THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH p SECOND PART. PAGES9T0I6. ' COUNTS AND BUNS Celebrities Among the Diplo mats at Washington. BEAUTY FEOM THE OEIENT. Ko Actlrity in the Market for Titles, Money and Hearts. PES PICTURES OP THE ROTABLES tCOKBESrOXDEKCS OF THE DISPATCH.! Washington, June 7. 2 Washington no- Ibility centers in 5?V the diplomatic clr- (jaljlPN cle. We have S Jg American princes KSBif5& y tne hundreds, - 1? llSO:' butthesimon-pure. unadulterated bine blood which flows only in the veins of those with titles be 'ore their names is almost confined to the families of the foreign ministers. Every legation has its Count or Baron and there are Countesses and Baronesses by the score. The most mawkish, sentimental vhippersnapper among the attaches has enough titles before and after his name to fill a sheet of note paper, and the toadies of our society are constantly bending the knee before nominal greatness. 2Jot a few of the Counts are bonafide and Borne of the Barons are noble, both in name end in deed. The Baron de Struve, the head of the Russian legation, has had a long diplomatic career, and he comes of a family which embraced the great astrono mer who was the first director of the Im perial Observatory at St. Petersburg. There was no brighter woman in "Washington than was Madame de Struve, and General Grant called her the most accomplished lady he had ever met. Baron de Struve is one of the richest of the Washington minis ters. He gets about 40.000 yearly for en tertaining and he has a number of rich men among his attaches. A EEAL BUSSIA2T DBOSCHKY. Everyone has heard of Alexander Greger, who started Washington society to paper chasing the last administration, and who is cuch a patron ot outdoor sports, lie has the finest horses in Washington, and he has a Russian groom as broad as he is long, who drives him about in a Russian droschkv. One of his horses has a pedigree of 120 years, and Mr. Greger is one 01 the best looking diplomats in the saddle. The English Minister has a title. Queen Victoria knighted him in 1874, and he ii a knight or the Commander o the Bath and lias also grand cross ol St. Michael and St. George. Lady Pauncefote is the daughter of a noted Indian army officer. Her name was Cubbitt, and she is descended from the famous Lord Major of that name. She has had a long experience in Enclish society and she is well fitted to aid Sir Julian in getting rid ot the 540,000 which the English Government allows him for wining and dining. The British Legation here is per haps the best house tor entertaining in asnington. It is an immense red brick find stone structure and it belongs to John .& A Blue-Blooded Russian, Bull. The English Government gives its Minister a residence and pays for his furni ture, and Sir Julian is said to have a for tune in his own right. His family is a de lightful one. He has three daughters, one of whom, Miss Maud Pauncefote, has ap peared in society this winter. DEVOTED TO AMERICAS- WAYS. She is a tall, graceful girl of more than ordinary attainments and culture. She is fond of novels, is devoted to horses and dogs, likes muMC and is apparently as fond of American things as the other Washing ton girls are fond ot English fads. She dresses well, and her mother has some of the finest diamonds in Washington. Atone of the receptions here Sir Julian wore about his neck thered ribbon of the order of the Bath and his other knightly decorations, and the attaches and Secretaries of the Le gation came out with brass buttons on their dress coats, which, by the way, were adorned with velvet Sir Juliau's" servants are dressed in livery and his coachmen and foot men have bugs on tneir hats. TheEreuch Minister is a count. His sauie is Theodore de Koustan. He is a abort, round, dark-laced man of 40 or 45, and isa great favorite with the ladies ot Washington society. He was a diplomat at Tunis be ore he came here, and he has now been in Washington for some years. He is a bachelor, too, and the title-hunters have been after him, but without avail. He still ticks to single blessedness, and though he imiles often he gives his favors indiscrimin ately. Count Sala, oue ot his secretaries, is anotherhaudsome member ot the diplomatic corps. He is married, but the Countess Bala prefers Paris to Washineton, and in deed the Count seems to bear his enforced widowerhnod very welL He is very popu lar in Washington society and has lots of friends. AX ADJIIEAL COUKT. The girls all admire the new German Minister, Count Arco Valley. I wish I could paint him as he looks at a Washing ton reception. He is over six feet tall, weighs a tenth of a ton and is a magnificent picture of physical beauty. His face is as rosy as the rising sun, and his monocle, which he screws into bis left eye, is as big around as a trade dollar. He has a gorgeous turnout. His footman is more wonderful than Solomon in his glory, and he had for a time a man to ooen his carriage door almost as tall as himself who wore a sword and military cap. He either does not care whether he attracts attention or not, or he delights in being noticed, tor he is always doing something which creates comment. Not long ago he walked along Pennsyl vania avenue with two immense hounds lol lowing a string which he held in his hand, endot course everyone looked. The Count is a bachelor, and ii he wishes a desirable catch with a lew millions attached he can get it here. He comes of an old German family, and he has a royal salary as Minis ter. His Government owni its legation