$jmft ESTABLISHED FEBRUARY 1848. Vol. ffi, Jio. 50 Entered mt Pittsburg FostoSce, Jtovembcr 14. 1SS7, as second-class matter. Business Office Comer Smithfleld and Diamond Streets. News Booms and Publishing House 75, 77 and 79 Diamond Street EASTERN ADVERTISING OFFICE. ROOM 21. TRIBUNE BUlLUIKtS. NEW TURK, where complete files of THE BISPATCH can always be found. Foreign, advertisers appreciate the con venience. Home advertiser and friends of THE DISPATCH, while In New York, ire also made welcome. TBE DlSPJLTCB U tvgvlarly on sale at Erentmti'. S Union Square, JVeie York, and 17 Are. de r Opera, Paris, Prance, where anyone ttfio has been disappointed at a hotel news stand can obtain ft TERMS OF THE DISPATCH. roTics nn nr thk tmrm etJltxs. PATLT DISPATCH, One Year I 00 lurrr Dispatch, Per Quarter S 00 Daily DrsrATCH, One Month TO Daily Dispatch, Including fcunday, 1 year. 30 00 Daily Dispatch, including Sunday.Sm'ths 160 Daily Dispatch. 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AH double and trlplo number copies ot The Dispatch require a 2-ccnt stamp to Insure prompt delivery. - PITTSBURG. SUNDAY. MAE. 29. 188L FKACE AXD THE BEST OF EUROPE, Our cable dispatches this morning show that the turmoil in Europe is increasing in stead of subsiding. Russia's banble to Prance has aroused the jealousy of the other powers, and apprehension grows out of the fact that the former is massing troops on the Austrian frontier. The supposition now is that if war ensue, Piance would bean active ally of Russia, and events of the past week do much to surjport it Any snch action on the part of Prance is epen to criticism; for while her geograph ical position is such that more or less intimate connection with her monarchist neighbors must be kept up, the fewer treat ies or alliances into which she enters the better. As a nineteenth century republic, the should keep kings and their ilk at a distance. She shonld have very .little in common politically with nations that are forever hungry for territory and seek war as a means of getting it And her states men should understand that her present form of government is far more likely to be overthrown from without than it is from within. The fact that an unsuccessful war means for France a return to monarchy is admitted, and in some quarter.! it is asserted that the chief cause of European disturb ance is a desire on the part of more than one royal schemer to restore the Prench throne. As has been said in these columns before, republican Prance is a menace to the monarchical governments, and common sense on their part demands a change. If she enters into a war they may be gratified. REMEDIES FOR LA GRIPPE. It is a popular belief that there should be at least one remedy for every disease. Some people even say there is a remedy for every physical affliction, and if told of a disease for which there is no kuown remedy, calmly reply that the remedy exists, but has not yet been discovered. La grippe, how ever, is not oat of those dis eases for which a remedy has not been offered. In our local columns this morning we give something less than half a thousand directions and prescriptions for its treatment These will be seen to run all the way from partial electrocution to a close approach to death by poison Or starva tion. Some of them appear to be the kind spoken of as "cures worse than the disease," while others are calculated to make a suf ferer think that if they do no good, they will do no barm. Just which of the reme dies belong to each class, we will not under take to determine. They are given as a medical symposium and either or all of them may be. beneficial. The sufferer will bave to decide for himself. A DIFFICULT TASK. "With the view of getting the proper sort of a candidate for the next State campaign, the Easton Free Press, after observing that neither a Quay nor an anti-Quay man can unite the Republican factions, declares : "What we want is a No Man's Man." This principle is a first-class one, and if it bad been adopted in Bepublican politics long ago things might have been different But against its practical application in the selection of a candidate for the next State campaign two very great difficulties inter vene. The first is to find a man who answers that definition, and who is willing to sur render the advantages of the position to become a candidate ; the second is to get a Pennsylvania State'Convention to nominate a "So Man's Man." If the Free Press can perform these two labors of Hercuies it will demonstrate its title to political leadership, and also will re habilitate the Bepublican party. OUR NEW TREVTX WITH BRAZIL. Report says Brazil is not altogether satis fied with the recent treaty between that Re public and the United States. It is claimed that this country has taken everything and given Brazil practically nothing. Either these claims are without foundation in fact, or the Brazilians who negotiated the treaty were remiss in tneir duties. It is probable, however, that neither of these reasons need be considered, as the treaty will likely .be found mutually advantageous. It is not perfect No work of mankind has yet possessed that attribute. Bnt that it is the best that could have been made for both countries will no doubt be proven by its operations. Condemn ing it without trial is foolish and useless. It is merely an article of agreement between the two countries, and neither can afford to repudiate It so soon after the affixing of signatures. There is no sentiment about the negotia tion of treaties. As business and political' contracts between nations, they are founded WfeS upon What are presumed to be the rights snd Necessities of each country Interested. If any mistakes are made no one It respon sible but those who make them; and diplo mats are not the people to readily admit making mistakes. This latter fact also pro Yes that any existing dissatisfaction does not come from Brazilians best acquainted frith the provisions of the treaty. People who know bnt little of the matter hid better wait. A BLACK EXE FOB STATE SOCIALISM. The proceeding of the British Postmaster General against the company introducing the district messenger service in London, as offending against the postal laws, gives a black eye to the fundamental principle of the Btate socialists. That principle is that in certain kinds of service the Government can perform the work more cheaply and satisfactorily by reason of its controlling the whole business and having unlimited resources at its com mand. The postal service is held up as a marked illustration of this principle, and the developments of the English postal serv ice are reearded as especially strong evi dence of its correctness. But here we have a case which gives a double shock to that theory. In the first place it wonld be in sanity for a district messenger company to start operations unless it can make money either from cheaper charges or better service than the postoffice gives. In the Second place, if it does not do more for thtmoney than the postoffice it would be wholly; un necessary for the Postmaster General to ap peal to the law for protection against the inroads of the innovating company. "When the Postoffice Department goes to the courts to sustain