THE HTTSBTJBG- DISPATCH, THURSDAY, JULY 3, 1890. t lIjeBigpitfj. ESTABLISHED FEBRUARY 8. 1848, VoU . No. 148. Entered at Pittsburg Postoffic. November 14. 187, u second-class matter. Business Office Corner Smlthfield and Diamond Streets. News Rooms and Publishing House 76, 77 and 79 Diamond Street. rASTEKN AUVERTISUiO OHlCt ROOMH, TKIBUN1" BUILD1G. SEW YORK, -where complete file, of THE DISPATCH can always b found. Foreign aavertlser appreciate the con venience. Home advertisers and friends of THE DISPATCH, nolle In Heir York, are alio made welcome. THE DISPATCH is regularly en tale at Srentano's, S Union Square, ICew Tork, and 17 Ave. de r Opera, Part, trance, and tf Strand, London, JEng where anyone who fiat been disappointed at a hotel newt ttand can obtain it. TERMS OF THE DISPATCH. t-ostagx ntn in tux mmii statxs. JU1LT UlRrxTCH. One Year. 8 00 Daily lHsrATCH, PerQuarter ICO Daily Dispatch, One Month 70 Daily Dispatch, lncludlngsunday, lTear. 1000 Daily DisrATCH, InelndingBunday.zm'ths. ISO Daily Dispatch, lncludlngSunday.lmonth $0 SUNDAY DISPATCH, One Year IN Weekly DisrATCH. One Year 1 IS The Daily Dispatch is dellTered by carriers at 31 cents per ieek. or Including Sunday edition, t SO cents per week. PITTSBURG. THURSDAY. JULY 3, 1890. THE DISPATCH FOB THE 8TJMMEE. Fertom leaving the City for Vie lummer can have The Dispatch forwarded by earliett mail to any address at the rate of SO cents per month, or ft CO or three months, Sunday edi tion included. Daily edition only, 70c per month, ft for three months. The address may be changed as desired, if care be taken in all cases to mention both old and new address. -The BUSINESS OFFICE of THE DIS PATCH has been removed to Corner of Smiihfleld and Diamond Streets. AGENTS AtyD CARRIERS. The Fourth of July hoavrnlr Puce Id this morning' time or THE DISPATCH will be printed on a lngle aheet of Calendered paper for GRATUITOUS DISTRIBUTION. Agent and Carrlera who dealre to preaent their patron with n copy of the Souvenir shonld Immediately place their order at the Soalneaa Ofllce. THE OPPORTUNITY IMPROVED. By the nomination of Robert E. Pattison for Governor yesterday, the Democrats seized the best opportunity which tbey have lad for years to profit by the weakness and errors of their opponents. The strength of the nomination lies in the "vigorous and in dependent personality of the candidate, and, distressing as it may be to some of the Bourbon element in the Democracy, to have & candidate who -will attract votes from out side, that attraction is so great as to nearly reverse the conditions under which the two parties generally begin a canvass in Penn sylvania. Hardly a stronger measure of ex-Governor Pattison's popularity, as a vigorous, inde pendent and honest public man, can be given than the fact that he has been three times a candidate for public office in Re publican strongholds; that be has never yet been defeated; and that his record in office has been always such as to satisfy the inde pendent Republicans who contributed to his successes, with their part in electing him. His two elections as Controller of Phila delphia showed the confidence which in that strorgly Republican city was felt in his fairness and ability; and his work in that office was one of the first exemplifications of the ability of an independent ana capable Controller to check municipal waste and mismanagement His election as Governor was no less a measure of his popular strength, and the resnlt an equal proof of Lis executive force and honesty It is upon Pattison's four years' service as Governor that he is mainly to be judged as a candidate in the present campaign. Performance has many times the value oi prolession in judging of the character of an executive official; and Governor Pattison's performance in the executive chair is the enviable one of having furnished this State the cleanest and most vigorous administra tion within the present generation. No sin cere man will dispute that his record was exceptionally that oi vigilance in guarding the public interests and of unqualified inde pendence alike of the influence of political machines or the domination of corporate interests. Upon his acts with regard to the regulation of corporate abuses bis supporters can especially afford to take their stand. His plain and clear statements in his mes sages of the duty of enforcing the sixteenth and seventeenth articles of the Constitution were not less characteristic of his attitude than the policy, in which his administra tion Etands alone, of forcing respect for the Constitution, as it was violated in the South Penn wrecking bargain. It is a pregnant fact that where his successor has followed out the policy be commenced, as in the matter of the soldiers orphans' schools, he las earned the public approval; where his policy has been abandoned, as in corporate matters, it has left him the one Governor of Pennsylvania, in moJern times, who has steadily and unvaryingly maintained and enforced the supremacy of pnblic welfare over corporate interest. The renewal of the ticket of 18S2 by the nomination of Chauncey F. Black, who was Governor Pattison's companion in the suc cessful campaign of that year, is equally j udicious. The ex-Lieutenant Governor was a faithful and impartial presiding officer of the Senate, and has since then carried the Democratic standard as the leader of the yonng Democracy. Pittsburg's representa tive on the ticket, Mr. Barclay, the candi date for Secretary of Internal Affairs, is well known and popular here, and will strengthen by his local'pipularity the favor able tendency toward the ticket on the part of onr people. With candidates so thoroughly worthy the votes of all men who are independent enough to cast aside party lines in favor of clean and vigorous State administration solely for the public interest, and with the dissatisfaction existing in the Republican ranks, the nomination of Pattison gives the Democrat a better hope of victory than they have had since the campaign which they won with the same candidates eight years ago. It must be remembered, how ever, that campaigns are won by organiza tion; and the Republican organization, with the normal majority behind it, can only be overcome bv systematic work. All who be lieve, as The Dispatch does, that the Democrats have selected the candidates best able to gnard popular interests alike against partisan profligacy and corporate ag gression, should bear in mind that only earnest and organized work will win the victory for them at the polls. A DAD &TART. As far as the plans have been publicly developed, the joint site, which was selected yesterday by the Chicago "World's Pair Commission, strikes ns as unsuitable in the highest degree. The joint site contains the Lake Front downtown and Jackson Park. The LakeFront is to be filled in by the Illin ois Central Railroad to a considerable extent. From the downtown section of the Expo sition to Jackson Park is a distance of abont six miles. This patchwork scheme only provides 350 acres after all; an amount of space which experience has shown to be in sufficient for a great exposition. But the great objection to the joint site is that it divides the Exposition into two parts, with an interval of six miles. It is urged that a four-track railroad and steamboats on the lake will bring the sections close to gether in point of time. But those who areue thus admit that the journey between the two points will take IS minutes. At this distance the joint site looks preposter ous. The Illinois Central Railroad alone cannot coraplainof a scheme which appears to have been carried through for its sole benefit. It seems a pity that the "World's Pair should start out under snch unfavorable conditions. The Dispatch is only de sirous that the Colnmbian Exposition should be worthy of Chicago and the coun try. THE LITERATURE OK THE DAY. The