building, and a bright American girl could make, things hum if she would marrv him. PBOM THE ORIENT. (Washington has several nobles from Asia. The dark-laced Turkish Minister, Mavo reyni, is. a Bey, and that is equal to thetitle of Sir in England. He is not over 40, talks fog iisn weu. ana u n polite and accoa- j gi plished gentleman. It is true that he has in all probability a half dozen wives in Tur key, but the Sultan does not limit him, and if there are any American girls who wish to marry a Turk they can attack Mavoreyni. All that he will have to do in order to ow a clear title will be to sav four times to his Turkish wives: "I divorce you. I divorce you. I divorce you. I divorce you." This done he will be a single man once more, and will be as iree to mate again as any grass widower in the United States. The Coreans are nobles, but both men are married, and very mnch married, toof for they have anumber of wives and concubines in their own Hermit Kingdom. They have each a wife here with them, and the Corean ladies are among the bright, picturesque curiosities ot the diplomatic circle. Their complexions are Jersey cream. Their eyes are brown, and their lip are as red as cher ries wnen ripe. They wear a quaint dress of bright-colored silks, have silk caps on their heads, and thev have so broken throngh the customs of tbetr country as to attend with their lords at the fashionable drawing rooms and receptions. EXJOT AMERICAN ritEEDOM. They have learned to talk a little English and delight in making calls. They have a piano and sewing machine at the legation building and their ironing and washing for both themselves and tbelr husbands is done at the laundry. In Cores a woman's chief wort is ironing her husband's clothes. She cannot go out except alter dark, and she lives in the back oi the house. These girls can sit at the front windows and look out on the street. They have shown themselves very adaptable to our civilization and they will probably be missionaries in the march ol civilization when they get back nome. I saw them at the White House reception, and was introduced to them there by their husbands. I am delighted with them and they are mnch prettier in my eyes than the Our German Count. small-footed woman who presides over the Chinese legation. The Chinese Minister comes of the best blood ot China, but tbero is no nobility among the Celestials and the Minister has attained his rank only through his high standing at the public examina tions. The Chinese Minister's wife is named Tsni Kno Tin, and according to the custom of tne Chinese she does not go out of her uuuic ouc ass not oeen to a reception this winter, and if she went she would have to be supported by two maids, for her feet are so small that she can hardly stand upon them. A NOVEL THEATEB PASTY. Her only appearance at an v public place this winter was at the theater where she came one nightand occupied a box with sev eral other Chinese ladles. The Corean la I-- - ... mwc uigub auu theCorean men sat in the tame box. The dies had annthcr hnr tha . -.:!.. . laaies nad tne tront seat and both the Chinese and the Corean bor blazed with the bright colors of the tar East. The wife of the Corean charge d'affaires wore a short waist of bright blue silk with a wine-colored silk skirt and the other Corean lady wore a short waist of lemon-colored silk with a bine silk skirt. Hermann, the con juror, was the attraction and the Chinese Minister's wife evidently thought that the man had a devil while the Corean girls laughed. The Chinese Minister did not ap pear with his wife though it is said he paid tor the boxes. The Dean of the Italian Diplomatic Corps is Baron de Eara, and bis wile is as blue blooded as her husband. She is a very beau tiful woman, and she has for the past ten years been one of the leading figures of Washington society. She is descended from a Lombard lamily of eminence in politics and science, and her father was one of the most noted physicians ot Italy. He was a great politician as well, and he was one of the cbif movers in the revolution which made Victor. Emanuel King. The Baron ess de Fava is a very fine musician. She sings well and when she was a girl thought somewhat of going on the operatic stage. Her familv frowned down the idea and she withheld her talents for private life. She has a son in Washington who is noted as an engineer and architect, and is a'profesror of one of the universities. A BIT OP BOMANCE. I heard a curious story the other day """ "b uwuiiujuuihh, oenor jinrnaga. Sobillty From the Orient. which may be true and may not be. He was Secretary oi Legatiou here years ago, and was educated at tbe Jesuit College iu Georgetown. Wmlehewas Secretary of Legation he fell in love with the young daughter oi W.W. Corcoran, who died some years ago leaving about 510,000,000. Mr. Corcoran was very popular with all tbe Ministers, but though he entertained tbem be did not care to have any of them in his lamily. He learned that Mnruaga had his eves upon his daughter, and he called upon the Spanish Minister, accompanied by one of the United States Senators, and informed him that he must break ofi" the affair be tween his Secretary and his daughter. It seems that an engagement had already been made. The Spanish Minister set his foot down upon it, and the young msn naturally be came very angry. He challenged Mr. Cor coran to fight a duel, which Mr. Corcoran of course did not accept Finding that the love anair was still going on sometime aiter this, Mr. Corcoran went to