its monopoly it deals a fatal blow to the theory that the public is benefited by the ezclnsive governmental control of any kind of publio service not essentially connected with the maintenance of governmental authority. Incidentally also, it does the same for the special plea by which trade monopolies attempt to conceal the real purpose of their existence. DEATH OF N. P. REED, The death of Kelson P. Beed, 6F the Commercial Qatette, from the prevailing ep idemic, fully noted in our local columns, is sad news to the wide circle of friends and acquaintances of that leading newspaper proprietor. Mr. Beed has been a prominent figure in newspaper and political workyand his energy and determination hare made his career, during all that time, one of con tinued progress and extending influence. As a business man he was energetic, pains taking and vigilant; in newspaper work he was an active supervisor ot all details, while in politics he was a warm party man, but outspoken in opposition to the discred itable features of party work. It will be difficult to fill the" place of a man of so much energy, aggressiveness and industry, as he who has been so suddenly removed from an active and successful life. THE WORK OF ARBOR DAT. Governor Pattison has fixed April 10 and May 1 as Arbor Says, for the planting of trees throughout the State, wherever they will serve purposes of ornamentation or shade. The object of naming two different dales is t6 suit the climatic -conditions of different parts of the State, The day Suita ble for planting trees In the southernmost counties may not be in the northernmost Of course there is nothing to prevent people from planting trees on other days; but the fixing of a day by public authority should have the effect of indtfeing general work of that sort It is to be hoped that on one day or the other there will be a wide observance by general tree planting. Pennsylvania has heretofore done more in the way of destroy ing trees than of planting them. Yet in either city or conntry there is no cheaper waytF beautifying and improving high ways and public places, as well as lawn and private grounds, than by the planting of shade trees. This consideration applies especially to Pittsburg. In all the work of street im provement that has gone on for the past few years, there has been a remarkable dearth of tree planting. The few spots where shade trees have been cultivated attract the ob. server and commend themselves to every taste. Tet as a rule property owners neglect an opportunity within the reach of all to double the attractive features of their vicin ity at an expense ot iabor and money that In comparison with the benefit is really trivial. This should not continue to be the case. In the observance of Arbor Day every citizen has an opportunity to do work that if kept up would make our streets beautiful with shade and foliage. A NOVEL COINAGE PROPOSITION. Mr. Edward Atkinson has thrown into the complicated question of silver coinage a rroposition for the solntion of the pending dispute. It has the merit of novelty, and if adopted would settle the question, at least until submitted to the test of experience. It can hardly be asserted that it simplifies the issue much; and with regard to the ma terial effects of its adoption, it is much more doubtful that it would simplify our cur rency system. In the last .number of Bradstrest's, Mr. Atkinson, with more detail than we can re produce .in this summary, lays down the following indisputable propositions: That the function of money is to furnish a measure of rating of values in the ihter change of products; that the purpose of coinage is to furnish a Government certlfi cate that the coin contains a measured quan tity of the metal which is used as money; that while varions metals have been and are used as money, gold and silver are now practically the only money metals that need be considered; that commerce can be con ducted on a large scale'without any act of legal tender, as is shown by the immense volume of international commerce without any act of legal tender; that it is expedient that the coinage of all kinds of gold and silver shall be made free, so that anyone desiring to have his gold coined can do so and anyone desiring to have his silver coined can do so; that to reach this point with justice it is necessary that all acts of legal tender shonld be repealed, so that no one shall be forced either tp pay or receive a gold or a silver dollar he does not choose to, Up to this point Mr. Atkinson's argument has proceeded straight to this original proposition: Free coinage and no legal tender laws whatever. The idea is snch a J radical one that, although, as will be seen further on, it is not Mr. Atkinson's'tnatnred proposition, it is Worth while to stop a moment and consider its significance. It is a return to natural principles in the matter of coinage, without imposing legal tender obligations upon either party to a bargain. Bat a moment's consideration of its work ings in actual bnsiness operations. Under this every transaction would necessitate a specification stipulation whether payment should be made In gold or silver. Every merchant who sold five dollars worth of goods Would have to notify his customer in advMee wfasjAer- It m fir dettiw e-f jW ffiffiS 6r five dollars 'ot silver. Every bant check or draft would have to stipulate on its face whether it would have to bo paid in gold or silver, every bank deposit would require a separate account, and the bank would hate to know how mueh gold and h&tr much silver the depositor Was entitled to check against. A man conld not get a twenty dollar bill changed wi'thbut a stipulation as td the coin that shonld be given in exchange; and the same trouble would be entailed through out every transaction from the highest to the smallest. . Of course this is entirely impracticable, and Mr. Atkinson recognizes that it is to, by proceeding, as soon as he has formulated the proposition above quoted, to -modily It with a proviso that in contracts or bargains where no express stipulation is made as to the kind of money to be used in payment, the gold dollar must be the legal standard. But this Is practically what was done when silver was demonetised. -Anyone was then at liberty to make.contracts for the specific payment of so many silver dollars. When gold is made the only legal tender for con tracts that use the word dollar, that is practical gold monometallism. There is an apparent gain for silver in the proposition that anyone conld get silver dollars coined for use in transactions where silver is agreed to on both sides. Bnt experience has already proved that this would be only an apparent gain. Some fifteen or twenty years ago the Government coined trade dollars, which contain more silver than our present dollars, for anyone who had the bullion. It was perfectly legitimate, for anyone to make a contract in which trade dollars should be paid ; bnt a great trouble was created because these dollars, intended for circula tion in foreign countries, returned to onr trade. The country was confronted with the paradox of silVer dollars, intrinsically Worth more than our legal tender silver, made the cause of complaint against the Government