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All double and triple cumber copies ot The Dispatch require a 2. cent stamp to insure prompt delivery. PITTSBURG. SUNDAT, FE& 15, 1891. ALLEGHENY'S "WATER SUPPLY. The opinion of those who are posted as to the coming vote of Allegheny City on the water works extension is that it is doomed to defeat If this shonld be the result, there ought to be a clear recognition that it is due to the form in which the proposition is put before the people. The understanding which seems to prevail that a vote in favor of new water works means an expenditure of 52.000,000 to 53,000.000 to attain results which can be reached at much less cost, will take away from an adverse vote the significance that the people are content with their present supply of diluted sewage. As to the necessity of furnishing pure water to a city like Allegheny there can be so dispute. Neither, though the city may enjoy temporary immunity from epidemics, can any impartial inquirer hare any doubt that the present method of supply makes pure water a practical impossibility. The investigation of 1885 showed that six sewers on the north side of the river dis charged their contents above the influent ripe of the Allegheny water works. At that time also ten sewers on the Pittsburg side assisted in the pollution. Since then the Herr's Island stockyards afford an addi tion to the constituents of the water, while the extension of the Pittsburg sewer system has added 4,000 acres in the East Liberty valley to the section whose drainage comes into the river above the point whence the Allegheny water is now taken. It is beyond question that if the present proposition is defeated it will devolve upon the municipal legislators of Allegheny to seek come other and prompt means of secur ing pnre water for the city. One suggestion is that an arrangement shall be made for Pittsburg to furnish Allegheny with water. Pittsburg's first duty is undoubtedly to the Southside; but it the resumption of the original plan of extension shonld give a capacity to supply both communities this idea may contain the most economical method. If we are not mistaken other plans have been submitted to the Allegheny authorities by which pure water can be ob tained at far less cost than that on which the Allegheny people understand them selves to be about to vote. The burden of action will rest upon the Allegheny city government. It cannot continue to draw the water supply of a great city from a point where it is mixed with the drainings of sewers and stock yards, and still claim to rank as an example of civilized city government. SOME BAD TAX BILLS. That bill to tax unnaturalized citizens, for the benefit or the poor fond, partakes of the same nature as the one which proposes a tonnage tax on coat for the benefit of in jured miners or their families. They look well from one point of view, but they seek to establish dangerous prece dents in legislation. They are of a class that would accomplish worthy objects by improper means. The way to provide for injured miners, or the families of those 'killed by accidents while st work, is by a liability act If the injury or loss of life shall be clearly the fault ot the employer he may be made to pay for it And the way to prevent foreigners from be coming a charge on localities which have no interest in them is to secure proper immigra tion laws through Congress. The griev ances complained of are hard to bear.but the remedies should not be made still more ccoroas. beautifying crrr streets. The proposition recently urged in Phila delphia for the ornamentation of streets by preserving spaces on either side for shadr trees and grass plats has taken the form of m an ordinance. The late G. Balston Ayres was the active supporter of the measure, which was an adaptation of the plan that lias produced three of the most beautiful avenues in the country Euclid, in Cleve land, Delaware, in Buffalo, and Michigan, in Chicago. The ordinance having been, favorably recommended in Philadelphia, the papers urge its passage. The fact that a plan which has produced such results elsewhere has not long before now been voluntarily adopted in Philadelphia and Pittsburg, shows how far the leading cities of mis State are behind the age in the matter of embellishing highways. The ordinance pending in Philadelphia - provides that when a steeet of seventy feet or more is to be paved or repaved, a space of five feet on each side of the curb is to be re served for grass and trees; where the width is 70 to 80 feet, seven feet, and so on. The spaces might well be made larger, as on res idence streets, where this measure would naturally be expected to take effect; from 40 to 50 feet is ample to accommodate the actual carriage and foot traffic But the pertinence of this point for our city is some what diminished, as Pittsburg has in very few cases risen to the height of seventy-foot streets, and in none to 100 or 120. Yet ou narrow streets the same end can be attained by setting houses back from the street line, leaving space next the curb for shade trees. Such plans are at once the most economi cal and the most effective method of making city streets attractive. They give to streets the park-like characteristics of' shade and grass, and when the full effect is experienced they do more for establishing real beauty than the most costly edifices. Pittsburg will make a great stride toward grafting attract ive features on her material greatness when she adopts some such meant for beautifying her highways. A GREAT CAREER ENDED. After a struggle with death hardly less obstinate, though not so prolonged as that of his great friend and companion-in-arms, William Tecumseh Sherman breathed his last yesterday. This removes the last of that world-renowned group of heroio figures whose military achievements won the tri umph of the Union cause. Twenty-six years after the termination of General Sherman's achievements in arms it is scarcely possible for the generation which has sprung up since to appreciate fully the hold which that commander had in the affection not only of the soldiers whom he led, but of the whole nation at the close of the war. Kor is it easy to fully state the magnitude of his services. To say that his military successes were second only to those of Grant, and were thought by some to show a higher rank of military genius, hardly presents a definite idea either of the magnitude of his position as a commander or of the success he achieved in his two great campaigns. Perhaps a clearer idea of It may be expressed by stating that he directed military operations over an area of country greater than the whole of West ern Europe. The importance of his victories is also stated in the fact that a little over a year from the time when he took the field as an independent commander he had car ried his armies through the heart of the Confederacy, which prior to that time had successfully resisted the attempts of the Union armies to penetrate further than Chattanooga. He also captured more im portant cities and strategio points of the Confederacy than any other General in the Union army. This assertion must, however, be qualified by the recognition that the captures which resulted from Grant's cam paigns surpassed Sherman's in vital im portance. The commander who after three years of the varying fortunes of war fought his way step by step from Chattanooga to Atlanta, and then marched his army through the Confederacy until its last important army surrendered to him at Bentonville, was justly given rank as one of the colossal figures of our war history. It