Mr. Buchanan, who was then Secretary of State and demanded that he should stop the af fair by requesting the recall of the young man to Spain. Buchanan refused to do this and the young couple continued their billing aud cooing. When opposition ceased they found, however, that thev did not care so much for each other after all, and the en gagement was broken off. Miss Corcoran married George Eustis, a member of Con gress from Louisiana, and the bulk of the Corcoran estate went to her c ildren. Scnor Mnruaga married a Bussian lady who died while he as minister to Mexico, and the Minister's stepdaughter married Mr. Yturbe, of one of tbe ancient families and largest land owners of Mexico. XS AMEBICAK COUNTESS. Tho Mexican Minister, Count Matiaajj Hip Bomero, has one of the brightest American women tor his wife. She is the daughter of an old Virginia lamilvand was a Philadel phlan when theMinis'ter marriedher. Mme. Bomero is one of the fine looking women of Washington and one ot the most accom plished. She speaks several languages and she entertains magnificently at the Mexican Legation, within a stone's throw of the White House. Her husband is one of the closest friends of the PresidentotMexico.and he was his Colonel and Chief of Staff when he was at the head of the Mexican army during the French invasion. He is one of the most efficient diplomats in Washington as well as one of the most popular. One of the most remarkable things about him was his friendship lor Grant, whom he offered $1,000 at the time of the failure of Grant & Ward, and to whom he stood ready at any time to do anything in his power. There are a number, of bine blooded diplomats here from South America, and there were a dozen counts and barons among the P,an-Auiericans. The most ot them, however, were poor, and though not a few of them were evidently ready to marry rich American girls, the rich American girls did not seem to be ready to marry them. The result is that the Congress has come and gone and we have no engagements to chron icle. THE MATRIMONIAL MAEKET. In fact, there are fewer marriages of dip lomats than you would suppose. The single men amoug the various legations are not backward in saying that they would not object to an American heiress for a wife, and there was a giddy young secretary here last year who said that he "was bound to have an heiress who had all the qualities of an augel and $5,000,000 to boot. At last ac counts be has not louod her. The secretarv of the Brazilian Legation, Mr. Gomez, is the only diplomat who has contracted an Ameri can alliance lor many years. He married an Indianapolis heiress, who had spent the most of her life abroad, and who spoke French more easilv thanEnzlish. She had. however, dark eyes and hair, and her man ner is so foreign that she is seldom taken for an American by strangers. At one time about half the diplomatic- corps had American wives, but the most of these have been promoted and have been advanced to foreign courts. I see that Prince Iturbide, the grandson of King Maximilian, of Mexico, was lately arrested in that country. He has been spending a good deal of his time here, and his mother was a Mist Green, of George town. Iturbide, the Emperor's son went to Georgetown College after his father was ex-' ecuted and fell in love with Miss Green and married her. He was brought' up near Washington, and Maximilian adopted him. He is much toadied whenever he is here. THE MOST NOBLE BLOOD. The most noble blood in Washington, however, is that ot the Bonapartes. Colonel Jerome Bonaparte owns a house here. He is the great grandson ol Jerome Bonaparte, the King of Westphalia, and the brother of Napoleon Bonaparte, who came to this couutry and fell in love with the beautiful Betsy Patterson, of Baltimore, and married her. Betsy Patterson died only a few years ago, and 'the family is, I understand, wealthy. Jerome Bonaparte was educated at West Point, and he left our army about 1856 to enter the Household Guards of Louis Napoleon. He was a great favorite of the Empress Eugenie, and he distin guished himself in the Franco-Prussian War. He had to flee from France at the close of that war to save his life, and then he came back to this conntry. He married Miss Edgar, a grand-daughter ot Uamel Webster, and took up his resi dence in Washington. He has been here until a year or so ago, and be is, I think, now traveling in Europe. He must be about 60 years of age, and he looks remarkably like Napoleon Bonaparte. He is a well educated man, thongh his education is altogether military. His younger brother, Charles, is a lawyer in Baltimore but Jerome is more of a man. about town than anything else. He is very quiet in his tastes, takes long walks and is very fond of horseback riding. There is nothing ostenta tious about him, and if the wheels of life and death and those of the ups and downs ot French governments should ever elevate him to the throne he will maintain his part with credit Miss Grundy, Jb. THICK OF TEE TAILOR. Hott He Plenses the Man Who Judge by the Cost or Ilia Suit Only. St, Lon Is Globe-Democrat. Nearly every man judges the quality of clothing above a certain grade by the price, and a certain tailor in this town, knowing this fact, takes advantage' of his customers in this way. He has wide tables, in which are drawers containing his samples. These drawers extend across the tables and can be pulled ont from either side. When a customer comes in a line of samples are taken outand shown him. He will probably say he wants something "better," and then the shrewd tailor goes around to the other side of the table. Bulls out the same drawer and takes out the same samples; but this time he adds say 0 per cent to the price, and the customer, who judges by price, finds a piece that suits him, gives his order, and goes his way, little thinking that he conld have obtained a suit of the same material at much less cost. ELEPHANTS HT AMERICA. Wonderful Remains of Animals That Rnnmrd Centuries Ago. Bt. LoalsFost-Ulspatch. It seems almost incredible that this busy, bustling and prosperous country was once a grazing ground for the elephant.