Dispatch to-day carries out its proposition to prepare for an old-lashioned Fourth of July by publishing in its supple ment the words and mnsic of the standard National Airs, with the Declaration of In dependence. This literature, appropriate to the day, will be distributed among the cele brators at Schenley Park to-morrow. This is in harmony with what was the vital characteristic of the old-fashioned celebrations of the National Anniversary. There may have been a good deal of fuss and feathers about the old militia parades and a superabundance of spread-eagleism in the Fonrthof July orator. Bat there was al ways abundant food for thought in the old fashioned celebrations to inspire reflections on the patriotic work of the men of the Revo lution in establishing the independence of this country, on the principles of equal ity and individual freedom, on which our Government was founded, and on the duty ol succeeding generations to maintain the purity and vitality of those principles for all ages. The drift away Irom that form of celebration until our Fourth of July has become an occasion for the annual sacrifices of a large amountof property and some life to the demon of Chinese noise is an indication of a divergence from the constant and jealous preservation of these principles. The gathering together of a large share of our population to .unite the pleasures of celebration with the commemoration of the principles to which the day is dedicated, will be very useful. The patriotic hymnr and the Declaration of Independence repre sent both the sentiment and the philosophy of the day. THE UNSUCCESSFUL RESCUE. The exploration oi the Hill Farm mine by the three daring explorers who pene trated 1,800 feet into its depths on Tuesday; the fact that until the fans of the Mahoning mine had driven the gases away from the portion explored, it was filled with smoke and black damp; and, finally, the discovery of the coats and dinner buckets of some of the lost miners, evidently left in haste at the time of the explosion, indicate the pre ponderant probability that all of the im prisoned miners were either killed by the explosion or smothered by the eases within a short time of the disaster. There is some mitigation, since we must accept the fact of their wholesale destruction, in the thought that their death was swift and compara tively painless, instead of being brought on by the slow horrors of starvation and thirst. The end of the heroic work undertaken on the slight chance of rescue makes it a fail ure so far as actual rescue of the imprisoned men is concerned. But work done in the hope of aiding fellow-creatures, however slight that hope may be, is never wholly thrown away. The splendid record of the attempted rescue; the grim determination with which for two weeks the brave miners drove their tunnel throngh hundreds of feet ol rock and coal; and finally the quiet hero ism with which the exploring party took their lives into their hands and penetrated the windings of the burning mine will always be a bright example. The practical precept afforded by men of humble station that all selfish thoughts are to be thrown aside to join in the work of rescuing their fellow-men in disaster is one by which the whole world can profit. With that heroic effort the next duty de volves UDon the charitable public. Nearly two score families have been deprived of their supporters by the heavy blow of this disaster. At the best, their circumstances were precarious; but with this calamity, only the aid of the public can rescue them from want and suffering. The charitable heart of the nation will not leave it to be said that after the heroic attempts to rescue the miners has been made a failure by their death in the mine, their families were left to slower death for lack of food and care. The generosity which has been displayed in the rescue mnst not be the only exhibition of high qualities in connection with the disaster. The contributions of those who wish to provide ior the families of the dead men should be prompt and liberal. It is by the exhibition of such qualities of mutual help and promptness in aiding the unfortunate that the gloom of such disasters is alleviated. The responsibility for the loss of life must be thoroughly sifted by the proper authorities; but without waiting lor that investigation the publiq, at large should be as prompt and generous in coming to the relief of the bereaved families as the miners of Dunbar were in their brave effort for the rescue of the victims. MISCHIEVOUS LEGISLATION. The Federal election bill passed the House last night The majority of six which it obtained would not have been forthcoming if a tolerably clear assurance that the Sen ate wonld have none of it had not eased several Republican consciences. The bill onght not to become a law, and the Senate will probably emasculate it or kill it outright The trouble about such ill-advised attempts at legislation as the Federal election bill is that they delay and endanger measures of the greatest value. The tariff bill, which is of the greatest im portance to the whole country, has already been injured in this way. The Federal election bill is bad in itself; and relatively it may do damage to the whole Republican programme. It is rather tartly remarked by the con servative Philadelphia. Ledger: "The way business in Congress has been expedited by Mr. Reed's new rules tor the House is illus trated by the fact that on th opening day of the new fiscal year there are only three appro priation bills that have become laws the Diplomatic, the Army and tho Military Acad emy bills." But the esteemed Ledger falls to give due weight to the fact that the expedition of mere pnblic business Misappropriation bills Is not what was aimed at by tbe new rules. That alleged reform in parliamentary methods has succeeded In passing stacks of purely par tisan legislation. THE approval by the PresidenVof hills for public buildings at Beaver Falls.PaSaUna, Kansas, and Alexandria, La, indicate that the disposition to shnt down on the petty distribu tions of pork has encountered an early and not altogether glorious death. No one can blame tbe Czar for dismissing the chief of his private police because bait a barrel of dynamite was found in the Czar's cellar. If the police cannot keep dynamite ont of the lower stories of an autocrat dwelling it will become impracticable to carry on the business of absolute ruling. In snch oases either the police, the dynamite or the Caar mnst go. The best solution might be afforded if all three should abolish themselves. The appeal for the destitute wives and families of the miners entombed at Dunbar shonld be answered at once and liberally in Pittsburg. The country is likely to follow Pittsburg's example. The Philadelphia Prest is making a great deal of the fact tbat ex-Secretary Whitney has become tbe recognized bead of Tammany. If he runs tbat political machine in tbe same way tbat he did the United Btates navy, tbe oppo nents of Tammany may do well to lay low In 1892. If Tammany puts no worse man than Whitney In tbe leadership of New York poli tics, it will be a great improvement over the present state of affairs. The Louisiana Kufclnx seem to have got in their work at Anlte just in time to furnish the best am munition tbat tbe supporters of the Federal election bill could ask for. The organs which are trying to crush Bishop Potter by calling his address "pessi mism," are evidently of tbe opinion that to at tack successful dishonesty and immorality is pessimism so long as the dishonesty and im morality brings water to their wheel. The dis approval of those who reprehend an assault on tbe evils which they support is an old trait of frail humanity, since tbe days of the Ephe sians. Tuesday night's gentle shower after that terrific prelude of electria phenomena, was a remarkable case in