r THE PITTSBUKG DISPATCH,, SUNDAY; JANUARY 4; 1891: mm & .. j ESTABLISHED FEBRUARY' 8. 1846. Vol.43, 3S o. 331. Entered at Pittsburg rostofllce, "S'ovcmbcr it. 16S7, as second-class matter. Business Office Corner Smithfleld and Diamond Streets. News Rooms and Publishing House --75, 77 and 79 Diamond Street. EASTEKN A1VEKTISU0 OFFICE. ROOM M, TRIBOiVE UUILDISG, XEW YORK, -where complete files of THE DISPATCH can always bo found. Torclcn advertisers appreciate the con venience. Home advertiser and friends of THE iJlSrATCn. ihlle In 2ew York, are also made m clcome. TEE DISPATCH is regulaily on sale at .Brent ar.o's. 5 Union Square. New York, aid 17 Ai-e. de V Opera, Parts, France, where anyone w7io hat been disappointed at a hotel news stand can obtain it. TERMS OF THE DISPA!TCH. POSTAGE FBEE IK THE CSITED ETATIS, DAtLT DISPATCH. One Year 8 CO Dailt Dispatch, rer Quarter ' 00 Daily Dispatch, One Month 70 Daily Dispatch, Including bunday, 1 rear. 10 CO Daily Dispatch. 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All double nnd triple number copies ot Tho Dispatch require a 2-cent stamp to insnro prompt delivery. PITTSBURG. SUNDAY, JAN. 4, 1S9L GENERAL MIXES' TESTIMONY. While the first thing to accomplish with the Indians is to pet them back under con trol, the sense of the nation is aroused to the demand that humanity, mercy and justice shall enter into their future treat ment much more than these qualities have teen exhibited in the past. General Miles has just published a strong article in which he directly charges the present and pre ceding troubles upon the gross dishonesty, incompetency and want of foresight with which the Indians have been treated by the Government agents. He points out that they have been kicked about from pillar to post, moved off their lands, cheated out of their supplies and regarded with contempt by the agents rent to dea' with them. One of his first acts when he got upon the ground is, as told by yesterday's telegrams, to rec ommend the removal of a number of these agents and the appoinimen; of army oflicers in their place. Seeing the continuous bungle that has been made of this Indian business, the public cannot but conclude that, unless the admin istration has some new plan of management to offer, it should lose no time in transferring the control of the Indians to the "War De partment. In auy event, this chapter of national history, so far as it has gone, will not be read with pride by generations to come. Belore it is closed by the utter ex termination of the unfortunate race, there should be some effort to redeem the disgrace which has ensued lrora permitting the fate or the wretched Indians to remain so long in incompetent and unworthy hands. Since the outbreak has gone so far, it is at least some satisfaction to know that General Miles is now personally in control, and that he approaches the responsibility with a vivid sense of the mistakes that have been made in the past. EASY KUNNENG FOK SENATOR. The opposition to Senator Cameron for re election is still loudly voiced by the Phila delphia rress, but has not yet taken any organized shape. In Erie it has been dis cussed to the extent of bringing a strong pres sure upon the local Representatives to vote against Cameron. Here and there at other points through the State there have been mutterings of intended opposition. The leading fact in the situation, however, is that Senator Quay alone would have the in fluence to hold out the necessary twenty seven Republicans against the caucus which Cameron will otherwise easily control. Considering that the Beaver statesman has made no sign of antagonism to his former chief, the prospect of any change in the Sen atorial representation is not particularly bright No other candidate has been named or formally entered the lius. Cameron can, therefore, regard the situation with tolerable complacency. He may sot feel flattered by some of the criticisms upon the quality or quantity of his Senatorial service, bnt so long as he gets the votes the criticisms will hardly disturb his composure. JANUARr WEATHER rROPHECr. The varieties and species of weather sched uled by the different weather prophets for the month of January exhibit a family re semblance, while differing as to details. According to the goosebone's vaticinations, as interpreted by Joel Stillman, of "Wood stock, Connecticut, January is to open with warm weather, with a gradual decrease in temperature, until, during the last two weeks, several days of freezing weather will ensue. The coldest day of the winter is to be January 27, but the whole season is be milder than last winter. Bcv. E. S. Hicks starts out the month with fair, cold weather and a reactionary wave about the 3d, raising the temperature and causing "rain, snow, and stonniness;" next come an alternation ot cold waves and storms, with a very cold -wave predicted for the 12th, and after that warmer skies and softer winds on the 26th and 27th. The hydrographio office predicts plenty of etormy weather along the coast north of Cape Hatteras, with strong westerly and northwesterly gales to be expected every five or six days, accompanied by heavy enow squalls and followed by clear and cold weather. It will be seen that the prophecies of Hicks and the hydrographic office agree in predicting a succession of cold waves and storms for January. Come to think of it, it does not require a wonderful quantity of prescience to predict cold waves and storms for January. The prophet who undertakes that January shall contain neither, would certainly get a reputation for daring origi nality, whether his prophecies were vindi cated by time or not. The gootebone sooth sayer comes the nearest to making that attempt, but unfortunately bis forecast is hopelessly discredited by the contrariness of MOTrtJ. Hiy the weather in already bringing to naught his assertion that this winter will be milder than the last one. Hicks, who sticks more closely to the conventional January weather has equally bard luck in having the weather turn out 'just the opposite.of his prediction, so far as the first three days of the month are concerned. This gives us the lesson that the only safe rule of weather prophecy is to abjure dates ajnd stick, as the hydro graphic office docs, to the general probab ility ot snows and blows during the midwinter month. The man who observes that Jan uary has opened with excessive humidity and sloppiness and then turned into a cold wave, and then asseverates that the month will contain a greater or less variety of freezing and thawing weather, will estab lish his reputation as a cautious .weather prophet who may be depended on not to stake his reputation too rashly. ConservativeTiction has its uses in certain provinces of action, such as prices, labor dis putes and banking. In none of these fields, however, is there likely to be more value in abstaining from rash or novel courses, than in the profession of weather prophecy. As illustrated in the above predictions, it is also the safest rule of conservatism not to descend to too much particularity of details. IMPORTS NOT YET CHECKED. The views of various consuls of the United States on the new tariff and theforeign trade of the "United States, as printed elsewhere, puts matters in a different shape from what most people would expect. It is contrary to what would be looked for to find most of the'consuls testifying that the trade of the ports at which they are stationed has not undergone any material change. Only Jar rett at Birmingham and Brown at Glasgow find a material falling off; and the report of the latter contains the expectation that there will be a reactionary gain of part of the loss by shipments of preferred sugar when the new schedule on that staple goes into effect Of course, the determining value of this evidence as to the effect of the law is ma terially modified by two considerations. First, a conclusive test is not afforded by the statistics of one or two months' shipments. The movement of trade for two years would be conclusive: and hardly less than a year's statistics could be held to be a reliable in dication. Then it is the fact that some of the reports are from cities whose trade with the United States is so inconsiderable, or is in staples so little affected by tariff duties, as to afford no criterion. "With these allow ances made, however, it is still somewhat surprising to learn that, in the month after the new tariff went into effect, little change was made in our imports from such cities as London, Dublin, Paris, Liege, Prague, Leip slc and Basle. This showing, if sustained by future sta tistics, cuts both ways. It answers some of the arguments of the free traders; but at the same time it casts a doubt upon the success of some of the leading purposes of the policy of the tariff bill. These purposes were.