- But there are indisputable evidences that it abounded from the equator to the Arctic Ocean either as the mammoth, mastodon, pygmy ele phant or dinotherium. Tusks and bones of mammoths have been plenty in some of the Middle and Southern States 'or America. Becent revelations also show A Tooth Found in Pennsylvania, that the "Elepbas Americanus" roamed the hills and valleys ol the Pacific Slope. Be- -tween Los Angeles and San Diego fragments of a gigantic skeleton were discovered, there being plenty to disclose that the animal iu life must have been one of the largest ever known. The tusks were at the largest part as big around as a child's body,and stretched out in graceiul curves 16 feet in length. One of tbe teeth weighed five pounds, and had the parallel dentive ridges peculiar to the elephant The elephant has eight teeth at a time, two on each side oi each jaw. 21 growing in the course of a regular life-time. They come first in the back part of the jaw, and gradually move to the front as tbey are cronnd awav. being pushed forward bv the " i tiT ; v.t.:j new Usui wuuj wuuttu PITTSBURG-, SUNDAY, JUNE 8, 1890. SUNDAY IN LONDON. Chilly Morning Services in Far Famed St. Panl's Cathedral. THE POPULARITY OF BEET HARTE. Draw-Backs of the Gorgeous Display In the Queen's Drawing Boom. OUE MINERAL WATERS AND KEROSENE. CCOBBXSFOITPEItCZ Or TUB DISPATCH. LoNTON,May31. TJNDAYin Lon don. I have been good all day to-day by law and custom, by act of Parlia ment and the grace of the Queen. I shivered in St. Paul's Cathedral in the morning, and sat with cold feet in Westmins ter Abbey in the afternoon. The thermometer was down to 40, the stone floors Were damp, and I believe the poor worship ers took home more pneumonia than re ligion. St. Paul's is a 510,000,000 church, with a great dome, but with little religion. The shivering worshipers looked poor. They were literally poor sinners. Next to me sat a very devout man. He followed the prayers religiously and cast up his eyes like St. Jerome. But, alasl it was all business with him, for alter the Litany he held out his hand and whispered: "Pleasegive me a penny. lam starving.' On one side of the beggar was the great marble sarcophagus of the Duke of Welling ton, and on the other the marble effigy ot Lord Nelson. There is here a magnificent monument to Cornwallis, who lost a nation, but no monument to Christ who saved a Miss Taylor's Toilet. The above sketch is from a photogranh and represents about 400 toilets seen at the Queen's Drawing Room. It is thm described bj Ponce f.w. -Vi?ntaff. the dressmakers who made it. Miss Taylor (presented by Dowager Duchess or Koxburghe). Bodice and train of faille and veloute stripe, prettllj.trimmed tulle, and large bouquets of daisies and heath; petticoats of satin, veiled mile, with clusters of daisies and heath. Ornaments, pearl necklace; head dress, plume and veil; bouquet, daisies and heath. Ostrich feathers In hair." world. There is a pile of marble for Chinese Gordon, who died in England, but not a slab lor the martyred disciples and a Savior who died for humanity. The services in St Paul were cold and sensuous. Not a word in song intonation or sermon could be un derstood, and the whole servfon . empty of ideas as a brass band. We might as well have listened to the Mohammedan service in Constantinople. DOESN'T SUIT A METHODIST. As we passed out a warm-blooded Metho dist from Kansas came in. Stepping up to a cossacked attendant he said, while his eyes glowed with Christian enthusiasm: "This is Christ's greatest church, isn't it?" "No," said the servant, "this is St, Paul's Cathedral." When the Methodist minister came out, he said: "The isi was right; Christ would be out of place between Lord ' Cornwallis aud the Duke of Wellington." I don't take much stock in Talmagism, but as I sat in this great tomb, I felt that it would be a reliel to seethe great live Brook- lynue jump into tne arena with a section of the Sea of Galilee in one hand, and the cedar of Lebanon in the other, and pound a little warm religion into the frozen Brit ishers. Bret Harte is now living in a quiet cot tage in Grove End road, near St John's Wood. He is getting old and bis hair is white, but the noVelist still retains all his old fire. His books sell immensely in En glandmore than tbqse of any other Ameri can writer. Mr. Harte's family is not with him, and the general impression in London is that he is a widower. Mr. Joseph Hat ton, a warm friend and neighbor of Mr. Harte, informs me tbat he is not now in the Consular service. No American is invited into the best English society more than Bret Harte. His American stories warm the English heart They never tire of the novelist's story about the first jury trial in California, and this is the way he told it the other night: ONE OP BBET HAEXE'S STOEIES. "It was over in the Mariposa Gulch in '50. They had never had a jury trial there. If a man stole a horse they lynched him, and