for letting depreciated money get into circu lation. Mr. Atkinson may 'have presented this plan as a means of demonstrating the weak ness in the silver argument; or as a method of inducing the silver men to accept free coinage ot silver without the legal tender provision. But in either light it is not likely to do much toward settling the dis pute. While the argument is good as far as it goes, it entirely avoids the real complaint of the silver men, that the gold standard has been changing by a constant appreciation nf the price of gold. As a possible compro mise, it is impracticable, because, under the shadow of free silver coinage, it is evident that Mr. Atkinson makes gold the sole legal tender. Eggs are eggs, notwithstanding the reports about the production of a successful imita tion. But the men who imagined they had con trol ot tne egg market so as to put up prices out of sight, reckoned without the host of hens. They went to laying eggslwlth sublime indiffer ence to the economic theory of the speculators that eggs ought not to be too cheap, and before Easter arrived, the egg market got to a reason able level. Much missionary Work remains to be done before the bens become converts to trust principles. The theory that tramps are useless has been proven false by a Long Island Jail janitor, who lodged them in the town hall at a clear profit of 12 cents each per night. Unluckily for the janitor, bis efforts in theory-demolishing are not appreciated by the authorities, and be will be prosecuted. Such was ever the fate of daring genius. The Anaconda copper mine in Montana has shut down. The copper combination Is evidently determined to guard the world against the calamity of having too much copper. Ez-Matob Caster Harbison has found a n?ve: way to establish a political cam paign fund without costing him anything. He says that, having made liberal bequests to charity in bis will, be can take 30,000 from those bequests for his campaign expenses, and be none tbe poorer. This is a great Idea, and it would probably work well it it were not for the obdnracy of tbe ward workers in refusing to take checks payable when the bequests are realized. "Two weeks from to-day we shall know it all," remarks the Philadelphia Item. The interest as to what the enlightening effect of the date named will be is wholly sunk in the delight afforaed by the discovery, through this remark, of one Philadelphia editor who does not know it all already. The latest Canadian developments strengthen the conviction that Sir John Mac donald is very shrewd and knew what he was about in holding his election in a hurry. The report that Cuba is beginning to ship molasses to this country In tank ships moves an Eastern cotetnporary to the hope that some means will be found to thoroughly clean out the petroleum tank ships before they are used to carry tbe molasses. To this the Sugar TruBtwill promptly reply before any committee of investigation that the remnants of the petroleum will add flavor and richness to the molasses. The Ohio Legislature cut down the ap propriation for keeping the State canals in Working c&sdltiOn to one half the necessary sum. Evidently the railways are after tbe Ohio canals, to tbe best of their ability and the ability is no slight one in tbe Ohio Legis lature. The story that a million dollars was made out ot a transaction in Allegheny municipal matters has put every one north of the river on a trantio hunt for the million. The appearance of General Grubb, our Minister to Spain, at one of the court recep tions in the imposing uniform of the Philadel phia City Troop,.bas evoked sarcasm from the organs of tbe opposition. This is unwise. It is evident thai General Grubb's uniform has its uses. If he were transferred temporarily to the Italian court bis uniform might overawe the rumored belligerent dispositions of that power. The latest variation of the stories about the Duke of Orleans and his passion for an actress, to the effect that he went into France in the disguise ot her valet, indicates tbat tbe actress must be getting ready for an American tour and has Secured an energetic advance agent The Connecticut dea dlock gave out signs of letting go for a moment, but it was only to spit ton its bands and take a fresh grip. The last Congress refused the request of the Civil Service Commission for power to Select its'own clerical employes, and, either by mistake or design, omitted to provide lor the assignment of two department employes to the commission. Cohsequehtly if the work of that body is crippled by its inability to secure proper clerical force, the spoilsmen will be jumped upon by tlis spoilsmen. t THAT La Grippe should be the name of the horse which so unexpectedly won a race at Guttenburg tho ether day is a coincidence worthy of remark when the disease of tbe name is the pale horse tbat brings Its terrible rider. Heath, to sd manyfhomes. Let us bope thjat the sunshine will dispel the grip as pfonyptly und thoroughly as the BOW. jf A TOLEbd jfaper shows mistaken enter briss in publishing the picture of a mayoralty MMMate a be- perpd wken by. The . tonti&sfa' J&&SX&, baby picture' is t oujwld by oho representing the candidate as tie brat present, and the mis take Is in the fact that the paper conld not complete tbe series by publishing bis picture as he will appear whenah dia mah. . . Mahone and Langston have made up their differences and are now avowed political friends. But each bj them is understood to carry a sharp knife in his bootleg as a prepara tion for emergencies. The "White Easter" missed us by a nar ro w squeak; but a miss is as good as a mile. The energy with which the Bepublican and Democratic organs have combined to open their batteries on Ingalli Is bringing the Farmers' Alliance around to the point 'of forgiving bim. Simpson has recently said that Ingalls is .now pretty nearly right, And if the organs keep on they will succeed in carrylngthat conviction to tl;e agricultural heart. PEOPLE AND POTENTATES. Ma yob Ghaut, of New York, Is a much better-looking man thanhls pictures make him out to be. Tbuxton- Beale. the new Minister to Persia, has not vet left California nor found a secretary of the right "Sort ' Queeit "Vict'obiA. has progressed so rapidly in tbe stuuy of Hindostknee. that she now writes It with ease. Pbesidekt Cabwqt is said to "be very fond of German sausage andsauer-kraut much to the disgust of the' French. ChatjitceY M.