which all the thundering was done in the index. The interviews with prominent citizens as to the nomination of Pattison, which appear elsewhere, show in some degree the division in the Republican ranks this snmmer. But it is impossible to gauge at this time tbe depth of tbe disaffection whlcb will elect Pattison Gov ernor if anything does. The Republicans who will vote the Democratic ticket are not obliged to proclaim their intention. If Germany arrests a Frenchman for picking up wood on the wrong side of the fron tier, what would it do with an American lum ber company t A COXFEBEXGE report has been agreed 'on in Congress looking to the bnrial of the overhead wires in the District of Columbia. Whether a conference report will appear in this city carrying ont that promise of putting tbe wires underground this year, is a matter on which the Pittsburg public would like informa tion. Well, whatever comes ot this summer's weather, no one will be able to charge anything wrong in the crops to tho June frosts. The city policeman who indulges in the amusement of pistol practice at a superior officer who suspends him for drunkenness is a very eligible subject for a long term of disci pline in the workhouse. Festivities of tbat sort are altogether too ornate for an efficient police force. Ik ambitious cities the census enumerator is now regarded as more perniciously mighty than the baseball umpire. A Democratic convention in which nothing of a fighting character took place, would not come up to the standard of Demo cratic interest Tbe faithful would consider the occasion entirely too tame to be Democratic if there were not some surface indications of knifing, CHAT ABOUT NOTABLE PEOPLE. Bishop Newman has gone to Japan on an extended visit Queen Natalie of Servia has insured her life for $200,000 for the benefit of her son. Vice President Morton will spend most of tbe summer at his residence at Rhinebeck. Congressman Charles H. Turner, of New York, is hunting icicles at Asbury Park. Leslie Stephen says it will be difficult to select a successor to Tennyson as Poet Laureate when he shall pass away. Geester's inuch-talked-of castle at Bologna turns out to be a very insignificant Italian villa, bnt of coarse this has nothing to do with her castles in Spain. Judge J. p. Smith, of Fort Worth, who Is nowworth f 1,000,00", once walked from Ken tucky to Texas because he did not have enough money to pay his passage. Thomas B. Rambo, of Morristown, N. J. has just been restored to possession ot his prop erty, valued at 540,000. which was taken from him 17 years ago when the Court declared him to be a habitual drunkard. Mrs. Stuart Robson was one of tbe most devoted of wives. She never was on the stage herself, but she accompanied her husband on all his tours and was widely known and much beloved in tbe dramatic world. Cardinal Manning's aversion to strong drink in every form ib so great tbat twice in arttculo mortis he has refuted stimulants, and he alludes triumphantly to the fact that he got well each time as proof that stimulants are never necessary. Prosper Crabbe began life as a reporter on the Independance Beige. The editor didn't like bis style, and told him he wonld never make a living as a newspaper man. He quit the business, became a stock broker, and died worth 50,000.0110 francs. The Countess of Tolstoi is a tall, beautiful woman, and very fond of society. She was In London lately as a delegate to the Liberal Woman's Federation. There is nothing about her to suggest that marriage is the failure that the old Connt depicts It Mendelssohn, tbe composer, has a cousin who is tbe leader of a band of Russian Nihil ists, and who was recently arrested for threat ening the life of tbe Czar. The Nihilistic cousin is, therefore, in no sense a composer, particularly of tbe Czar's shattered nerves. The late Princess of Thurn-and-Taxis, sister of the Empress of Austria, was a few years ago regarded as the handsomest and most intel lectual woman in Europe. She was once en gaged to Emperor Francis Joseph herself, but he jilted her to marry her 15-year-old sister. Labouohere got hit badly the other day. Colonel Saunderson, in a heated speech, com pared him to a "gargoyle." "I believe yon don't know what a gargoyle is," said Labby. "Yes, I dot" shouted Colonel S.; "it Is a gro tesque gntter-spoutl" Labby joined in the general laugh. Miss Charlotte Robinson, a decorative artist of London, .had tbe good fortune to make a set of doylies for tbe Queen and some Wat teau soenes for the Princess of Wales. Imme diately Miss Robinson's work became tbe fashion, and now she receives any price she chooses to ask for her work, and is getting rich with very little labor. Good Enonsh to be True. From the Boston Herald. They are telling of a young man who was graduated at the Harvard Law School this year who has taken tbe full academio course of fonr years at Harvard, followed by three years In the law school, and has supported himself tbronghont the seven years, coming ont with a balance ot 15,000 to the good. This is good enough to be true. Big Mntrimonlnl Broom. From tire Boston Ulobe, Tho dependent pension bill has produced a big boom in matrimony for the veterans, and, sympathizing spinsters In all quarters are said to have been seized with a sudden affection for the poor isldier. THE TOPICAL TALKER. A Remarkable Storm Some of the Feature of r Great Dlstarbnnce Tuesday' Electrical Exhibit Newspaper Boxes Strangely Used A Speak-Easy Conven tion. 'The storm, which came from the west last nlgbt, did not strike Pittsburg with tbe ex traordinary violence that characterized it but a few miles down the Ohio Valley. As it neared this city the center of the storm veered to the northward apparently. For my own part I saw more of the storm than was agree able. At seven o'clock masses of heavy gray cloud were banked in the west and a lower stratum of ragged, smoky clouds began to spread over the sky. "The latter came from all points between W. 8. W. and W. N. W. and at so low an elevation and in such a furious fashion that tbey resembled smoke from a river steamer more than clouds. The sky in the west began to assume yellow and greenish tints, and gusts of wind 'followed each other rapidlv. Thnro was not much thunder, how. ever, before tbe main storm was actually at hand. The warning was notably short, though ugly enough. At 7:15 tbe storm burst upon Bewickley, the point at which these observations were made. A light rain quickly developed into a drenching downpour, accompanied by almost incessant lightning. Tbe heavens were covered at once, except tor a slender margin of clear blue sky upon the eastern horizon, by a pale yellow-gray vapor. I have never seen or felt rain come down in larger masses. There was no wind to speak of; the rain descended in straight sheets. At a quarter to eight when it is usually broad daylight the gas lights on tbe platform at Bewickley were distinctly useful. A curious sight the Chicago Express presented as her blazing headlight appeared through the fog of rain and steam. If the train bad been travel ing throngh the Ohio rivor for ten miles it could not have looked wetter. ' AS the train cautiously made its way to the city tbe storm showed no signs of abate men. The river conld hardlv he seen trom the railroad; and a steamboat hngging the northern bank near Agnew looked more like a phantom ship than a solid stern-wbeelet. Such a storm the passengers and crew of that train agreed they bad seldom if ever seen. Some idea of the extent of the storm may be gleaned from the fact that this particular train fell in with it at 3 o'clock in the afternoon and steamed steadily in it till Pittsburg was reached at 8:15. The storm -as at its worst at Homewood. What sui erb nerve and pluck the engineer of a locomotive mnst have to take a train through such an elemental warl Impressive and terrific