is not necessary to pur sue the question whether he was a greater General than Grant, further than to notice that it never disturbed the relations of the two great soldiers. One of the remarkable qualities of their careers is the constant friendship and trust which subsisted be tween them from the time when they came in contact before Shiloh, and which waa never betrayed. The mental characteristics of General Sherman were markedly different from the reserve aud self-control that marked Grant's career and the dash aud brilliancy which surrounded the figure of the third In the trio of military heroes, Sheridan. His ec centricities of temperament which of late years were really prized by the publio as a part of his genius subjected him to misun derstanding in his early career. His impa-r tient declaration in the first year of the war that 200,000 men were needed in the depart ment ot Kentucky and Tennessee was thought to indicate insanity; but it was subsequently shown to be correct military judgment Later in the war, when he cut loose from his base of operations to march across the Confederacy, leaving Hood at liberty to fol low Thomas up to the gates of Nashville, the fear that he was crazy reappeared; but the movement was demonstrated by a stroke of military genius that terminated the re bellion. Finally in Sherman's career, the gratifying fact apears eminently, which is also true of Grant, Sheridan, Hancock, Thomas and Meade, that m an era when the nation was devoted in its homage to its military heroes, not one of them ever cher ished an ambition inconsistent with the lib erties of the nation. The nation may well mourn for Sherman as one of its greatest characters. He will stand in our history side by side with Grant and Lincolnand in his own province hard ly second to either. He had enjoyed a long retirement and respect since the days when he achieved greatness; and died full of years. In the final honors to his memory, the nation should show its recognition of the fact that the last and one of the greatest of the gigantic figures that rose to the occa sion of our great struggle has passed away. AN-ANCEENT LAWSUIT. A lawsuit is found to have been lingering in our county courts lor 0 years. It began about a piece of property worth about $1,200. During its pendency the value ot the prop erty has doubled again and again. It is located in the heart of the city, and now represents a small fortune. Meantime costs, fees and incidentals have been lost track of, though they probably amount to a nice sum. This beats Dickens' Jarndyce versns Jarndyce by considerable odds, and is more remarkable because it occurs in a comparatively new country. It is little more than two years since the cen tennial of the erection of Allegheny county was celebrated, yet here isfl case at law nearly CO years old. Legal forms, it is hoped, have Improved in that time and will continue to improve so disputes may be set tled in the courts in something less than a generation. WEALTH AND ITS DANGERS. The latest addition to newspaper en terprises in New York City, among other claims to the quality of originality, pre sented the other day an argument to show the pleasures of poverty and the drawbacks of riches. It warns the New Yorkers that paper currency is a vehicle of disease; that coins will transfer bacilli; in the writing of checks lies the danger of pen paralysis, and the clipping of coupons is calculated to wear: out the thumbs. The ruin which men have wrought on their health in trying to spend their wealth, or tbe moral damage wrought in hoarding it, with the insomnia produced by the possibility that in the morning a rate war or a stock squeeze may have, attacked your favorite stocks, also constitutes a case against the evils of Wealth, even if it does not establish the pleasures of poverty. All this might be salutary if we could get anyone to believe it Some centuries btfore the Christian era an Inspired philos opher prayed: "Give me -either p'overtof riches;" but if any people net aeoordisg to that philosophy in tbk age, "tber are. promptly tet down as Impracticable, or placed under suspicion .of crankishness. Nothing it easier than to escape the dangers, perils or responsibilities of wealth if any one so desires. But while this age is notable for striking examples of the use of wealth for the public benefit, the munificent million aires who make such gifts do not so for the sake of escaping the ills of wealth. -Their purpose is to exert its power in the highest aud most gratifying form. The fault of the age in regarding wealth as the suntmum. bonurh, the measure of success in life, is not likely to be cured by representing the evils of wealth, which no one fears enough to let go of a single dollar of profits and which are, after all, less dreaded them the lightest evils of poverty. It our cotemporary had magnified the moral evils of an exclusive aim at money-getting it would have made a stronger case. It it had shown how the man who can see no good in life but the accumulation of riches sets his ambition on the most sordid object that he can select; how the practical adoption of the rule "make money; honestly if you can; but make money" turns business success into a competition of dishonesty; and how in the competition of dishonesty, lying, cheating and meanness are tbe means to success, the demonstration of the superior lot of poverty would have had more force if not more success. The reconciliation of the modern pursuits of business with the abjuration of wealth in tbe original teachings of Christianity is a task which most moralists of the present day do not attempt With regard to a large share of the pursuits of the present day this is simply because the task is impossible. The case as stated by the Teacher: "x"e cannot serve both God and Mammon." But we must see that to suppose the principles of Christianity to forbid such immense addi tions to wealth and Knowledge as the devel opment of navigation and internal com merce, would be to suppose it opposed to the benefit and progress of mankind. Busi ness " enterprise, or the attempt to make wealth by benefiting humanity, is in har mony with the spirit of divine teachings, whether according to the letter or not No one will ever be driven to abandon the race for wealth by talk of its dan gers and worries. But if public opinion can be brought to see that immense wealth gained by dishonest or injnst means is a monument to the greed and unscrupulous ness that secured it, there may be a more decided restraint on the methods of money making than at present MOKE OP THE B. AND O. All of the details of tbe Baltimore and Ohio deal are coming out slowly. Mr. Io nian, ot tbe Bichmond Terminal, has been led to deny the report that he holds an op tion on the stock, and to mate the denial more explicit, admits that Mr. Bacon has been securing options on the five-eighths of common slock, which was put in trust last summer. This stock is held in trnst by the Farmers' Loan and Trust Company of New York until 1893. Prom other sources it is learned that the necessary capital for all of Mr. Gould's late acquisitions is fur nished by Drexel, Morgan & Co., Kidder, Peabody & Co., and the Standard Oil party. This brings the matter fully up to the an nouncement first made in The Dispatch more than two months ago, and these inter ests will readily be recognized as the same that control Western "Union. the pbobleu of water traffic. The Dispatch, as our readers are aware, has lately given much consideration to the importance of the coming great problem of internal water traffic. That this is not a fictitious