KMsf"! ?w& THE FTETSBURQ DISPATCH, SUNDAY, 'JULY 20, 1890. i I Bigpafck fcSSTABUSHEJO FEBRUARY 8, 1618, Vol ftlio. 161 Entered at Plttsbcrr I'ostoEce. I JJorcmbcr 11, 1SST, as second-class sistter. Easiness Office Corner Smithfleld and Diamond Streets. . Kevs Eooms and Publishing House-75, 77 and 79 Diamond Street EASTERN ADVERTISING OFFICII. ROOMS. i TRIBUNE BUILDING. NEW YORK, where eempiete aies or THE DISPATCH can always be found. Foreign au-rertlsers appreciate the con venience. Home advertisers and friends of THE DISPATCH, while In New York, are alio made welcome. THE DISPATCH is rcoularlv on sale at KSrentano's. S Union Square, Ji'etc York, and ' c t. vjcrw. jruru, trance, wnere any one who has been disappointed at a hotel Bnetri stand cun obtain it. TERMS OF THE DISPATCH. rpSTAct ran vx the cxird statxs. SHAILY dispatch. One Year. coo iJJAn-t DisrATOi, rertjuarur ICO IIJAUV IIisuATcn. 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POSTAGE All persona who mail the Sunday iaane of The Dispatch to friends should bear in mind the fnct that tho post nee thereon Is Two (2) Cents. Ail donbie and triple number copies ot The Dispatch require a 2-cent stamp to Insure prompt delirery. fc PITTSBURG. SUNDAY. JULY 20. 1S90. e ! : i. h- THE DISPATCH FOE THE SUMMER. Persons leaving the City for the summer can have The Dispatch forwarded by earliest mail to any address at the rate of SO cents per month, or ft 10 for 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. Jt3-The BUSINESS OFFICE of THE DIS PATCH hat been removed to Corner of Smiihnsld and Diamond Street!. TnE WAY TO DO IT. The proposition of Secretary Blaine that' the removal of the sugar duties should be used to secure free admission for the products of the United States to Cuba and South America, has aroused a good deal of discussion. The fairness and wisdom of the policy in the main must be generally conceded. But the approval of the Secre tary's proposition has so far utterly failed to bring out any reason for believing that progress to the desired end would be se cured by the course which Secretary Blaine and his supporters appear to indicate, name ly, to leave the sugar duties as they are for the present . Two purposes are very important in con- , section with the sugar question. One and , the chief purpose is to take advantage of the f revision of the tariff to secure a reduction of i the cost of sugar to the consumers of this $ nation. The other is to secure from the sugar producing countries a reduction of the duties against suctt products as flour and I provisions. As Cnba and Porto Bico are at once the largest sources of sugar supply for ' the United States and the points where the ' most extreme duties are levied against our ' food products, the question really is the ex- change of free sugar in the United States 5l for free flour in the Spanish "West Indies. If the two purposes can be served in har , mony, no one will deny that it should be done. If, not the relative importance of the ' two purposes can be seen from the fact that - the sugar consumption of the United States ? is about ?130,000,000 while the total exports 1 to the Spanish West Indies from the United States are $11,000,000. Taking the agri cultural interests alone, in whose behalf the reciprocity idea is urged, the increased cost of its sugar supply by reason of the sugar duties is over twice the amount that could be gained by the opening of the Spanish "West Indian market to the flour and pork ot the United States. It is quite possible that these two pur- poses can be served together; but it ought to DC justs mat nernier oi mem win ue serveu by arresting the reduction of the sugar duties proposed in the tariff bill. No in terest would gam anything by keeping up the sugar duties except tbe Sugar Trust. The country would have to keep on paying nigh prices for sugar. TheTreasury wouldre ceive a revenue which it is desirable to cut off. No advance would be made toward reciprocity, for it wonld continue the duties under which Spain has imposed tbe exces sive duties on our flour. In short, to post pone the sugar reduction for the sake of reciprocity, would not only defeat the in ternal benefits to be secured by cheaper sugar, but it would postpone the attainment of reciprocity itself. It is plain that so long as we impose high duties on all sugars imported into the United States, Spain will not be induced to reduce the duties on our shipments to Cuba, -tor it is exactly under that condition that the Cuban market is closed to our shippers. The only way to bring Spain to terms is to reduce tbe sugar duties as a whole, and then to impose retaliatory duties on the sugsr of countries which levy discriminating duties on our products. If Spain saw the suear trade of the United States transferred to South America or the British West Indies she might come to terms; but no progress in that direction would be made by the defeat of the reduction proposed in the McKinley bill. Progress would be made either by reducing the duties and after the lapse of a year imposing a retaliaory duty on Cuban sugar if Spain keeps her duties on flour.orby a proviso to the present bill to the effect that the reduction of the sugar duties sball not go into effect on the sugar of countries that impose discriminating or prohibitive duties on American flour and provisions. Either of these measures wonld open our ports to cheap sugars and hold out the strongest inducements to Spain to abandon nerstupid tariffon our flour. But to prevent tbe reduction proposed in the pending bill wonld be simply to perpetuate the era of high-priced sugars and to maintain the con dition of things nnder which our flour is excluded from Havana. The Secretary's ''reciprocity idea is a strong one; but the idea 'fit, keeping up the sugar duties on account -ef it is a decided non sejuitur. COULD NOT DO OTHERWISE. That forty-seven of the Beaver County Republican Committeemen voted yesterday to repudiate the candidacy of Major Mc Dowell for Congress is not so surprising as that sevjn should have voted to sustain that nomination. There has been a cool indiffer ence displayed in certain quarters as to the admitted bribery. It goes even to the length of splitting straws as to the degree in which the action of the Congressional conferees should be vitiated by the undisputed pur chase of their votes in Mr. McDowell's in terests. So far as the general public is concerned this is not at all a question of candidates. Outside of the particular Congressional dis trict which has won an unenviable notoriety by the proceedings, the pnblio know very little of the men who competed for the nomination. Bui the whole State and whole country has naturally an interest in discouraging and punishing the buying and selling of votes. It is not even a partisan question, except ing in so far as it is the first duty of the Re publican party to make clear that within its organization undisputed bribery shall not be regarded as a legitimate incident of politics, but on the contrary as a matter to be dealt with as tbe law and the best sense of the party prescribes. The Beaver committee therefore acted only as the circumstances of the case dic tated. But behind that, the sterner func tion of securing a full inquiry in the courts still rests upon the public .officers within whose jurisdiction the votes were bought. One healthy result of this affair should be to promote a quick ending of the- conferee plan of choosing Congressmen. It has long been on a par with the delegate convention system of holding primaries. A direct vote by the people is the simplest and fairest method; and it will not take many more such developments as have occurred this cummer to jo strengthen the demand for a direct vote as to compel its general adoption. ANOTHER