value to the laboring people of Europe. If such a meeting were held with the sin cere and controlling motive of securing to the laboring class a greater share of produc tion and relieving them of their burdens it would deserve the sympathy of civilization. The first decision of such a bod is so plain that a conference would hardly be needed to arrive at it. It would be the decision of all the Powers to disarm and relieve production of the immense burdens of great armaments. The second decision would be equally clear, namely, the abolition of all special privi leges, either in commerce, taxation or Gov ernment. But neither of these steps would be at all satisfactory to the ruling powers of Europe. When we find the opening speech of the representative of the German Emperor, setting forth the problem, not how to elevate the condition of labor, but how to keep the labor question from disturbing the European Governments, the doubt as to the sincerity of the professed interest in labor is justified. That .kK is strengthened by the very slight indication, in the report that the membership of the conference is composed of anything bnt the governing classes. A la'nr conference in which labor is not represented, and the purpose of which is to prevent labor from making any trouble, would justify a paraphrase of Mme. Roland's declaration in the words, "Oh labor, what shams are perpetrated in thy name!" A CHURCH QUARREL. The conviction of Bev. K. B. Msnsell, of McKeesport, in the church trial which was ended yesterday, is the termination of a case which can hardly be regarded as calculated to reflect credit on the cause of the churches. The province of the press hardly extends to sifting the evidence in order to establish an opinion as to the justice of the verdict; but it is pertinent to point out that the allega tions and circumstances are such as to show that an exercise of the Christian charity and forbearance which should prevail in the churches would have forbidden any such bitter quarrel. As it now is, the quarrel will doubtless be continued and the counter charges will go on, with each party asserting conduct on the part of the other wholly in consistent with their Christian professions. While we must recognize that clergymen and church members are human, it certainly seems necessary to say that in this case the toleration and good will necessary to all organized work seem to be conspicuous by their absence. TEE SENATORIAL HAT. The action of the Senate last week in passing a resolution to expunge Senator Call's interpolation into the report of his remarks in the Congressional Record, of a savage assault on Sir. Cnandler, which he did not actually make, has several peculiar and amusing aspects. The controlling principle in all this mat ter is the Senatorial idea that when that lofty body says that a thing is or is not so, that settles it, no matter what the fact may be. That idea extends to more things than the publication of the Record. It is nota ble in the enactment that the executive sessions of the Senate shall be secret. Al though the Senators themselves straight way go and tell what is done, still they hold that when the Senate says that it is secret, their little indiscretions in the way of telling the secrets makes no essential difference with the secrecy. But the practi cal application ot the same idea, elaborated by Gilbert in "The Mikado," appears to a . delightfully complicated degree, in this matter of the Congressional Record. In the first place it starts with the publi cation of speeches never delivered. It makes no difference whether the speeches are, or are not, actually delivered. "When the high authority of the Senate manilested in its weighty publication weighing sever al tons per diem declares it is so, that settles it. This being established, it is not singular that Senator Call imagined that by making that official publication assert that he jumped on Senator Chandler with both feet, it would place the matter beyond dis pute. But the Senatorial method of correct ing this undue application of its own principle caps the climix. It resolves that the interpolated matter shall be expunged; and therefore it is expunged. It is no mat ter that the Congressional Record contain ing the speech was published and circulated some weeks ago, and that every one who has eo little retard for the value of time as to read that publication, has absorbed the Florida Senator's factitious thnnder. The high authority of the Senate declares that all this primed matter shall dissolve to nothingness. Consequently the printed tons of official ponderosity are annihilated. This is so beautiful a theory that the sug- gestions of the press to confine the Con gressional Record to the report of what is actually said, are wholly beside the mark. How can the Senate be expected to come down from its lofty attitude of declaring that its fiat settles questions of existence and non-existence, to a sublunary and limited theory that its authority can only state things as they actually are, and must con fine itself to the groveling rules of common sense? THE PREVALENCE OF CRIME. A criminal epidemic is raging at present, to judge from the rapidity with which cases are cropping out in the local reports. This issue of The Dispatch has to report the cae of a prominent citizen of the Soutbside, who has anticipated the discovery of his forgeries by leaving the town; the murder of a little girl by a cranky and presumably insane stepfather, and a poisoning case in which suspicion is directed to the husband of the victim. Each of these cases presents features whose sensationalism is of the disturbing character; and suggests the inquiry whether any explanation is possible of the prevalence of crimes. Some time ago, when there had been an alarming frequency of crimes dur ing the summer months, a theory was de veloped that crimes were caused by the hot weather. Bnt as the present outbreak occurs during the only winter weather we have had this year, the same sort of logic would indicate that they are produced by a low temperature. If crimes are produced both by torrid and arctic weather, the out look for humanity in the alternations of this climate is very gloomy. It wll be more satisfactory to regard the two specimens of inductive research as dis proving each other. But that leaves the problem still unsolved. THE USE OF FREE LIBRARIES. A special contributor elsewhere makes a detailed statement of his grounds for oppo sition to the Carnegie Library project. It hardly need be said that the views expressed there are directly opposed to those of The D ispatcii; but as an example ot what can be said in dissent, the communication is interesting and may not be wholly without iustructiveness. The basis of our correspondent's opposi tion is that the free libraries will not be beneficial to the people, and therefore it is unjust to levy the tax required to keep them up. But this is not only begging the whole question; it is ignoring the testimony of experience that wherever free libraries are kept up they are of the widest benefit and are universally used. This testimony comes from Boston, New York, Baltimore, Cleve land, Detroit and Chicago, and a score of cities in foreign countries. Even in this city where the example of the struggling Mercantile Library is cited as a failure, a moderately careful study of what it actually does, would prove the con trary. In proportion to the very few thousand dollars of extraneous assistance received by that institution during its thirty years' operation, its