that settled it Bnt the people, many or whom came from Massachusetts, began to tire of lynch law, and sigh for the good old jury trial of the East So one day, when Bill Stevens bad jumped a poor man's claim, the Massachusetts fellows resolved to give him a good old-lasnioned jury trial. They took him into the bacK end of the board postoffice, selected a jury, and the trial commenced. Dozens of witnesses were called, and finally the jury retired to agree on a verdict When they had about con cluded tbat Jim was innocent, the boys out tide came banging at the door. " 'What do you fellows want?' asked the foreman through the keyhole. " 'We waut to know if you h'alnt about agreed on a verdict If you h'aint, you'll have to get out We want this room to lay out the corpse in!' " We took a private letter from Mr. Blaine with the idea of.going through the ordeal of a presentation at tbe Queen's drawing room, but we found it so troublesome and expensive that we preferred to use the J money for opera tickets and carriage rides W 2sw ll IW0i mr'i "n l'f i "JsfcRij WJ (I i r"S u fc JB rlfflAl cfWSff Wfws0 lift. on Botten Bow. On inquiring we found that every lady presented had to have A SBESS ESPECIALLY MADE by certain court dressmakers and the gen tlemen a court suit. The dress had to be cut very low in the neck and had a train 12 feet lone. The gentleman's court suit is a swallow tail, trimmed with gold, a cocked hat, and knickerbocker trousers with kuee buckles and silk stockings. The hair of every lady has tq be surmounted with three white ostrich features. Alter buying these clothes at an expensive place, a court coacher has to be employed to train the de butante in the art of bowing and carrying a train. To back away from the Queen with a four yard train is no easy matter, and when a lady steps on her train and sprawls over the floor like a steamer chair, people want to laugh, but, being in the presence of the Queen, they don't. The cost of presentation in the cheapest possible form is about $400 or 500 lor a lady and $100 for a gentleman. No words are spoken at the presentation. It begins and ends with a ceremonious bow, an artificial, cast-iron smile, and the be3t Eli Perkins. bark out that a lady can make with a train four yards long. A gentleman to-day told me that he saw both Seward and Beverdv Johnson in knick erbockers and tight stockings. "Eeverdy looked very well," he said, "but Seward well Seward's calves made me ashamed of my country." AMERICA IIAS THE MINEBAI. 'WATERS I have been comparing American and European mineral waters. I find Congress water, or rather the Hathorn spring water ot Saratoga is precisely the same as the "Elisabethan Quelle" in Ho'mburg. The white sulphur water of West Virginia is identical with the waters of Wiesbaden and Carlsbad, while the hot sulphur springs ot Arkansas and Glenwood, Col., cannot be distinguished from the waters of Aix-les-Bains, near Geneva. It is not necessary for any sick Americans to come to Europe for mineral waters. We have the same waters at home. The waters ol Leamington, Eng land, are salt like the sea and a barrel of Saginaw salt will make a backyard fnll of them. If von dive into the Hudson at Sing Sing on an ebb tide, you'll think you are in a Leamington bath. There were several American bank cashiers in Leamington, who, so far as the water is concerned, might have gone to Sing Sing just as well. The English are slow to adopt new ideas. Strange as it may seem, the people are still using tallow candles all over the country. Tbey dida't know what kerosene was in Warwick and Bakewell. They had never used it At tbe Warwick Arms Hotel and Charing Cross Hotel in London, we had to go to our room with one tallow candle, and sit with it, too, or pay sixpence for an extra one. EXPERIENCE -WJIH JCALM-nr, DIPS. After writing vby -Our spleodid kerosene lights in America, this trying to write by the light of tallow candles is something dreadful. It is goinfj bick to barbarism. At Oxford I got fairly exasperated, and calling the porter, I asked him if he couldn't go out and buy me a kerosene lamp. "What be that their?" he asked in amnsement "Why, something to burn to give a good light," I said. "Lor yeas. I do know whar' to find that their," and off he started. But what do you think tbe fool brought me? Why, six tal low candlesl Light them? Why, of course I did, and if you'd seen hie trying to write with eight tallow candles in a row, you would have taken my table for a Catholic altar and the writer for a bald-headed monk. In London they are just beginning to use kerosene a little. They call it paraphene, but it has the same old Oil City smell. One snuff convinced me that I had struck oil. The smell was pleasanter to me than tbe perfume of flowers. The dealer told me be sold it at 16 and 24 cents per gallon. They have no splendid lamps to burn it in yet, but that will come in time. They tell me the French are burning our kerosene very generally, and that they have beautitnl lamps. " Em Peekins. CURLY IS A FLAGMAIT. A St. Louis Do Tbnt Warns Tenmiters of Apprnacblug Trains. St. Louis Fost-Dlspatcb. Scarcely anyone who passes the point of intersection of the Gravois road and tbe St. Louis and Oak Hill Railway fails to notice a little dog, acting as flagman at the railway crossing. This little animal is named Curly, and is tbe property and assistant of Flagman Edward Howard. One day as Howard wa. busy cleaning the lamps a train dashed into sight around tbe curve. Several wagons were approaching the cross ing and