as last night's storm was, in its electrical featnres it did noteqnal the storm which only threatened this region on Tuesday evening. Tbe heavens on Tuesday evening wore much tbe same ominous look tbey did last night before tbe storm broke. The west was full of dark gray clonds, puffed up with yellow edges. Against this dark background tbe lightning shone with astounding brilliancy. One flash came out like the column of flame from a lighted gas well, from which branches of white fire zigzagged to all parts of the sky. It blinded everybody who saw it for many sec onds. A dozen persons at least living twenty miles apart in some cases, bave told me tbat tbey never saw so immense and dazzling a stroke ot lightning. This principal effort was preceded and succeeded by lightning of less volume and intensity. The expectation tbat a storm of terrible pro portions was at band was general, but it did not come within thirty miles of Pittsburg then. The new boxes for newspapers and packages at the street corners reveal some singular surprises at times. A cat was taken out ol a Market street box the other day, and Detective Sol Uoulson is not the only person who has mis taken the boxes for other things. At tbe Union statlo . a lew nights ago a yonng man of rustic apppearanco approached the newspaper mall box and after a brief ex. animation thereof sat down upon it He seemed to be searching fo something with his right hand, and be was evidently nervous. Finally he called to a station employe. "How does this dnrned machine work, any how? I can't find tbe slotl" Eaid he. He took it for a weighing machine. "The Pennsylvania Society for tbe Advance ment of the Deaf is holding its conven tion in the chapel of the First Presbyterian Church. It does seem a little odd, as a reverend critic of this city suggests, to be running a "speak easy" in a church. CURRENT TIMELY TOPICS. IF it keeps on the surplus will bo known shortly as a hole in the ground. One of the contracts of the Republican party was the 1-cent postage. The contract has not been carried ont. The Atlanta Constitution has secured a live elephant for that city, and now th citizens are wondering what to do with it. Atlanta should Join issues with Chicago. Tascott, when found, shonld be sent to Chicago as one of the greatest wonders of the nlneteeth century. ON acconnt of It being an off year the fact that Governor Hill has carried Indlanabas no political significance. It Is cold yet up in the Maine woods. Two Connectlcnt sportsmen who have reinrned re ported snow drifts two or three feet deep in sheltered places in the forests, and the tempera ture so cold that fishing in tbe lakes has been backward. Pennsylvania should bold her next Democratic convention in the Maine woods. Chicago policemen have been warned to discriminate between drunkenness anffsunstroke. That will be a difficult matter for the average Chicago officer without a doctor accompanies him on his rounds. "Snapper" Garrison has signed a contract to ride Hon. W. H. Scott's horses for the remain der of the season for tbe sum ol $10,000. This Is what may be termed fairly good pay, considering the fact tbat a superintendent of schools, or the editor of a flrit-class dilly would be compelled to work fonr or five years for tbe same amount. Twenty-four years ago yesterday the New York Evening Telegram made its first bow to the public and it has been bowing ever since. It is tbe best evening paper published In that city, which Is all that could be said In a half column notice. SULLIVAN and Mnldnon are fighting at long range. Tbe public will therefore, be disappointed, as bullets will not kill at that great distance LATEST FROM BUENOS AYRES. Bnalnea Improving Slowly Confidence In tbn Ni w Mlnlatry. A gentleman writing from Buenos Ayres to Mr. Charles Abel, of this city, speaks encour agingly of business there, as .follows: "Bus! noss here is improving slowly. My sales the past month have amounted to more than ever before. Gold is now at 210, and last week was as low as 229. Tbe general opinion is tbat it will soon go down to 200. Confidence is return ing, the new ministry appears to give satisfac tion to the community, and on the whole a gen eral Improvement is visible." DEATHS OF A DAY. Washington Christy. The funeral services of Washington Christy, an old resident of Wllklns township, near Beulah, were conducted yesterday afternoon by Kev. Mr. Kalston, pas tor of the Beulah Presbyterian Church. The remains were interred In Beulah Cemetery in the presence of a large number of friends of the deceased. Mr. I'hnsty was a member or Post 199, O. A. R.. of Turtle Creek, and had always been active in Grand Army affairs. He was also prom inent In the Royal Arcanum, being a member of Wllklnsburg Council No. 760. He was years of age and a very vigiorous man until stricken with paralysis several years ago. the attack resulting lu Ms deatn at 10 o'clock on Monday night. He bad been tax collector of bis township for several years. Sir. Mary Clngaton. Mrs. Mary Clagston, tbe oldest resident of Pat ton township, near WUklnsbnrg, who died on Sunday night, at the ripe old age of 80 years, was burled yesterday afternoon. She was very well known In Wllklnsburg. and a number or people from that place attended her funeral. The re mains were Interred in the Betbel Cemetery, near tbe borne of the deceased. uilllnm Ebbltl. New Yobk, July J. William EbbitU for whom the noted Washington hostelry, tho bbitt House. was named, died yesterday at the West Point Hotel, West Point. Tbe cause of hi death was Brlgbt'a disease. Mr. Xbbltt was nearly BO years of axe. FIFTEEN MASTERPIECES. A Chicago Man Purchase 3200,000 Worth at Picture In Florence. Chicago, July 2. Mr. Charles Hutchinson, President of the Art Institute, has jnst re turned from a visit to Florence, where he in vested 200,000 In old masters from the collec tion of the Prince De Mldoff. In speaking of them to-day he said: There are 15 of them lu all, and each one is a masterpiece. There is a superb Hobbema, one of the finest in existence, I think; a Van Ostade tbat cannot be sur passed in anv collection; a Jan Steen, over which half of Europe has raved; an Adrian Van Der Veld tbat comes within any rate equal to any in tbe Art Gallery: an exquisite Terbnrg; a magnificent RuisadeL and an unequalled Franz Hals. "Tbe pride of the collection, however, is a Rembrandt It is a beantiful, superb, magnifi cent canvas, and It stands very close to the famous Gilder In tbe Metropolitan Museum, ot New York. It is far abead of other Rembrandt canvas in this city, at any rate." SOCIAL CHATTER, "Yourself and family are cordially invited to attend tbe sixth anniversay and display of fireworks to be given by Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Jolly in their orchard, atUoraopolis, Pa., July 4, 1890. Choice selections of music will be ren dered by J. K. Jolly Cornet Band. Ices will be served on tbe grounds." So run the invita tions issued. Miss Kitty Hamm bids adieu to Plttsbnrg to-day and goes to Scranton, N. J., where she will visit some weeks with her sister before going to tbe Albion Hotel at Atlantic City, of which her brother is one of the proprietors, where she will spend the remainder of the season. Mr. Dice, of Campbell A Dick, with his family, will leave tbe 17th ot this month for Pigeon Grove, where quite a party of Pltts bnrgers will nnite with them in catching the briny beauties. A delightful reception was given by Miss Oliver at ber home in Hazelwood yesterday be tween the bonrs of 4 and 7, at which numerous of the recently returned boarding school misses were present Mr. Holmes, one of the proprietors of the Monongabela Honse, left last evening for New York where be will register at tbe Victoria and enjoy friends and pleasures for a few days. The Mozart Orchestra will give their first annual picnic at Windsor Park