question, but one which is seen more clearly every day to have a vital in terest, is shown in the simultaneous char acter of thoughts and plans upon the sub ject While a ship canal from Lake Erie to the Ohio is being exploited in Pennsyl vania, the city of Chicago has entered with more vigor upon the scheme of a ship canal from Lake Michigan to connect with the Mississippi. Later yet, the Ohio Legisla ture passed a resolution for surveys for an Ohio ship canal from the great lakes to the Ohio, These movements show how the wind blows. They result from many of the railroads being already choked with traffic, and from the need for lower rates upon various lines of freight It is worth while noting in the same con nection that for several years a steady re vival of traffic- has been going on upon the Ohio riyer between Pittsburg and points below. A regular and prosperous line of packets going out every day from this port has now as much, if not actually more, than it can do to accommodate patrons. Thus the necessities of the rapidly-growing internal trade of the country are compelling atten tion to the utilization of the means which nature has provided for carrying on the in ternal commerce of the country. VERDICT ON THE MINE HORROR. The Coroner's jury, in the case of the miners killed in tbe Mammoth mine ex plosion, concluded its labors at Greensbnrg yesterday. The finding is a rather non-com mittal one. None oi the matters in contro versy are decided. The jury finds that the explosion was due to the simultaneous pre. ence of gas and a naked lamp in the mine a fact not questioned. There is no conclu sion drawn as to what caused the -ccumua- tion of gas and everybody knows the lamp got there. The responslbilit; not fixed on anyone. The employme bosses who drink intoxicants in eve smallest measure is deprecated, an stringent law to prohibit the use of naked lamp in any mine is recommended. Publio opinion was far in advance of the Coroner's jury on both these pointsso the rendering of a verdict maybe considered a mere matter of form. In this case tne ver dict is not the important part of the in quest. The public taking of testimony waa of far greater value, allowing the pub lic to render its own verdict And it is to be hoped the popnlar verdict in favor of better mining laws and more carefdl observ ance of them will be heeded. HYPNOTISM IN COOK There has lately been much discussion of hypnotism by various classes. It has been particularly talked of in relation to crime and criminal practices. It was ilead in de fense of Gabrielle Bompard, thi s accomplice of Errand. It has been '; imposed to' rise hypnotism to secure confessions from persons arrested for comn itttng crime. This proposition is bitterly apposed, and justly so. If it be true that any person may be hypnotized and made subjc ct to the will of tbe operator, there would je nothing to prevent such an operator sect ring a con fession of guilt from the innocc nt It would be an exceedingly dangerous iractice, tak ing away a prisoners right to trial at the will of the court operator. PlTTEBUBa ffets Bierbauer Wd Mack. 'This makes the prospect for a Weat vested Interest lovely once more, and pophlaf content -will hover over the diamond field, itatil foreign THE HTTSBTTfiGl- DISPATCH, . . teams commence to knock out our representa tives. And now it is remarked by the Kansas City Star with regard to that Watterson letter: ''As a peacemaker 'Henry appears to be a bigger man than Bill Brown." To judge from tbe fiery comments which the Watterson letter has called forth, bis efforts as a peacemaker have been principally successful in evoking pugnacity. To assert that this Is more suc cessful than the harmony which prevails when Colonel Bill Brown has filled his guests with wines and viands, is derogatory to the great achievement of that last addition to the roster of statesmen. The discovery-of'tin ore in Virginia will doubtless be a great thing for tbe discoverers if tbe pnblic buys tbe shares of that million dollar corporation which comes to the front simultaneously with the alleged discovery. THE Bepubllcan organs are chuckling over tbe fact that Mr. Cleveland's letter on silver coinage has alienated from him the sup port of the Western and Southern Democrats. Tbe fact must also be recognized that Mr. Cleveland sticks to bis principles with the knowledge that be will lose votes thereby. He does not follow the example of a certain great party that stuck a strong silver plank in its last national platform to catch voteswlthal. It the "Whisky Trust will confine its activities to blowing up its own distilleries it may yet earn the indorsement of the Prohi bitionists. At present it is only figuratively hoist with its own petard. The persistence of error is shown by a recent editorial declaration of the Philadelphia Mecord which with obvious sincerity asserts that tbe Pennsylvania petroleum supply Is gradually falling and that tbe richest field of present pro duction is in West Virginia. At tbe same time tbe statistics published in TBE Dispatch yesterday showed the Wild wood field at tbe northern gate of Pittsburg to be the richest ever developed. The Hon. William B.. Morrison has, after mature deliberation, concluded that tbe practice ot universal education which teaches politicians to write letters is a great mistake. It IS now asserted that the Hon. Jerry Simpson, who has presented convincing proofs that ho is n ot Sockless, is interfering in Illinois politics as an, "assistant Democrat" If Mr. Simpson assists the Democrats that will vindi cate the foresight of the Bepubllcan organs in jumping ou him; but tbe Democratic organs will hare" to conclude that he is notsucba barefooted fraud as he has been painted. The Hon. D. B. Hill is understood to stick to his assert! on that the letter that he did not look for, never came, The assertion that Tippoo lip was once Stanley's errand boy is made by the esteemed Washington Post. As Stanley first metTippoo Tip on his first march across Africa, when the Arab was the biggest slave raider on the upper Kongo, we lear that tbe brilliant Jfott relies on its imagination for Its facts in regard to African' matters as much as in connection with civil ser vice matters. The Arthur Bue Gorman boom is sprint ing with a vigor that marks it as a victim for early sprouts. , . Sekatob Gobdott, of Georgia, after spending a couple of days in Wall street, was robbed in Jersey City of bis pockeibook and SMS. And now the Wall street man are Indig nantly in quiring bow hebapp 'cedtogetout of Wall street with a pocketbook. FAMOUS K. Joe Jefferson, himself a painter, calls Corot tbe Shakespeare of landscape painting. Aechbishop WllLikais, of Boston, opens the Pilot Famine KeliVS Fund for Ire land with a 100 contribution. Mb. Moody declares that if an archangel should come down from heaven and preacb in Boston tbe congregation would find flaws of grammar or logic In tie sermon. Mb. Sestet, the Brooklyn art patron, who has just now sop a choice collection, says he thinks the foWr greatest living painters are Cazto, KnauB, Ikness and Israels. The last leads the Dutch sclool. General SnrfiiMAN has four daughters. The eldest Eleanor, Is the wiferof Lieutenant Thackara, of tbjf United States Navy, and an other is the wife of Mr. T. W. Fltcb, ot Pitts burg. The two younger daughters, Lizzie and Rachel, are unmarried. Ex-CHrcp Justice Mabcus Mobtoit, of Massachusetts, who died in Lawrence last Tuesday morning, served $2 consecutive years as a judge, she last eight ot which were as Chief Justice, His father ex-Governor Mor ton was also an eminent jurist , One ofthe