-first the reduction of revenue; and next, in cer tain cases where high protection was de sired, to reduce revenue by raising the duty so as to check imports. O.f course, the repeal of the sugar duties was expected to result in increased imports of that staple, but if advanced duties on certain English, French and German products do not de crease tne importations of the articles, the revenue will be increased by the advance of duties, and ..the protective purpose of the change will be at least postponed until domestic competition has come in to reduce prices to the point that will check the im ports. This test of actual workings of the tariff is an interesting one, and will be observed with close attention until it has proceeded so far as to give a decisive -indication of the results of the new schedule. We think the main factor yet to come, which will put a different aspect on the situation abroad, is the competition which a protected market in the United States will cause to spring up here. New American producers will come to the front The time since the passage of the Tariff act has been too brief for the full development yet upon this line. A MAT MUSIC FESTIVAL. We are to have a Hay music festival this year. Tins will be grateful news to the many who enjoyed the feast of harmony and melody two years ago. Especially as this festival is promised ta be greater and grander than the former one. Pittsburg has risen to the dignity of being one ot the mus ical and art centers of this great country, and it has fully earned its reputation as such. The great exhibit of art in the Car negie Hall and the subsequent grand musical treat not only demonstrate the cultivation of the community, but they will add impetus to further progress. A NOVEL EFFECT OF POPULARITT. A very remarkable view of the reasons which are supposed to sway commercial ac tion is furnished by a recent announcement to the Philadelphia coal trade. The an nouncement was made by the Beading Coal and Iron Company that from the 1st of the year, it would discontinue the supply of the size oT anthracite coal known as small stove coal. This is for the novel reason that this size of coal is too popular with consumers. Merchants and manufacturers at large would be thunderstruck if told that the ex ceeding popularity of anygrade or size of an article is a good reason for refusing to let the public have any supply at all ol what it wants. Fashionable shoemakers, for in stance, may have observed, among their patrons of the softer sex, an extraordinary demand for Nos. 2 or 3 in shoes; but. but it has never occurred to the members of that craft that this affords a reason for telling the ladies. that they can not have any shoes of those sizes at all. 'On the cdntrary, the enterprising shoe merchant will make an extraordinary effort to supply that demand, even proceeding to the length of marking down 4s and 5s into the grade of 2s and 3s. The iron manufacturer, if he finds a certain size of bar iron leading in the demand, will set his mills to running on that size. But the coal corporation in this case is so superior to the ordinary commercial rules that it adopts the Draconian rule, when it finds the public running after a given size of coal, of telling the public that such a vagary of popular opinion will be corrected by taking away the supply altogether. Of course a detail is added on the part of the coal company that modifies this remark able position somewhat It is that as the coal company produces a certain proportion of each size of coal this excessive demand for one size causes inconvenience "by leaving an excess of the other sizes on the hands of the company. But that hardly furnishes an adequate reason for discontinuing the supply ot that size altogether. It might furnish a reason for raising the price of the popular size, or, as merchants often do, in creasing the sales of the unpopular sizes by lowering the price on them. The truth is the explanation of this peculiar at titude is furnished by the fact that there is a partial monopoly in supplying anthracite coal to Philadelphia. If the competitive forces were freely at work any coal com pany would readily perceive the necessity of furnishing the size of coal the public wants, even if they. bad to go to the length ot altering their breakers so as to turn out more of the size that is wanted. But as this company has at least a partial monopoly, it is able to inform the public, when it finds itself burdened with an excess of the un- pdpular sizes, that consumers cannot have what they want until they have relieved the company by buying a considerable amount of the sizes they do not want We can imaginoWhat if a grocer bad a monopoly be would be likely to nuke the public buy less popular grades of tea, coffee or sugar in much the same manner. Thus wo have a new illustration of the rule laid down "as a'fundamental principle of law by the New YorkxCoun of Appeals years ago, that where by the obstruction of competition any line of business is "safe against the reduction that would otherwise follow mean accommodation and want of skill and attention." The inevitable result is that the public is ill-served in proportion as the interests thus freed from competition are well paid. A GOOD PARK SUGGESTION. That is a good suggestion made to Chief Bigelow that the arches over the five en trances to Schenley Park be built by sub scriptions for that purpose. The idea of naming them for celebrated persons or events is not entirely new. It has been adopted elsewhere. But it -is none the less good on that account. The suggestion hav ing been made, the next thing is to act on it There ought to be many citizens with pride enough in making our park one of the most delightful in this country to start the subscriptions for this purpose and fill them out properly. The intimation by Judge Stowe, in his decision on the oil well case last week, that the Blue Laws ot 1791 must be constrned in the light of common sense, and with some refer ence to public judgment is a disappointment, no doubt, to a few ultra-Sabbatarians. Yet there is not tho slightest' reason to expect tnat the broader interpretation which the bench puts upon works of "necessity" will result in riecdless violation bf the Sabbath. Any nar rower view would logically call for stoppage of railroads, street cars, telegraph, electric lighting companies, newspapers and other incidentals of modern progress, which were not "necessi ties" in 170 1 because they were not then known, and which can only be conceived to bo exempt ed by tho judicial interpretation that what is necessary must be judged in some degree by the evidence of public requirements and special circumstances. The suit against tho oil wells was very much like drawing a microscopic signt for a fraction of the strictest letter of the law. It was an answer to no public demand. Eastern money, fearful of uncertain, investments on