wort in spreading the benefit of general reading has been no slight matter; and its usefulness is attested by the 150 to 200 readers who visit it daily at the very time when people who do not take the trouble to investigate the matter are pro claiming its failure. The same tendency to prejudge the whole matter, shown in the declaration of the use lessness of free libraries when the testimony of experience shows their value, appears in the assertion that a tax cannot be legally levied for their support. This ignores the fact that the authority to do so has been ex erted without question for years, not only in cities of other States, such as Boston, Cleve land and Detroit, but in no more remote a locality than the city of Allegheny, where a public library has been maintained by taxa tion for many years. The public usefulness of centers of general information, where the right of the humblest and poorest citizen is made bv the very act of taxation as good as that of the richest and most powerful, is un questionably a sufficient ground for the public support. It is a singular illustration of the incon sistencies which preconceived ideas can produce, that while our correspondent cnt cises Mr. Carnegie's gift because he does not think its benefits will be widely dis tributed, he thinks that the gift which ought to have been made is the foundation of a polytechnical school, the benefits of which would, by his own statement, be con fined to a few hundred pupils. That such an institution would be of value to Pittsburg no one will deny; and perhaps Mr. Carnegie's example m3y stimulate other wealthy citizens to found it. But to allege that it will be more useful than the institu tion' which will place the means of culture derived from general reading within the reach of hundreds of thousands, is to com mit the mathematical absurdity of suppos ing the whole to be less important than one of its parts. One point, however, is worthy of atten tion. That is the intimation that such an institution will become the especial property of the wealthy and fashionable, and that working people will find themselves unwel come theie. The plan of the institution is devised especially to prevent such a mis fortune. It is to be believed that those in charge of it will carry out that plan in good faith. The appearance of such a criticism at this early day should make them careful to avoid any act which will look like removing the benefits of the institution lrom the common people. THE REGULAR COURSE. The Cherokee strip furnishes a reproduc tion of the Oklahoma experience. First, the land is occupied by the cattle barons, whose tendency to squat on any territory without legal right, is not at all abated by the fact that after they have enjoyed several years of pasturage, the Government very tardily comes to the conclusion to order them off. No sooner are they forced to vacate than the boomer makes a rush for the land, invariably before there is any legal right to do so. The fact that the national authority is always exerted to re move the boomers from the land they at tempt to grab, does not at all deter them from repeating the grabbing act on the next opportunity. One might wish for a little variation of the monotony of these proceedings, but they are at least in structive of the lesson, that both cattle com panies and squatters are equally hungry for any land they can get t their claims on, re gardless of legal right or the authority of the Government. USURY IH THE WEST. The complaints as to usurious interest, especially in the Far West, are multiply ing, and some of them are accompanied with specifications that seem to justify fault-finding. One case is reported to be that of a sober and industrious man in South Dakota, who, being in need of ready money, gave a note for 535, on which he re ceived 50, and, after paying $51 30 in in terest in thirteen months, without getting any deduction from the principal, gave up the struggle and blew oat his brains in despair. The case looks like a hard one, but it nevertheless illustrates the law that such cases of usurious interest are only possible where the ignorance, or the recklessness, o' the borrower makes the hazard great. No doubt the money-lender who exacted such a rate oi interest was a remorseless shark. But the event proves that he was right in his calculation that he must exact a high rate in order to balance the risk of the loan; and the result is that he has, by that rate, got back his principal with $1 30 interest for the thirteen months. The man who blew out his brains because he could not pay such a debt, is certainly so far ont of the ordinary class, that he cannot be regarded as a relia ble debtor. We hope that things are not so bad out West that reliable men cannot get necessary loans at decent rates of interest. If any such rates as are reported prevail on re spectable security, there is lots of capital in the East for that investment. If Senator Stanford can cet liberty for the farmers to put as much water into the mortgages he proposes for their relief as has been put into Senator Stanford's railroads, the farmers might have a good thing, when some ono i5 found who will pay for the inflated values. The organization of the Allegheny Car negie Library having progressea nearly to the point where It will be necessary to elect a librarian, candidates for that useful and honor able, position are coming forward. Among them tho name of Mr. Erasmus Wilson, for merly of The Dispatch, is prominently men tioned. Mr. Wilson won his newspaper repu tation by the treatment of topics of c urrent in terest in an unconventional manner which brought them close to the popular apprehen sion. The same qualities would be likely to prove valuable in methods of bringing literary subjects within the reach of the people and stimulating popular interest in them. Mr. Wilson's many friends in the newspaper pro fession would bo glad to congratulate him, if he should be selected to that important poet. It is'pleasant to observe that we have had one grand jury which attended to its business promptly and won the approval of the Court. This is such a degree of progress as to raise a hope that in time the Court will be able to get constables to return all the speak-easies. The price of Bio coffee is going up. It is asserted by the trade that neither the manipu lation of a corner nor the monopolyof a trust is producing this result, but the scarcity pro duced by short crops for three years past. If this is the case and the assertion appears to be well corroborated the advance in the price of that food staple is simply one of the hard ships for which no one is to blame. That is a very different matter from the cases where the cost of life for the masses is enhanced for the benefit of a combination. Hardly any better investment for the welfare of the coming generation can be made than a subscription to the fund for the News boys' Home. A very few dollars spent on these little street arabs will yield rich returns of im proved manhood in the future. One of the beauties of machine politics is presented by the spectacle of two deputy sheriffs of New York, who are accused of sell ing extraordinary privileges to prisoners con fined in jail, presenting their resignations to a sheriff who is on trial for fixing up a court to present him with a bogus divorce. When the differences between the officers of the law are only in the variety of the corruption and in justice which they perpetrate, there is need lor very radical reform. The statement that Miss Marie