aspirants for Senator Hearst's seat in Congress Is Major Bonebroke, of Los Angeles. He is known as tbe Beau Brnmmell of Southern California, and is a man of curious and plcraresque ways. He has been known to wear a far overcoat In summer, and never goes out without a pair of rubber overshoes. Th A poet William Morris is one of the mostifictnresque figures (n England. His dress is extremely unconventional and is always the samt a black slonch bat, black sack coat a bine shirt with a collar to match and nonde script trousers. In winter be wears a thick, dark Inverness cape coat He has not worn a silk bat for years. MB. JCSTICe Jettne, having been brought up in an atmosphere of theology, took naturally to oburch mattei s In his legal prac tice. They are telling this story now about tbe npw appointee to tbe bench: Some years ago be argued a case before Sir E. Kay for an entire day without being interruDted once. The matter excited some surprise, bnt It was explained bv a well-known junior, who ob served that "Kay was taking his first lesson in Ecclesiastical law, arid, of course, could not r nhnw whpn ha crnt nut of his denth'' Edwin Booth, so well known to his in timate friends as a companionable man and racy talker, once said to a friend in Detrolti "People generally look on me as a recluse, and seem to think me an unhappy ana grumpy fel low. Tbe fact is, I have long been a sufferer from dyspepsia: but that's a small matter and concerns only mjSelf. It Is not true that I seek Beclusion, but I'm getting along in years, and while I am alwaj glad not passively and tol erantly, but ple'asnreably glad to have my friends drop in and take pot-lack with me, 1 cannot spur myself to tbe performance of con ventlonal social duties. Tbe fact is, I have ex hausted all my topics of conversation, ana don't know what ou earth to say to strangers or for mal callers." Adaptation of a Theory. Philadelphia Bulletin. A flnoexample of the Honry George theory of "unearned Increment" was given yesterday in the sale of Benjamin Franklin's watch. Its orieinal cost was posslblv $50. It gained noth ing In actual value by years of servioe and more years ot silent Inaction; yet It sold for $3,100 Simply because it once belonged to Benjamin Franklin. DEATHS OP A DAY. Major C. L. Bedamon. Natjvoo,, Itiii., Feb. 14. Major C. L. Bedamon, one of the molt widely kown charac ters In Illinois. Is dead at the age of 83. Ha was born in Williamfport W. Va., and came to .Kan voo In IKS. He Uvea la trnlton eonnty for a time, and was a Lieutenant Colonel of the Thtrty-ec-ond Keelment or tbe Illinois Infantry. He was married four times, bis third wife, whom he mar ried in 1818, being Mrs. Emma Smith, wireorthe murdered Mormon prophet. They lived at tbe historic old Mansion House, which was often vis ited by relic hunters. Mrs. Brallh-Uedamon died in 1ST8. subsequently Bedamon married Mrs, Mancy Abercomble, who survives him at an ad vanced aje. Mrs. AnnKearas. Mrs. Ann ICearut died at midnight yes terday at the advanced aof 70 years. .Thede eeascd lady was the moluef of Thomas Kearns. the wholesale liquor dealer of sis Second aVenne. from whose residence tho mueral will take place to-morrow at l:o o'clock v. u. Cewle Williams, Nbware;-0., Feb.-U-Tjwls William a leading farmer, of Washlngtou township' , was stricken wltb paralysis to-day, and died lu a short uae. 'Jae was year age, SUNDAT, MEBKUARY 15, . - MURRAY'S MUSINGS. Experlenoe of an Intelligent JLady 'With a Dreamy Astrologer Says She "Wa Hyp notizedOdd Phases of Life in ew York Temper of Policemen. "you will be surprised," said a well-known society woman tbe other day, "when I confess that I have been consulting an astrologer a fortune teller." Due acknowl ment was made, and the lady, whose standing and veracity are unquestioned by those who know her, continuedi -'I've always laughed at people who treated fortune telling seriously! but I'm not sorry I invested $2 in one of the smartest women I've seen in a longtime. I've had tbe worth of tbe money. She lives on Twenty-third street and does a great business, t don't see much to interest me in women, as a rule. 1 prefer the society of intelligent Ben. But this woman's eyes fairly fascinated me. I've Seen many eyes more beautiful from an a.,l,llrt nMntnf vIaw. tt wasn't that It WaS thn unit dreamr. bottomless deoth In them. I' just know I shall dream of that women's eyes to-nlgbt They were tbe eyes of a woman of a highly nervous temperament Aud she had a smooth, low. well-modulated voice to match. ' 'Yon would know tbe lutnte, madam? she said elevating ber delicate brows a trifle. " Certainly.' I replied. . A .. Then she turned to a chart spread out atner right It was covered -with stars and other heavenly bodies and mysterious hieroglyphics. "When were you born, madam?' "I told ber and she wrote it down and figured on It over the chart. After several other ques tions she turned those deep blue eyes on ma and began to tell me ot my past 1 jell your past madam, said she. that you may Judge of my power to discern the future,' I tell you that woman read me like an open booKI Turn ing to her chart occasionally and looting me full In the face when she spoke, she repeated the principal events of my life Just as if they bad been written in my eyes. The revelations ttrt hnt nn to a certain point seemed wnat you call 'glittering generalities. Pretty soon she said abruptly as If She had Just discov ered It: . ' 'Yon are happily marneur " 'lam,' said L j '"You have chlldrenf "I bowed. " 'One child a boy is about i2f " 'It is true.' . , "Her eyes fastened upon mine more persist ently than ever. 'You have a grown daughter, a sweet and lovely young lady, of whom ion are veryfondj . J " 'I have,' I replied, almost trembling. '"And a son alio grown a good young "It is true. A better boy never lived.' I be. lieve I began to lose my usual nerve. How could sbe know all this? I - " 'You' referring again to her figures "have had other children one, two, now dead? "True again,' said IrSbe sighed, paused a moment and began my f dture: "'You have a happy future ahead of you, madam. It is in tbe stars, x ou and yours will be prosperous. You will live 18 years and will never be a widownor will you bury any of your family m that tipie.' " That's (mooch.' said I, getting up. 'I'm satisfied.' She smiled pleasantly at that and took my hands in her taper fingers. Some minor details sbe added, but I confess I was too much agitated to pay much attention to them. "Don'tJyou know I believe tnat woman byn notlzeoXme? 1 think she got control ot my mtauin someway, for she told me only tho things 1 thought of and seemed to follow my thoughts. I can't account for ber knowledge ofmylamllyaftairs on any other hypothesis. I 'believe the chart business is a humbug. Bdt the psychological facts cannot be thus dis- lposed of. I had quite a Chat with her at ter- " 'I am going down to Washington City,' sha said, 'In a fortnight I have enough engage mentstokeep me a week or ten days. I have several very prominent people who wish to con sult me, among them a lady of distinction, whose buBband has often been mentioned in connection with the Presidency.' " life in a Great City. Ceriotjsly sneaking, the tragedy of every day in the metropolis presents very little to laugh at Thero Is so much of it that we pay very little heed to tha details. In a city where there-are 2S0 arrests on an average every 21 hours, and whero a single day doveleps every feature of human crime and every phase of human sorrow, it is, perhaps, natural that those not Intimately connected with the particular cases should feel somewhat calloused and In different In New York tbe record of a single day, as recently deploted In on? of our big dallies, if it conld be made In a smaller towu Mould throw an entire people into mourning, On an ordinar,- day of 24 hours ic is found that there were 10 fires, 23 accidents. 