-DEPEW is said to hive .recently refused ah HJffeV- of 100,000 a year to edit a New York dally .paper. Secbetaby Tbacy and Senator Aldrich will be tbe chief speakers at a monster Bepub lican banquet In Boston on April 8. Pbof. GhabIiBS A. Younq, of Prince ton, the greatest ot American astronomers, is short and very round-sbonldered, with a pair of very keen, flashing eyes. The Sultan of Turkey is "said to be im bued with tbe superstition concerning cross eyed people. He sad a man In his suite afflicted with an obliquity of vision In one eye, and as tbe courtier was too useful to dis charge, the eye was extirpated. Mhe. Cabnot had 4,000 guests at the last ball at the Elyseo in Paris, bhe was attired for the occasion in a handsome dress of Louis XV. pekin, vieux-rose stripes on white ground, broche with Vlenx-rose flowers; vieux-rose satin tablier, trimmed with point d'Alencon, and a headdress small rose, feathers and dia monds. Lawrence -Babbett was unable to wear a hat not made to order, though on one occasion he succeeded in finding a tolerable fit in John Puke's when this cleVer, but absent mlnded.pbilosoober walked off from Ole Boll's house in Cambridge with Barrett's brand new beaver, leaving a less enticing beadgear in its place. MB3. maby BBATrrbir Yottno died at her home In Pall Bfver, he other day, aged 78. She was the mother of Bradford M. C. Dnrfee, in whose honor was "erected tbe Durfee Me morial Hall, at Tale College. She gave ro Fall River a public high school, costing 8750,000, the building being formally presented to tbe city in 1887. She was married twice, her first husband. Major Bradf o rd -Dnrfee, being the richest man in that section. Her second husband, Joshua Young, was a clergyman Her estate is esti mated at 812,000,000 to15V000,fc00. Db. Peabody, of Harvard, who has just entered the ranks o'f the octogenarians, is a little absent-minded at times. One summer day, having come to Boston from Cambridge, and having alighted from the car at Bowdoin square, he turned a "sharp corner and collided with an elderly gentleman who wis stanaing with his hat off, wiping the perspiration from his forehead, who held his hat in snch a way as to give the appearance of begging. Dr. Pea body seeing the hat dropped a quarter into it with his customary kln remark. Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, who was holding the hat, put tbe money in bis pocket, solemnly thanked his old friend, the giver, and passed on. WOBK OF THE TABD7F LEAGUE. Some Statistics From Its Corresponding ' Secretary. Wilbur P. Wakeman,JC6rrespohdfngSecretary ot the American Protective Tariff League, says: "We have some 10,000 correspondents in all parts of the Union. They write the1 league letters frequently and give information as to how pro tection is spreading. As first we had difficulty in getting correspondents, but now they are coming forward rapidly. By 1892 We may have 100,000 correspondents. They help to distribute tariff tracts and act as educators in theSr sec tions. So few people understand the tariff the league is kept busy exp'ainlng it, by means of pamphlets ot course. Tbe Tariff League is an institution that has come to stay and propagate ono idea protection." Try It on Fifth Avenue Dados. Philadelphia News. I Proprietor Gllmore's heroic efforts to rid the vicinity of tbe Central .Theater of mashers and star-gazers by turning tbe hose on them, though well intentioned, has been resented. Mr. Gilmore is In receipt of a letter from At torney Charles L. Smith, as representative of John Bishop, who asks for $150 as indemnity for loss in having a full smt of clothes, not to mention hat, shoes, and haberdashery, soaked on the evening of March 16. It appears tbat on or abdut the night men tioned tbe girls in the company found it impos sible to exit per tbe stage entrance on account of tbe youths which blocked it up. So the fair pursued were let out the front way, and with the nozzle of a fire "hose Mr. Gilmore played down the alley "It Showered Again" in a way that would break Dave Braham's heart. The ram struck John Brshop in tbe left lobe of the neck, and bis clothln? suffered a severe strain. The suffering is estimated by the af flicted party at 1150. Another Kind of Bust. St. Loots Globe-Democrat.1 An item is floating around 'to tbe effect that at the meeting bf the new Congress Vice Presi dent Morton -will enjoy the distinction of be ing the first man to face his own bust in tbe Senate Chamber. It 'strikes us that Mr. Voor hees and others have frequently looked upon their own busts in their place. DEATHS OP A DAY. Mollio "B. Laughlln. Mollie S. Langhlin, youngest daughter of Benjamin and CathaVlne LauKhlln. died at the xhome of her parents, on Au Washington, yester day at the age of.ll years and S months. Her many friends will crcatly m(j this little girl, who was one of the kindest companions in the little circle. Her death becomes doubly sorrow ful becanse of the Illness ol both her parents. The funeral will occur this afternoon. Eetli C. jTaqufty. Beth X3. iaquay fifed at his residence, 2f Lacock street Allegheny, yesterday afternoon at 2:30, In hlsfeith year, Mr. Jaquay was one or the oldest ironworkers lb the city, having been employed it ShoenbergeT's mills lorn number of years. He leaves a lafrfce circle offrlends, both in this city and Wheeling, who will be sorry tolearn of his demise. J, " , Mrs. Margaret Brown. Mrs. Margaret Brown, widow of the late Kev. 3. H. Brown, died yesterday at her home, 174 Koblnson street Allegheny. Bhe was one of the best-Vnown old ladles of that city, and will be mourned by a large circle of friends. Her funeral Will occur to-morrow auernoou m a o'clock. Mrs. Christiana Bauer. Mrs. Christiina Bauer, widow of the late Helmold Bauer, dies yesterday at her hotne, H Liberty street Allegheny, at the advanced age of 82 years. Mrs. Bauer was well-known and uni versally respected. Her funeral will occur Tues day morning from her late residence. Colonel ohn SleEnery. New Obleans, March 28. Colonel John JlcKnery, who, the Democrats claimed, was elected Governor of Louisiana in 1872, died to-day, aged 78. t . i, Charles si. Mlelgs. New Yobk, March 28. The death was reported this morning on theStbck Exchange of Charles H. Meigs, who had Veen a member Slice lsen. -Charles JX. Lettc. SJMK-gfiM,1. ,3Ca$&. March 28."-Chaa- b. lette. the.lTeWor,ofbftrtalBte oartxldge, 'JtsUMnsSisk WfcCi;afaag&r--tt:v-A "ffmrtJA; flASWH"&.".16Si;. MUtiftAV'S MUsWqS, Baine Fashion (s Now Sweeping lh& Streets The Booms ot a Swell club A Type writer n BaS Thing to Steal Mddern Entertaining. ii any fashion could be any more unreason able and accompanied by filthier and more dis gusting results than the fashion of long dresses tbat has recently come in here it would be dif ficult to name it Bven the women themselves affect to detest this fashion, but there are everywhere evidences that they are universally adopting it Poke all the fuh attbenivdu may, ridicule and abuse alike fall as harmlessly upon them as water npon a (luck's back. Wherever you go np and down Broadway there, are pavement sweepers In front bf you kicking up a dust and filth gather ers behind yon scrapuie up the mud. Wow and then a glimpse of what onca would tifto beta dainty underwear proVokes'tne imagination as td how these same' modern substitutes must look after their day's sweep about the streets otifew Ydrk; Fortunately tor "the Unhappy slaves oilashroh the old type of white Stock ings and underskirts has become extinct. Blacks and grays ahd "other colors ido ait so readily betray the disregard for dirt This is the rule now and then, however, one may see a skirt and sometimes a pair of stock ings that were white when the wearer started out in the morning, and a sickening sight it usually is. How in the World A womah, other wise sensible and dainty of taste and cleanly ot habits, will submit to this dictation of dress makers and thus literally wallow in the mire IS something that a man at least cannot find out Perhaps Such a woman would be horrified it she had