Prescott has lost her divorce suit because she did not know where she lived, is a slight offset for the large number of people who have won divorce suits by being able to swear that they lived in any place that was convenient. It is somewhat aside of the mark for some of onr cotemporaries to warn the Tory critics ot Lord Randolph Churchill that they are scarcely safe to abuse him lest he be provoked to retort in his well-known and pointed man ner. A consideration ot the last speech of the young Tory Democrat will show that thev can not piovoke him to do more in that lino than he has already done: and that they are now doing their ineffectual best to get even. The Vesuvius has now demonstrated her ability to slmg dynamite out at sea with the same reckless prodigality that has been shown en land. Foreign nations will please take notice and abstain from knocking any chips off our shoulders. We are surprised to observe the Demo cratic New York Times criticising the act of the Hon. Bahv McKee, in setting off the White House fire alarm when there was no fire, as 'a criminal proceeding." The natural expec tation would be that the Democrats would re gard the young McKee's act as doing tho best he could to raise an alarm over the policy of the Republicans in Congress. Let us hope that the mountain of tariff revision and surplus reduction labor will bring forth something more than tho rtdiculus mus of a slight deficit. The horrible case of child slaughter in Allegheny yesterday can be dismissed as a case of sudden insanity. With the lunacy of the slayer established beyond doubt immediately after the killing, it is not consistent with the credit of human nature to suppose that so pur poseless a crime could have been committed before the lunatic had lost bis mental balance. If Maine can ship us ice at prices within the reach of modest purses it will be a gratify ing evidence that that far-eastern State can furnish the rest of the nation with something more than building stone and statesmen. "Is religion a failure," is the question raised by the Christian Union, which sajs that the daily newspapers are inclined to answer the question In the affirmative. This is an error. There is no general tendency to assert that religion is a failure; but a wide impression prevails that some of the people who make em phatic professions of it, are gross failures. . The fellows who use dishouest means to get money In small amounts are being found out rapidly. Only wholesale dishonesty, on the scale of millions, rises superior to the adage that honesty is the best policy. Now WE hear that a five-cent fare from Hazelwood to the city over the new electric line is a foregone conclnsion. The era of cheap transit rates is coming so rapidly that we may soon expect tho day of cheaper rates for the shorter distances, by sales of ticket books or commutation tickets. "With the Australian system provided for the whole country, by act of Congress, the ex pectation that corruption will be wiped out of politics will be permitted until experience proves the contrary. Judge Hilton is stated to have bought the Stewart property at the corner of Broad way and Ninth street. Did he sell it to himself according to the approved methods of corporate millionaires? If so It would be an interesting matter to learn what was the cash considera tion he gave for it A NATUBAI. gas line to the Westview oil field will, we hope, be the precursor of an oil pipe line to bring a large product from that field to Pittsburg refineries. The great coal strike in England does not seem likely to make the cost of manufacturing English iron any cheaper in the near future. The struggle, therefore, if maintained for any length of time, may prove more beneficial to the American iron industry than to the English workingman. THE TOPICAL TALKER. A Scene From Life In a Suburban School roomSandy Had Bis Way FIttsbnrs nnd Ifao Great Eastern Insurance Com panies A Bnid-Hcaded Joke Tho De mand for Gilbei t nnd Sullivan's Works. LIE had committed some high crime or mis demeanor against the dignity ot his pre ceptor and tho peace and propriety of her do main, and the sentence was that he should stand apart from his fellows for a certain space of time in a conspicuous place, -the criminal of ten summers, more or les, took his stand, therefore, in the spot designated, beside the blackboard in a corner of tho room. The board stood at an angle which made its face visible to the scholars but hid it from tho teacher. Tins fact the young scapegrace soon observed, and as an expression of his feelings and lawless contempt for the government he wrote upon the blackboard in good big letters this express ivo monosyllable: Dak. Toe class broke into smiles and titters at once. The teacher at a loss for the cause of this new disturbance looked at the prisoner in the pillory. Ho was solemn as to visage, still and composed. For a moment the teacher turned to 1 er hook again. In this interval the incorrigible youth by the blackboard rapidly calculated what course events were likely to take. If he rubbed out the obnoxious w ord, he reasoned, someone in the class would bo sure to rei eal to the teacher what it had been. The laughter of the children was growing more boisterous every second; discovery of tho in scription was inevitable any moment. He de cided at once, and added two words to the original legend, so that when tho teacher ex amined the board a moment later she read this harmless sentence: The Conrt guessed what jugglery had taken place, but upon the evidence there was no way to convict the prisoner of contempt. But the Court had a fearful struggle to keep a straight face. ... TLT E. James Stevenson, the well-known in surance man, laughs when ne tells of an encounter he had with Bonny Scotland t'other day. Mr. Stevenson was crossing a street down down, and when he was half over a big fair skinned Scot, evidently just arrived from his native heath, met him face to face. Mr. Ste venson was on the right side of the crossing, and he didn't feel called upon to givo way. He glared at the Highlander and the Highlander glared at him. Then the latter said sharply: "Ihe right o' way, please sir!" and Mr. Ste venson, taken aback by the sheer coolness of his opponent, stepped aside. No doubt Sandy felt that he had but insisted on a right, for while hero pedestrians take the right on the sidewalk, in Scotland they give the right or take the left. ... TT is acknowledged freely by insurance men that Pittsburg is one of the best fields they have in this country, and the amount of money that tho great Eastern insurance companies take out of Pittsburg pockets in premiums every ear would make Pittsburgers stare if they saw the figures. A concerted movements understand, is being mado by a number of leading financiers and businessmen of this city to compel the great insnrance companies to put some of the money they get out of Pittsburg Into city improve ments here. Tho insurance companies for some incomprehensible reason have never fa vored Pittsburg investments. No great build ings attest the presence of insurance capital on our streets. The insurance magnates pre fer to adorn Minneapolis with mercantile palaces, to go even further West and sow the golden seed they reap from Pittsburg in the ctassic avennes of Red Cow, Minnesota, or Liar's Gulch, Wash. They are eager to buy real estate in Western towns at any sort of prices, hut they decline to look at Pittsburg property at alL I know of a case in point. Three or four years ago a piece of property on Fifth avenue