Saturday, July 6, 1890, from 1 to 11 P. M. THEflist annual picnic of the Children's Aid Society will be held at Oak Shade Grove on Thursday, July 3, The Bingham Street M. E. Sunday Bchool will hold its picnic at Idlewild on Monday. A PRIZE FISH STOBT. It Walk tbe Street and then Falls Iato the Watrr nnri Is Drowned. From the Forest and btream. Henrlk Dabl, of Aalesund, was a reader and follower of Darwin. Wlshlag to apply bis theory of the limit of adaptability of a species to its environment be procured a herring from a neighboring fjord and carried it home in a tub of sea water. He renewed tbe water dally for some time, and gradually reduced the quan tity, with so little inconvenience to tbe herring tbat be conclnded tbat tbe fish might in time, learn to breathe air undiluted with water, like tbe cat and man. It turned out as he expected, and the water was finally tnrned out ot the tub never to be replaced. Henrik next removed tbe fish from its tub and placed it on the ground, where it flopped about very awkwardly at first, but soon learned to move freely and rapidly. In a little while tbe herring was able to follow its master without difficulty, and then it became his constant companion about tbe streets of tbe city. On a certain unfortunate day Henrik had occasion to cross a dilapidated bridge which spanned an arni of the harbor. The herring coming gracefully along, heedless ot danger, now and again springing at the ephemera, for which It had acquired an especial fondness, missed its footing, slipped through a crack into the water beneath and was drowned. ELECTED A FACULTY. Tbe Humboldt School Board Appoints a Corp of Teacher. Tbe Humboldt School Board met last even ing and elected tho following teachers: Prin cipal, Mrs. M. B. Redman: assistant principal. Miss Mary E. Lauffer; grammar department, Misses Jean Hangh, Kate Siocum, Cornelia Pate and Del Anderson: primary department Misses Sadie Grlbben, Alice Pitts, Belle Dyer, Lilly A. Hawk, Annie Hoggs, Cora Simpson, Maggie Prosser, Jnsle Scbmolze, Lizzie E. Davis, Edith Deakin, Sadie Weyman, Maggie McDowell, Maggie Adams, Emma Carey. Emma Dyer and Jennie McCutcheon; substitutes. Misses Keller, Deakin, Early and Coleman. A commitee was appointed to secure lecturers for every Friday afternoon during tbe next school term, to which tbe parents and friends of the school will be Invited. Carey' Vaux took the highest honor In his class on the High School examination. A Warning to Foreign Jingoes From tbe BostonGlobe. Our census will show, if Mr. Porter Is not mistaken, that the American people are 65, 000,000 strong, and still growing. Lord Salis bury, Emperor Billy and other foreign Jingoes will please govern themselves accordingly. A Plea for tup Laboring Qlan. From the New York Telegram. Tbe barbers are right The man who cannot reach a barber's shop before noon Sunday should learn to shave himself. Every working man shonld have at least half a day's rest each week. WHAT WOMEN ARE DOING. Mrs. Daltow, of Winfleld. Kan., has just been admitted to the bar. She is tbe wife of an attorney, and will assist her husband In his business. Rosa Bonheur is 67 years old. She says she still has work enough in her mind to fill two life-times. She sold her latest picture for more than 110,000. Mrs. Sallie Joy White, President of f be New England Women's Press Association, has been in tbe newspaper business 21 years. She is tbe first woman who secured a position on a Boston journal. Virginia's first woman physician Is Mrs. C. L. Haynes, who has recently been elected as sistant physician at tbe Westorn Lunatic Asyl um after passing a successful examination be fore the State Medical Board. The Ladles' Atbletio Club of New York, recently made an exhibition of 70 paintings by women artists, both amateur and professional. Two hundred pictures were sent in, and the 70 selected were very flno. Miss Alice Parker was lately admitted to the Middlesex (Massachnsetts) county bar, be ing the third woman thus received in Massa chusetts. She is a native of that State, but has already practiced her profession successfully in California. Ten women, includingBPundita Ramabai. were delegates to the Fifth National Congress of India. Their credentials were in due form, and thev were given seats on the platform. It was an unprecedented innovation, and made a great commotion. These are two sisters in New York who conduct a very profitable jewelry business. One Is an expert clock maker, and both are well trained in all the details necessary to their work. It is rather amusing to know that these girls have on an average one proposal a week. There is in New York a woman who goes about from house to bouse fitting keys, mend ing or putting on trunk locks, putting fasten ings to rights, and all such little things where small tools and nice work are necessary. She makes a very good thing of this rather odd work and finds plenty to do. THE'Women's Club of Chicago is determined that vagrant children shall be taken from the streets of that city and properly cared for. The City Council has appealed to it to aid in the good work, and now investigates each case, and wlih the assistance of several of tbe charitable institutions of the city, clothes and cares for tbe homeless, and compels all children to at tend school. Tbe Oft Repeated Story. From the Philadelphia Hecord. "All dead in tbe Dunbar miner is the sad but not unexpected announcement wblcb comes with tbe close of the task of tbo beroio rescuers. What brave struggling for life, what hoping against hope, what living tortures were endured by tbe 31 men imprisoned in that death-dealing chamber, ill never be known. Tears for the dead there will be; but there will also be honor and praise for the manhood which inspired so many humble workers to risk danger and death if only one comrade conld be brought Pacx to uxu- um uie. TOMBS 4,000 YEARS OLD. REMARKABLE RELICS OF ANTIQUITY AT ASSOUAN. A Trip Throngh Devlou Passage and Strange Grottoe Where Rest the Re mnlna ot Egyptian Prince and Poten tatesThe Mummies, Mask nnd Hiero glyphics. 'There are few towns in Upper Egypt which show more plainly than Assouan the benefits which bave accrued to the wbole country from the British ocenpation. True, Tommy Atkins is no longer to be seen in tbe streets. Ris place is taken by gigantic negroes of the deepest dye, but bis influence seems to pervade tbe whole town still. Anyone who knew it in the old times finds himself fu'i of wonder at Its com parative neatness; at tbe names often, it is true, badly misspelled over tbe corners; at the great increase of European shops, and at the long rows of new houses among the palms which lead to the'unfortunately chosen site of the first English camp. It will be remembered that immediately below the Cataract tbe Nile is divided by two large islands Elephantine, called bv the Arabs Uezeeret al Zaher, the Island of Flowers, and Gezeeret Atroon. On the eastern shore is Syene, the modern As souan, and tbe main cbannel of tbe river bas always flowed past the town. But during the past few years a change baa occurred in its vol ume, and tbe stream ot deep water seems now rather to favor the western side of Elephantine, and to be disposed to leave Assouan high and dry. Great mud flats line tbe shore at the north ern end of the town, and what little of theriver runs past the old qnays is now received into a shallow bay from which It has no direct exit It was ou tbe banks of this bay that the wisdom of officers who should have known better, but who were probably deceived by tbe old maps and charts, placed our camp, with a result sadly attested by the crowded state of tbe walled cemetery on the road to Mahatta. In any case, with all the country to choose from, it is strange that a camp should ever be placed down stream, below a populous and dirty town, with no outlet for its drainage but a land-locked