account of tho late flurry, is coming hero to be pat in Pittsburg real estate. This investment is quite, as popular as Govern ment bonds, and has been far more profitable for several years past A political truth of great value is brought out by the remark of the St Paul Pioneer-Press that "the issuos ot 1892 are not in tho hands of Grover Cleveland or any other Democrat, bnt in those of the Republican ma jority and the Republican administration." This is worth remembering, but the trouble is that the Republican leaders seem to be very busy in furnishing the Democrats with plenty of good issues by their excessive appropria tions, their neglect of needed public measures and their passionate devotion to the policy of trying to preserve party supremacy by act of Congress. ANY scarcity in the ice supply next sum mer can safely be attributed to the ice men and not the weather. But it is notable that the ice men are usually ablo to bull tlie markot as much in summer as Jack Frost can bear it in winter. ; Silver men, weary of waiting for a free coinage law from Congress, are going to try to establish a right to free coinage in the courts. Should they suceed in establishing consti tutional authority the wonder will grow why Congress and financiers bave wasted so much time squabbling over tho matter of silver legis lation. Ballot reform will loom up at Harris burg about as soon as the Speakership contest is settled, and the politicians may as well un derstand it is going to stay up until it is an ac complished fact even if the politicians have to go down. GOVEKNOR-ELECT Pattison, it is an nounced, will resign the presidency ot the Chestnut Street National Bank when he goes to Harrisburg. He is wiso in thus catting loose from private interests. The Governor, elected as a people's candidate, is expected to do his whole duty by a great public trust It is now noted that the three members of Governor-elect Pattison's chosen cabinet are named William. This has no political sig nificance. Unfortunately the Bering Sea dis pute is as far from settlement as ever. It is again reported that a second proposition for arbitration has been rejected at Washington. Had the first proposition-been accepted the matter might now be amicably and satisfactorily adjusted. The cold wave has certainly succeeded in reforming the previous damp, moist unpleasant ness with which 1S91 was ushered into exist- Unless the muddy condition of some cities in this country is greatly exaggerated, they may furnish a partial explanation of the manner in which ancient Silesia and Troy were buried so quickly. Those cities probably had poodle politicians for Street Commissioners. Geeiiany, having failed some time ago in getting control of Samoa, is now trying to gobble some of the smaller Pacific islands. The report that the thermometer went down to sixty degrees below zero in Aroostook, Maine, may be a hyperbolical way of express ing the tact that since the veto of that Bar Harbor postoffice appropriation it is exceed ingly cold weather for Maine men. OUR MAIL POUCH. Hello! Superintendent Metzgar. lo the Editor of The Dispatch In your Mail Pouch on Thursday of this week appeared a complaint from a Hazelwood sub scriber about the poor suburban service afforded by the Telephone Company here. That complaint is no doubt correctin the main, it being verified by my own experience, but a poor memory must have misled your corre spondent into saying that last week he held any communication whatever with the city, as all the Second avenue telephones (save those be longing to the city of Pittsburg, which were promotlv put in order), bave been useless since the great snow storm, now more than two weeks ago. The company's officers, when ap pealed to, have made frequent promises to put these lines in order so far with no results ap parent How much longer subscribers are to bo without the means of communication for which they have paid in advance, remains to be seen." Possibly the publicity ion are kindly giving this matter may hasten the repairs more than personal appeals have done It not, those living and doing business beyond Tenth street are in a bad way. Hello Central. PlTTSBtTBO, Jan. 3. A Difference In "Volts, Perhaps. Scran ton Republican. The olectric light wire instantly killed a man in Philadelphia the other day. If he bad been a murderer condemned to death by electrocu tion half the newspapers ot the country would assert that he died in great agony, but having been an innocent man who accidentally came in contact with a live wire it is freely 'admitted that his death was instantaneous and therefore painless. THE T0P1CAI TALKER. A Pagoda Built in Vain. The lire-year-old autocrat whose will' is law in a certain East End household has shown a singular liking of late for the celestial king domthe very earthly one we know mostly by the fans, tea-cups and laundrymen we get from, there. His parents, in whom the enthnsiasm of youth still booms, thought to gratify the child and encourage him to become a Chinese specialist, as it were, by giving a Chinese tone to tho Christmas tree. They rigged up a sort of one-story pagoda though in China, by the way.pagodas mnst be at least three and not more than thirteen stories high or vale the archi tect's head with curtains and gilt paper and bells galore. If it didn't look exactly Chinese it looked crazy, which is nearly the same thing, by the time midnight on Christmas Eye came. While the malo architect was putting the finishing touches to the pagoda he fell off the stepladder, and brought the whole struct ure to the ground. This was discouraging, but in the bright lexicon of the father of one child, and that a boy, there is no such word as fail, and so he went to work again to rebuild the pa goda. With his wife's assistance fie had the' temple completo onco more by half past four In tho morning. Under it where the bones of Buddha or some other respectable person would have lain had Fekin been the location instead of Pittsburg, tho Christmas tree gaily decorated spread its glittering branches. The beneficiary of all this expenditure of tho midnight oil did not postpone the hour of his levee. He m as awake at 7-30. and saw to it that his parents did not waste any time in slumber alter he was out of bed. To cut the story short the trio, the parents and the slightly blase babe of five, presently came to where the pagoda with its tree shrine stood. The small boy let go ot hismother's hand and cooly inspected the whole outfit Then he turned bis little back upon it, and with deliberate scorn exclaimed: "Ohl you made a great mistake with that tree you've got no moss under it!" A painful silence ensued, under cover of which the small critic retired to the kitchen to show the cook a two-cent Christmas card the milkman had given him. In the subsequent proceedings he took more interest as the spankee in a lively encounter he could not help doing so. A Vocal Raise. The tariff according to McKmley has been the subject ot many good-natured debates between Mr, B and Mr. S both ot promi nence politically and otherwise in Pittsburg. The other night Mr. B who is a Democrat called up his Republican friend Mr. S on the telepbone. Mr. B purp'osely disguised his voice and then upbraided Mr. S for not recognizing it "Well-say! hello!" replied Mr. S through the telephone, when he found out at length to whom ho was talking, "your voice is over so much higher than it was!" "Of course it's higher," B answered, "Everything is since you fellows passed the McKinley bill." Judge Brown Actually Smiled. More practical jokes and Indeed jokes of all sorts are attributed to General Pearson than any other Pittsburger alive to-day. Some of them happened so long ago that it is almost a cruel joke upon the General to toll them again. But one that was told in a gathering of lawyers the other day may be related here it for bo