3 sudden deaths. 3 unknown bodies found float ing In the rivers, 2 persons seriously injured by falling from street cars, several persons run over, one man fatally burned by electric wires, other men by falling down elevator shafts, from telegraph poles or the roofs of bouses, several sick and destitute persons hustled off to a hos pital, besides the 260 above mentioned arrests for all tne crimes in tbe calendar, from murder down to a common drunk. By the side of this everyday record ot fatal ities and crimes, the imagination of tbe great est novelist that ever wrote falls short and insignificant But In a great city like New York where a man doesn't Know bis next duor neighbor, and doesn't want to Know him, and where every fellow is busy looking out for himself and bis, and kindly permitting tas devil and the policemen to look alter the rest it is Lot a matter of much moment There Is a big policeman near my office who has been on the force for upward of years, and IS now a member of the famous Broadway Squad. He is somstbing ot a philosopher In bis way. I asked him the other evening, in a pause long enough to pas tbe compliments of the day, what be was thinking of. A great throng was sweeping up this finest thoroughfare In tbe world, occu pyinc every square foot of superficial flagging. "I was thinking." aid be, "of alt these people streaming past hs at tbls hour. WbataStorythe inner Hie oi eacn one ot mem wuuiu mane u it were put on paper? And yet how little heed they give to each other and how selfish every man. woman and child Of this great throng is in battling for existence. Among these very people," be added, "is to be found every phase of every day human life. Yet how many of us and of all this crowd ever reach beyond their own immediate surroundings, their own par ticular Joys or sorrows? Herd is ohe grand sweep ot bumanlty for hours, yet as a matter of fact scarcely one" of tbem knows any of the rest, cares where they come from or whvre they go to. In this same crowd is every degree of virtue and every streak of besotted ignorance and degradation. I was thinking of my 20 years' of association with tbe Streets uf New York as a policeman -and bow Utile I really knew of my feilowmen." Enterprise of the Bill Posters. tt IS amusing and also Instructive to see how quickly every available medium Is seised upon by New York advertisers. Astone dropped In the street Is soon plastered with a bill of some kind. A prostrate telegraph pole will be covered from end to end bstore 12 o'clock In the day with every conceivable placard and in every Imaginable color. An old ash barrel placed out over night In any business street will blossom with small billsbefore mornine. Where street repairs are In progress not even tbe law or tbe watchman- can stay tbe brush and paste oi tbe bill-sticker. This is especially tbe case on Saturday nights, when the prospect of the advertisements remaining over Sunday undisturbed presents "unusual temptations. Tbe last snow storm left a dead horse In the drift In front of tha Hoffman House and the carcass remained there nearly all tbe next day covered wltb bills. Tbeatrlcal dates, soaps, baking powder, patent medicines, etc;, fall upon every inanimate object not protected by law. And rival bills follow each other two and three deep, one bill on another before the first bdry. A Bale of Bad Debts. WTitiait a week or two an experiment will be made in this city Which must inevitably create a sensation and attract no little atten tion among tradesmen of other Cities. It is tha disposal of unsettled accounts at publio ft no tion by tha Merchant Tailors' Society. Who will buy bad bills, whether tailors' or grocers' bills, remains to be seen. And It there Is a market for tbe dishonored accounts of the tailors, wbv not a market for the unsettled ac counts of all other descriptions? Tbe society claims about $100,000 In these bad debts. As the threatened publicity that would attendee offerings at public auction will perhaps have the desired effect of causing Individual settle ments, tbls may be considerably reduced before the first sale comes off. However, there are many fashionable dadbeats about town who have been sued time and time again. They are case-hardened. An Odd Phasa ot Xlfe. nyous shoes mended while you 'Walt" 11 a completion! sign at the mouth ot a stair Way tbat leads down beneath a Broadway store. There on fc little bench may be seen an industrious Italian drawing his waxed ends or hammering sole leather. Far into the night he may be seen by tbe light of his dim gas jet pegging and pounding and stitching. By his side you will oiteu see men and women ot tbe lowest conditions of life Waiting patiently for tbe work in hand. Tbese people, for the most part have but a single tairof shoes and can afford but a small fee for tbelr rehabilitation. Thatr 4 tnrtSa WhO mUSt WSlt WhOtl ItUt HlV4 tbelr shoes mended, and tha very taot cenveyr an idea or tue many oiuer necessities oi tuis life for which they must also wait It Is an in structive picture In dim colors, and one wnicn greed my eyes every time I pass bis little shop aud glance Into the cellar. Tbe same reminds I eve? mad of how mas tlauW bo aMtbtt Aol - waited though ifi"a different sense fir this work of the bootmaker and the tailor. Testing the Temper of Policeman. ClrXAKtMO ot thB New Hot police force. tt minds md of the severe ordeal thxpugh which a man must pass to become a member of "the finest" Every.ttan must pass a risrid medical examination and be proved to possess sound limbs, lungs, kidneys, etc. They must then undergo a test of physical strength and endurance, this test being usually made in a gymnasium. All of this comes after tbe pass age of tbe applicant Of the requirements of height and general physique. The physical examination passed, the applicant must un dergo a mental one. They are tested In read lng, writing and arithmetic and on various branches of general information, having a special reference to tbe city government and streets of New York-. There is one thing on which a satisfactory test cannot be obtained. That is the temper of tbe applicant Men de velop brutal tempers while actios; in ah cflleul. capacity which tny were never known to pos sess belore. With all the tests known to the civil service it Is impossible to ascertain what anv man will do in an emergency requiring judgment and courage. In this respeot the New York policeman can only be fairly judged by time and experience. Bemuneratlon of Literary "Work, ii ivyHT don't you devote your leisure hours vv to literature r said General Grant-to me one day In London." The remark was from a retired army officer who makes his home at the Fifth Avenue Hotet "It was right after Bayard Taylor's death, and the papers were still fall of tbe traveler-author. "'What Is there in literature to tempt a man T' was my answer. Here Is a man who was successful; who was f smous. His body is scarcely cold when tbe officers pounce npon his books, pictures and manuscript to satisfy his creditors V " Charles T. MCHSaY. New Yobx, Feb. Is. AT.T. TTATT. B0TJTH AMEBICA. The Vast Field Opened for American Prod ucts by Reciprocity. Extracts From lit. Tatmaze In Christian Hsrald.J Tbe President's proclamation swinging wide open the doors of commerce between Brazil and tbe Obited States, Is tha beginning of a movement