bay. Meanwhile, the question arises will As souan bave to migrate to tbe site of the old Egyptian Aboo, on Elephantine. At present, except at high Nile, when there is but little traffic, the entrance to tbe harbor is so difficult that it has perforce been abandoned by tbe fiostal and excursion steamers. Tbey can no ringer thread the narrow and devious passage among black granite bowlders which leads to their former aucborage; but have to stop some way below the town at a sandy flat immedi ately opposite tbe yellow slope of Sheykh All, half way un which are tbe wonderful tombs which General Grenfell Ci mmenced to exca vate in 1887, and which bave made so powerful an addition to the many attractions of tbe place. , Relic of a Most Ancient Race. Jvidences of civilization extending back to the period ot the twelfth dynasty of the old Pharaohs, says a writer In the London Sat urday Review, at least 2,000 B. C, and beyond that, again, to tbe unknown age of the pyra mid builders, are not to be seen everywhere, and the interest of the grottoes, as described a couple of years ago, bas been grea'ly enhanced by the researches of Major Plunkett and other officers, who bave left as distinct a mark on the antiquities of Assouan as their soldiers have left upon tbe outward features of the town. The new stopping place,necessltating as it does a long walk or ride into the town, is thus not without its advantages; bnt the occupiers of dahabiehs, who can still moor near the old Ro man quay, or close by the railway station at the southern end of the old town, have a pleas ant sail or row to reach the landing place at the foot of the yellow sandy slope under the tombs. Standing at the station, and looking due north, we see, beyond tbe black and sblning bowlders of the bay, gay with dahabiehs, and the low-roofed bungalows of tbe military hos pital on Elephantine, a background of sandy heights crowned with the little white dome of an ancient Sbeykh, or saint, locally and appro priately known as the AH lhn SulUn al Ilowa, 'Alt (tbe lofty) son of tbe King of the Wind," Immediately under the shrine of this exalted personage is tbe ruin of a castle constrncied of rude brick by some early Arab conqueror. It is also annronnately named. Viewed from the town of A-souan, wblcb its builder meant to protect or oppress. It appears at nlgbt to be immediately below the North star, commonly called In tbe Arabic of Egypt al Nagmeb, "The star," and the castle is tbe fortress of the Sheykn al Nagmeh. It stands on a shoulder ot the bill, and Is founded on a stratum of bard sandstone rock, whlcb runs along the brnw of the slope northward and southward for miles. In the face of it are cutting which look like ancient tombs, and if we follow it for a few yards we come to the remarkable double tier of rock shrines with which the name of Gen eral Grenfell is so deservedly associated. In some resnects they resemble the grottoes of Bent Hassan, with which tome of tbem are co temporary; but apparently Maohoo and Sab bena. Princes of tbe Aboo under tbe sixth dy nasty, set a fashion followed by their suc cessors under the twelfth, and kept the archi tectural features of their tombs within the narrow portals. Mommies and Funeral Offering. ()ne of the most striking featnres of this ancient system of interment has perished at Benl Hassan; but here we bave the original approach rising a hundred feet from the river's edge a kind of slide, nearly perpendicular, with narrow steps on each side for the bearers who drew up the mummy to its destined rest ing place. The pathway leads to tbe top of the bank. Here gannt Arabs show piles of hun dreds of wooden masks taken from mnmmles. Here are also thousands of pots of red earthen ware which contained tbe wine, beer, honey and corn of the funeral offerings. The staircase leading from the waterside ends at tbe tomb of Sabbena, who may bave been a Governor of Elephantine, and many members of wbose family are commemorated on the walls. Tbe columns are squaro and rough, and deep mummy pits render tbe floor dangerous In tbe dim light- Here we see tbe cartouche of Pepy IX. a late king of the sixth dynasty, but of a period so remote tbat there is no use in attempting to date it Passing one or two doorways, which look onlv too invitinir. but are silted up with sand, we come to the must important or all. tbo tomb which is generally known as Grenfell's." It is carefully protected with shutters, and fully deserves any attention M. Grebaut and bis satellites are likely to bestow upon it it commemorates a high and mighty functionary of tbe twelfth dynasty, and is, tbereiore, cotemporary with tbe more famous grottoes of Beni Hassan. This tomb it was. we believe, which bad tbeadvantage of Mr. Wallis Budge's personal supervision at tbe opening and exploration. Mr. BudRe'a adventures on the occasion were of a roost thrilling character, and are described by those who have heard them narrated to resemblo too closely an ex ceedingly bad nightmare to be a pleasant sub ject of contemplation: but he penetrated, after what appear to have been protracted journeys through drainpipes, and a kind of obstacle race in ceneral. to the long-hidden abode of the boclv of "Ra-noob-kaoo-necht Pnnce of the Land of the Elephant" A Gloomy Pnsnge. No other tomb of tbe kind has yet been opened. Its designer seems to have de sired to produce an effect almost theatrical, and be bas fully succeeded. The gloomy en trance, with its great rongh-hewn square col umns and its mysterious side aisles, unrelieved by a ray of light or scrap of carving, leads to a square doorway some SO feet from the entrance, which it exactly faces. A narrower passage is then entered. At the very end, with tbe day light streaming in clear and f nil npon it, is the shrine which bears tbe portraits of Ra-noob-kaoo-necht, of Neb-Sahoo, his wife and their young family. The passage by which you reach it is unspeakably impressive. On either side are three deep niches in the dark walls. Before yon yawns an apparently bottomless pit. Each of the niches Is seen to contain an up right mummy, w hich gazes at you with sad eyes as you pass oy. lbese six sepulchral figures are carved in stone and colored, and form an appropriate line ol sentinels to the entrance of the inner tomb. Tbe hieroglyphics, which are numerous, would in themselves be sufbeient evidence of tbe period, for they are carved and colored in the best style of the twelfth dynasty, Noob-Kaoo-Ra, after whom tbe tenant of tbe tomb was called, is better known as Ainen-em-bat II., was the third sovereign of his family, and must bave reigned at a period which cannot be placed much later than 2,300 B. C. Curloa filernglypblc Legend. THI province of Aboo, tbo sign and deter minative of which an elephant is among the hieroglyphics behind the chair of Ra-noob-kaoo-necht, must have been'a very busy place during the rule of this dynasty. The names in scribed on tbe rocks near the Cataract by men of tbe period are almost innumerable, and. like that of this viceroy, enable ns In many in stances to judge ot their loyalty to tbe King and his family. In this cae we have "the Conqueror" appended to the King's name. In another it is "the Gracious," in a third it is "the Powerful," and in a tomb in this same series a gentleman bears the royal appellation with tbe addition of "long life to him." Tbe Cataract inscriptions would nrobablv afford n further particulars as to the careers of Rs noob-kaoo-necht and his family, and as to his neighbors Ra-y and Ba-en-Cboo and Ra-Nefer-Ka-Men-Ancb, and the rest of the goodly com pany who took so much trouble to provide themselves "everlasting abodes of life'' In this well-honeycombed hilL A RATTLESNAKE PARADISE. Where Rattier and Other Snakes are Found la Plenty. From the New York San. A great many serpents, rattlesnakes, copper heads, adders. Black fellows, or white-ringed