other reason than to show how early the pro pensity for extracting fun out of everything developed itself in tho General. Judge Brown, who was the last lay Judge elected in the Allegheny county courts, was ac cording to tradition a very austere man and ex tremely economical in the distribution of smiles in fact it was said that he was a per fect prohibitionist and never smiled. Mr. Pearson, who had then but recently been called to the bar, was not exactly in sympathy with Judgo Brown. Onoday he entered Judgo Brown's court, and went to tho water cooler which was back of and above tbo jury box. A bald juryman was sitting immedi ately under tho water cooler, placidly snoozing. The court was charging the jury. Mr. Pearson took a drink of water and then, observing the bald head below him, deliberately left the water rnnning. The stream struck tho center of the shining cranium, and its pwner jumped three feet into the air. It was instantaneous and intensely. ridiculous. J udge Brown smiled, and then actually laughed. The scene was un precedented, and it is related by veracious eye witnesses that one of the tipstaves fainted. A Widow's Mite. On a Troy Hill car. by the way the little green hearses with the melancholy mules are the last of the boDtalls, yesterday a very fashionably dressed woman took the usual paroxysm a3She approached Penn avenue and made a wild effort to stop the car. As has so of ten happened in bobtail cars she got hold of the wrong cord and began to ring up fares on the dial. The first tug luckily took mnst of her strength and the succeeding ones were not powerful enough to register. Then somebody stopped the car. As the finely dressed woman made cor way to the door a lit tle woman in a painfully thin shawl and a shabby dress, said: "Excuse me, ma'am, the driver will have to pay the 6 cents you ring up." A smile, just enough to show the teeth, and a shrug of the two high sealskin-covered shoulders were all the reply the high born dame vouchsafed. She got off the car without delay. Then the little woman took a thin pnrse out of her pocket and found a 6-cent piece easily enough for thero was very little money there. She dropped it quietly into the box, and the driver was puzzled, doubtless, to account for the nickel when he found it there later on. A Jeweled Question. One of the oddest little bits of jewelry I have seen lately is a stickpin or more properly a lace pin made in the form of an interrogation point 'thus T). The body of the pin is gold filagree and it is crusted with diamonds. A deep blue sapphire formed the tip of the npper curve. They are the fashion, it is said, in New York, but the objection raised to them by one fair critic is that only questionable poople could wear them. The dancer of sending one as a present to a lady seems to be that the query in the bauble might be interpreted to be a pro-, proposal. Hepburn Johnsi. BEF0EHIHG THE BALLOT BOX. The New League Organized in Chicago Adopts Its Constitution. CHICAGO, Jan. 3. A preliminary meeting to effect tho permanent organization of the Chicago Ballot Reform League was held last night, a numDer of prominent citizens being present A constitution' was adopted by the meeting, which declares that the objects of the league "Shall be to employ all honorable 'and lawful means to seenre for the city of Chicago and the State of Illinois what is known as the Australian ballot" The draft of the bill to be introduced in the Illinois Legislature at Its next meeting was considered. The bill is modeled after the Minne sota one. with some changes providing for the three tickets red, white and blue, in color corresponding to the colors of the ballot boxes to be preoared by the State, county and city officers. The reformers agreed that the pres ent city election law was a bad one, and tho primary system was denounced as "Infamous, gutter-snipe politics." in which lay the founda tion of the evils in the body politic Some methods were suggested to take the place of primaries, but nothing definite was agreed upon. Judge Tuley was elected President, and Charles Bary Corresponding Secretary. THE FAHt AHD SPAHISH AMERICA. The Commissioners to Be Sent to Those Countries Malting Preparations. Chicago, Jan S. The officers of the army and navy detailed to lay before the Govern ments of Central and South America, the desir ability of their being suitably represented at tin Columbian Exposition, reported to Direc tor General Davis this morning for instruc tions. An extended conference was held. They will remain in the city for some time, loading up with the effects for use in their work, and will -take with them illustrated pamphlet covering the points in relation to Chicago and the Fair, which, it is supposed, will aid them in their work. They will be abroad at least a year and a half. Each officer is familiar with the language of the country to which he is assigned, and most of the naval oflicers have done duty in the places which they will again visit Be Will Probably Keep It Philadelphia Press. It it said that Grover Cleveland's Hew "X ear's resolution was to stop telling school-girls "the tariff is a tax," PERSONAL NOTES. Dr. Jakes Croix, the first to explain the movement of tho Gulf Stream, has died at the age of OS, a distinguished Fellow of the Royal Society. James P. Scott, son of Thomas A. Scott, late President of the Pennsylvania railroad, proposes, by way of experiment, to plant 1,000 acres of nee near Kissimmee, Fla. RnoDA Broughtoit lives at Oxford, whore she took up her abode just ten years ago. In all the has written about 30 books, but she has allowed only half of them to be published.' ScnLiEHANN was 34 years old before he knew a word of Greek, and it was not until he was 41 that he began the study of archaeology, in which he was destined to achieve so much distinction. Goyebkob Wattebman. of California, has surpassed all previous Governors of the State in pardoning criminals. In the last 40 days of bis term he has pardoned 62 convicts, including murderers, robbers and others. Archduchess Maria Dorothea is one of the beauties ot the Austrian Imperial family. She is above medium height with dark hair and eyes, and a fresh complexion. She is noted for her charities and for her skill in piano playing. Ellsworth Ingalls, the eldest son of the Kansas Senator, is a lawyer who has built up a lncrative practice in his native town. The Senator's second son, Ralph, is a student at the Colombia College Law School. He will take his degree in the spring. Bismarck's inseparable companions are two large Danish hounds. At dinner they eat beside their master, and be occasionally feeds them with his own bands. After dinner the Prince smokes three pipefuls of tobacco, that being the amount allowed htm by the doctors. Judge William P. Ltoit, of the Wisconsin Supreme Court, who will become Chief Justice on the retirement of Judge Cole a fewweeks hence, has held his present office 20 years. He is a native of Columbia county, N. V., and won a brigadier's stars in the Volunteer army dur ing the civil war. Governor Hiix, of New York, has, been obliged to decline the invitation sent him to be tho guestof the Young Men's Democratic Clnb, of Philadelphia, for the evening of Jannary 8. The Governor's official duties will necessitate his presence in Albany on account of the con vening ot the Legislature. Bbaytox Ives, the .New York millionaire, is going to sell his famous collection of old manuscripts and rare pottery 'at public sale in March. The collection, an unrivaled one in this country, is worth abont $600,000, and much curiosity is manifested as to the price the gems will bring at auction. Bookless Simpson, having been sent a present ot hosiery from Jersey City, returned the bundle with a note which read: "Sir, our f orefatbers refused to drink tea because it was taxed 3 per cent, and held a tea party in Bos ton to get