DENIAL WANTED. The authorities of the Spanish legation at "Washington utterly repudiate the story that the Spanish Government will sell the Island of Cuba to the United States, and laugh at the statement that $200,000,000 is the price that would be taken for that more or less valuable real estate. That is all right on the Spanish side; but something more is needed to make the matter even. "We want some equal authority to repudiate and laugh at the idea that the United States would give 200,000,000 for the Island of Cuba. This denial is more necessary to establish our reputation for national horse sense than the one already made is for Spain. Perhaps some features of the present Con gress may excuse the growth of an idea that the nation is anxious to get rid of its money; but when it goes to the length of supposing it possible to get rid of $200,000,000 in one lump for a tropical island which we do not want, and for a population, which, in the mass, would be a most undesirable acqui sition, it is time for a very positive correc tion. We are not so hard np for brigands, savages and place-servers that we need to pay $120 a head for a population which has been brought to that level by the most per sistent misgovernment known to history. When this country has $200,000,000 that it cannot nse in any other way it may buy Cuba. But it would be less trouble to fling the money into the North Atlantic ocean than into the Gulf of Mexico. FIREPROOF BUILDINGS. The fire in the Western Union offices in New York shows forcibly the foolishness of housing such a valuable plant in any but a strictly fireproof building. The whole country has been inconvenienced and indi viduals have been subjected to great loss in addition to the damage done to the telegraph company's property. It is a costly way to acquire wisdom, but the, fire will not have been altogether a misfortune if it shall in duce the Western Union Company to make its main office fireproof. It is remarkable indeed, that a building of such grand pro portions, and intended to contain so much valuable property, should not have been constructed of fireproof materials in the first place. There is wider realization of the advant ages of building cities so that they may re sist any ordinary attacks of fire. The latest and mostambitious structures in New York, Boston, Philadelphia and Chicago have all tbe name, at least, of being fireproof. In this city, where a few years ago there was not a single building at all fitted to resist fire, there are now many such structures. The majority of the new buildings in the business portion of the city are fireproof, or nearly so. This is the policy of wisdom and strict economy in the long run. WHIMS OF ARCHITECTURE. The establishment of a national school of architecture is one of the favorite topics of the day. In the cases where it takes the shape of establishing schools for technical education in architectural matters it de serves approval and support. But when it proposes to bring out what may otherwise be termed a national style ot architecture, it calls for the comment that we do not need a school of architecture so much as we need the application of the principles of science and art to architecture. The distinction may be made more plain by the fact that while schools and styles may be subject to changes, tbe principles of beauty and fitness ought to be immutable. We may have some toleration probably because we cannot help ourselves for the feminine theories on the subject of beauty in dress, which make a certain garment or coiffure beautiful this year and hideous the year after. But as the productions of architecture are enduring, it onght to be plain that the theories of art which define beauty in buildings should be permanent. Yet anyone who takes the trouble to review the course of architecture for the past half century can see that its vagaries have been almost as extreme, if not quite so rapid, as those of female fashion. Fifty years ago the Grecian style was the accepted one. From that the architectural fashion diverged into the Italian school, with a corrective era of Gothic architecture. This was followed by a universal rule of the Mansard style. Thence after a slight period of uncertainty our buildings were plunged into the vagaries of Queen Anne or Neo-Renaissance fashions. That fever having run its course, fashion is surging back to what is called the colonial style, and the circle seems to be on the point of completion, when we are in formed, as the readers of The Dispatch lately were, that the perfection of the colonial style is to be found in the porches and columns of the Grecian buildings, that flourished fifty years ago. If the succession of fashions can be relied upon it might be made a subject of calculation; and the man who wishes to build a house that will be fashionable for his grand children, might hit it by going back twenty years and copy ing the French school that was the correct" thing in 1870. " So long as the changes of architecture were in new forms, we could place some faith In the edicts of the artistic authorities that the old styles were crude, ill-formed and the products of oar esthetio ignorance. But when the architectural fashion deliber ately goes back to these old styles and throws aside those perfections of art which have made our residences look like an architec tural nightmare, the claim of artistic prin ciples as ruling guides in architecture is utterly destroyed. If beauty in our dwell ings is a matter of whim and fashion, let us recognize the fact and cast aside the delu sive pretense of artistio laws. In any other view, perhaps the best thing that can be done is to adopt the rule about not reading a book till it is a year old, and refrain from judging of the beauty of any architectural style until it has gone out of fashion. SHOULD SERYE IN THE FUTURE. It is not surprising that the campaign against the superfluous dogs, which has been going on during tbe week, should bring out strong expressions, pro and eon, as to the methods adopted for their removal. The objections to shooting on the streets, which caused the abandonment of that first pro posed programme, were valid. So have been the protests against the nse of the deadly "Button," which is attended by tbe inconvenient consequence of leaving the re mains of the ill-fated animals very much in the shape of a dangerous nuisance so long as they are exposed in the hot summer weather. Besides, 'the complaint of those who lose dogs which in no way deserve death is well directed. The proper proceeding is clearly to pro vide a pound and give a few days for tbe reclamation by owners; after which the un claimed and objectionable captives might be disposed of as effectually but as mercifully as might be. It is not likely, however, that this is going to be done immediately. The net result of the agitation, therefore, it is presumed, must be to impress upon the police the need of discretion in selecting their victims, and promptness in removing bodies from the streets. Meanwhile, before another such onslaught is undertaken, the authorities should see to it that provisions are made for a poudd. Indiscriminate killing of the dogs is wholly unnecessary. A COMFORTABLE SHOWING. The story of the pawnshops is a pleasant one as telling of prosperous times and com fortable circumstances for Pittsburg's work ing population. Those pawnbrokers who deal in old clothing and advance money on the household goods of the people, neces sarily do an active trade when people are hard up. Those who sell watches and jewelry in addition to loan money on per sonal property are prosperous when the people are prosperous. The latter are now doing a thriving business, and the former are sitting at the doors of their shops wait ing for something to turn