was offered to a New York Insurance Company at a price which would have netted the latter, had the salo been made, about 51,500 a foot front to-day. But the New York men said that the price was too high. They are saying the same to-day. To a man not in the insurance business this avoidance of Pittsburg, the contempt for its wealth, and ingratitude for its premiums, seem idiotio from a simple business standpoint. The interest of tho companies themselves, one would think, would prompt them to invest some of their funds in Pittsburg. It is not surpris ing that a protest against such discrimination against Pitt sburg is going up on all sides. Yes terday I talked with several wealthy and influ ential men on Fourth avenue, and learned that unless a change comes over the policy of the Eastern insurance companies, a retaliatory campaign will bo inaugurated. V T can't quite get that last idea of yours through my hair," said tho bald-headed man. "No?" queried the other man sympathetic ally, "I guess the Idea IB having a deuce of a time finding the hair to get through." "P very time a new Gilbert and Sullivan opera is given in Pittsburg a chorus arises: "Why doesn't some first rate comic opera company play a repertoire of half a dozen Gilbert and Sullivan operas?" At least a dozen people have asked ma that very question this week. I can only repeat the question. There does seem to be a real and strong desire for the Gilbert and Sullivan operas, and it is remarkable that one of the first-class companies, the Bostomans, the Boston Ideals or McCaull's, has not ven tured UDon a season of them. In Pittsburg it is certain an artistic performance say of "Patience," "Pinafore," "Pirates of Penzance." 'The Sorcerer," "Princess Ida," "The Mikado," and "Trial by Jury'1 and one of the later and less successful operas as a double bill, would attract great audiences. Among the men who will pay well to hear good light opera with a comic vein,the fondness for Gilbert and Sullivan's joint productions is very great. THE Dispatch has received many letters upon this very subject. A revival of "Patience" and "The Mikado" is promised here shortly, but what is asked for is a repertoire containing six or more of the Gilbert and Sullivan operas. Hepbubn Johns. MhN WHO ARE TALKED ABOUT. President Harbison rarely smokes more than three cigars a day, it is stated one after each meal. William H. Jackson, brother of Governor Jackson, of Maryland, owns a peach orchard containing 25,000 trees. Mbs. Judge Mages, of Pittsburg, accom panied by ber son, is among the arrivals at the Stratford, Philadelphia. Mb. Gladstone's close friend, Lord Gran ville, has in his gift the Captaincy of Deal Castle, made vacant by the death of Lord Syd ney. ME9. Elizabeth Stuart Phelps Ward will give readings from her own works, includ ing an unpublished story, in Boston on Tues day next and the Tuesday after that. Mr. Whitelaw Reid, American Minister to France, sailed from Havre for New York yesterday on the steamer La Champagne. Mr. Ried goes to New York tor the purpose of ac companying his wife back to France. Mrs. TJ. S. Grant leads a very quiet life in New York. Her eyesight has become poor and she seldom appears in public, except to drive in the park. General Sherman is a frequent and welcome visitor. Colonel A. H. Rogeks this week got out writs ot habeas corpus in behalf of several in mates whom be alleges to be sane, though de tained as insane subjects in the Ward's Island (New York) Asylum. This makes 24 such writs he has taken out. The car in which Mrs. Harrison's party trav eled southward had been comfortably fitted up and the pantry well supplied wtth every imag inable dainty. The refrigerator, where the wines and meats were kept, is under the floor in the forepart of the car. M. Rouvier, th e French Minister of Finance, is about to contract a marriage with his niece, Mile. Cadiot, of Dieppe. M. Rouvier lost hts first wife about a year ago. She was well known in the HteraW world as a novelist under the name of Claude Vignon. i .....a........ ; : A watek dam. : IN HEM0EI OF KELLEY. Democrats nnd Republicans Alike Euloglzo Him In the Home. Washington, March 15. The House to-day passed its last tribute of respect to the memory of William D. Kelley, of Pennsylvania. Mr. O'Neill, of Pennsylvania, was the first speaker. He related a conversation which he held with Mr. Kelley a few days before the Christmas holidays, in the course ot which the latter said: "My dear, long-time friend, I want to tell you that I am a dead man; yes, to tell you, but please do not repeat it to others. Oh," said he, "if my lite can only be spared until after the holldajs, how thankful to my God 1 will be. I so much desire that the shadow of deatn may not be upon the households of my dear children and grandchildren to mar their Christmas en joxments and to darken in my family the brightness of that f esth e time." "To me," continued Mr. O'Neill, "the shock of this, as it were, confidential communication was terrible. The composure with which be spoke the words 'I am a dead man' unnerved me, and I cin never forget them. Soon he took to the bed from which he was not to rise again. A devoted wife, sorrowing sons and daughters cared for and nursed him until the last mo ment ho was permitted to live. He suffered greatly at times during these dying days, but there was no murmuring. He knew that his end was coming, but he realized that there was One to whom he could look for eae nnd com fort in tho passing hours of his trials on earth; and calling time and again upon the Lord Jesus Christ, his divine Lord and Savior, and repeating over and over, by day and by night, the Lord's Prater, taught him bv hi3 Chr'stiau mother, he breithed away his life m calmness and comnosure." Mr. Holman, of Indiana, and Mr. Bank", of Massachusetts then touclunglj eulogized the deceased member. Mr. JIllls, of Texas, bore testimony to the worth of Mr. Kelley, whom he characterized as one ot the most di-tinguished statesmen of the Union. Mr. McRinley, of Ohio, paid his tributo of respect to tho old friend for whom, in life, he had had the most anectionate regard, ana in wnose death an had lost an honorable associate and wise counsellor and some a very close and dear friend. No eulogy could do justice to the dead statesman; his life work was his highest eulogy, ana what he wrought for his fellow man and the impress he had made on the legislation of the country w onld be his best and most enduring memorial. His public life had been uncorrupt and uncor ruptible, and he left to his family and friends and associates and countrymen the highest of all honorable titles that of an honest man. Eulogies were also pronounced by Messrs. TBiugham, of Pennsvlvania; Wilson, of West Virginia: Cannon, of Illinois; McKenna, of California; Reilly, of Pennsylvania; Atkinson, of Pennsvlvania; Breckinridge, of Kentucky; Kerr, of Iowa, and Reyburn, of Pennsylvania, and then as a mark of respect to the memory of the deceased, the House adjourned. No Better in Pennsylvania. From the Bedford Gazette.l There is no better newspaper in Pennsyl vania than The Pittsburg Dispatch. Its Sunday edition is a whole library in itself, while the circulation of daily and Sunday edi tions has reached figures never before attained by a paper west of Philadelphia. In every de partment The Dispatch approaches close to perfection. The people want more of it, and the proprietors find themselves obliged to pur chase another of Hoe's wonderful perfect ing presses early in the now year. The Dis patch is