rid of the stuff. I have just finished figuring up the tax upon those stockings, and I find thatit amounts to 70 per cent. I will wear no socks until the tax is taken off." Senora Mendonca, wife of the new Brazilian envoy to the United States, Is an American woman, daughter of a down east sea captain. Captain Redman, ot Thomaston, Me. When her father sailed for Rio Janeiro 23 years ago he took his daughter with him to keep him company on board his schooner. Scnor Mendonca was then a young editor in the Brazilian port and a chance introduction of the youngpeople ripened into a romantic court ship that led to marriage, lime, Mendonca has a son 25 years old and four daughters rang ing from 18 to 22 years in age. TEE EASTERN DANCE. It Is a Product of Physical Endurance Be gun in Early Youth. Julian Hawthorne, in Dress. One of the most attractive features of the recent Exposition in Paris was the Eastern dancing girls. In half a dozen or more booths or tents, scattered about tho grounds, these strangers ot another world and civil ization held their unique receptions. The spectacle, to Western eye3, is so entirely new and unprecedented that the first effect ot it is mere astonishment After further experience, its strangeness begins to resolve itself into beauty; wo can discriminate between .the com parative merits of dancers, and dispense ap plause judiciously. A narrow stage occupies one end ot the room, which may be 30 feet square. On the stage, in a semi-circle, sit the dancers and the musicians. The latter produce a concert; chiefly with a sort of drums, and pipe3 that emit a noise not unlike the scream ot a bagpipe. It is a bewil dering, exciting noise, which, after a while, begins to heat the brain and hurry the pulse. In the midst of it a young woman rises.swathed about in silks and muslins, and with bangles and necklaces jingling and sparkling at every move ment. Her body sways easily between her haunches, and her air is partly indolent and partly suggestive of latent vigor. As she faces the audience, undulations pass through her body: and these undulations are not only lateral, but vertical. Anyone who has observe 1 the belly of a snake in motion has seen the counterpart ot this movement While the undulations are going on, the gitl is in other respects performing a slow, graceful and languid dance. Iler arms rise and fall and wave about her head: she turns her face from side to side, and occasionally smiles as it in a voluptuous dream; her feet shifting rhythmic ally and without baste: and ever and anon she turn; completely round, but always slowly and deliberately. The marvel and singularity ot tho performance lies in the undulations of the front of the body. It is impossible for a Eu ropean to produce svcn the germ of such a movement These girls have been trained, from early childhood, in the use of groups of muscles of tho very existence of which we are ignorant Their control ot them is absolute. The oxtent and power of the contractions is as tonishing. In a European it would be almost revolting, but in these Oriental damsels the effect is dif ferent. We recognize tht the "dance" is nat ural to them: that it belongs to their race and genius, and that it has come down to them from an epoch as ancient as the sides of the pyra mids and the infancy of Buddha. It is not to lie criticised by our crude cotemporary stand ards of convention, fashion or morality; it is to be accepted, wondered at for what it is, and has been since the East was the East DEATHS OF A DAY. Charles Thomas Swift rsrrciAi. txixobau to tbe dispatch.! Atlasta, Jan. 3. The remains of Charles Thomas swift were laid to rest In this city yester day. He died last Tuesday arter an Illness of nearly a year. He was a warm-hearted man of unimpeachable Integrity and untlringln business and was once President of the Swift Specific Com- fiany. the recognized prosperity of which is argely due to his efforts. Mrs. Emma Sledle. Mrs. Emma Sledle, wife or A, E. Sledle, the well-known East End Jeweler, died yesterday morning at her home on Frankstown avenue. She -was universally loved and respected and had an exceedingly large circle of friends. The rnncr al will take place to-morrow morning. Bequlem mass will be celebrated at S9. reter's and Paul's Church, Larimer avenue, at 8 A. M. Ex-Sheriff Bethel. Zanksville, Jan 3. Ex-Sheriff Bethel died suddenly at his home here this morning of heart failure. He was a member of tbe Seventy-eighth Ohio Volunteer Infantry, and as First Sergeant at the battle of Atlanta protected tbe colors with his fists when cut off from his regiment. For this gallantry he was promoted to a lieutenancy. He was elected bherlffof Muskingum county In 1SS8. Clement Butler, Jr. rSFECTAI. IBLXOHAH TO THI DISPATCH. 1 COLORADO SPRINGS, Jan. J. Mr. C. C. Butler and wife, nee Miss Florence Hefllck, formerly of Allegheny City, have Just lost their promising son Clement Butler. Jr. He was taken with catarrhal croup and died In three days. Mr. But ler is the agent at Plkevlew station. Many friends In Allegheny City will deeply sympathize with the bereaved parents. Senator A. J. Robertson. Sidney, O., Jan. 3. State Senator A. J. Kobertson, of the Twelfth dlstriet died at 4 o'clock this morning of cerebral hemorrhage. He had been sick two weeks. He was born in Preble coMnty In IKS: was elected In 1337 ami re elected in 18S9 to the State Senate. He leaves six children. J. Hannach, Sr. IM-ECUX. TX1BOBAJI TO THB DIBFATCIM . , GnEEKViLm. Jan. 8. J. Hannach, Sr., who owned several large clothing stores in Greenville and other places, died to-day after a short Illness of heart disease. Tbe remains were taken to fltts burg to-night Henry Ilnckesteln. Henry Huekesteln, one of the best known citi zens of Allegheny, died yeslerdar at his residence on Center street, at the ace of 71 )cars. The funeral has not been arranged for. Isaac Walker. Isaac Walker, a well-known resident of Walk er's Hills, died yesterday at the advanced age of 73 years. His funeral -win occur from au lata rssldence on Tuesday at 10 A. n. MURRAY'S MUSINGS. Hard, Coal Monopoly and Fogs Frighten New Yorkers Everything Begrimed With Soot An Heiress on a Hunt for a Chivalrous Dude Mrs. Cleveland's Health. IFItOH A STAYS' COIU-XSPOHD-CXT. Mew Yorkers are very much concerned as to the future climate they may be expected to endure. This is notwhollyon account of the recent London fogs that have visited Man hattan Island, but chiefly because of the in creased consumption of soft coal. It has been the boast for a good many years that the clean ness and bracing qualities ot the atmosphere of the Atlantic coast made this section more delightful to live in than any other. This boast had considerable foundation in fact in this particular latitude between the two extremes. Unlike the conditions of other large American cities, we could from any prominent point in New York overlook almost the entire me tropolis from border to border. Of recent years, however, the increased consumption of soft coal has brought about a material change in this respect It is only within the last year or two that this change has been particularly noticeable. Of course it is nothing like tbe evil complained of in Chicago anil formerly in Pittsburg before the introduction of natural gas, but it is an evil which is growing. That is what now scares New Yorkers. They see in the near future an atmosphere clogged with floating coal soot and the beautiful archi tecture spotted and" besmeared by the grimy refuse of metropolitan chimneys. Ten jears ago there were no more than half a million tons ot soft coal used per annum between the cities of Brooklyn andlew York. Now, there are on a close estimate about three and one-half mil lions tons used. The tight grip of the railroad and coal barons of Pennsylvania upon tbe an thracite regions and the consequent high price of hard coal, while tbe