up. Without any ill-will to our avuncular relatives, this is a highly satisfactory indication of steady work, good wages and prosperity among tha people. A KW phase ot the original package idea comes from Kansas, where a dealer re ceived whisky in bottles from a wholesale house. The bottles came to him in a wooden ease, and to sell them he unpacked the case and sold tbe bottles separately. This when it came before the United States District Court was held to be outside of the Supreme Court decision, as the wooden case was the original package, and the right of sale only extended to sale by'the'ease. Such a construction will be likely to restrict tbe original package busi ness to the sale ot tha foaming beer in tbe wood. Tee announcement that the Lorillards are going into the manufacture of Wheeling: stogies shows that stiffness in the flavor of smoking material Is more popular than the mild Innocuousness of the Connecticut cabbage leaf. The report that United States Treasurer Huston threatens to resign because he has not tbe patronage to distribute that lie wants will, if confirmed, prove that the addition must be made to that trio to which the horse-leech's daughters belong, the organized appetite known as the practical politicians. The Eastern papers of Friday jeer at the Signal Service for predicting cooler weather. They are wiser now than they were, and the Weather Bureau has registered one of tbe suc cesses that are very popular. That paragraph which is going the rounds of the press to tbe effect that the amount which a man can drink dally according to English medical authority is four onnces of brandy, with lighter drinks in proportion up to thirty-six ounces of beer, looks like a disguised boom for tbe liquor traffic It the city will not let its workers have tbe poor satisfaction of bathing in the rivers, the least it can do is to furnish bathing houses. The bone and muscle ol our industries can not go unwashed. Senator Blair's assertion that "20,000. 000 babies have been born since 1SS0 and every one of them is an Ignoramus" may be ad vanced as a basis for the Senator's political ambitions. Bnt the Senator was indiscreet to make his opinion public. Ho forgets the influ ence in politics of the mothers ot the babies. THE complaint from the Southside con cerning the odors from the bodies of the dead dogs that are lying around there constitutes an object lesson on the subject of the poisoning business. SILVER has gone up in London and Am sterdam; but unfortunately it has not ad vanced so much as to preclude tbe idea that the appreciation in value is produced by the demand with a view to tbe shipment of silver to this country. In one respect we must recognize that General Fremont is in posthumous good luck. New York has not proposed to put up a monu ment to bis memory. Thebe are intimations that Mr. Beed is very much opposed to having Pension Com missioner Ranm Investigated; but no one has heard any declarations from Mr. Raum him self that he wants the charges examined Into. "deaths of a day. David James Wilson. On Friday afternoon at 4:35, David James Wilson, agent for the produce commission bouse of Wilson & Phillips, this city, died at the resl dence of his parents, 363 Webster avenue. The young mas's death was duo to congestion of the brain, which was pn.bably caused by being over heated. He being stricken last Sabbath noon, and growing rapidly worse, was unconscious Irora Tuesday inornlug until the time of tils death. Tho young man was possessed of more than ordinary ability, and as an agent In ills Une of business could not be excelled. Mrs. suveln Able. Mrs. Savcla Able, wife of Conrad Able, died at her residence In Allegheny Friday in her 7Tth year, Mrs. Able was a former wife of John C Mendell. now deceased, and the mother of John C Mendell, Mrs. B. c DalzelL wife .of tbe well known contracting agent, and the mother of Mrs. William Pounds and of Mrs. 8. J. Addy.wire of the Penn avenue plumber. .Mrs. Able had been a resident of Montgomery avenue for a score of years, and was highly esteemed by all who en- ioyed her acquaintance, bhewas well known for ler many deeds ot charity. Ljdla Becker. LONDON, July 19. Lydla Becker, leader of the woman's suffrage movement, died to-day at Gen eva, from diphtheria. Dr. Chrimian F. Peters. UTICA, N.Y., July 1.-Dr. Christian F. Vetera, the astronomer, was found dead in his .bed at vnnion inis morning. Sir Alfred Sin LONDON, July.19.-Slr. Alfrea Blade, Chief of died to-day. the Inland Revenue Department, THE TOPICAL TALKER. The Summer Fliabt Excuses for Holidays Tho Slauelitcr of the Dogs Better Guard tho Bear Gossip of All Sorts. 'THE phrase "Everybody's left town" Is as nearly true about Pittsburg as it ever can be about any city. There must be many thousands of Pittshurgcrs already by tbe sea and beyond it; at springs where health is drunk, among tho mountains, and anywhere, everywhere out of the heated city. There has not been tbd same reason for complaint in the weather of the last two or three days as there was in the excessive sultriness which preceded the present cool spell. Yet the holiday makers, the health seekers, and their Imitators will by force of habit r ush out of the city by all routes in greater and greater numbers as August approaches. A NOTHEit preacher is about to become an actor. His name is Virgil Maxey, and he Is a nephew of ex-United States Senator Maxey, of T exas. It is not stated what line of the pro fession be will adopt, but from tbe fact that be expects to act on week days and preach on Sun days, it is only a fair assumption that he will alternate in comedy and tragedy. With his seeming versatility bo might do a song and dance one night and Hamlet the next. It will be interesting to note what he will do when he strikes such ungodly towns as Cincinnati and St. Louis, when he will have to act as well as preach on Sundays. It is probable, however, that this will cot be a serious hindrance to the Rev. Virgil Maxey, actor, for ho is not likely to get beyond one-night stands. Preacher-actors rarely do. ""Theee Is no man more careful of his health and comfort than a young Pittsburger who is afflicted with a goodly share of this world's goods. "I am going away on Monday," ha said yes terday, "for my health." "Why, you're the plctnre of health," said I. That's just It I mean to givo my health the best kind of chance to make me Its picture permanently." A gentleman who lost his dog in the slaughter this week said to me yesterday: "As a prudential measure I would advise Mr. Blgelow to muzzle the bear out in Bchenley Park. Somebody may feel like casting a but ton out that way." y Thi dog killers made one big"heart in a small bodyache wuen they gave abutton to a lit tle boy's pet dog on Second avenue on Friday. One who saw the child carrying the luckless dog in his arms tells me that a more pathetic sight ho never beheld. The dog was very near death swollen hideously, but the boy hugged him tightly, calling the poor brute by its name and sobbing as if his heart would break. i Tm American "church choir young lady" has found an El Dorado in London, and demonstrates the wisdom and reward of the judicious mixture of church choir and comic opera. The shining examples of this happy state of things aro Agnes Huntington, Hello Cole, Geraldine Ulmar and Margaret Hall. It is, however, "our Agnes" who has beaten the record and acquired the social "bun," for it is an open secret that her newly-found patroness, the Baroness Burdett-Coutts, is conducting delicate negotiations with a viewto presenting Agnes at court. It will be a proud day, indeed, for Boston when her most favored artiste "kisses hands";at Buckingham Palace. One of tho greatest of tbe great social functions of the London season is tbe annual garden party of the Dnchess