been accidentally discovered With her gown or face unwashed, Or in an otherwise un kempt condition. SO far as we know sho may be now horrified everv tlmesbe comes home and shakes off the accumulated filth ot tbe streets. In the meantime, however, dresses get longer and longer, and she bows her neck to the yoke more patiently and even with enthusiasm. Thank Heaven, there are some women who ate not afraid to assert themselves. rTheyaretbe sensible women who live not for fashion's sake, but for some brighter and more definite purpose. They believe that cleanliness Is next to godliness in this matter of dress, to say noth ing of it3 other features. If they could bear the warm commendation of the other sex per haps it would cheer them on, though such women do not require any extraheous assist ance Otthls kind. Tfaev am unite as independ- , ent of male opinion as their erring fashionable sisters. A Popular Piece of Nonsense. One of the newest jokes requires a match for its successful perpetration. There areptbose who detest practical jokes, and if this one is played npon any snch, tbe perpetrator is liable to get into trouble. It is very slmp!6 and con sists of an ordinary match on which is some tnlminating powder that goes off with a sharp snap something like an electric knap when. tho enrrect jumps from one metal to another. Tbe familiarity of the general public with eccen tricities ot erectile enrrents helps ont the joke wonaermily. You hand a gentleman a cigar and at the same time one of these matches, wbich he proceeds to light in the nsual way, on the sole of his boot or his trousers, and about the time It has burned sufficiently for him to light his cigar from it the explosion occurs. When you have given ono of these matches to your maid with instructions to Mght the gas. and she climbs a cbair for that purpose, it is perhaps a funny tblng, and doubtless Is to everybody but the maid, if she falls off the chair thinking tbat the wires are crossed in soma place or that a blast has suddenly gone off in tbe near vicinity. There are some fellows in New i'ork who carry nnr AriTv tliaaA maritliM tin Btsrf ftirfi-ra lT SIVII VUIJ tUWU UiatUI.1), MUM UVU b4Wldt ,1VS J their Iriends and seem to derive no end of I amusement from this exhibition of alleged humor. When yon remember how almost any one is startled by treading on a match on the floor, you can readily imagine tbe surprise ot a man who is taught with one ot these matches between bis fingers in tbe act of lighting his cigar. The matches are- sold down on the Bow ery, and those wbo are familiar with Its pecu liar properties are exceedingly wary of any kindly proffer of a light Stealing tho Typewriter. Everybody has heard of the man who would steal aredhot stove. 1 he i newest brand of thieves in New York Is tho fellow who comes Into an office and steals the typewriter. Not the girl who -ordinarily goes under that title bnt the machine Itself. You could replace the girl a good deal easier than yon could the ma chine and for less money. A number of eases are reported where these office thieves have stepped into an office m a prominent part of the city with the ostensible purpose ot asking a question or selling something, -and having loundthe occupants out have lugeed away the Remington or the Caligraph, as the case may be. Now, the typewriting machine is not an easy piece of property to dispose of, from the fact that tbe numbers of the machines are scheduled at the manufactories ahd salesrooms and sooner or later, when a particular machine has to be repaired, the temporary owner is cer tain to be cornered. Take the nnmber of your machine and report its loss to tbe main office, and the chances are that in no part of tbe city or even a remote country town will tbe pos sessor find concealment. Aredhot stove will get cool, but the typewriter never ceases to be dangerous to the thief until it goes into the junkshop as old iron. Managing Rooms In a Club. There is a rule at the Manhattan Club that a member can have a room for a limited time, but when that time expires be must move or get a special permit to continue its' occupancy. Very fine quarters are given for a reasonable consideration and the rooms are thus in great demand. It it were an unlimited privilege cer tain men abont town who are members could keep these rooms all the time, and the rule is for the convenience of those who indulge la occasional jags. When the time expires for which tbe roomcanbe occupied under the roles the member roust move out for a day or two, when he can come baek and take it again if it Is not occupied. This works a good deal like tbe limitation upon the sale of postage stamps in many places. You can buy, say, ten stamps only at a time and if you require more you must come back again to the counter In a few minutes and buy ten more. Since the Manhat tan Club has moved into its new quarters, tbe btewart mansion, tbe privileges of the club are more eagerly sought after by its membership than ever before. One reason is that club life and club associations are more congenial to some people tbanabotel existence, and another reason Is that it is cheaper to live thus than at a correspondingly swell bostelry in New York, History Repeats Itself. "In respect to the nodal fad in the way Of private entertainments In New York," said a lady the other day, "we are but returning to a custom which prevailed a eouple of thousand years ago, I mean that of hiring professional people to entertain one's guests at private houses. During tbe last season this has been the rage in New York society. Everywhere one goes it is merely to see reproduced in a private drawing room what you can see to a great deal better advantage in a variety theater. Skirt dancers and singers of all grades, comedians and professional musicians all go to make up the sort of exhibition one expects to see for irom 60 cents to fl 60 by going to the theater. It is not unusual to find tbe entire evening taken up by this form of entertainment Now, tomymindCarmencita and the professional skirt dancer is all very well on the stage and hedged in by the traditions of tbe footlights: but when you come to see such a woman dancing In aprivaieurawing room ana mingling witn tne cnestsbetweeb the aetS.ltlSbeither conducive to pleasure or good morals. When one goes to Nlblo's to see a spectacular performance In which some hundreds of more or less beautiful women appear lu stage costume the mind suf fers no shock, for there is no contact between tbe audience and tbe performers. Bnt it one introduces these same women into private es tablishments Ih the same Costumes the thing is quite different When I see such a play as I have mentioned I bave no desire to hang around the greenroom among the ballet dancers and clowns. SWdl New York society drags tbe air of the greenroom home with it. and forces it into the nostrils of everybody in tbe social swim. Tnis fad has been growing steadily, and I would not be surprised, if it keeps ou.to see in tbe near future the introduc tion of acrobats and contortionists aS a moans of private amnsement Then we shall have certainly returned to the customs of ancient Borne." How an Arab Beauty Makes Money. There are a Creat many fakirs who wort the