bitumluous or soft coal is to be had at little above half the price of the former, are the conditions under which this result has been reached. That tbe decrease of the use of bard coal and tbe Increase in the use of soft coal will rapidly grow Under such con ditions is unquestionable. Tbe probability is that the anthoritis of New York will be forced to begin the battienowinprogres3in Chicago to force a curtailment of the soft coal uuisauce or tbe introduction of smoke consumers. At any rate the outlook for the New Yorker is not altogether a pleasant one. What Torty Dollars Went For. YXJ35 come across some very amusing things, and see some very amusing people in our business," said a theatrical agent the other day. "I remember one time while with the Patti.company in Chicago a rather funny thing occurred. There was, of course, a great de mand for seats for Patti, and tbe prices were very high, as usual. We received a telegram the day before one of her performances asking for four seats. The telegram came from Quincy, 111. Tne seats were all taken by pur chasers and speculators, and I replied that they conla not obtain them at the regular price, bat that I could purchase from the speculators for 10 a seat Money is no object to some of those people out there, and they immediately wired me to buy tho four seats. I gave S10 for the outfit, and found at tbe hotel where I was instructed to deliver them that the four purchasers were ladies. Of course they went to tbe opera, and after tbe performance I saw the ladies and inquired what they thought of Patti. They were per fectly delighted, and all tried to talk at once. Curious to know what a Qnincy girl knewabout tbe Patti style of music. 1 pressed one particu larly as to what single part of tbe performance gave her the most pleasure. 'Ohl It was perfectly delightful." she said. "There were exactly 82 people on the stage at one time because I counted them." "What struck me as the funniest thing." put in another, "was the fact that although that big chandelier burned candles, they did not seem to be any nearer burned out at the close of the performance than they were when it began. 1 was looking every minute to see the grease drop down the people's necks, but no body else seemed to mind it" "She was speaking ol the porcelain imita tion candles about the gas burners. With these opinions of the Patti performance wbicn cost them 40, I went away feeling almost dead." A Financial View of a Snow Storm. "Qo you know what snow means in a great city like New York? It means the almost total blocking of the lines of travel for a time, the greatest inconvenience to every man, wom an and child, the loss of hundreds of thousands of dollars to employers and employed and a total paralysis ot business of all kinds. On the morning after tbe recent great snow the streets were wellnigh impassable for hours to the ordinary means of conveyance. "Even the elevated roads which are supposed to be above the snow line were Irregular, and so uncertain of movement were tbe trains that all business calculations were upset for the day. . There are probably in this city and Brooklyn overSOO.COO men and women who go out in th9 morning to shops, factories, stores and counting houses to work for a living. It Is putting a very small estimate upon the value of their services to say that tbe loss of a singlo hour costs each one of them 50 cents. This is au average of a skilled workman. The loss of one hour therefore to these people alone, amounts to S25li,000. That is a direct loss to tbe em ploye. It docs not embrace any of the greater Joss by tbo general paralysis of trade. On this particular day mentioned, it was not a question of one hourbut a matter of two. three and four hours for the people concerned. It is true that tbe fact that no people go shopping Is not to be counted as a los, for if people buy not on one day they will boy the same things on an other day, so the tradesman makes an average. But tbe loss of labor of all kinds is direct and positive and has nothing in the future to make It good. This is a lesson which ought to be valuable to the street cleaning department and to tbe gen eral city authorities of New York. From the niggardly appropriation for tbe operations of tho street cleaning department that feature of city government here has been a clear failure and has evoked very little beyond incessant abuse for each successive commissioner. The city spends over 11,250,000 every year in tbet tempt to clean streets which cannot be cleaned for less than donblo tbe money. If we take the case of a single snow storm like this last it will be seen that the financial loss to all classes of business from the blockade of a few hours would more than doubly repay the necessary expenditure to make such a blockade practi cally impossible. . Babies In a Sleigh. A novelty in baby carriaces, inspired by the holiday snows is a double ender sleigh in ivory white and gold. When two little twin cherubs, their noses and cheeks pink with the frosty air, are stowed away in either end wrapped in soft furs, and a good-looking French maid in a white cap is at the other end of the string, the whole, cavorting along the walks, it forms a sight for the gods. Stories Abont Mrs. Cleveland. T see a paragraph floating around concerning Mrs. Cleveland which does that distin guished lady a great injustice. It is to the1 effect that for some reason or other, presumably social dissipation, she is looking pale and peaked, and showing tbe worse for wear. There is not the slighest reason for this statement beyond the imagination of the writer. I saw Mrs, Cleveland recently, and never saw her looking better since she was a bride entering tbe White House at Washington. In fact she was visibly improved in physical beauty since that memor able event. Speaking of Mrs. Cleveland's health, reminds me that her august spouse is also apparently enjoying a new lease on life. He is by no means as fleshy as he was when confined to the White House. Whether this reduction in flesh comes from the use ofapatent flesh reduclcgmacbine, anti-fat, exercise or the continuous attacks of Charles A. Dana, the reader will be qnlte as good a judge as the writer. A Fact About tho L Trains. A cubiots thing may be observed at any of the elevated stations. Women, as a rule, stand in a bunch in the middle of the station and crowd Into the middle can as long as they can fincProom to get Inside the gate or pack the platform. Of course men who are just in time are compelled to take the first car opposite tbe gate. This has tbe effect to pack the middle cars almost to suffocation while tbe first and last cars of every train are usually but half fall. No amount of counsel or experience seems to do these people any good. The old stagers who have time enough will always he found at one end of the platform or the other, taking advantage of the general pigheadedness ot the public w The Sequel of a Rescue. TTIERE is some romance still left in ordinary every-day life. In evidence of this is an occurrence of one day last week in which a young man figures as having rescued a lady and some children from the hoofs of a passing team. It was an express wagon driven by the usual reckless Jehu of New York, who deems the right ot way exclusively that of horses and wheels. He bad well nigh driven over tbe lady in question, when a dude young man In a cape overcoat and derby bat and the customary cane pushed forward and slapping the nearest horse on the nose brought the vehicle to such a standstill that it nearly threw the driver from the box. Tbe acr gave the lady time enough to fretbut of the way, andif it did not save her ife or ber limbs, she at least thinks so, which isjust as good, so far as tho romance of the affair i concerned. Now. thus far the story la one of almost com- mon everyday notoriety; out unlike hir sort. practical