of Westminster; indeed, it is only one remove from a royal entertainment, and an invitation to it is most eagerly sought after as a social prize in Lond"i society, and the idea of an actress being one of the guests has never beon known before, yet j'our Agnes" not only was present with the Burdett-Coutts party, but was the "lioness" of the occasion. Still, it will not do for the Casino chorus to go over to London en masse, as there might be difficulties in tbe way. Pbancis Wilson is very well satisfied with his venture in comic opera. He certainly did well enough last season with "The OolafS and "Tbe Gondoliers," and he is not likely to hire himself out to any manager again. Marie Jansen, Laura Moore and Nettie Ly ford will again appear in Francis Wilson's comic opera company, now rehearsing "The Merry Monarch" at the Broadway Theater in Hew York. Others of last year's company re tained for next season are. Chules Flunkett and Harry Macdonough. The new members of the Wilson organization are Willett Sea man, Jr., the tenor, and Gilbert C. Clayton, a comedian recently with "The Pearl of Pekin" company. The new piece will be first pro duced at the Broadway Theater, Monday, Au gust IS. The scene is Oriental, the costumes rich, the scenery fantastic yet appropriate. The music is by Emile Cbabrier and Woolson Morse, while J. Cheever Goodwin, who did so much to help Alice Oates to her great suc cesses, has done the libretto. PUBELY PERSONAL, John Gbeenleaf Whittieb will spend next month at Centre Harbor, N. H. Rev. Josiah T. Howes, a Congregational clergyman for over 67 years, is still preaching at Litchfield, Me., although in his 92d year. Pbof. C. B. Richards, ef the Sheffield Scientic School, Yale, has been made by tbe French Government a chevalier of the Legion of Honor. r Majoii J. Hoeace De Lacy and General Jubal A. Early should get together without further delay on the field of honor, if there can be a field of honor for a man who certifies to tbe Louisiana Lottery. Mb. Henby M. Stanley has a first cousin living on Hazel street, Wilkesbarre, Pa. His name is John R. Jones. He is a small shop keeper and well-to-do. He is the physical image of the great explorer, having tbe same cast of features. Mb. David Dudley Field, the eminent lawyer, now SO years of age, is about to don bis black silk stockings and small clothes, and be presented at the levee of, the Prince of Wale&I after having sturdily declined tbat honor for many London seasons. AT the banqnet of the National Club, of Montreal, Canada, recently, M. Launer, the leader of the Liberal party, said: "Ca.iada can not always remain a colony. The time must come when we will take our proper position in tho world; and for my part I favor indepen dence." Mb. Robebt Rae, the well-known temper ance reformer, of London, and his daug iter have been guests at Cliff Seat, Mr. Joseph Cook's summer home, near Lake George. Tbey met there Mrs. Mary H. Hunt, National Super intendent of Scientific Temperance Instruc tion, and her secretary; also Miss Whiting, professor of pbysics in Wellesley College. The late Willard Sears, of Boston, stood with Garrison, Wendell Phillips and other prominent abolitionists during the early days of anti-slavery agitation, and when every church and ball in tbe city was closed to them he built the Marlborough Chapel and dedicated it as a battle hall against slavery. It was In its time the largest hall in Boston, and afterward became the Lowell Institute. Mb. Geoege Vandeebilt, the youngest of the four graudsons. of "tho old Commodore," cares neither for stocks, nor railroads, nor for fashionable life. Ho Is almost unknown in New York, except to booksellers, dealers in bric-a-brac, and picture dealers. He is a great collector and possesses, among other treasures, a bust of Rembrandt carved iu ivory by Fritz Kaldenberg, which is considered tbe finest ivory carving ever dono in America and which is valued at 3,600. I0BSW0BH HEE MOTHER. A Girl Sticks to tho Convent In Spite of Tears and Entreaties. Cleveland, O., July 11 Mrs. Mary J. Mc Enlght went before the Probata Court aud secured a writ of habeas corpus for the release of her daughter Mary from a Catholic institu tion known as theHome of the Good Shepherd. Mrs. McKnlght is a Protestant. Six years ago her sister took Mary, who was then 13 years of age, away from home. Until recently Mrs. McKnlght was unable to cet any trace of the girl. When she discovered her whereabouts the nuns in charge of tho in stitution refused to let her see or converse with her daughter. The girl was brought into court by a deputy sheriff, accompanied by a nun. She had a long talk with ber mother, but In spite of the latter tears and entreaties she refused to leave the convent. Tbe scene was a most affecting one. As the girl Is IS years of age tbe Judge decided tbat be could not interfere, and tbe case was dismissed, Mary leaving the court room with the nun. FSENZY OP A DYIHG HOUSE. Seized with Hydrophobia a Month Aflor Belnff Bitten by a Dog. PltoviDENCE, R. t, July 19. A horse owned by Paris H. Mathoweon, a Johnston farmer, died this morning of hydrophobia. In its mad ness the animal tore its forelegs fearfully with its teeth and had to be bound with chains, ropes and straps to prevent its doing injury to. the people who were in tho vicinity. The horse was bitten a month ago by a strange dog which was evidently mad and was subsequently killed. The horse did not appear to suffer from the bite until Thursday night. The animal was one of a valuable pair of bays. Tbey had worked together in a mowing machine all tbe afternoon. When about to put them up for tho night the farmer drove the pair Into the barnyard, gave them some water and left them In charge of his wife while be went to the house. He was called back to the horses by his wife. One of them had fallen and was act ing strange. Ho separated the animals and tied up the affected one in the yard. The animal's eyes had become blood red. A stringy saliva started from tbe mouth, and it began to bite at every thing within reach. Steadily its frenzy in creased, and the horse snapped at its own flesn, tearing out large pieces from the muscular parts of the forelezs. Mr. Matuewson securely tied the horse, and at 10 o'clock at night to stop the animal from further self-mutilation tied a heavy apron of bagglnc on the horse's neck and thus covered its cbestand legs. In tbe morning tbe crazed borso was much worse. It had torn off tbe "apron" and continued biting its legs. It bit at everything in sight. Awheel on a heavy lumber cart was seized by the mad dened brute as though the animal was de termined to make an impression on tbe heavy iron tire and rim. The creature plunged Its head against the barn wall and against wagons and other things in tho yard. Chains and ropes were thrown about its neck and fastened to a pin under a beam. Then Mr. Mathewson man aged to fasten a strap around the animal's jaw as a muzzle. This put an end to tbe biting, but the brute plunsed and thrashed in convulsions, and finally, 12 hours from the first symptons of the trouble, it died. CURRENT TIMELY TOPICS. A TnnsviLLE man treated his potato vines to a bath of petroleum to clear away tbe bugs. It proved a howling success, so much so that now he Is not troubled with either bugs or potato vines. The story about Mr. Blaines retirement from tne Cabinet has not been sprung for several days. This hot weather must have a demoral izing eftect upon some of our esteemed Democratic cotemporarles. , Colonel Shepabd's Mail and Express announced with a flourish of trumpets a few days ago that General Alger was an aspirant for the Presidency and would be nominated by the Re publican National Convention in 1892. On account of the rumor coming from suth a source the Gen eral is now afraid