a great newspaper. THE FIGHT FOR THE FAIR Does Not Seem to Have Reached an End Yet. by Any Means. Washington, March 15. For the first timo since the House decided the question of the site, the full committee on the World's Fair met to-day and received the report of the sub committee in the shape of a bill providing for the fair, with amendments to suit the wishes of the Chicago people. The proceedings were not entirely harmonious and before the con clusion of the session it became evident that tho New York representatives were disposed to differfrom the sub committee in respect to the financial scheme and other important de tails. Mr. Belden offered a resolution to the effect that it is inexnedlent to adopt a bill on the sub ject of tho World's Fair until the citv of Chi cago had furnished a site and a 10,000.000 se curitv. This resolution was debated at some length. The friends of Chicago insisted that the nature of the security required should be spe cifically defined in the resolution, so that they could not be compelled at a later stage to fur nish still otherseennty. Thereupon tho resolu tion was modified so as to read: "That when a guarantee fund of 810,000,000 shall be secured by the citizens of Chicago, the sufficiency and legality of w bich shall be satisfactory to this committee, that we report the pending bill with such amendments as the committee may agree upon." The debate upon this proposition was continued until the committee became weary, and after i o'clock adjourned until Monday morning. The Chairman and Messrs. Hitt, Bowden and Springer expressed themselves as of opinion that Chicago had already given sufficient guar antees in the papers presented bv the Chair man of the Finance Committee of the city of Chicago: but the New York and St. Louis peo ple insisted upon having the matter more accu rately defined. Accomplished Her Denrest Wish. From the Washington Times-Star. There is now no question that Cincinnati, aftor years of effort to be recognized as tho musical center, has accomplished hear dearest wish. At a musicians' convention in that town recently Baltimore local, No. 17, was excom municated, expatriated and expelled because it had employed a musician who had been dis missed from Pittsburg local, No. 15. A UNIQUE AFFAIR. Tho Second Presbyterian Church to be the Scene of a Chinese Wrildlnzr. A Chinese wedding that will interest a great many people will take place at the Second Presbyterian Church Friday evening. March 28. The title roles will be assumed by Miss Minnie Howard and Mr. George Herron. They will be attended at the altar by eight bride maids. Misses Maud McLain, Kato Foster, Ada Foster, Lou C. McLain, Vida McCuI longh, Anna Herron, Margaret Sutherland and Nellie Backer. Mis Katharcne Howard and Mr. Howard Wright will act as parents of the bride, and the minister, or go-betwoen, will be Virginia McCreery. Elaborate Chinese costumes will be worn by all who take part in tho reremony. and appro- Eriate music will make the entire performance ighly interesting. The Lotteries should Go. From the Oil City Blizzard,! It is claimed that nearly all the postal clerks and carriers who become thieves began, by stealing letters addressed to lottery agents, which thev know are almost certain to contain money. The lotteries should go, though it is just about as profitable for lottery patrons to have their letters stolen in transit as to reach their destination. Pitlsbnrs Ladles to Attend Games. Prom the Savannah Morning News.J Twenty young ladies of Pittsburg. Pa., have formed themselves into a club to attend base ball games in that city. The membership is just about the size for two female "nines," and such enthusiastic admirers of the game will probably take to the diamond. WAST AX EIGUT-HOUIt DAT. Chicago Union Carpenters Issue Ad. dress to Their Brethren. CniCAGO, March 15 The union carpenters of this city to-day issned a circular, copies of which will be sent to carpenters' unions all over the country. It notifies th'o guild that they propose to demand eight hours work per day at 40 cents per hour on April 7 next and that they expect to bo compelled to strike to get their demand. They ask tho trado to prevent union car penters, and, as far as possible, non-union car penters from coming here to take their places. It Looks Very Rlnch Like Revision. From the Baltimore American.! There are 211 Presbyteries in this country. Of these, S have voted on the quostion of re vision 33 favorably and 18 in opposition to any change. The same proportion. If carried through the entire Presbyterian membership, will make the members 2 to 1 for revision. Fcrhaps, it would be safe to say from tho facts at hand that such Is about the case. The Clover Clnb Bnnquet. On Thursday evening next the famous "Clover Club." of Philadelphia, will tender a farewell banqnet to Hon. Charles Emory Smith, United States Minister to Russia, a member of the club, at tbo Hotel .Bellevue. There will be a feast of reason and a how of soul. Mr. Leonard Wales, of this city, will attend tbe banquet as the guest of Hon. E. 8. Stuart President of the Pennsylvania i State League ot Republican clubs. 1 .AV-i . ,-.Ji.t !,.,. w-i NATURE LIES TO US, Things Wo See and Hear Not All What They Seem A Pons Asinorum Everywhere Soand bnt n Vibration, Color a Motion A River That Ran Up. rWIUTTEN FOB TnK DISPATCH.! 'Thought will out andlanguage is the medium for its communication; so say grammarians, and that is, perhaps, as good definition as can be given. "Language is the medium for the communication of thought" In the absence of some medium, as occurs between persons speaking different languages, or between civilized and uncivilized people, much strategy and many devices have to be re sorted to to start a tram ot thought, which may be enjoyed in common or alike profitable to both. The attempt of Captain John Smith, of Colonial times, to illustrate the solar system to the savages by means of a pocket compass, was not only strategic, enabling him to gam time, but was also a means and a pretext to put In motion a train of ideas in the minds of the crude savages in common with his own; and in so far as the compass accomnlished that end, it was a Ian guage symbol. A Language of Nature. T stay also cite the case of the English noble man who registered and took his meals at a hotel where the head cook was a Chinaman. Ihe English, as a people, are proverbially known to be keenly sensitive in the getup of that which is to constitute their diet Thi3 nobleman had just learned enough of Chinese cuisine to be somewhat suspicious, and such a state of mind was a faithful talisman to save his gastronomy, on more than one occasion, from the wide range which Chinese cookery sometimes takes. On one occasion the cook brought in a large fuming dish, which appeared, as far at least as human judgment and foresight could determ ine, to be a roast duck, temptingly garnished witn an the savory vegetables or. tne garden and placed it upon the table, easily accessible to an tne guests, uur noDieman eyea tne uisn with an eagerness which indicated a healthy state of digestion, but as tbe identity of the dish had not yet been establisned beyond a reasonable doubt he said to the cook, interrog atively, while pointing at the dish: "QuackT" "Quack?" He was agreeably surprised at the response, "bow-wow," Now. by the definition laid down by gram marians for our guide. "Quack, quack," "bow-wow," as far as it goes, is language, since it enabled these two parties, having scarcely anj thing else in common, to hold