which will make every dollar in vested in North American manufactures worth $2, and lift our laboring Classes Into a greater prosperity than they bare yet dreamed of. la a recentyear $5,309,000,000 worth ot goods manufactured in the United States, aud only 3 per cent taken by foreign markets! Is it not a marvel that American manufactures are not as dead as the proverbial door nail? In South America are regions nearly three times as large as the United States without manufactories, without woolen goods. Without agricultural implements, without telegraphs, without telephones, without shoes, without sewing machines, without 10,000 things that we have and they mnst have. We need thelr's as much as they need our products. But look, and then bang your heads at the statement that while our next door neighbors, tbe South ern republics, and Brazil and neighboring col onies import 675,000,000 wortb of goods a -year, only $126,000,000 worth are from the United States only one fifth of the trade ours. Now, this ,1s goibg speedily to be cbanged, and it is going to be tbe solution of tbe labor question, of the bread question, of tha Com munistic question, of tbs OTsr-productidn and Underconsumption Question, and nearlr all tbe other questions. It is going to set all tbe mills on tbe Merrfmac, and tbe Connecticut and tbe Susquehanna, and the Chattahooche. and the Alabama running day and night With double set of hands, and calling for ten factories where we have one, and putting all the men out ot employ Into wore at good waees, and it is go ing to change this story ot dull times into a prosperity wmen wm roil on in inn uae until the Mississippi loses iti way to the Gulf of Mexico. "While the pessimists have been hunting up tbe burial service to read at the death ot Amer ican commerce, and the stops of tbe organ were being pulled out for the "Dead March in Saul." I, an optimist both by nature and by grace, take up In anticipation tbe brlgbt cov ered wedding liturgy, and as the blonde North takes tbe brunette booth by tbe hand, Saying. "With all my worldly goods I thee endow,' cry, "'Whom God bath Joined together let neither foreign despotism nor American dema goglsm ever put asunder.1' Then let all the organs and Choirs and orchestras make every thing, from the Montreal Ice palace to tha balls of tbe lionteiumas, quake under tbe rolling thunders ot the grand march of North and South American progress. In anticipation I nali oa,lho front door ot tha nation an advertisement: Wanted, 100,000 men to build South American railroads, as long as from here to ciau Francisco. Wanted. 6,000 telegraph operators. Wanted, $20,000,000 worth ofdrygoooa and hardware from New York City. Wanted, all the clocks you Cab make at New Haven, and all the brains you cab spire from Boston, and all the bells yon oan mould at Troy, and all the UcCormlck reapers you can fashion at Chicago, and all the bams you can turn out at Cincinnati, and all the railroad Iron you ean tend from Booaton and Pittsburg. Hnx JOB FE SILVEB. Now York's Governor -Pat Himself on Record tout Fall. S, T. Correspondence Philadelphia Ledger.: Governor Hill pat himself on record on the silver question last September In a speech in Brooklyn, when he criticised the silver bill passed by the Bepubllcan Congress as "merely a temporary expedient It will give permanent Satisfaction nowhere. It puts a heavier strain upon our resources than free bi-metalllc coin age without foreign co-operation would do; ob structs our progress toward that end which we all desire to reach, the free coinage of silver under a proper international ratio." Tbis may mean a great deal Or very little, according as one reads it Multitudes of people are in favor of International bl-metallism who are opposed to this country establishing free coinage alone and unsupported. The Governor went on to explain, however. that "in ohe act a Republican Congress has thus usurped a more than doubtful powdr, which, if lawful, It ha worse than unwisely used; has repulsed a popular demand for restor ation of our monetary unit wblcb, till 1S73, was bimetallic, wltb free coinage alike to sliver and to gold, and has interposed new hindrance to a single and fixed weight ratio of parity for tha gold and silver ot tha world's commerce, which is a rational Solution ot tbe Silver question, If commerce remains international and uni versal." Tbls seems to put the Governor In line with free-silver sentiment. Old qtabkel nr.nAT.vvRT), Donn Piatt and Senator Hale Son's Spook as They Pais By. MewrorkCohtineutJ I saw Donn Piatt at tha Brunswick Hotel not many days ago. BIS .beard and hair have whitened a great deal since I last saw him. He was standing at the bar in the cafe drinking a Beltzer lemonade. While, standing there a handsomely dressed gentleman, with iron-gray hair and steel-colored eyes, rubbed against him. Tha two men looked each other squarely in tha face. They did not speak, though they knew each other well. The other man was Senator EugeuaHale, of Maine, tha son-in-law of tha late Zach Chandler, of Michigan. Senator Chandler once walked up Newspaper Row, In Washington, when Piatt was editor of tbe Capital, viilh a revolver in his hand, in search of the editor. Hale was then a member of tha House of Representatives. At tha Brunswick meeting It was evident that belther of the two distinguished men had forgotten thn the unpleasantness at Washington almos 18 years ago. Congressman Dalzell's Great Speech. The full text of Mr. Dalsell's argument In the Barrnndla case, as reported in tbe Congres sional Record, is a monument to the ability and eloquence ot the Pittsburg Representative. nrvEKaiDE. iwnrrrxir o in cisjatcs. Tbe suhIdk waters at the bue Tbelr basalt bounds do oharop. Upon the hill, wltb measured pace The silent sentries tramp. Well ward ye there! xe sentries bold Tbroujtn, darkest nlxtat and days A priceless gem yon easket holdsl Preserve It safe for aye! Dear to the patriot! Latest shrine'" Where he the guerdon pays To him. oar country's noblest nun, In the Heroic Days, So need of storied stone or orals, Tanntlng him or hli deeds. Oar Union Is hit epitaph, Oar Liberties, his prowess1 meed. "LetttlhaTepeacel't from anguish her He fauna It; and frora strife. But deathless Jn oartratefuCneatts .' - The Patriots deeds have life, -. Pit Ul US. -b. U. '.. j. .L W. XL -"r-7 -V-"" -iSH -? ' TT -T "" - THE TOPICAL TALKER, (Toha fsduamr- Baa St Heart, A good many people who live. on Pennsyl vania avenue, Allegheny, know a sunny-haired, laughing little girl of & Anna, the daughter of Ik.Glefi'erv Sha is a great favorite with all who know her, and since sbe has been figbtlnz bravely with typhoid fever the neighbors have missed her greatly. Many a bouquet and toy and picture book reached Anna's bedside in tbese days, but last Bunday came tbe oddest gift of all. On that day, in the afternoon, a ring at tbe door bell summoned Mrs. Glstfer from tbe sick room. Sbe opened the door, and to her sur prise found a long, lank Chinaman, without He looked at her shyly odt of his small eyes, and, before sbe could speak, solemnlystretcbed out both his hands, which he had held con cealed 'udder his black sllK blouse. In Cach hand was a big orange. AS Mrs. Glitter look tbe oranges the Chinaman said t "Oese fordo tilolt 'lttle girl," or words someAbiwia these, and, bowing bis head respectfully, be walked quickly away. The Chinaman runs a laundry near by, and. It seems, among tha wash tubs md Ironing hoards, had learned to ptUa tha charm of a kindly, gentle oblld. Assemblyman Smith's First Chance. One of the braniestnaw men in tbe Legisla ture at -Harrisburg