that his name will be Dennis. Fob a man who has been reported dead as often as ex-Governor Foraker has been. It must be admitted that he is a pretty lively corpse. Many Cincinnati families live on the river boats running to Louisville. They And It cheaper than paying house rent and servant girls, TnE Chicago Post asks the question; "If a man and a lady drink an original package and a half in an hour and a half, bow long will It take three men to see a sea serpent." Respectfully re ferred to the United States Supreme Court. Db. Brown-Seqtjabd claims that his elixir of life not only restores tbe aged, but that It Is good medicine" In many diseases. He says he has cured Intermittent fever, neuralgia, rheuma tism, insomnia and leprosy with it, but strange to relate. It has no effect whatever on a lazy man. Hon. William L. Scott's horse Banquet has broken the record. The ex-Congressman Is a pretty good record breaker himself. The census shows that tbe town of Gettys burg has a population of 3,061 persons. What an insignificant little snburb it Is of the great city of the dead, which lies outside its lines. Probably nowhere else on this continent. If in the world, says the Detroit Dree Press, does such a handful of tbe living go about the vocations of dally life In the silent presence or such a multitude of the dead. Major Goodman Iu Philadelphia. From the Philadelphia Inquirer. , Conspicuous among tbe names of the arrivals on the register of the Lafayette Hotel yester day was that of Major E. H. Goodman, of Pittsburg. Major Goodman is well-known in Philadelphia, where he was formerly General Superintendent ot tbe Pullman Car Company's interest in this city. He is now identified with tbe Westinghouse Electric Light Company. ALL THROUGH THE STATE, LAWN tennis is one of tha lost arts in Oil City. A Nobbistown man claims "bee charming" qualities. Ground has been broken for a new city bnilding in Oil City. A lot of Nomstown boys have been arrested for stealing Sunday papers. Some Schuylkill connty census enumerators have refused to finish their work. A West Chesteb man says the umbrella he carried was shattered by lightning recently. Samuel Gabdon, a Welsh Monntaln farmer, killed a 13-foot black snake a few days aco. A single birthday party at Reading did service for three relatives who were b orn on the same day. Mbs. S. S. Ladd, Superintendent of tne Bradford Hospital, has been asked to resign, which request she politely refused. Henby Rambo, of Reading, while fishing in the canal, caught a fish, the 'like of which had never been seen before in that section. Peteb Egolf, Sr., aged 93 years, who has been aD active farmer for 83 years,is probably the senior agriculturist of the Schuylkill V al ley. While assisting an officer to arrest a drunken man in Bradford, George Fisbor, a hotel clerk, had a finger bitten off by the fel low, Michael Gibbons, a National Guardsman, 26 years old, was mangled to death under a train near Wilkesbarre on Thursday night. He had just attended drill, and met death in uni form. John W. Rudy, convicted of murder in the first degree at Lancaster and commuted to imprisonment for life, was lodged in the East ern Penitentiary yesterday morning by Sheriff Burkholder. THE THIRD CENSUS DISTRICT. A Gain of Twenty-hlx Per Cent Made In Montgomery Connty. Nobbistown, July 19. Tbo first compilation of tbe returns from all the eonntles of the Third Census district, of which John H. White is Supervisor, was made to-day, and shows that tbe population of the district is, in round num bers, 499,000, distributed amontr tbe five coun ties as follows; Montgomery, 121.500; Bucks, 72, 000: Berks, 135,500; Northampton, 83.667; Lehigh, 77.359. Tbe largest gain over tho census of 18S0 wits made by Montgomery county 26 per cent, with Northampton 18, Lehigh 17, Berks 10 and Bucks 5 per cent. The figures will vary slightly, as one district in Lehigh countv, two in Mont gomery and four in Bucks remain to be heard from, and the returns from tbe institution enu merators, of whom there are 26, are incom plete. A Sklllfnl Acrobat. From the Tltusvllle Herald. Line Repairer John McCllntock, of thePostal Telegraph Company, was on the top of a 60-foot pole in Titusville, when tbo pole snapped in two at the bottom. Before the pole fell the skillful acrobat slid half way down, and when tho pole was within five feet of tbe ground he leaped to a guy rope and fell on the top of the pole, miraculously escaping with his life, but seriously injuring his left side. ABOUT THE SIZE OF IT. rWBIXTEN TOB TOX D1SPATCH.1 Ob, here and there , And everywhere The cranss are coming and going. So wind from the sea. No wind from the lea But cranks to cranks is blowing. 'Twere vain to try To classify The crank, whose name Is legion; Who buzzes and swarms, Pulls down, reforms In every terrestrial reglon. But It's safe to say, In a general way. Of erankery, and every sort ot It, That the long-haired he And the snort-nalred she , Are about the long and short of it. -Polk swaiM. MURRAY'S MUSINGS. A neef-Enicr's rJaiprlae at "the Independ ence of American Women Abuse of the Tip System on tho Occnu Dressing and Tobacco Chewing. trnojf x siAvr cobmsposdest. mT0 You know what strikes me the most forcibly that makes tbe greatest im pression on me here?" This by an English acquaintance who had been in this country but two days. We were seated at one of the little square tables in the Hoffman House art gal lery, and my foreign friend was complacently toying with a straw. I suggested that it might possibly be mixed drinks. "Oh, no; you're chaffing! Though they are good, to bo sure very nice and and very dear,"h added, glanc ing at bis check. "I'll tell you. It is your women promenading up and down Brdadway without mate escort or other attendance. I've been watching them for hours. Here It is nearly 10 o'clock and the street is full of them. You might suppose they were within their own private premises. I've heard much of the in dependence of your charming women, but I confess my astonishment at this. "Nothing remarkable But it Is very re markable to me. Such handsome women, and so admirably dressed! In London after night fall you will see nobody but disreputable women aoroad unattended at least nobody who can remain at home. Here the great mass of these women are evidently respectable ladies." I told him bis surmise was correct. The dif ference was in the application of municipal law. London gives its bad women the right to the streets at night; New York reserves that right exclusively for decent people. "But we have reached tha point by long process." he continued, "and by a method of municipal ratiocination beyond ordinary human understanding. In many respects America is more civilized than England. Now, isn't that a big admission from a a 'beef eaterf " It was, indeed, but not bigger than other ad missions I have heard from English travelers. And this same point of feminine freedom in variably strikes the foreigner with astonish ment. The thousands of ladies who stroll in pairs and clusters up and down Broadway every pleasant evening is the most substantial testimonial to the decencies of New York; As a matter of fact, and despite tbe horrid charac ter given the metropolis "under the gaslight," a respectable woman can go almost anywhere at almost any time of the night without being disturbed or as much as-accosted. The woman who works year in and year out on the morn ing newspapers of this city will testify to that. AH she has to do is to go along and mind her own business. The Broadway promenaders, however, are strollers, but they are protected by custom and by tbe natural chivalry ot the American gentleman. Dressing In New York. "pnE best dressed men in New York are not the richest citizens by any means. In fact, dress is no more the