familiar con verse. A River Running Up. A long with the linguistic conventionalities, which stern necessity invents to bridge over some chasm met with, in our peregrina tions through life, I may mention that known as the side-splitting "bull;" and as a fair sam- file of geographical obfuscation, will relate the ollowing taken from our country's history: Before tbe settlement of Alabama, and while the State was yet in a Territorial condition, an expedition was fitted ont to make hydrograph ic surveys and other explorations of interest to the National Government The Commission was not to break the seal of their instructions until they had entered Mobile Bay. When at length their destination was reached and the seal broken, it was found that the chief object of the expedition was to locate Mobile Bay, Mobile river and its tributaries, and, particu larly, to ascertain how far up the principal tributary, the Tombigbee, ran. This was all plain and intelligible, except that which related to the Tombigbee. They had, they thought, al ready learned enough o'f the general trend of the rivers to know that tbe latter part of these instructions, at least, contained a geographical error. The business of the expedition was, therefore, suspended until the head of depart ment at Washington, from whom the instruc tions emanated, could be conferred with. A monnted courier was dispatched across the continent 2,000 miles to bear the important in telligence to Washington that the Tombigbee did not run up at all, but on the contrary ran down, and that the expedition awaited further instructions. r That was too much for official dignity. The further instructions came, but they wero that the "chief of the expedition should report im mediately at Washington." Colleao Boys' Jokes. JJ early allied to the "bull" is the term known among stuuen is m college, pons asinorum. Tbe seniors, when in a frame of mind to enjoy a little joke, at tbe expense of the freshmen or sophomores, will introduce some fact or sub ject for discussion or friendly interchange of opinion, the truth of which is the opposite of what appears. Tho latter, being comparatively unsophisticated and void of suspicion, will, in all probability, answer according to appear ances and against the truth. Their position is then disclosed to them, amid shouts of derision from the seniors. In this case the truth is said to be a pons asinorum, or ass's bridge, and there is implied in the use of the term tbe hint that in making our debut Into life it may possi nly have been by the "ass's bridge." The rising and setting of the sun is a pons asinorum to everyone who does not under stand tbe solar system and who, following na ture's appearances, believes that the snn does really rise and set. They become accustomed to nature's assertions and her appearances are one ana the same thing; and when she says there is a horse, a tree or mountain, we find it to be generally about as nature says. And when she says that the sun rises, moves and sets she does so with the same emphasis, the same apparent sincerity as when she tells us there is a mountain. Again, when it thunders nature tells us there is great commotion and noise in the upper sky, and tells it with even more sincerity than usual; and but few people to this day doubt her utterances in this state ment, when, in reality, it is only another pons asinorum. There is no noise or commotion in the outside world. The noise Is in our ears. Something is going on in nature which starts the drums of the ear to beat tbe "reveille," and that is all the sound there is. What it is that is taking place in nature, or how she af fects us to produce that impression, we do not know. But we do know that if there were no ears there would be no sounds. Sound, being purely subjective, belongs only to tho body. Olhcr Little Deceptions. TN many other ways nature deceives us; and only by observation and experiment are wo enabled to entrap her in her lies. When look ing in a mirror or body of clear water she tells us there Is a man on the other side; she tempts us to walk upon tbe beautiful snow, but says nothing of the treacherous ico she has care fully concealed beneath. And we would never bo any wiser were it not that in the sequel we find our heels where our head onghtto be and vice versa. She lies to us, when if we look in a convex mirror, she tells us that we are as fat as "Falstafl" and In a concave, that we are as lean as "Cassios.' She lies to ns when she says a pool of water i3 only two feet deep when in reality it is six; that a stick standing in water is bent when we know it to be straight; that a mountain is only a mile or so away when it is ten; that a speck of dirt on our eyelash is a coon on a distant tree; that the grass is green when we know that no colors exist in nature. Thus, when wo look at a table painted red, nature tells us it is red and all the world be lieves nature in this statement. She tells us it Is really red and not that the color is a mere quality which our eyes paint upon it She tells us also that tbe color is an external verity, and would be so if there were no eyes to be hold It Color Only a Vibration. "MATURE, in short, gives an external verity to all the deliverances of tho senses; that the things seen are red, white, sound, smooth, hard, soft, sour, sweet just as they impress us. In all these nature lies, and the truth here, as before, is simply a pons asinorum. The red color of the table is only vibration of a certain length and rapidity, as believed by all scien tists, which produces upon tho mind tne im pression of red. If the vibrations were a littlo slower or faster, as we soe in tbe change, which colon undergo during tho progress of the dav, the color would be black or white. Different kinds of paint produce vibrations of different length and swiftness and that gives all the variety of colors seen in nature. In fine, the farther this subject is pursued and the deeper nature is probed, tbe more de ceitful and void of probity she becomes. She is man's buffoon and man is her jest, and she seems never to tire of the comic burlesque. Prof. James M. Peyob. THE OLD SABBATH. Sweet Sabbath of the human soul, We long and wait for thee; Thy perfect peace, thy pure control, U'r every land and sea. Thou know'st no day, the rears were young AVhen yet thy perfect law Of liberty and love first sprung From God without a flaw. Thou know'st no creed nor race nor time, But over every hour Of consecrated life divine Flows thy immortal power. As after every labor, kind Nature brings her rest To weary hand3 and hearts, eo bind Thy peace across oar breast. O, holy Sabbath, born of love Before the morning stars Sang In the heav'nly choirs above, Come, heal the nation's scars. W.B. Tkorn: ,&m-' 'i'-AA. . W.a.Jo:aaairs,ft,f&.At- ,, -i ONE OF NATURE'S CURIOSITIES. A fllyiterloni, Bottomless Lako In Which No Living Thing Can Survive. rsraCLU. TELBqBAM TO TOT DISPATCH 1 Birmingham, ala., March 15. 