would probably have driven on, meeting with a serions accident had not the little animal rushed past its A Canine Flagman, master and begnn barking furiously, which bad tbe desired effect of stopping the teams. An idea then struck the master to train the dog to hold a flag. She could stand on her hind feet with perfect ease 'and to hold a red signal flag in her month wonld be a great help to him, as the passing trains are nnmerons. It took but very little time "to break her in" to hold a little red flag, and now every time a train whistles she runs to fetch it, and, standing on her hind legs, holds it alolt to warn drivers of the danger. The engineers all know the little dog and look out for her. In addition to this flat; work, Curly performs a varletyof tricks and is a good mimic. Just now sbe is rearing a lamiiv. nnLvftrvfim... .mh!..tMin i whistles she gets" her flag and does her duty. I jf fipL . II pbc FLOWING WITH FUN. Pens of Prominent Paragraphers Plied for Public Pleasure. LIVING LINES ON LOVE AND LOSE. Amusing Anecdotes, Penetrating Philoso phy, Distracting Dialect TITILLATING TEIFLE3 PDT IN TTPfl nrBrrTEN JOB the dispatch. I Tut Colin blsbs. Thy Colin sighs and sighs in valnl Sweet Phjills, doth a strong man's pain Afflict thee naught whose eyes grow wet To -ee within a spider's net Some fly by cruel cunning slalnT A loyal beart implores thy reign. If thou wouldst prove its truth, but deign To gaze within ab. gay coquette Thy Colln's eyes ! His laden heart muit still complain Until love mocks thy fine disdain; For hope attunes bis measure yet And let that rival not forget Who boasts tdy favor luckless swain Thy Colin's size ! Eva Wilder JIcGlabsox. Polk's Jokes. MART'S FAITH. Little Mary (who lives on the thirteenth floor of the Excelsior flats): "Mamma, is heaven higher than this?" "Yes, indeedBMary." "And when we die, are we going to heaven?" "I hope so, darling." "Mamma, if we are real good maybe we can get to move down on the second floor when we die." SOMEBODY 'WOEE THE BEEECHES. "I don't see the good," remarked Mr. Lamson, as he looked up from his piper, "of all this argyfyin' about whether it's pronerer to.say 'I wear trousers,' or'I wear pants.' To mv way o' thinkin' narry one of them ain't no better nor just plain 'I wear breeches' " "Shut up, James Lamsonl What do you know about wearin' anything?" snapped Mrs. Lamson. Whereupon Mr. Lamson withdrewbebind his paper and buried himself in the obituary column, until Mrs. Lamson snatched the sheet away, with the information that she needed it for putting her hair in "curl papers." Polk Swaips. The Girl in the Gninaboronah Hat. Chanson Militaire.) Bbe wore a hat with a curving brim And a gleaming plume of white, Tnat nodded and laughed o'er tbe dusky rim Like toam in tbe morning light. I cave one glance; 'twas enough and more For my heart went away with that. My comrades smiled as I watched from the door The girl in the gamsborongh hat. Her locks were as dark as the blackbird's wing. Her lasbes a fringe of jet; Her eyes were the kind tbat the poets Sing; And a soldier can never forget. I looked. I sighed. How should I begin Tbe game I would fain be at? I knew by her mien no sigh would win The girl in tbe gainsborough hat. "Faint heart ne'er won fair lady," and so One twist of my long mustache. And boldly I marched to meet the foe, Where the darts of Cupid flash. When a summering lover grows dumb, they say A kiss is better than chat; And tbat is the way I won, tbat day. The girl in the gainsborougb bat. Samuel mihcttbx Peck. A Sort of Orlulnnl Paeknse. Cadley Jove I Bronson is a case, he? Highflier Not always. I've seen Isn't him when he was more like a keg. Cabltle Smith. The Devil's Place. They're bavin' protracted meetln's down't the village all this week. An all the Meth'dist brethren are called npon to speak: An' lots o' bollerin' "glory P an' singin' hymns is done. An' old an' young folks both are bavin' a heap o'fun. So 1 dropped in last evenin' ter hear the parson preach The new one thet Is spreadln' religion fur's 'I'll reach; An' words o' sense an' wisdom I calkerlate he give Thet, ont in practice, couldn't fall ter help us all ter live. Fer instance, he was savin' that the Lord He loved us all. An' couldn't hear ter see the weakest, poorest sinner fall; An' he made bold at last ter say, right iu the deacon's face, "Onless tne devil's In your heart, he ain't in any place." "Some think," says he, "tbe devU Uves Inter a pack o' cards. Or theaters, or ball rooms they claim his best regards; But ef he never teched you ontel you cut that pack. You needn't fear but In the game you'll keep the inside track. "An if ye never cotten ter tbe EvU One ontel Ye step inside a show room ter see a play done welt. He won't come there an' grab ye and make ye fall from grace Onless the devil's In your heart he ain't In any place. "'Ef you've lived up ter the present time an' kep' a good, pure heart. An' never eive blm any show, he can't now git a start: Ef in the game o' life right's trumps an' you have beld the ace. The devil baln't been in your heart, an' there fore hain't no place," Lots more ho said; but them 'ere words struck me as 'bout tbe best, Ef we c'n keep him onto' us, no matter fer the rest. Ef we live pure an' sweet an' clean, an' strong ter rnn our race, Twill keep tbe devil from our hearts, an' he won't have no place. HelehM. fltesiow. Be Knew. Mrs. DeSmith "My dear, I have a little conundrum for you; why does a woman change her mind oftener than a man?" Mr. DeSmith (still reading) "Because a woman's mind needs changing oftener than a man's." (Silence.) J. A. Macok. Pellets From Various Pestles. It is bad form for a young man to powder his face, when preparing to call on his sweetheart. It is equally bad form for him to powder his face while he is with her. "Does the weather seem to affect the mar ket, Mr Trimmer?" "Yes, indeed. On rainy days umbrellas go up and cocktails go down." Profanity is like the tramp's coat a bad habit, that' Is at its best when it is worn off. Brooklyn people brag about their great bridge and say that it bas no equals. The fact remains that it has two piers. SHE IS PIETY GENEBAXS HT HEB OWX BIGHT. "They say Queen Victoria greatly dis likes Lord Wolesley?" "I am not surprised. She is very jealous of him." "Jealous?" 