U Editor Smith, ot the Ponxsnuwney Spirit. Week before last F. W, Bowen, tbe well-known oil country news paper man, visited Mr. Smith at Harrliburg. They,had rather protracted night session to gether, and it was not until tbe clock had reached the time when it could practice strik ing economy that they started for Mr. Smith's boarding house. When they reached it Mr. Smith was.unable to find bis latchkey, ana at last be remembered tbat it was in his other trousers a favorite resort of latchkeys, by the way. There was nothing for it but to ring the bell and trust to luck that somebody would answer it ,Ibey rang quite a while. Then a voice was Beard inquiring from a distapce: Who Is that? What do you want?" Neither Mr. Smith nor Mr. Bowen could determine where the voice came from for a minute. Then Mr. Smith ehanced to look up and saw some thing whits moving at a window in tbe third story, and heard the voice again proceed from tbat direction. The white objeot resolved ltselt lbto a woman's head and shoulders in night attire, and Mr. Smith explained at once who he "OW it's Mr. Smith, of Panxsutawney?" asked the landlady. "Yes. ma'am." replied Mr. Smith, adding sotto voce to his companion: "Great Scott I Bowen. that's tha first time I've caught the Speaker's eye!" Ha Thought of Vaccination. Last Sunday In a certain Hill district Sunday school the teacher asked ena of the boys: "Were you ever baptized?" "Yes, sir," replied the boy. In all seriousness, "once but it didn't take." A Man ol Millions. "I met a man yesterday coming down from Buffalo," said Harry Askm, tbe young impres sario at tha Duquesne last night "wb B" tna remarkable record of having owed but never owned a million dollars. He U a young man, not much over 30, yet bis hair is already tinged with gray. One day about six years ago Wall street awoke to a realization of tbe fact tbat Mr. Cranston Speneer was short a cool million. Who he was. where he came from or where be bad gone, were qnestions Interested parties asked each other. The announcement ot the failure said that Mr. Spencer waa a daring young speculator who had been operating for about three months, and that he had left for unknown parts. Five years later he turned up in New York with a bank account, and settled all his claims. He had been to South America, whe'e ha was wonderfully fortunate in making money: After satisfying bis creditors Spencer had just $1,500, with wblcb he want to Spokane Falls. Wash., where ha has succeeded, during the past year. In making about $40,000." It Was Not Suicide. Sbe was one of the most thoughtful of the great army of thoughtful wives. Ha was one of the most thoughtless of the greater army ot thoughtless husbands. To keep him in mind ot some medicine that he had to take, she put UIOU9 miurain uu hi uwi w mm - j,- It in a tiny Vial, and placed the latter tenderly in his upper right-hand vest pocket Then he went to work and forgot all about tbe utile vial and the indispensable medicine till some hours after tha hour be should have taken the dosa and ha was sitting on a high stool at a lunch counter with a savory mess of stewed chicken before him. Tbe thought of the medi cine flashed across his mind with fearful suddenness. Ha sought and found the vial, pulled the cork, raised the vial to his lips and had just tasted the medicine, when ker smacklt the vial was knocked out ot bis hand violently, and the man sitting next to him ex claimed excitedly: "Did you swallow any? What Is It?" A cure for dyspepsia." "I thought it was laudanum I beg your par don, sir." But no pardons or explanations could re move the stains from a man's collar and shirt front and a sensational Scene ended very meanly. To An Early Robin. 'You're welcome, red-breitt whistle loud And break mj slnmbtrs, if you please. When dawn peeps over hill and cloud. And gilds tbe rusty orchard trees. Blng roblnl You may need a song To cheer your heart, before the day Shall 1 apse in nltht, so darts aud Ions:. Srave roblulpipe, ays, pipe awayi Sut red-breast take this veroum tap: Don't rash tbe season, gentlcblrd. While snow and ice are still on tap. At Jrttco concerts are absurd! Biraean johxs. t TBU8T TJUIVEEBirY. Pointer for Those Who Want to Occupy th Chair of Synamlo Economy, Sew Yrk XJmes.J Someday, when the new Trust University shall have been added to the list of our educa tional Institutions, there will be among lu nchly-endowed chairs one whose incumbent will devote his attention exclusively to dyn amic economy, and his lectures will relate to such Incidents of trust development as that In which the Whisky Trust and its Secretary just now art so prominently exhibited, and tbat other affair at tbe oil refinery of the Buffalo Lubricating OU Company three of four years ago. We shall then be enlightened as to the neces sity for the use of dynamite bombs, the incen diary's torch; secret bargains with railroad companies and Other similar Instruments In tbe great and charitable work of persuading ignorant and obstinate manufacturers to enter "combines" and there to enjoy those "econo mies ot production" that can be procured, as wa are told, under no other conditions. Bat until tbe Trust University shall have been es tablished and its lecturers shall have entered npon tbelr wore tbe average honest man In his Ignorance will persist in misunderstanding the use ot tbese agencies and will long to see tha doors of tbe penitentiary close upon the philan thropists who resort to them. The professors of Trutlsm should not over look this Case. They should all be present at the trial, to obtain every scrap of evldence,f or It will be very useful in tha new Trust Univer sity. Tbey did not make enongh use of tbe trial in tbe case of tbe Buffalo Lubricating Oil Works, and tbey have neglected the testimony In tbe case ot George Rice. But here tbey will have ampla time for preparation, and they Should feo dispose of their engagements tbat all of tbem can be on hand. Some of their doc trines will be exposed to a crucial test and tbe secretary of tbe Whisky Trust ought to have the aid of all the experts and authorities In his trade. Dangers of etter Writing. New York Press.! Watterson's letter to Hill Is likely to ruin Bill's political chances, just as Cleveland's let ter on silver bit made it doubtful it Western and Southern Democrats will permit him to carry off their nomination In 1892. Letter writ ing seems to ben dangerous occupation with Desaocratlo statesmen. i Appropriation Wltb a String to It Useaha World llnld. Nowtt-t tha force bill u safely shelved, Ala bama'S-osiilataro makes an appropriation to the-WorM's Fair. Tbe money will probably have a striae attached f,o- it; 14 tie- bill is aver CURIOUS CONDENSATIONS. Glrard Colleee has 1,391 publl,' the) largest number in its history. An olive oil factory, to cost $250,000, In cluding the acreage. Is about to bo built it o) Guilcps, Sonoma eonnty. Cat The will of Mrs. Elizabeth So2z, of New York, making charitable bequests to tho extent of $H5.G00, Is tu bo contested. Twel-Da-Ha-Ma-Nine, the oldest In dian among tbe Umatillas. died last week. Tbs Indians say be was more tban 12U years old. The iron cip is being pljced on tha chimney of tbe Narragansett Electric Com pany, at Providence, R. L Tha chimney Is 237 feet high. It is alleged that a treasonable clot has been discovered in Sofia, the object of which was tbe overthrow of Prince Ferdinand ot Bulgaria. A woman In Mishawa-a, lad., recently received, through tbe mails, a puppy in a per forated box. Its presence was not suspected by the postal clerks. Emma Bowen, of Atlantic City, known as tbe "Jersey Lily," was committed