index to a man's pocket book here than it is elsewhere. There are probably 20,000 clerks downtown who dress bet ter, richer and more tastefully than their em ployes. Some of our millionaires are so mean they would use a wart on the neck for a collar button. Tbey show it in their attire as well as in other ways. The best dressed man yon meet is more likely to be a man who lives in a hall bedroom of some cheap boarding bouse and can scarcely raise money to pay his board from week to week. He may be an actor, or a bar ber, or a drygoods clerk, or something of tbat sort, but he pays special attention to clothes. He makes clotbes the leading feature of bis daily life. Every fashionable woman will tell you tbat dressing is an art. It is the same with a man. It requires both taste and study, and not necessarily a good deal of money. Tbe less money, tbe greater the genius demanded. I have seen women who always look better on 100 or $200 a year than others on as many thousands. All of us know men who spend a lot of money on clothes and tailors and are never well dressed. New York is full of such men. Life is too short and time too valuable for most men to worry over the exact shade or figure ot cloth and the precise cut or lit of the tailor. So the fashions ot men are' invented and gov erned by people for whom those of the great, driving business world have tbe utmost con tempt, just as the fashions of tbe feminine world are moulded and set by tbe cocottes of Fans. The originators are worthless and unknown, but they bring to bear on tbo matter an amount of taste and an aggregation of novel laeaa superior to toe masses wno consciously, or unconsciously, imitate them. There are young fellows about New York yes, and old fellows, too who, on small incomes, get more amusement out of dress and make a braver show of fashion than all the millionaires of tbe country put together. Leas Chewing of the Weed. h'Tobacco chewing has been steadily and happily declining, so far as New York users of the weed are concerned," said a well known tobacconist the other day. "It is a relic of crude civilization, anyhow, and will now be found prevalent only among raw communities West and South. The poor and Ignorant chew tobacco more or less everywhere in some form, chiefly in the United States. Laboring men, who have fewer opportunities for smoking, more naturally take to chewing tobacco. We very rarely sell chewing tobacco to gentlemen, nowadays." And this observation is verified in numerous ways. The carpets of the various New York theaters are very little damaged by the users of "fine-cut" or "plug." The side walks in those parts of the city most affected by gentlempn of cnlture and refinement show comparatively few stains from tho habit. Even the elevated trains, where half a million of people of all classes and conditions ride up and down daily, show decided evidence of tbe in creasing cleanliness. A man may meet and talk with hundreds of other men day after aay and never see a chew of tobacco taken. Intbig respect If ew York is probably not in advance of Boston or Philadelphia, though there is a painfnl contrast in the West and South. "It used to be quite as bad here," remarked an old New Yorker to whom I spake about tbo matter. "The foreign population and foreign travel have brought about the change. Abroad very little cbewing tobacco is nsed, as anybody who has traversed tbewhite marble pavemenu of Florence, Milan, Rome and other Italian cities, or made tne continental tonr will grate fully remember. The Ameiican tobacco cbewer who goes abroad is continually re minded of his filthy habit byttbe absence of the here universal spittoon, and the difficulty of obtaining supplies. Jf such a journey does not cure him it will certainly Induce him to con ceal bis vice, as far as possible, from decent people." V Gotham's Comfortable Weather. TTJITH the exception of a single night, when a cover heavier than a sheet was comfort able, we have had a delightfully cool summer thus far. There have been nore evenings when a spring overcoat was desirable than days when the beat was seriously disagreeable. I writo this with a mental reservation against the day on which it is printed. 9 Robbers ot the High Seas. UB ocean-going steamers inflict a penalty on passengers not anticipated by any save old timers. This is in tips. As most of them are under the flag of nations where the tip is a part of the general system, it a considered a part of the necessary expenses. The man who starts out with the idea that bo can Ignore the cus tom will have a disagreeable time of it. The English lines are the worst, for the English steward, waiter or petty official i3 tho most in solent mortal on the face of the earth or sea. Ton will havo to reach higher and will get less foryour money dealing with him than with anybody else. Everybody who has been across the water has a harrowing tale to tell of bis ex tortions. His kind are not adverse to setting their own price, maaing meir own caarges. Tbe steamship companies pay their men about 115 per month. They expect to makoS25to850 a trip in tips. If you are alone and ask no fa vors a waiter will expect at least SJ 50. This although he lias done nothing "especially for you beyond the necessary service at table. The bedroom steward expects the same. Both will ask you for it and insult you if you don't pay it. If you have a family, or 3re seasick, or the female members of your family require any extra attention, the charge will bo run up to S5 or S10. I remember when coming over on the Cn narder. Anrania, I Innocently tendered the man who bad waited upon me at table two-and-six. Ho handed it back to me impudently andald: "We usually get ten shillings, sir." I put it in my pocket. A short time atterward I tendered tho same amount to tbe bedroom steward, whom I had not even seen before on the trip. Tbat menial simply passed it back with a scornful glance tbat took in my entire anatomy. Instead of being annihilated, as I ought to have been, 1 solemnly replaced tbe coin in my pocket. Unfortunately lor Amer ican travelers generally, I noted that few passengers have as much presence of mind. I am a believer in tips, when I get something for the money: as is usually the case on the Con tinent. When a conductor or guard gives a man a whole compartment in a crowded train he earns his shilling, and Americans will invariably recognize the fact. The steamer tip is, however, usually a bit of blackmail. There Is another thing. You are expected to Inrnish vour own steamer chair at a cost of from $1 to $7. Why a passenger should buy his own seat and lug it along is more tban most fellows can find out before they go. They Ann out then that it is to sit down unon. to look after daily, to pay storage upon when they get across, to find stolen or brokon when tbey want to return and to cost them' all tbelr odd i-rnnnees and reserve tetrmer. There is only one thlDg worse, and tbat is to stand np, if you j wish to remain on deck the only desirable place most of the time. m A Result of the Wine Booming. TT has got so in New York that well-known "club men," as they liked to be called, are afraid to name their preference for a particu lar brand of wine for far tbey will be taken for wine boomers living on corkage. Some distinction must be preserved between gentle men of eTegant leisure. CITABLE T. MUBBAY. New York. July 19. JFKEE RAKKHTS MISTAKE. The Actor Declined a Fortune Offered Him by Mr. Wrstlngbouse. From the New York Dramatic Mirror. J Some years ago when McKee Rankin was leading man in tha stock company at tho theater in Pittsburg, ho was visited every few days throughout tha entire season by a long, lean man. who looked like a typical countryman. He tried to indnce him to ad vance money for tbe putting of a patent before