sisterhood of this modern era, the lady is not only grateful, but is advertising far and wide her gratitude together with a descrip tion of this young man, in the commendable desire to reward him for hi heroism. She says, after this personal description of ber hero: "I am a lady of means and an only daughter, and if I can find out the whereabouts or this young man I will reward bim, and he will not know from whom it comes." Now. if thi3 youth should come across that advertisement and does not respond with an ardent desire to meet this heroine ot his adven ture, andiavtng met her does not at once pro pose matrimony, he will not answer tbe require ments of the knight of olden times. To be sure, tbe description of a young man in a cape orercoar, brown derby, big cane and horse-shoe-and-whip pin is not accurate enougn to distinguish a young New Yorker ot a certain class from a good many young men ot his set, and wo may look for an active competition on the part of all the dude young men so dressed, for the band of the heroine and her "means." Charles T. Murray. New Yonu; Jan. 3. WHIM BABBABIAKS AHDBED SAVAGES. Chicago Qlobe; Tbe conflict is a disgraceful episode of our "civilization," is costly in blood and money and wholly wrong to the Indians. Kansas CUy Star: The present hostilities in the Northwest are tbe legitimate outgrowth of conditions which will continue to exist until the Government adopts an intelligent policy. It has been temporizing with this question for a hundred years, and has not yet bit upon a practical solution of it Chicago News: Tho loss of a few brave soldiers in quelling an Indian outbreak, or in protecting tbe lives and property of settlers, may sit lightly on tbe consciences of those who are responsible lor Indian maladministration. But the blood of every soldier sacrificed in such ignoble warfare calls for retributive jus tice. Evffalo Express: That it was necessary for tbe soldiers in order to defend themselves to shoot the warriors was a misfortune: that the women" and children were also killed was barbarous: that wounded Indian men and women and babes too young to care for them selves are left lying on the battlefield to starve and freeze is Inhuman. This is a poor example of white civilization to set the friendly Indians. Minneapolis Journal: General Miles' article on the Indian policy of tbe Government in the North American Review should be widely read. He shows conclusively that the agency and reservation system must be abolished as soon as practicable, so far, at least as tbe disturbing element among the reds is concerned. The little array is called out to deatbf ui campaigns to punish Indians for re volting against a shipsbod kind of civilian management which ought not to be tolerated an instant The system is really more to blame than the Indians. Brooklyn Citizen: The trouble began when the Indians were permitted to possess arms on the reservations, and it culminated when Sit ting Bull was arrested and then slain, and the attempt was made to disarm Two Strike's band. But it is too late to remedy the blunders or to make recompense for the crimes of the past The Indians havo been pursued into the Bad Lands, and. as ws havo f orseon from the first war has followed, and soldiers have been wantonly murdered and men, women and chil dren butchered among tbe Sioux in a frenzy born of present rage and past memories. SU Paul Pioneer-Press: And then, when we have got so far is It too much to hope that we might finally so progress in justice and decency as to treat tbe Indian just a little is we would treat the white man! Shall we coddle all these fellows who have gone off into the gullies of the Bad Lands, and fill them with beef and cover them with blankets, while we let our faithful allies starve as usual? Cannot this great nation, in tbe intervals of leisure from debates on the tariff and silver and the election bill that is to do so much for tbe negro, con sider the possibility of keeping just a few of its solemn promises to the Indians?. BL Paul -Dispatch: Tho method finally adopted for the arrest of Sitting Bull which of itself now appears to have been criminally inexpedient was hardly less foolish. It has already provoked and produced endless blood shed, and Its latest rcsnlt appears in the report that 3,000 Indians, heretofore peaceful enough, have escaped from the agencies and taken to thewapath. Unless such unhappy occurren ces are destined, to become sporadic the Indian must be reserved from the clutches of the thieves and vampires that have swarmed around tbe Interior Department as tbe product of spoils politics, and have consumed every thing in sight that was intended for tbe use ot the rod man. PEEPABDIG FOB THE FRAY. Rov. H. MacQuarey, to Be Tried for Heresy, Preaches His Farewell Sermon. -ST CTAX. TXIGBAU TO THX DIBPATC1Z.1 CANTOX, Jan. 3. Rev. H. McQucarey, the Episcopal minister whose trial for heresy takes place in Cleveland next Wednesday, announced to-day that he would preach in St Paul's Church Sunday, probably for the last time. He has fully prepared his defense, and will make a strong fight He will leave early next week for Cleveland to arrange the prelimi naries. CEBTAE?LY GBEAT. One Prompt Visitor YYhlch Is Welcomed at Over CO.00O Firesides. From tbe Greensburg Sparks. The PrrrsBUKO Sunday Dispatch is cer tainly one of the great newspapers of the country. It has been almo3t a constant visitor to our borne ever since tbe first number, and it would be a sore trial indeed to be obliged to do without Tiie Dispatch. Its popularity and circulation are both constantly increasing. An Encouraging Sign. , Washington Star.' A significant development of the census of 1890 is the fact that the increase of wealth and manufacturing in tbe South wjs greater than the increase of population. In the decade from 1880 to 1800 the Southern States gained in popu lation, 19.9; in actual wealth, 62.5, ana- ot capi tal Invested in manufacture; 20.7 per cent I A Valuable Book of Reference. Bradford Dally Becord. The Pittsburg Dispatch of January I contains a chronological review, comprising 33 columns of nonpareil, of important events of the year 1890, and is a veritable and valuable book of reference, which all who are so fortu nate as to possess should preserve for future use. At the Top of the Ust Philadelphia Call. A' good reform for 1891: Ballot Reform. DISENCHANTED. wmrrzN ron Tire dispatch.1 She was sitting at the'eonnter lira store: Customers were plenty. Quite a score or people, stood about Wishing, without doubt, ' There were more To do their bidding, O'er and o'er. Patiently I waited also, And I let Unimproved no chance to vlewher Our eyes met. O, I thought her face the sweetest, ' And her -inalenp" the completes, I had yet Beheld, 'raong tne mortals, out or In our set. Bo my eyes I gladly feasted As I sat. When my charmer thoughtlessly Arranged ber hat; And alas! My admiration Proved to be of short duration. After that; Tor Instead of tapering fingers White and fat Or a hand well gloved And tended, Be the glove well worn Or mended I should not have a care The hand I saw was red and bare. My Intended Adoration fled, befort It was Xxteadtd. A.M.B. CURIOUS CONDENSATIONS. Berlin is the only city in Germany that has an excess on.OOO,000 population. Only X have over 100,000 inhabitants. 