'Yes. Wolesley has been called En gland's only General, and the Queen has an idea, from the. number of her military titles, tnat she is no giouca oi an army nerseu." eta THE STORY OF THE DOCTOR AND THE DETECTIVE. WBITTEjr TOE THE dispatch. -BT- XB. PHU Author of "Who ia Guilty?" bYNOPSIS OF PEEV1003 CHAPTERS. The narrator of the story Is a physician who bas sought rest at the seashore. Inthehote. near bis cottage lived Mrs. Amelia Glaye, an eccentric widow, who makes blm her physician Her charmine daughter. Bertha, had eneaged herself to Cyril Durand. who had squandered most of bis fortune, and had promised to weil another womin, who cluni closely to him. One night tbe doctor bears a shriek. He sees a tall figure in overcoat or cloak slinking away, and discovers tbe body of a voung woman stabbed to tbe heart. Takinc: from tbe body a breastpin and ring, be runs for help, lteturnine.be finds the body gone, with evidence that It had been thrown into tbe sea. A piece of shoe was found there. Two servants enter a deserted cabin. Instantly their torches are dashed to tbe ground, and a tall flgnre vanishes in tbe darkness. In the cabin a diamond earring Is found. Tbe body bad only plain gold earrings. CHAPTEK II. MBS. OIiAYE'S STRANGE COMPOStTItE. I reached my little cottage without fur ther incident worthy of being set down. I had undergone great exertions, and as I have said, I was very hungry. I am not a great eater, but I am methodical by instinct, and was prepared for emergencies like the present I opened a can of truffled wood cock, a bottle of Wiesbaden apricots in an ticipation of a sweet for dessert, and with the assistance of bread, canned asparagus, a morsel of pate de fois gras, a bottle of Clos de Vbugeot and a cigar, I made a simple but appetizing little luncb, my appetite somewhat spoiled by my sad experiences of the evening. I eat leisurely, for I have a profound respect for my stomach, and, having eaten, I sat down to write out this narrative for the amusement and instruc tion of the beloved reader, should it ever be read by anyone bnt myself, which I doubt. I had not written many pages when I was disturbed by a loud ringing of the bell. I glanced at my watch with a lrown; it was 11:30, and I was angered that my well earned solitude should be invaded at this late hour. I opened the door and a young lady tripped hastily into tbe room. I im mediately recognized the charming Miss lone Grande, the maid, femme de cbambre and companion of Mrs. Amelia Glaye. "Pardon me, doctor, for disturbing you," said the intruder with a charming little blush, "but Mrs. Glaye has one of her nerv ous attacks again and needs your assist ance." "What has disturbed the good lady this time, my dear?" I asked, not pleased at again facing the chilly night air. When one has eaten, one needs rest that the process of digestion may continue undisturbed. It is the neglect of this truth that makes your SEEKING A CLEW nation, my dear reader, a nation of dyspep tics. "Mrs. Glaye has been nervous all even ing," said the modest little lone, preferring to study the dimples iu her pretty hands to the lines in my old face. "She thought she needed exercise and went out for a walk. She returned more composed, but when I as sisted her to pnt on her night attire we dis covered that she had lost one of her earrings, a valuable solitaire diamond. She treas ured it very highly, and the discovery has made ber wretchedly nervous, at least, that is the way I account for it." I never lose my self-control; if I prize myself for any particular Ulent it is for the rare gift of preserving my wits, even under the most astounding circumstances. "Mrs. Glaye was not wise, to promenade iu the open air at night, with diamond ear rings in her ears." "When she is nervous one never thinks of such things." "Did you go with her?" i "She went out all alone, and it was so dark when she went out that I am not sur prised she got entangled iu the blackberry ousbes, ruining her dress and tearing her hands learfulh. It is clearer now, but I had some difficulty in escaping the treacher ous bushes in coming here." I was surprised, bnt the simple lone could not guess my thoughts in the gay smile with which I sainted her. "We will visit Mrs. Glaye immediately, my dear. I am very much interested in her peculiar symptoms' Perplexity has a strange effect on me; it lightens my spiritn.acts as a stimulant on my nerves. If I may be allowed to say so, I am the personification of pure reason, and that which exercises my brain exhilarates my sentiments. In the open air I gallantly offered my arm to the timid Miss lone, and we walked at a brisk pace through the niirht. A sea mist had spread over land and water, deepening every moment into a thick fog and bottling out the