to tha May's Landing jail for three months for the twenty-eighth time. The number of Indians in the United States who can read ngll3h Is stated to bo over 23,000) tbe number who can read Indian language is over 10.0UU There was & priz e wall- for a big billy goat in Richmond, Va., a few nights ago. Tha goat broke loose during tbe night ana ate tbs only high hat in the assemblage. John T. Barrage, Who died the other day in Washington, V. C. "was the last of a long line of barbers, tbat having been tbe business ot bis ancestors for several hundred years." The Prince de Eohan, in a bet with Prince Torlonia. has lately driven a traD and four down the stone steps of tbe town of Monaco. Tbe descent was rather steep, but lc was dona without a stumble. The report of Isaac TJpton, President of the San Francisco Board of Trade, made to tba body, shows the productions of California for tbe past year to have amounted to (119.415,11s, an increase of SI.662.S57 over 1SS9. The Government medical authorities at Washington have, after many experiments, an nounced the discovery of a lymph which glreS immunity from diphtheria and tbey hope to make it a certain cura for tbat disease. D. G. Pitner, of TJkiah, Cal., is prepar ing an Incubator on a large scale. His hop houe Is to be converted into one, Tbehousa contains two rooms, each 21 feet square, with a capacity of 18,000 eggs. He will begin by try ing 800 eggs in oue of the rooms. It Is to be betted with wood and kept at a temperatars of 103. Austrian census-takers have discovered a Bcore or more persons in tbe empire who bars passed their ICOth birthday. The oldestwastho widowor Peler Hanei. Sbe has a certificate of Birth dated December 24. 1T78. Of her rour liv ing sons, tha youngest is 70 years old. Io B2ege din a man namedlsakshowedabirthcertlficata lua years old. Twa physicians of Havana are success fully inoculatins new arrivals in Cuba against yellow fever, through mosquitoes that hava contaminated themselves by stinging yellow fever patients. Fifty-two cases of mosquito inoculation have been followed uo. Of tbem only about 8 per cent subsequently contracted tbe disease, with a mortality ot less than 2 per sent Alfred Mahury, a well-known hermit of Clark county, Ind is dead. Became frotd Virginia after the war. in which he was ruined financially. He left his family and lived in tha Woods, entering no bouse for 20 years, and sub sisting ou roots, herbs, and tbe scant proceeds of basket-making. He bad not cut bis hair or beard since the war, and both were several feet long. A few days ago the 3-year-old son of John Kennedy, ot Nevada City, Cal., strayed from home and gnt lost in the mountains near by. He wandered around Until nightfall, and then, like tbe babes in tbe story book, scraped some leaves together and slept on tbe impro vised couch until daylight. He then made bli way to a ranch, where be was found by the men who were searching for him. Tbe Imperial families of Eussia and Austria count more members than any other ruling families in Europe. In Russia there are to-day 28 Imperial princes and 18 Imperial princesses. In addition to tbe Czar a nd Ctarlna. The twenty-seventh Imperial Prince waa bora on January 1 as the son of Prince Constantine. jjjj younger ' I fTOJ ot hii 1 poet of merit the younger, who recently Incurred the die iajesty. rrince uonstantine Is a In 18S4 ha married the Princess Elisabeth of Saxe-Altenbatg. It has been decided that the East Indian National Congress wilt hold its session tor 1892 in London. Not more than 100 delegates will be elected to be present at that session, who will make the Voyage In a steamer Specially chartered for tbem. In which arrangements will be made for the Hindoo delegates to ob serve tbe casta roles with regard to food and driot without any difficulty. The expenses for tbe voyage for the poorer delegates will to de frayed from a special f und,whlca will be failed by subscription throughout India. Mrs. Mary Dailey, of Gibson, Ind., was married in 1S53 to Frederick Daliey. He was killed In the war, and she was granted a pen sion. InlSG9she married William Skiles.and her pension as the Widow Dailey ceased. Sklles died In 1873. and. he being a disabled soldier, tha woman applied for a pension. This disclosed the fact his first wife was still living, and that Mrs. Dailey's marriage to the de ceased waa void- Now she has filed a petition asking tbe court to annul tba marriage with Smiles, in order that she may be restored to tba pension roll as the widow of Dailey. The origin of the name "America" has recently been discussed by the Geographical Society of Berlin. Some held tbat it comes from a range of mountains in Central America, called by the natives Amerigo, and tbat Ves pucci was not called Amerigo, as it is riot a nameln the saint calendar of Italy. Tbey as serted that he cbanged his name from Alberigo to Amerigo after tbe latter was comtoginto uss as a Bame for tba Western world. Slgnor Govt however, has proved tbat Alberlco. in tba Florentine laneuage. Is Identical with Amerigo, and a letter of Vespucci, dated 15MJ, loand re cently in the archives of the Suite ot Gonsaga at Mantua, shows tbat be sometimes sub scribed himself Amerigo. Moreover, the natives call tba moahtains Amerisque, not Amerique, so tbat tbe question may ba con sidered settled In favor of the personal name. A CORNER IN SHILE3, Ethel Don't yon know, dear, that that last year's boanet of yours is very unfashionable this year? The fashions change so. Maud-Yes: and It is so nice for you that they do change. The same fashions come baa. every three or rour years, and uow yoar bonnet a In again io 3' Hatar, Miss Ongwee (to her Cousin Jonathan from the country during a spectacular dlvertlM ment In the opera) Well, cooiln, 1 have observed your frequent nse of the glasses. What do yon think? Cousin Jonathan (bashfatly) Nothln. Miss Ongwee Ob, yes, yon do! hat U Itt Cousin Jonathan Wall, I wouldn't hare Bea con Tubbs know I looked at them folks through a microscope for tew iMnti.JticelUr't Wtitty. "After all," remarked Mrs. Hojaek, "It'a lucky I lost that po gold piece." -How so?" asked her husband, surprised. "I read In a newspaper that you lost Scents' worth of metal off a 0 piece every day you carry it." Chicago Inter-Ocean. "I feel miserable, and I don't know what t Is mat makes me so." "What bare yon been eating?" "Lobster and cry stalllicd girizer." "And don't know what males you miserable?" "Dldl saywhat? I meant which7"-.y. Xnlt Sun. The man who in this season of fish and sackcloth meets a friend wishing to borrow a V with the statement tbat Iu wonld delight to oblige him were it not lent may have hopes ot heaven, but no certainty or lt-CAfcao Times. "Yon have a head on von this morning, haren't joa. dear?" inquired bis wife, kindly. "Gigantic" he gr oaned- Jaa-ontlc" she echoed, and left him with It Walhtngton Star. O, woe ba unto Simpson A-sInmolttjr gO bis stocks, Since he doth curtly now assert Bis feet have Carried socks. Scu Tort Continent. Detective Catchem How did you ever get a confession from Touejh Tobies? Detective Cjaliem-l gave hla a Connecticut cigar, and after he'd smoked It he thought he was jrolng to die, and told me alt be ever did.- VvJWA Exprttt. "Prank, have yon ever loved?" "Count the stars abort, Alice; number tbe sanda,, sands of the lea, and y6a will have the namber'of times 1 hate' loved." - lam yours, Vraak. rerf other One ot ; million or so of fellows I've twea la lore wist V? AtA Cll 7ftAVAkn1 1 -f --nnlli -sl i T al.Mnb.C.J IT - ..w.w uv..r -!- ,. 'em- Here's a um fee tear eauer,' 4 , - '- .i, tSffr . . I tfSM-SXr- h