2 Australia has begun to seed eggs to England. They must be at least six weeks old before they can be nut on tbe market There is said to be a strong sentiment in Arkansas against the convict lease system, and the Legislature will be asked to abolish It. The Corean alphabet is phonetic, and so simple that any one can learn to read in a day. Nearly all the women In Corea can read. In digging out an old well at Murphy's, -Calavcars connty. Cat., tbe other day, a skele ton with handcuffs on was found. Its history Is unknown. Americns, 6a., reaps a rich harvest from the dry counties near by. Last week a single firm shipped something over 1,000 gallons of whisky to those counties. As a young woman was entering the Methodist Church at Dover, N. H., on Sunday last about 1,200 pounds of snow fell from the roof npon her. She was taken home In a dazed condition. A Kansas man was injured in a rail road wreck at Breckinridge the other day, and be wouldn't believe be wasn't killed until the other passenger dragged him to to the mirror and made hint look at a small wound on hi head. The Mediterranean is comparatively shallow. A drying up of C60 feet would leave three different seas, and Africa would be joined to Italy. Tbe British Channel is more like a pond, which accounts fflr its choppy waves. The directors of the English Great Western Railway intend to run an express train, constructed on tbe American system, as an experiment It will consist entirely of long cars, having communication all through, from one end to the other. One of the latest crazes in St Louis Is that of riding upon the electric cars to cure rheumatism, and hundreds of victims of the dreaded affliction, who bave borne their suffer ings in silence are now eagerly seeking for in formation and testing tbe new cure. The Committee on School Management of the ChicagoBoard of Education, to whom had been referred a petition tor placing the Bible or extracts thereof in tbe public schools, reported last week that "for tbe general wel fare of the public schools" it was not advisa ble to grant the petitioners' request The general board unanimously adopted the com mittee's report A man named Simon has been arrested at the request of the1 Austrian Government at Leschnitz, Silesia, where ho owned a handsome villa and lived in great style, his neighbors sup posing him to bo a wealthy speculator on the European Bourses. Evidence was secured which showed that he was the head of a secret robbery society, having agents in London, Ber lin, Altona and Vienna. A great forest fire is raging on the mountain range ot Batoom, Russia, so that the smoke is spreading many miles around. Beside the loss of the finest timber which this fire in volves, tbo destruction of the forest will bo fatal to the irrigation of the entire district; for that forest was the only preserver of the brooks and rivulets flowing from the range of mountains which it covered. In a Main street window in Pawtucket, R. L, there is a fine specimen of the cat owl alive and apparently ugly. It was caught last week In a rather curious manner. A gentle man was in tbe woods with his dog, a Gordon setter, when tbe owl attacked tbe dog, catch ing it by tbe throat. The owl succeeded in kill ing the dog. but its beak and talons got caught in tbe dog's hair or flesh, and its capture was easy. The village of Little City, in the town ship of Haddam, Conn., has a fine schoolhouse which has been without a pupil for two years. Time was when Little City had a prosperous school with SO children, but now there is not a child in tho small hamlet to educate. The cause is a general abandonment ot tbe town by all the young men, who seek a better chance in the larger towns, while tbe women remain un married. A visitor in New Orleans says that there are three features of the life in tbe Creole City that are sure to impress the stranger forcibly. They are the cemeteries, which are veritable flower gardens; tbe language of the French residents, which is spoken everywhere and has the pure Parisian accent and tbe fact that the negroes on tbe lower river still sing tbe old tuneful songs that were heard in slavery days. Another Russian officer is going to make long-distance experiments on a bicycle. This is Baron de Kellerkraus, staff Captain ot thoKovne Artillery, who has already distin guished himself by a ride from Kovno to Tobolsk. He Is now waiting for the warmer weather, and will then travel from Warsaw by way of Vienna, Stuttgart Paris, Lyons, to Cannes. Here be will take ship for Algiers, and thence continue his tour into Africa. Mr. and Mrs. Todd, Christian Scientists end graduates ot Toronto (Ont) Metaphysical Institute, say that "anything can be cured, from a corn on the foot to heart disease, if tbe pa tient to be treated will but have faith m our doctrine." No material medicine is used. -Dr. Todd says he has many patients, and has made many cures. Those who are not cured are the rebellious ones, who will not have faith. The doctor was formerly a Methodist Sunday school superintendent near Toronto. While excavating in front of the Chi nese Consnlate in San Francisco, a few days ago, workmen found six old flint-lock pistols In tbe clay soil, about five feet beneath the sur face. One of the pistols, which was taken to the Alia office, is about 15 inches long, and several marks are dlscernable on tbe barrel. Including "J. H." with "P." underneath, and the figures "6L" The soil at tbe place where the pistols werefoundis believed to have been not disturbed since the present city was built Tbe pistols are thought to have been cached by Spanish buccaneers. The renowned composer, Rubinstein, who has been the director of the St. Peters burg Conservatorium for many years, has re solved to resign his post and to quit Russia. He openly declares that the anti-Semitism that bas prevailed in Russia for tbe last ten years is more than be can bear, and that he wishes to spend the last years of his life in peace. E. en tbe most virulent Judeophobic publications like Novoyt Vrcmya and Syn Otetchestvo ex press their regret at this resolve of the great composer and virtuoso, and hope that he may yt be persuaded to stay. Bueno Guasa, a Mexican planter who arrived in New York the other day on the Aguan from Vera Cruz, told a reporter a story of a fight between a woman and an eagle which occurred on bis estate at Canon Jalico. The father had gone out to work in the fields and his 4-year-oId child was playing before the door. A great eagle came swooping down from the mountains and caught the child in its talons. The mother rushed to save ber child, when tbe great bird turned on her and with its wings and beak threw her to the ground and fractured ber skulL Then it seized the child aain and was trying to rise with it into the air, when the father came up and shot the eagle. The mother died. ITCCre MEN'S FANCIES. To faint dead away after a Busiian bath is to be clean gone, at least. Seta Orleans Picay une, Have you got that resolution with you? Or dld-you break It by taking too goodeareoflt Buffalo lime. "Charley Naivyo is a sort of go-as-you-please boy. Isn't he?" said one Washington girl to another. "It has been my observation that he never pleases to go, "was the sadly-spoken reply. Washington Pott. Mother Mable, when will you learn something about eoozery: I thought 1 told you an hour ago to stuff the turkey with chestnuts? Mable-I don't care, ma, the turkey wouldn't eat 'em: really. I believe the poor thing is dead Sao Xork'Heratd. "I will bet that woman's a terror holding her own." was remarked at the reception. -What mates you think so?" 1 never saw one show more backbone. Phila delphia Tim's- ...... , 3Irs- Bullion I bought to-day a genuine Parisian work of art itrs. lilllsdoo One of Detallle'i paintings. Mrs. Bullion No.:A bust of some young woman named Hebe. The dealer assured me It Is real plaster of Parls.-Vewt" Circular. With a dancing master it is not only the flrst 4tep which costs. Yon have to pay for them all. J'w Jort Evening World. Dash away I understand that yon were around to Miss Palisade's last night Did yon see the old year out together? ' No; I wanted to, but Miss Palisade saw me out flrst-i'Prt. Mrs. Dinwiddie (to ber daughter) Lucy, dear, yon shouldn't say ;Shoot it" That's a slang exprtssionand unladylike. Lucy Oh, no, mamma. You remember that the poet Pope, says, "Shoot folly u It 21ei."-Cflla? Inter Oesan, . 1 - CSBia fi& Zf fttffefe