racers, are killed yearly in famous Gungy wamp Swamp, in Groton, a wild country town a few miles northeast ot this city, and some times tne farmers take a day off from hoeing or haying and make a big slaughter of tbe pests. To come home at nightfall laden with a bushel or two ef snakes after a day's campaign is not a great feat for the snake hunters in the neighborhood of Gungywamp. But for sev eral yearS one giant rattler of the swamp had invariably baffled all tbe hunters. Ha was frequently seen at a distance, sunning himself on the southern slope ot a big flat rock near the center of tbe vast swale, but he slept with one ear alert as It seemed to his pursuers, and be fore tbe hunters could get within a dozen rods of him he slipped off the bowlder and gilded noiselessly away into the impenetrable thicket A few days ago, however. Snake Hunters James Turner. Charles Mitchell and Aaron Chapman, who were on one of their periodi cal rattlesnake chases.bad tbe good luck to bag the monster. He bad crawled out ot the swamp district and was crossi:,; tbe road neat the house of James Turner, wnen tbe men overtook him. He was about five feet long, as tblok as a man's arm, and woie fourteen rat tles. Tbe hunters got another rattler the same day tbat bad nine rattles. An Obstacle Easily Overcome. From the Erie Herald. Pittsburg and Allegheny are talking of an nexing each other. Good scheme. Reduced expenses, better administration of municipal government and tbe certainty of taking a high rank in tbe list of American cities, are some of the prospective advantages. But there's one cloud on this promising sky. There wouldn't be so many offices to be filled, and we are in formed upon reliable authority tbat there are not enough to go 'round down there now. So this ro3B has its thorn also. A Remarkable Average. Principal W. A. Proudflt of the O'Hara School, str.tes that MI'S Minnie Shelley, of bis school who is given second honor in tbe list of aspirants for High School honors, is entitled to a higher position when her actual general work Is taken into account He says tbat Miss Shelley's general average in the nine studies, was 2K per cent higher than any pupil in tbe city. This includes tbe preliminary examina tion held in December. FASHIONS FOR MEN. From tbe Clothier and Furnisher. The high silk bat was worn as early as 1589, as pictures by the famous artist Albert Durer, show. The Windsor tie has not vet experienced the boom that was predicted for it When the out ing season, however, is fairly at its height the Windsor tie will have its sway. The outing youth in his mildest fabrics will be seen later on upon the pave of Gotham. But only tbe hlgbest temperature will warrant him, and be must be, in all his details, quiet and un obtrusive. Some of the fashionable hatters will lay be fore tie prospective customer, npon request as many different patterns of hat ribbons, and in as many combinations as a well-equipped men's furnisher displays ot neckwear. A good fingermark of the turndown tend ency is the fact tbat a nnmber of the custom made shirts, with collars attached, bave been recently ordered with turndown collars, and these concurrently, were cut especially high in the neck. The revival of the cravat is one of the sur prises of tbe season. With the colored shirts a quiet solid color Is most effective. But there is a great multiplicity of patterns and colorings to choose from. They are not to be worn with the neglige shirt ALL of the leading men's furnishers will, from this time fortb. keep npon their shelves from three to a half dozen of the new turn down styles of collars as part of tho staple stock of tho line. Tho new styles are not as is the mistaken idea of some in any measure within the pale of tbe freak collar influ ence that struck the realm of fixings like a humorous cyclone last year. They are sensi ble, comfortable, unobtrusive and becoming. Creating Pocket State. From tbe Philadelphia Public Ledger. The Senate proceeds bravely in the work of creating pocket States to insure Republican control of that body, while the House does what it can to restrain Democratic wickedness at elections. Wholesale business has always been considered, lor some mysterious reason, more respectable than the retail. An Advnntnge that Count. From the Boston Herald. It is announced tbat Vice President Morton ba started for his summer residenec on the Hudson. This is where the superfluous mem ber of the Government has an advantage over tbose who are obliged to perspire in Washing ton. SIT LITTLE NEIGHBOR. She stood at the open window. A picture sweet and fair; My neighbor's little daughter, A lassie with nut brown balr. A bonnle. winsome lassie. With a face like a blossom sweet She stood at the open window, Watching the busy street. Homesick "and sad and lonely. At the close of tbe summer day, I stood at my open window. On the other side of the way. And I saw the little maiden. So near me and yet so far; In ber Innocent, childish beauty. As pure a the angels are. And a smile of radiant beauty. As she saw me, flashed over her face. Like a ray or golden sunshine That lights up some darkened place. So more was I sad and lonely. And gone were the shadows gray. For that smile of friendly greeting Had banished the gloom away. Oh. bonnle little maiden. If wish of mine could bring Earth's choicest, richest blessings To thee, on fortune's wing, now free from care or sorrow Thy happy lire would be My neighbor's little daughter. The lassie who smiled at me. Aimes Huntington, STATE MATTERS IN BRIEF. Tuesday was the hottest day Erie has ex perienced this summer, Sunday band concerts and ball playing have been stopped, in Allentown. THE Lancaster Daily News has been en larged and otherwise improved. Dr. Lewis Baker, of LIckdale, has been ar rested for malpractice at Lebanon. The Prohibitionists of Clearfield county will nominate a county ticket J nly 10 at Clearfield. W. D. Banker, or this city, has entered the bicycle race to be run between Oil City and Franklin on Friday. People who have no regard for tbe proprie ties of life have been guilty ot vandalism in Capitol Park. Harrisburg. During tbe progress of a recent thunder storm in Huntingdon a young gill was fright ened to death by its violence. John Moore, one of Erie's best known citi zens, died on Tuesday, aged 78 years. He had been an invalid for a number ot years. Leroy Ballard was arrested at Banbury charged. with baring robbed a postofflce in Sus quehanna county of a large amount of money. TnE One Hundred and Fifty-fourth and One Hundred and Sixty-fourth Regiments of New York are at Gettysburg and will hold a re union to-day. A Du Bois barber gives a man a shave and a glass of lemonade for 10 cents. If this latest move to draw trade does not prove successful he Intends throwing in a sbine. Experiments are being made In Forest eonnty on raising tobacco. Mr. Wells, a planter, bas three acres set out and the plants are growing nicely and give promise of yield ing a good crop. Amos Leist, a farmer near Reams town, Lan caster county, aged 60 years, worked in tbe harvest field all day Monday and went borne in tbe evening and hanged himself. The cause of the suicide is a mystery. GUHI0US CONDENSATIONS. The largest contingent of recruits ever demanded by the Russian War Office. 