offices abd other places of bnsiness about New tork, but obe variety at least is interesting. This is a beautiful Arab girl, of about 17 years of age, wbo sells lead pencils, cheap jewelry and notions of all kinds. She bas a dark olive com plexion, black hair and eyes like midnight in a coal pit The long lashes that sweep her cheek wonld enthuse an artist When she came Into my office the other day She advanced to tbe desk and taking my hafad in hers bowed grace fully over It raised It to her lips and theh made tbe sign of the cross with it Naturally this un accustomed proceeding secured tbe attention of everybody ih the room. The Same perform ance was gone thtouftb wlfliacoUplb of visitors and the young lady who runs the typewriter. Bhe could not understand "Anglalse," but all - A hafnra ehn (rnt illlilv tun ftnM turM-. three pencils worth about 2 cents for 10 bents each, a cake of soap and a pair of Batters. It .,. Mnwrfflsislsfrom Arabia has thn un. kis4etIfceiwOW8J. as wW84i,will J hate i fortune before the Is able td Speak the English language. The Bargain Counter Catches Them, bhe ot the most picturesque and amusing sights is to be seen at the bargain counter in Macy's establishment oh Fourteenth street every day in tbe week. Now.a bargain counter is a bargain counter almost anywhere, but at Maej's, Where almost everything is sold and where there are employed somo 1,400 to 1,600 clerks and where the salesrooms are thronged with thousands ot people every pleasant after noon, tbe effect is most striking. Fobtieentn street is famed for its lady shoppers, and few among them there ate who will not say they de test Macy's. At the sane time there Is scarcely a woman in JNew xork but win try the Bargain counter at such ah establishment eviry now and then if only as a sort of "flyer." Charles t. Murray. New York, March 2S. PldPLE TALK TOO HTJCH, Says a Western rhilosoplief Whb Ik Any thing But Mutn Chicago Herald. Did it ever strike you that tbe reason human beings grow to be eo wrinkled and battle scarred by the time they get ready to die is be cause they talk too muehf l'be family cat goes through trials as great as ever befell a mortal Rachel in seeing family after family of blooming kits consigned to tbe water bucket; the cow bands over one after another of her frisky offspring to the bntcber's sbambles; the chicken is chased Into tbedinber pot; the bird is waylaid by the small boy and bis sling-shot; the borse Is over loaded and abnsed to tbe limit of equine en durance, and yet each arid all from the family cat to tbe noble borse preserve countenances ot youthful calm and serenity to the last You heversiW a tear Stained cheek br a pain-rur-rowed brow on an animal, and I believe it is becanse they were mercifully denied the power to communicate and dilate ttpun their troubles. If tbey met together to talk over their ail ments as we do. and filled the hours of a morn ing browse under the maples with de tails of a bad digestion or tbe items of a family funeral, perhaps they wonld grow old and hollow cheeked and wizened before their time, as we da What is mankind's universal form of salutation? "How are your" Ten to bne the ques tion launches a full-rigged craft of physical wretchedness upon the tide of conversa tion that shonld be devoted to nobler commerce. How Would it do to change the form of Inquiry to matters pertaining to the spirit rather than to the bodyT "How is it with your soul, sister!" rather than "Have you got tbeeriiif" "How fares your temper!" instead of "How is your liverf" Wonld it not be better to interest ourselves in tbe progress of the soul on its journey toward the delectable conntry than to vex ourselves so wildly about matters pertaining to headaches, catarrhs and bay feverT Try it THE MABKUTG OP BO0KB. The Penciling May Prove an Undesirable Record. "What do you think of the habit of marking booLs?" Kate Field asked an old book worm ahd book lover. "Why, I think that if the marker himself doesn't mind it no one else ought to." "I do not understand, Why should the per son who marks books mind it t" "Because it Is snch a reckless giveaway. It is bad enough to have to stand by the things you say yourself, without adopting a lot of things some bne else has said in addition. When yciu mark a book you often put on exhi bition sentiments which you wonld express only with the greatest reserve, bnt here they are open to tbe criticism of friend and foe alike. "I haye always had a private opinion tbat tbB marking of books showed a lack of proper re serve and delicacy. It is making the public a present of what belongs to yourself and your friend. 'Then, apart from the revelation mads to other people, you often find marked books an uncomfortable record of your own past mental poverty. If you should read the same work, but in different copies, once a year for five years, ahd mark at each reading the things which struck your fancy, the five copies when Compared, wonld show you some startling facts. Our appreciative ability grows raster and surer, I think, than any other. You would bo heartily ashamed of the things you approved at a previous stage ot development "On the whole, it IS a verv dangerous process for the nerson who cares for his own and his friends' good opinion to stand sponsor for the dictum of an author, simply because, on read ing It for the Brsttlme, he felt ad agreeable re sponsive glow." FOOLISH LITTLE LAHBS. Two Hundred of Them Get Frightened and Jump into the Sea. The tendency of sheep to follow their leader was amusingly illustrated at the Third street wharf yesterday, says the San Francisco Ex aminer. A band of about 20U lambs was being drixen toward Butchertown to be slaughtered. A four-horse team turned tbe bend from tbe right course, and the badly frightened lambs ran down the street in tbe direction of the Third street wharf, followed by the shepherd does. Whose barking only Served to increase their terror. Tbe wharf gate was opened at tbe time, and tbe foremost lamb leaped upon the stringer Of the wharf, and galloping clear to the end, jumped Into tbe water. A long string of lambs did exactly the same thine, and the air seemed to be full of them, turning somersaults, revolving in the air, and sprawling in all shapes before they struck the water. Every boat in the vicinity was called into use. and after much difficulty the animals were gathered up without the loss ot one and firoceeded on the journey, very wet but doubt ess mueh wiser lambs. LEAVINGS OF THE FAIB, The Great Show Is Not an Unmixed Blessing for Chicago. Mr. A. M. Brown, of Philadelphia, in an in terview the other day said: "There are 80, 000 idle men in tibicago to-day. Most bf these are not legitimate residents of the city, but bave been attracted there by tbe prospects ooened np by the World's Fair. Chicazo natu rally finds that large surplus of idlers, which is nnfortunately mostly of tbe laboring class, a difficult problem to deal with. But she will fibd a greater task in taking care of tho idle surplus that will be left there after tbe fair Is over. I know how this thing worked in Phila delphia. It is a great misfortune that; a scheme like tbe Centennial Exhibition or tbe World's Fair serves to stimulate for a time and leaves the most