'Devil's Lake," in Calhoun county, Ala., 70 miles east of this city, is one of the most remarkable, natural curiosities to be found in America. The lake is oval in sbape and covers about four acres of ground. No vegetation of any kind grows on its banks and nothing lives In its waters. Even snakes and terrapins shun tbe waters of Devil's lake, and fish placed in it die In a few hours. The water is clear limestone, with a peculiar taste, which makes it unpalata ble to man or beast. Horses and cows will not drink it, no matter how thirsty they may be. Deep down below the surface of tbe lake may be keen what appears to be the charred and blackened trunks of large trees. They stand upright in tbe water, but have neither root nor branch and never rise to the surface or sink to the bottom. The lake has no outlet and the volume of water in it is tbe same all tbe time. A strange fatality attaches to thi3 lake. Once it was the favorite resort of the boys of the neighborhood for bathing and swimming, but now they never go near It. Fifteen boys have been drowned in its waters in twice as many years. A few of the bodies were recovered, but those who w ere drowned any distance from the banks sank to tbe bottom and were never brought to the surface. The depth of tbe lake has never been ascer tained, fcoundlngs to a depth of 700 feet found no bottom, and tho people in the vicinity say the lake has none. The Indian legend of the crigm ot the lake is that before tbe white man came to this country two tribes became involved In a war, and after a number of bloody battles the smaller tribe was almost ex terminated. Then tbe old men and chiefs of the weak tribe sued for peace and arranged for a council. While the pipe was being passed ainund a signal was given and the chiefs of the strong tribe suddenly sprang up with drawn tomahawks and murdered every one of the chiefs of tbe smaller tribe. Then the war was renewed and carried on until the weak tribe was exterminated. A few moons after the massacre of the chiefs a fire broke ont in the pine forest where the massacre occurred. The lire burned in this spot for eight moons and the ground sank down ont of sight; the fire disappeared, and in its stead ap peared the lake. The Indians gave the lake a name which means "lake of death." Shipping Iron to Pittsburg. from the Cincinnati Times-Star. 1 Alabama has been shipping iron to Pittsburg, and Boston florists always send a few carloads of exotics to New Orleans for the Mardi Gras. We shall only reach the climax of incongruities when Pennsylvania competes with Mississippi as a cotton-growing State, when Florida mo nopolizes the ice export business and Alaska raises all the world's oranges. FEESH LENTEN LOGIC. SNAP SHOTS FIRED AT POPULAR TARGET3 BY THE DISPATCH PHILOSOPHER. To be Returned. I asked her if she loved me She said, "Yes." Bald I, "Then you will give me Just one kiss." She said, her loving glances On me bent, "I will, but 'tis not given, Only lent" And as I pressed the darling to my breast Said I, '"Twill be repaid with interestl" An Economical Girl. Jennie George, I think you will have.to turn that gas down a little lower. George Certainly, darling. The request is an evidence of your affection for your father. You do not wish his gas bill to be large. Jennie Exactly so. Father (who has overheard the foregoing con versation Nevermind, George; burn her high or burn her low, the meter works all the same. Jennie That's so. papa, and the best thing you can do is to turn it off altogether. George Amen! Father Yes. So I had the electric light company place one of their lights in front of this parlor, and they are about to turn on hat see. there it is! Floods with light this apart mentt Jennie George, let us go into the kitchen. Poor Prospect. First Poet Have you done well this winter? Second Poet Very well. F. P. So have I; but I'm afraid S. P. Afraid of what7 F. P. That the winter's work will be followed by a spring idyl. Touched Her on tho Right Spot. Recently bereaved widow (to caller) I am afraid I will be poor company to-day for you. Friend Why moper Come out and take a walk through the streets. It will do you good. R. B. W. Oh! I could not think of it F. 1 saw some lovely mourning styles as I came along. K. B. W. (with interest) Indeed! Well, perhaps a walk through the streets would do me some good. Thev Are All Sensible to Flattery. Tramp (to servant girl who answers his ring at the bell) Madam, pardon me. I am sorry to take yon away if even for a moment from tho supervision of the domestic duties of your household and the direction of your servants, but I am really in need and if Servant girl (with a gratified smile stealing over her countenance) Walt a moment, my poor man. She disappears and speedily reappears with a generous supply of food and pressing a quarter into bi3 hands, says: "Call again when you are this way," And as the tramp goes down the road he chuckles and murmurs to himself: "That's the best racket yet. To mistake the lady for her daughter is a played out game, but to mistake tbe servant for the missus! Ah! That's what fetches the vittlesl" Lovely Womnn. Oh woman! in onr hours of ease Uncertain, coy and hard to please And variable as the shade By the light quivering aspen made; When pain and anguish wring the brow, A ministering angel thou ! But when you at the play do wear A seven-storied hat I swear (And so I'm sure will other men) You are not deemed an angel then. Not much. You put me in a rage; 1 see jour hat but not tho stage. And pain and anguish wring my brow For quite a nuisance then art thou I The Original. When Jonah was cast overboard The sailor3 laughed in glee. And cried: "Down goes McGinty To the bottom of the sea I" Tho Floor Walker's Plaint. "Ha! Jack, you're married now, I hear; I wish you every joy." "Thanks. I've been married for a year And have a little boy." "Where are you now? Still at the store?" "I am; and sad's my plight! For I not only walk the floor By day, but every night!" lis! Ho! Ha! ha! again tho skies are clear. La grippe its work has done; There's cold still in the atmosphere, But In the head there's none. The Fnilicr-in-Law. Scene: Boston Woman's Clnb. Time, 1800. Mrs. S. Have another cup of tea, dear? Mrs. H. Thank you, dear; but I must got home. Mrs. S Why should you hurry? Your hus band will not chide you if you are a little late; Mrs. H. It is not my husband, but my father-in-law that I fear; he is staying with us at present! Settled. "Where shall be held tho great World's Fair?" O'er this no more men make the jaw go. And though Now York may rant and swear The fair's to be held in Chicago. Phort nnd Sweet. TnE man who ha3 to mind his wife Is often found minding the baby, too. The woman who hasn't a real sealskin will soon be a3 happy as she who has. Gkkaldine asks: "If marriages are made in heaven, where are the divorces made?" In Cbicago, dear. Jokes about tho sealskin jacket are far fetched, and the humorist who makes them is in danger of getting tbe sack. uzobob Russx&xi Jackson. CUKIOUS CONDENSATION An Alfoona horse received two 1,300 volt shocks from a broken wire and wa3 un. hurt At Cherokee, Ga., a 'Squire united a verv young couole. The groom was 18 and thj bride 12 j ears of age. The hundred and twenty-fifth house keeper of an old widower of Pleasantville, Pa, gave him a thrashing the other day. Milo Cooper, a former slave of Jefferson. Davis, now living at Orlando, Fla., has sent a lot of fine peach trees to Mrs. Jefferson Davis. Two weeks ago Hollis Mosher, of Rocfc ford, drew a sparrow-bounty of !H1 19- Las week he presented 1,874 heads and drew $56 25. The young women of the Detroit, Mich., School of Art have revolted because the con ductor of that institution decreed that no pupil shall be allowed to chew gum. A young couple in Sampson county, N. C. were married on Tuesday. The lady's name was Miss James Henry and that of the groom was Mr. Henry James. Mr. Ward Parsons, of Parsons, offers to donate five acres of welLlocated land near tho town of Parsons. W. Va., to anv company that will give steady employment to 50 men. Ex-Senator William Mahone. of Vir ginia, will deliver an address