the public. Tbe visitor only had one way of stating his case, and this he religiously did on an average ot tbree times a week for about 30 weeks. He would lounge up to Rankin, and. after bidding the actor "good morning," and chatting for awhile, would incidentally remark: "Pve got a patent out of which untold wealth can be made if I only had abont S50U to get started. Now, Mac, I'll give you a half inter est in it if yon'll advance the money." Tha same speech was repeated so frequently that it became a standing joke in the company, and the young fellow who gave ntterance to It was looked on as a crank by one and all. Other people not members of the company joined the actors in tbelr estimate of tha mental balance of tbe inventor. The season closed. Rankin came to New York and bis friend from Pittsburg was for gotten until some years later when Tbe Danites was in the flush of its success. Rankin was playing tbe part of Bandy in Pittsburg, when be received a call at bis botel from, one of the millionaires of the Smoky City. He was greatly surprised to think that this man should call on him, but a few moments conversation soon put him straight. The visitor was George westlng house and the "Datent" he tried to get Rankin interested in was tbe now universally used "air-brake," the royalties from which amount to more than 1500,000 per annum. A FORTUNE WITHOUT EFFORT. Virginia Capitalist Said to Have Cleared n Million. Richmond, Va July 19. It is stated upon good authority that Messrs. James B. Pace, James Dooley, and B. D. Christian and General T. M Logan, from Richmond, capitalists, have recently made a large amount of money in a railroad deal. About two years ago these gentlemen acquired stock in a construc tion company operating in what was then Washington Territory. The schema was to construct a railroad from Seattle to Spokane Falls, a distance of about 350 miles This company baa completed 140 miles of the Lake Shore and Eastern Railroad, and is now pushing forward to fill np the gap of 84 miles between that point and Mission, on tbe Inter national Line, where the new road will connect with tbe Canadian Pacific. The result ot the enterprise has been to net the gentlemen named a bandsome profit with out any one of them ever having seen the prop erty upon which this money was made. Messrs. Pace, Christian and Dooley were equally Inter ested, and it is understood that the net profit which they divide Is $600,000. General Logan is saia to have cleared between three and four hundred thousand. A PETRIFIED SKULL Found by Workmen Excavation for Foundation. Wheeling. July 19. Yesterday, while en gaged, with other workmen, in excavating for the foundation of a new house on Fifteenth street, east of Wood, Mr. William Fnese un earthed what appears to be a petrified skull. The head is small, like that of a child, and is as hard as rock and apparently solid clear through. The face Is well marked, tha nose, eyes and mouth being distinct, but at tbe back of tbe head there is a large depression or hollow, as though the original skull bad been crushed in by some heavy blow. No other bones were found. Tbe skull or bead was found but a short distance below the surface, and had evidently been in the earth for many years. It attracted a good deal of attention auring ine aay. HErDELBERG UNIVERSITY. The Acting President Resigns, and More Trnuble In Prospect. Tinrrs, O., July 19. The difficulties in con nection with the management'of Heidelburg University multiply, tbo latest incident in con nection with the unfortunate affair being the resignation of Prof. C. O. Knepper, of the chair of belles lettres and history, and acting President of tbe college. It Is understood that in his letter to the Board of Regents conveying bis resignation, the professor criticised with much severity and some bitterness, the action of tbe board in electing Dr. Knost to the Chancellorship. Other resignations are looked for, and tbe prospects for a satistactory adjust ment of the troubles are bynomean3 encour aging. In the meantime the institution is suf fering and its usefulness being destroyed. R9AD IMPBOVEHENT. The Pennsylvania Commission to Meet In This City Friday, August S. Tbe Road Commission of Pennsylvania will meet in Tltusvllle at tbe Hotel Brunswick on Thursday, August 7. instead of Meadville, as before published. Tbe object of the meeting is that the commission may ascertain the views of all interested in tbe matter of roads, road improvement and maintenance. The commission will meet in this city on Fri day, August 8. at tbe Hotel Anderson. A Little Too Previous. From the Detroit Free Press.1 A man at Erin, Tenn., bought a bottle of "liver invigorator" of n quack doctor, and then, for S2, certified tbat it had cured him of a complaint of 20 years' standing. Ho went home, took half a bottle and died, and it Is for tunate for him tbat he cannot hear the chuck lug and see the grins of his old neighbors. A Hero's Narrow Escape. From the New York World. Ralph Woodman, a workman, of Auburn, Me., snatched a 8-year-old child from in front of a railroad train and had such a narrow es cape himself that tha cowcatcher of the loco motive knocked off his hat and it was carried under tbe wheels. The Spoils In the Postofflce. From the Boston Herald. Postmaster General Wanamaker's position, that no Democrat is to have a postmaster's place under him when a competent Republican can be found to fill it, is tbe ancient spoils idea in its worst form. The only redeeming quality in it Is tbat it ha3 not the element of hypocrisy. THE WAYS OF W0MAJT FATS. Miss Helen Gould, the only daughter of Jay Gould, owns tbe rarest collection of orchids in the country, and is an accomplished botanist. Mlle. Clottldk Mejstrie Is a female bull fighter of distinction in Portugal. Tbe first four weeks she was in the business she killed fonr bulls. Miss Agnes Lowe has been awarded the first prize in the oratorical contest of the Wis consin University. She is described as an at tractive young lady with a fondness for pretty clothes. "I cannot make you beautiful," a well known artiste is reported to have said to tha daughter of an oil king recently, "but if your father will give ma 86,000 and a year's time I will make yott charming." Among the legacies left by tbe late Empress Augusta, besides many to Protestant bene ficiaries, are a bequest of 5.000 marks to the Romanist St. Hedwigs Hospital, in Berlin, and one of 5,000 marks to the Hebrew alms houses. Madam: Helena Modjeska, who is still a very "Rose of May" upon tbe stage, and who is known as tha gentlest and kindest of artists, is quoted as saying that ill-temper, with its ex citement of the nerves and disturbance of the emotions, is a deadly toe to beauty and charm, and that no wise 'woman will permit herself its Indulgence. Mbs. Jopling, the most famous and able of English woman artists, is a leader ot Intellec tual London society as well. She is handsome, graceful, and a witty and original talker, who dresses well and possesses a beautiful house. She has been thma times mamed, butber bril liant and agreeable husband, Mr. Rows, prefers tbat she should continue to sign her pictures with the name she has adorned. CUBI0US CONDEKSATIONS. A new model school in Germany, which, has been built at a cost of $225,000. contains a large dining room where 700 poor children can be fed in winter. A wild sweet orange has been discov ered growing in the northern part of Florida. The fruit hangs on the tree all the year round, often for six months after it is fully ripe. The tattered chart found on the body of Lieutenant Da Long.of Arctic fame, now forms one of the most interesting relics in Colonel Langdon's museum, at Fort Hamilton, in New York harbor. A mass of pure, compact rock salt, said to contain 90,000.000 tons of