disastrous results following in its wake. It is Just like a man who drinks too much whisky and suffers the consequent head ache tbe next morning. There will be 103,000 laborers and artisans and fakirs in general left upon Chicago's bands at the close of the com ing Exposition. Tbe greater the success of tbe fair the worse It will be for these people who bave lived and thrived on it temporarily." May Beat the Erie. , A project to build a canal from Borne to the sea is being seriously entertained in Italian circles. The canal will permitthe passage of the largest ironclads, and it is proposed to build three forts along the line ot the water way, thus making Borne Strategically more lmpor taat than Spezzia or Genoa. The canal will be about 22 miles long, with a depth of 32 f eotand where its mouth extends into the sea, stone embankments will be bnilt on both sides. AS the canal will pass through tbe deadly Ostlan marshes, it is proposed to nse the ma terial excavated for the purpose of filling in the fever-stricken marshes, and, it possible, bring tbem nnder. cultivation. The canal, it fs said, will cost J10.000.000. A Venerable Goose. Kingston Freeman. John Bay, an old and respectable resident of Croton Landing, and formerly of Putnam county, says that while residing in Putnam county he purchased a goose of obe Isaac Bill, and tbat the goose was 62 years old when he purchased her for 75 cents. He kept her for three years. Each year the goose laid over SO eggs, and the first year raised 11 goslibgs,which fell over a high wall in tho creek and were drowned. Tbe second year she raised 22 gos lings, and the third year 40 goslings. He then said ber at the end of the third year to one Amos Austin for $100. Mr. Ray Says to the best of bis knowledce and belief the- goose Is still alive, making her 83 years old. Eggs-aggerated, No Doubt Philadelphia Public Ledger.1 A Dauphin county clergyman, who knows how to run a hennery, increased bis income by over SCO last year, from the sale of eggs alone. Enterprise like this would be creditable to any lay man. MAUD'S EASTER BONNET. The milliner, with poet's an. Has made atprlngtlnie softhet AhtffroW the treasure of AlaTtoe's heart libit new Easter bonnet. Bet, beatrtifut thouRb it may he. And all the things tbstwreath it 'She beauty that sppeatt to me Is In l& face beneath.lt. . -,1 ec ,.-J ,, -Owe Qietn. KoK FROM CAY TO GRAVt:. ' Effect of the Weekly Exodus on Staid Old HarrbBorz The Town Takes a Two Days' Nup--How the Time Is SXaughti ered. tFEOMA STAJT COBBXSFOirnKKT.l HABKiifltrfto, March 2$. No one, even in his wildest flights of. imagination, would call Harfisburg a lively place that 13 to the pil grim and stranger whom business may take there. There Is nothing metropolitan about it Nor is there any undue rust displayed. On a Saturday evening, when the Ironworkers from Steelton pome up town to crowd the gallery at the Opera Honse, there is a briskness and a hustle on tbe streets which gives out a sem blance bt liveliness, but ordinarily candor must class tbe capital city as decidedly dull. Every second winter, however, when the leg islative solons gather there, things begin to liven, Hotels' and boirtling houses are fur bished up, the somewhat monotonous bills of fare blossom with dishes whose names we.set forth in idiomatic French, ahd the Oyster Ex press brings in increased supplies bf tbe bl'nlve whose native lair is In the Waters 61 Chesa peake Bay. Even the salooiis are said to put an extra keg on tap, for whilo the legislators are the most abstemious of mortals, there are roystermg blades interested in legis lation whd flock to the capital, and whose bibu lous tendencies tod frequently "give the place a bad name." Transeendently Eminent Busy-Bodies. And while tbe session lasts things are lively; at least so far as the 400 or 300 people are con cerned whom the Legislature brings there. The committees are all at work, and lafge delega tlons df eminently respectable and transeend ently eminent people appear before them in advocacy of or opposition to certain measures upon which the fato of the Commonwealth seems to depend, and who generally succeed in boring the committee and accomplishing far less than do otber and smaller delegations ot not nearlv so eminent ana possibly not quite so respectable people, but who know the ropes anu irom wnicn ena to pull them. Debates are not always dull. Occasionally some dignified Eenator forgets tbat famous "Senatorial courtesy" and Jumps' on another dignified Senator, and for a time there is a scene which makes tbe painted face of William Fenn, above tbe President's cbatr, look as though bo wished he had never settled his woods, but had left tbem undisturbed to the copper-colored descendants ot the two Indians Who, evidently suffering from some severe In ternal pain, squat ih the background. But interest centers In the House. There the debates are more of a "free for all" character. All the speeches are not directed to the Record and listened to by it alone. The members size a man up very sdon and very accurately. He who talks for buncombe or for "home consumption" is soon found out, and his impassioned flights of eloquence fall on heedless ears, and are even accorded Jrreverent jeers. Bnt the man wbo has something to say and can say it and, above all, Is not always saying It never lacks respect ful attention. And the House is much more re sponsive to eloquence than is the Senate. Many a bill has been saved or defeated by a five minutes' burst of appeal or argument It is true that when the excitement has some what cooled down, the House may cruelly re Consider its action and undo what eloqoehbe had accomplished, but even then the tempor ary triumph takes the sung out of final de feat The Blight That Comes With Friday. Bnt it is when Friday morning's session has come and gtine, and with it the Philadelphia and Pittsburg delegations and the members from those eastern and middle counties easily reached by rail, that the loneliness of desola tion settles like a pall over the Capitol and the hotels. Then the members f rdm the remote bounties-, who cannot spend Sunday at home and get back for the Monday evening's session, wander around like those "wbo tread alone some banquet hall deserted.' Tbe Senate is tenAntless. save and except the Senator from Erie, Mr. Mccreary, as the President pro tern rhythmically announces when that 'gentleman takes tbe floor. He bas remained at the capital dunng the whole session, not missing a single roll call, and seems always busy looking after the interests of his enterprising and growing bonstitueney. In the House the score or so of members gather In lonesome groups of tbtee or four, smoking and talking and retatinghumorous an ecdotes redolent of the mould of'tbe Middle Ages, and are ignominlously driven from their seats by tbe charge of tbe broom and serub urnsh brigade, primeval matrons who evidently exist by prescription, their earthly origin dat ing back to a "time whence the memory of man runneth not to the contrary." The industrious ones write letters to a fractious and critical constituency, and the ambitions ones mail tbem copies of tbe .Record containing their speeches, or write regretting deeply to inform tbem that it is