270,000 was fixed for the next enrollment by the latest ukase. A new lion hunter has arisen to suc ceed the late Bombonnel in Algeria, named Catner, who invites not only men but women to come and hunt A stock company, with 100,000 capi tal, has recently been formed for the pur pose of raising peaches on a large scale in Houston county, Ga, During tbe financial year closing on May 1 the German Government received a surplus of (8,000.000 from tbe imperial postal and telegraphic department and of this 1350, 000 from the Imperial printing office. N. V. Heide is an Ogden farmer who had 14 hogs sunstruck and the lard fried out of them in three bonrs. one day last week. Their skins were blistered and scaled off like the paint on a house. This is tbe story Mr. Helde tells. Mr. Drury during the rain storm Mon day was in a small home on the place of Mr. Dickey, at Bridgeport and left it in time to es cape a flash of lightning wbich struck th building, tearing a part to pieces and badly damaged it Tbe acreage of sorghum in Kansas is re ported at 10,700 acres, against 9,300 acres last year. The crop is in good condition, and tbe prodnct is almost entirely contracted for by tbe different companies at prices ranging from 3150 to 5200 per ton. A German named Lilienthal, afler ex-K perimentlng for 23 years with artificial wings," bas succeeded in raising bimself, weighing 160 pounds, with the aid of a counter weight lifting 80 pounds. How to raise the other 80 pounds is still beyond him. A new element, named "damaria," is said to bave been discovered in the crater of an extinct volcano in Damaraland. It is re ported to bave anatomic weight of only 0.5, or bait that of oxygen, and therefore It Is the lightest known substance. An extraordinary feat in telephoning was recently accomplished between St Peters burg and Boulogne, a distance of 2,465 miles; convenatlon was kept np notwithstanding a rather high induction. The Russian engineers propose tn converse by telephone over a distance of 4,505 miles. Adam Clark, in returning thanks at tbe table ot another, made use of tbe follow ing significant and pertinent words: "Lord, bless these vegetables and this fruit and bread; and If thou canst bless under the gospel what thou didst enrse under tne law, bless this swine's flesh also." A young lady of Altoona observed by the roadside a wild rose, upon one of the branches of which was growing a small bnnch of burs, healthy and perfect in every particu lar, as was also tbe rose branch to which tbey were singularly attached. A freak of nature which is unexplanable. Mr. Charlie Phinizy, of Athens, is an unerring marksman and achieved a feat the other day tbat required an extraordinary degree of skill. He placed a tiny piece of paper on tbe bead of a negro and shot it off with a parlor rifle. The negro evidently was endowed with iron nerves or was a firm believer In predestl narlanlsm. At las week's sitting of the Academy of Medicine, M. Laborde, of tbe Pans faculty, announced his discovery of a new anac-thetic. wblcb be calls crystallized narcein. A solution of tbls substance sends the patient into a sound sleep free from vomiting or digestive derange ment and without subsequent torpor. So far experiments bare been confined to rabbits. Colonel Colt's old war horse, Frank, died two years ago at tbe advanced age of 32. He was buried in tbe public square in Water ford, Erie county. On the last two memorial days the grave was decorated. The town Council ordered the flags removed whereupon the O. A. R. and town people bave become so Indignant that tbey threaten to erect a monu ment to the memory of Frank. Henry Franklyn pleaded guilty in the General Sessions in New York on Wednesday to robbing Thomas McDonald of 15 cents, and was sentenced to 14 year Imprisonment Thomas McDonald, an old man. was walking through Pell street one afternoon, about two months ago, when Franklyn and two other "held him up" and rifled his pockets of all be had 15 cents. Great numbers of fireflies are sparkling In Staten Island every night now. They first made their appearance a week or ten days ago, nnd tbev bave multiplied exceedingly since then. This is considered a certain sign by all veteran fishermen that tbe weakflsh will oi'at.r tremendously this year. What tbe connectr.-r' may be between fireflies and weakfish tbey du not attempt to explain. A butler in London brought action against bis former employer for tbe libel said to lie In a reply to an inquiry about tbe butler's cbaracter.wbich said: "I discharged John Walsh for insolence." In consequence ot this be lost a subsequent engagement. Tbe insolence had been shown to tbe defendant's wife, and was not denied. The judge -aid tbat it was for the plaintiff to show malicious misrepresentation on defendant's part and the jury gave a verdict for tbe latter. A company has been formed to rent out steamer chairs lor SI a trip acrcss the ocean. Tbe cbaits are supplied with little tables de signed to hold a plate, tumbler and a bottle. Several thousand of these rented chairs are now in use, and the demand for them is con stantly increasing. The idea is tbat most travelers would rather pay SI for tbe rent of a steamer chair than buy one and be bothered with storing it when they get to Europe. Here arc a lew amusing blunders that have just occurred in examinations in Boston public schools: One little girl said tbat "in 1630 the Pilgrims came to Massachusetts for tbe purpose of fighting tbe Battle of Bunker HilL" Another said: "In 16ii2 William Penn explored Pennsylvania wltb a crew of Quakers." In an other "paper, a small boy, who had evidently beard that the English people were fund of meats, said tbat, of all the countries, he had rather visit England, because be would like to see tbe Thames river and tbe Beef Eaters. Sable Island is one of the most danger ous points along tbo Atlantic seaboard. Wrecked men have sometimes been stranded on tbe island for weeks without being able to inform tbe world of their condition. It is now proposed to import carrier pigeons from Bel gium for nse in the coast service, and quarters for their reception are being prepared in Hall fax. Some of tbe pigeons, having been accus tomed to Halifax, will be taken to Sable Island, and when a disa-ter occurs one will be set at liberty with a message attached to it. Tbe pigeons to bo used in this service are very rapid birds and will require but a short time to bring messages from that point into tfle city. The average Indian has not much time to waste in sentiment, but in pnre practicality a Piute squaw in Nevada leads ber race. Left in charge of her bnsband, wno was an Invalid, while tbe yonng bucks and sqnaws were enjoy ing themselves at a fandango at Paneca, whither ber own inclination led ber, she ar rived at the (or ber) comfortable conclusion tbat as Seekabno bad but a few days to linger anyway it wonld be best to bury him at once, so leaving herself free to attend the fandango and find another husband. Wltbont waiting for so trifling a consideration as death she car- " ried ont her plan, and went joyously on her way to i-aneca. tint itte, in tne person ol a wayfayer stepped in, resurrected Seekaboo and cast a gloom over two hearts in the very midst of the fandango. CUT TO ORDER- Customer Is this woolen material new? Tailor Yes, sir. It's so new you can almost hear it bleat. Robinson "What a terrible thing it is to be poor. Travers Not half to bad as not having any credit. Customer (in furnishing store) Have yon spats? Clerk-Yes, sir; I'm married. , w Razzle I understand that Robinson is a fluent French and German scholar. Dazzle He Is. But the great trouble Is that yon can't tell where bis German leaves off and bis French begins. CUPID'S ESIPLOTMENT. "We know that Cupid never wears The smallest sign of any clothes, Ard yet in all our love affairs, We keep him busy tying beaux. Mrs. Bingo See, dear, look at these lovely white vests I bought you down town to day. Only 50 cents. Mr. Bingo-Why didn't yon buy me some paper collars to go with them? Mrs. Slimdtet Mr. Du'nawar, your tailor called, and I told bun you wonld be back at t. Dasbaway (consulting his watdO-Ooodby. , Robinson How did you come to get sneh a cheap-looking office coatr Travers-I bad to pay for It A PREFERENCE IN FLATS. A little clam, in a state of bliss In a bosom ot mud reclined. - Andsaldhe, ''Iprcferanlceflatliketblso. J- lo one or your Harlem kind." All from CMMerant .rurnffMV