tha mineral, is located on an island 185 feet high which rises from a sea marsh on tbe route from Brashear to New Iberia, up the river Teche. In Louisiana. The French Minister of War lately of fered a prlzo for tbe swiftest bird in a flight from PerJgneux to Paris, 310 miles. There were 3,748 entries, the winner doing tbe distance la 7 hours and 34 minutes, or at 43 miles au hour. A new and popular development of electrical science is tbe electrical hair curler. It is said to be equal to the most exacting de mands of tbe feminine coiffure, and tbe beard or mnstache can be curled in any style In t o minutes. Two burglars broke into Henry Vin cent's house, two miles south or Grand Haven, and in tbe baste to get away when discovered overlooked S1.C00 which was in the trunk tbey carried away but dropped in the woods when given chase. South Attica, Mich., farmers planted mustard seed. They did not expect pineapples or oranges, but tbey were wild when the plant came up and proved to be Western mustard, which is abont ten times as hard to eradicate as tha Canada thistle. A Scotch physician has discovered that playing on the bagpipe wears away the player's front teeth in four years. The effects on the people tbat hear tbe noise come sooner; their teeth are set on edge and their patience worn away in about four minutes. The Baltimore American relates that a couple from Pocahontas, W. Va who went to Cumberland, Md., to get married, were delayed 36 hours in having the ceremony performed, be cause the groom was not old enough by tbat uumuer oi nours to get a license. About a week ago Luther Clough, of Bow, N. H., was bitten through the hand by two cats which he attempted to separate while they were fighting. Soon after be became ill, suffering greatly from his wounds, and his death is no w momentarily expected. Of the 3,321,000 people who crossed the Brooklyn bridge during the month of June 3,022,000 were carried in the cars. The most in teresting feature of tha Brooklyn bridge trus tees' report is. however, tbat tbey spent $2,723 for "legal expenses" and but 51,000 for coal. The most thoroughly disgusted man in Kansas is Dr. Burton, of Andover. He spent $12 and a large amonnt of work on the cultiva tion of Russian mulberry trees, and the one tree that survived developed into a healthy syc amore. Tha doctor has returned to his pa tients. The greatest steeple climber in England is said to be William Green. He has repaired 50 or more steeples and spires, and is sent for from all parts of tbe kingdom. His great achievements have been in repairing tbe spire of Salisbnry Cathedral, 404 feet bigb; Louth, Lincolnshire. 350 feet; Gratbam, 320 feet, and a steeple in Cambridgeshire, 280 feet. A wealthy and noted sporting charac ter, in Connecticut, on a wager of $50, drove a pair of hired horses from Bridgeport to Nor walk last Friday evening in 47 minutes 27 sec onds. The distance is 13 miles. Both horses, althongh alive, are ruined for life. The Con necticut Humane Society has secured a war rant for bis arrest, and tbe liveryman proposes to bring suit for damages to tha team. A mystery of New York is a "Norwe gian, a thorough cook and housekeeper, with the best of references as to character and abil ity, now ont of employment," who has been ad vertising for a situation for more than a year. Sometimes she receives as many as 100 letters a day. Several decoy letters have been sent to her address by newspaper men desirous of pen etrating the mystery, but they have been un successful. The Franciscan monks have recently opened their first Canadian monastery in Mon treal. The monks live entirely by alms and are allowed to touch no money. If victuals are not supplied they go forth and beg." They preach penance and conversion, and their principal occupation is prayer, meditatian and penance. Their doors are always open to the poor, and with them the monks share such as they hava themselves. A citizen of Selma, Cal., who had two lazy boys on his hands induced them to plant a vineyard and cultivate it with their own labor for three years, with the promise that be would pay them a bonus of 81 for every pound of raisins tbat wonld be raised in tbat length of time. The boys went to work with a zeal that nearly took the old gentleman's breath away, and from present indications this year's crop will cost him $2,000. On St. Paul's river, in Liberia, there is a homemade steamboat. It was constructed by a negro named Irons, who was once a slave m South Carolina. He built his steamboat in this way: He remodeled a canoe 50 feet long, put In the engine of a sugar cane milt rigged up pad dle wheels and put m some bits ot iron shaft ing. The steamer is not a beauty, bnt it carries freight and passengers and does good work. Its builder has inventive genius, and should ba encouraged. Mr. Horatio Littlefield, of WestKenne bunk. Me., discovered a curious object on his farm tbe other day. He was chopping timber, and decided to dig one old tree, known to have been there for over a century, up by tbe roots. He did so. and was surprised to find an iron kettle firmly embedded in tbe roots. Tbe large roots looked as though they bad grasped it and year by year pressed it deeper and still deeper into the ground until it got to the depth of five feet. The question now is; who put the kettle where it was f oundf The Methodist minister in Ohio who got into trouble with his congregation because he insisted that fans should not boused iu church bad less tact then a Massachusetts min ister, who also disliked fans. Going quietly to a church committee he explained to them tbat fans of all varieties distracted bis attention and requested tbat fans of one variety only snould be used. An immediate compliance followed, and tbe flirtation fan, the nervous little fan, the ponderous fan disappeared, and In place of each jf these there is now waved tbe respectable palm-leaf fan, which gives com fort to the congregation and satisfaction to the minister" FUNNY MES'a FANCIES. twarrriN ron tbe dispatch. The Eetort Temperate "Now, don't lose your temper." "I won't. But I'd advise you to lose yours." A Curious Effect "This is a nicely dec orated room. So warm In color." Tes, lt'j surprisingly warm, considering tbe depth of the frieze. "-. S. Watts. A Business Paradox "How's the out look?" "Dark." "Why?" Sales are light." Henry Uartness. An Unpleasant Man "Is Foster an un pleasant man?" "1 should sar he 1st In a crowded street car tbe other day he got up and gave his seat to a lady, and then, of courjc, tbe other men had to get up so, altogether, he made us very uncom fortable." 9 A Born Crawler. "I don't think ranch of Benncttson. He made me a promise the other day and crawled out of It the first chance he got." "That's Bcnnettson all over. Why. he's as much as told me be crawled before he walked." CholmonMV Uareourt. AU, All is Vanity. "Why do yon call your Jokes conceits, Mr. Funulboy?" asked the sweet girl graduate. Because they are a part orthe vain of humor, " returned the humorist; and the young woman laughed so heartily that Funulboy gave her an opportunity to tell him she'd be a 'sister to him, later In the evening. Cartjte Smith, A SEBENADK. He, Willi Banjo Accompaniment. 'Tis bold in me to seek thy favor, But love is mine tbat does not waver. Open the shutter and 1 shall know That thou. Love, dost receive me: Keep the casement closed, and I will go, You care not-1 will leave thee. Mir, Iasldp. The words are fair be dares to utter. I wish I could see through this shutter. Is It Jack, or Tom? I cannot tell Who warbles there so sweetly; Whichever It Is, I know full well. He's won my heart completely, Oprns the Shatter. Why, Bob! Katel Scott Xuut, l ,-.- - . . f jj PHsBBSMBBSMaMSlirfSSSSSSslfeflfcyj.YaMMlteSkvA .BIBdi3BBlElaSSSs3ftBSBBBBBaSSHfeB301LaGlk J