on Slondav even ing next at the Manufacturers' Club 1409 Wal nut street on 'The Black Man in the South." Christopher Schwartz, a prominent bakerof Allentown, has brought suit for $500 damages against Elmer Bernhard. who is al leged to have said that Schwartz sold stale bread. Some idea of the amount of plates kept by the Methodist Book Concern fn New York maybe formed from thefact that the aeent3 have just sold for old metal over SO tons of old plates and type. It is stated that the Russian Govern ment will attempt in April to lift two Englih steamers, which were sunk off Balaklava during the Crimean War. It i believed that one of the vessels contains 40,000, George LaBarge, of Ada, felled a tree recently and found a steel trap grown fast be tween two limbs in the top, and an owl's feather in the trap. There was an owl in the neighbor hood some years ago with a trap fast on (his foot ' The results of recent experiments in the Mediterranean showing how far daylight will penetrate the water were found with geUtlne bromide plates. The greatest depth was 1J51S feet or 327 feet short of the limit assigned some years ago. In Chester, Pa., the colored people h.tva come to the conclnsion. after a trial of e-ght years, that tbe education of white and b.ck: children together does not work satisfacto f y, and have asked for separate schools to be.s tablished. There is a negro man in Hickcly Monntain, N. C.who is the champion runneif the Stite. He is a great rabbit hunter and hunts without dog organ, and can catch mora rabbits by outrunning them than anybody elio can with dogs. The great body of the Eskimos of the Arctic region, the Tinnehs ot the Tipper Yukor. and tbe Eskimos of tho coast of Bebring Sea live in log huts partially underground. They have made less advancement in civilization than the lower coast tribes. The eulichon, or candle fish, which am found near the glacial streams, in the Arcti region, are dried by the natives and used frr lights during their long winter evenings. Tbfy are also salted and smoked, put up like herring and exported to a limited extent An Adelaide, Australia, daily paper has in its employ three men named Day. One of them is called Sun Dty, because be is a cler gyman: another being the cashier, is called Pay Day. while the third, being a law reporter, goes by the name of Judgment Day. There is a perch fish in a well at Mr. William Ayeras near Nashville, Ga.. known to be 35 years old. When the well Is being cleaned "perche" is taken out, placed in a bucket of fresh water, and kept nntil the work is com pleted. Tbe nsh keeps the well clear of all in sects. Harriman, the pedestrian, returned W ednesday to Wabash from Cbicago, where he has completed arrangements for his great walk of 3,000 miles to the Pacific coast on a wager of $3,000. The final deposit of S50O was made Tuesday night in New York by Harriman'' backers. It seems that lhe African elephant is in, danger of being as thoroughly exterminated ai has ben the American bison. Tbe demand for ivory has caused them to be relentlessly bunted and they have become so scarce that the supply of ivory has greatly decreased and its price has advanced in proportion. An Alabama negro recently brought to Birmingham some chips 'cue from a cork tree growing in his neighborhood. He says the tree was imported from tbe old country andplanted many years ago, when a mere twig. It has grown to be several feet in circumference, and the chips show it to be a genuine cork tree. State Food Commissioner Derthick has been examining tbe extra pure Vermont maple syrup sent into Ohio by a Detroit firm and be finds it compounded of ono part of sugar to two carts glucose. Is this due to the sugar tariff, or to an awakening Detroit conscience? A few years ago the formula was one barrel of sugar to five of glucose. In a suburban cemetery near Detroit are three graves of husband3 of the same woman, all in a row, and a most remakable and suggestive of the place Is the three head stones. The first to Jbe burled received a very handsome and expensive stone; tbe second ex hibits a considerable reduction, and the third is a very cheap affair indeed. William Martin, a pattern maker for the Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Com pany, met a singular death at South Pittsburg, Tenn. He was in an intoxicated condition, and while eating breakfast undertook to swal low a piece of steak two inches wide and six inches long. It stuck in his throat and wonld neither go down nor np, and before medical aid could be summoned Martin choked to death. While a boy was cutting bananas from a bunch hanging tn front of a Burlington. Vt. grocery store, a large tarantula sprang at him, striking him on the side of the neck. From, the boy's neck the insect leaped into a barrel b alt full of crackers. No one caring to med dle with such an ugly customer, at the sugges tion of a policeman the barrel as dosed with kerosene, and then carried Into the street and set on fire. W. D. Danzler, an old colored man who lives in Orangeburg county, S. C. goes every yeirtotho graveyard where his former master and mistress lie buried and cleans off their graves. In speaking of the matter, he said: "I care for those who once cared forme. These white folks I belonged to before God broke the bonds of slavery, and, since God has taken them first and left me behind. I go everv tmi and clean off their graves." The story come3 from Augusta.Ga., that recently a ben hatched out a lot of chickens, but to one of them, for some nnac countacle reason, showed much aversion, finally driving the little chick from her flock! But the chick quickly found a sympathetic partner in a white puppy that owed allegiance to the same household. They eat and play to gether. When the chick gets sleepy it hops on. tbe back of the dog and dozes away with as much confidence as If under the protectlne wing of Its mother. CUEEEST TIMELY TOPICS. Our office boy wants to know what makes buzz saw. Elephant Tippecanoe's heart was too large for him to carry and last week he keeled over and died. It is said of "Tip" that he was the first elephant to die suddenly, bnt tbe people who have died suddenly from the lovable dispositions of elephants Is past counting. It is said that a little over 7,000 divorces were granted In Kansas the past M years. The record Is a good one, considering the number of drug stores that dispense poor whisky. A man has been fined 510 for snoring In a New York church. Considering the fact that there are no flies in the winter time to keep a man awake in church, the flue was an outrage and should be remitted. The Wheeling Hegutcr has donned a new spring suit. It now looks as lovely and sings as brightly ss the robin In the parts yesterday. Aunt Matilda Rubv has just died in Ken tucky at the advanced age of 135 years, she has teen an inveterate tobacco fiend for many years, and but for the use of the obnoxious stun, might Have lived on forever. An amendment to the Oklahoma bill in the House, which has pissed, prohibits the sale of in toxicating liquors until after the adjournment of the first legislative assembly. The amendment was added, no doubt for the purpose of allowing the members to ride home. On Thursday a Hungarian of MllnesviUe. Pa-, put up bis wife, furniture and a crow at auction. A number of the woman's admirers were present and one of thenr finally captured the prizes for tsi. II any State in this broad uni verse eaa neat uut, now u the ums to sptatti A Wfi XgBafeAsmgmamiMmtwuwttZBMbKsaMa i ' ' ''SBsPgByssssBBgssBBsrfflnMraEBBsHSjEsp