sky as well as the more familiar land marks. It was impossible to distingnish anything a few feet distant. The wind had died away, but the air was cold, damp and uncomfort able, strongly impregnated with the odor of seaweed, and distinctly saline to tne taste. "It is a horrid night," said my companion, clinging tightly to my arm. "A matter of feeling, my dear. But still I would sooner be out of it than in it. Mrs. Glaye selected a peculiar evening for a promenade. Did you see her when she re turned?" "Ko; I was in my room reading. She summoned me." "Was she Tery much excited?" "Sbe was pacing up and down wringing her hands." "She needs a husband to take care of her." "He whom she would accept is indifferent to her, and yet she is a sweet, lovable woman I" "You mean Cyril Durand?" "I mean nothing; but it is a pity to see her suffer." "She is obstinate to go the road where suffering is sure to meet her. Cyril Durand is not worth her trouble. Did she meet him?" ; jIIE3 "WOOLF, "I don't know." "Has sbe ever met him?" "She has never told me," was the dry answer. Not wishing to arouse the sus picions of my charming companion I spoke no more, and she did not tempt me to break my resolution by opening her pretty lips. On reaching tbe hotel I found my patient unusually calm; in fact, in all my experi ences of her I had never seen her so calm. She was sitting in arm chair reading, and on my anpearance she glanced up at me in un mistakable surprise. "It is a late hoar for a visit, doctor," she said, in a tranquil voice. "You should have told him, lone, that I was not prepared for even his presence." "My instinct told me that you were ill, madam, and I hastened to him." "I never felt bettet in my life, doctor." I glanced down at ber scratched and still bleeding hands, and said: "Surely your hauds, at least, must pain you." She laid aside her book, and a frown gath ered over her face, as she studied the scratches. "The next time you indulge in a prome nade, Mrs. Glaye, you must take a com panion with you." "I have not lett my room the entire even ing, doctor. I should not so far forget my self as to walk out alone, even if I felt strong enough to do so." "Then you did not lose a diamond ear ring?" "It is a late hour in which to joke," she said, severely. "I have lost no earrinz, and I am in excellent health. I thank you for your anxiety on my account: but just now I do not need your valuable assist ance!" I glanced toward the quiet lone and was amustd by the startled expression in her face. In her innocence and inexperience she had but little knowledge of wretched, lying humanity. She could not know that within the slender body of Mrs. Glaye there AT THE TVHABF. were a heart, will and determination of iron. I could only bow to the placid woman and retire. What she hoped to gain by uttering a demonstrable falsehood I could not guess. I puzzled over the subject on my way home, but the journey ended, I was and am still in doubt. I shall summon a detective in the morn ing and make over the responsibility to him. If he sees his way clearly I shall be surprised as well as puzzled. As a scientist I am only warranted in drawing the con clusion that a murder has been committed. To this I am willing to swear; fortunately beyond this I am not required to go. For my own amusement shall I follow out the clews? I think I could place my finger on the guilty party; I think I can detect the motive for the crime; but I will give no hint until justice is at fault. I may be wrong; my knowledge of humanity may be less complete than I imagine it to be. In any case I end my narrative here. I may complete it'at some future time for my im aginary beloved readers' edification. At least I have impartially set down all tbe facts, as they are fresh in my mind. I am tempted to vindicate my skill- in analytical reasoning, and to reach the known from the unknown; but my brains and my fingers are tired, and X will no longer keep myself from tbe relresbing sleep I so much need. ' That I may not be accused of guessing the truth alter the truth is discovered, I will here imitate the old scientists and set down my belief in cipher. Ckrmt flub Agpw yghz o jqxtke lbpr m yzb. This for the overthrow of the future doubter, should any exist; now for the peaceful sleep, won ot exertion. CHAPTER IIX. HAEBATIVE OP DETECTIYE PEMX TOX. In accordance with orders I went down to Eglantine Hill early in the day following the evening on wbioh the mnrder had been discovered. Had there been telegraphio communication between this out-of-the-way little place, and the city a good deal of val uable time might have been saved. The dead body had been seen at 8 o'clock the night before. I reached tbe place about 11:30 next morning. Under the circum stances the murderer had some 15 hours' start of me. I was told that, on boarding the train, a certain Karl Brandt would give me the in formation on which to start the case. I dis covered Earl Brandt to be a man of some SO years of age; a tall, strong, upright figure on an intellectual, cleanly-shaven face, much wrinkled, but with ruddy cheeks, blue eyes and an attractive smile. On acqualntancel found him to be a simple, eccentrio fellow, who wore his heart on his sleeve; garrulous as all old people are, and fond of showing his learning and his knowledge of "human ity," as he called it. He told all he knew without any "pumping," and was childish ly eager in offering'hia services to me. I was amnsed by his pomposity and simplicity; but won his good will forever by treating i - - ;c