impossible to send a copy of tbe "Bird BoOk" nbless the proposed bill for another edition should become a law, in which event they may rest assured that they shall be the first to get-one, etc A Time lor Snake-Honting. The newspaper correspondent whom unkind fates have stranded in the city over Sunday prowls about like a moody ghost For news IS Indeed scarce. He interviews stray members in the bope of extracting "something new or strange," but not infrequently finds tbat they rely on him for that which he seeks. He pores over tbe L00 pages of House bills in search of "snakes," and after two or three hours' effort gives it np either in the optimistio belief that there are no more serpents tbere than there have been in Ireland since St Patrick arove them into the sea, or he is seized with legis lative delirium tremens and find them lurking in every leaf. Something must be written, and white be may not "rely upon his memory for bis wit," it is very hard to resist "depending npon his Imagination for his facts," and the temptation to "fake" is perilously strong. The spirit of prophecy comes upon him, and he writes careful forecasts of coming legislative action, and sometimes has been known to hit it. Evening comes and tbe hotels and restau rants are deserted. Ross' and Aldlnger's no longer resound with merriment; the pop bf cnampigne corks is not heard, and the bar keeperlooks with dlgniBed severity upon him whn orders "beer." and frowns In bis face as ha bands It to him. And so pass Friday and Sat urday. Under the Minister's Lash. Sunday dawns, and the weary member goes tochutcb. Tbe newspaper man doesn't The former Is met by the sexton, who sizes him bp for a member at once, and regarding him as "a brand to be plucked from the burning." shows him up to a front seat, under the very drop pings of the sanctuary, and the preacher seems "onto him,", too, and grows severe over the misdeeds of those in high places, and the sol emn responsibilities ot those clothed with authority by the people, all of which tbe mem ber not unnaturally takes as highly personal, and When in tbe offertory It is proclaimed that tbe Lord loreth a cheerful elver," he drops a nickel into the box, instead of the quarter he proposed giving. And the day drags by, and so does Monday, and in tbe afternoon the trains come with the members who have spent Sunday happily at borne, and the member wbo stayed over greets them with all the fervor of one embracing a long-lost brother, ana cheers up at once. Things grow livelier and hosier and gayer, ahd at 8 o'clock all are in their places to bear tbe Chap lain announce to the Lord that the Legislature Is about to resnme its labors, and Inferentially suggest that He bad better keep an eye on it as tbere is no telling what it may do before the week's out Henry Hail. - Welding Wheels to the-Track. Scientific Amerlean.3 Ah Ihventlon is how undergoing investiga tion which promises the improvement of rail way traffic. The invention consists ot a Small dynamo and an auxiliary engine placed npon the locomotive in such a way as to be easily operated, furnishing a current of small force but large quantity, wbich is made to pass from one pole of the dynamo to one pair of driving wheel", thence along the rail to the other pair of driving wheels, thence to tho other pole of the dynamo, thus forming a traveling circuit, moving at all times with the locomotive. By means of tbis current an Incipient weld is caused between the wheels and rails at the point of contact preventing the slipping or the wheels. The working model of the device shows an increase of 400 ber cent in the bant ing power of the locomotive. The model with out the application of tho current wonld not mount a grade of 15 per cent but when the current "was applied It monnted a grade of 33 percent, a iocoihohtb is now oeing equipped with tbe invention to test it on the Baltimore and Ohio Hallway. It Has Broken loose. Heir York Continent. It really looks as if New Yotfc would win the baseball pennant this year. Her talk Is mueh more convincing than the mere brag of the other cities. It is ft peculiarity ot ours that, while we frequently allude to our own strength and assert our ability to knock out tbe rest of the baseball world in three rounds, we never, never brag. Keep your eye on US. With Method; in Their Madness. Buffalo Express,! Ths attempts, at Incendiarism in New York tenement houses look Hkothe work or an or. isuiu sane of lttaattsa. fcuRlOtJB C0SDEKSixl0J,&. ', Thirty.thtee steamboats aavisste.tht Kongo river. Denver is a mile higher than the Missis sippi Valley. Petroleum has been found exuding from a stream fn Oklahoma. V Indian elephant cannot live in Central Africa, tbe home of a larger and more hardy species. It is said that the consumption of im ported beer In Now York City has greatly in creased of late. A resident of Wythe county, Va.? claims to have trapped six ground hogs since "ground hog day." Two years ago a Bolivar, Tenn., woman predicted that ana wonld die on her ninety fourth birthday, and she did. At a recent marriage ceremony in Mor Eab. county, Intt, the bride was exactly twica the age and twice the weight of the groom. A petrified. body of a prehistoric mart has been found about six miles below Eugene; Ore. IJke the famous Fresno petrification ths feet are missing. A foreign watchmaker has patented a device by which, an hour or twe before a clock runs down, the word "wind" will appear at an opening in the dial. An object of interest in Baleigb, K. C, the other day, was a blind boy who had climbed to the top ot a tree, abdut 45 feet high, and seemed to enjoy it greatly. The largest amount of mail ever carried across the Atlantic by anyone vessel was 910 sacks on bound the City of New York, wbich arrived at Queenstown the other day. A colored man 103 years or age, died is Chicago the other day. The most remark able thing about him was that, though a Vir--glnlan, be had never heard of George Wash ington. An old farmer of Monroe county, O., was pecked in the hand the other day while setting eggs under a ben. Blood poisoning has set in from the wound, and his condition li critical. A horse at Alexandria, Ls., which wai run over by a train and had One of its legs broken, hobhled to a store near by, knocked at the door, and by signs and brute language ap pealed for relief. A Pettis county. Mo., man had his hair and whiskers cut the other day by a Sedalia barber for the first time stncslSSO. When ha went home his own dogs barked at him and his wife shnt the door ih bis face. A circus company paid $20 for a license to exhibit at Astoria, L. L The Mayor revoked the license and returned the money on ths ground tbat the circus was "no good," and he) did not Intend to have his constituents imposed upon. One of the latest exhibits at the quar ters of the California State Board of Trade is a set of peach, almond and prune trees selected from nursery raws. Although only eight months oiatne tree3 are aireaay xs ieetia height Different classes of substances have been found to effect the organs ot taste in the following order: Bitters, acids, saline sub stances, sweets and alkalies. Tbe taste nerve are nearly 2,000 times as sensitive to quinine as to Sugar. The tail of a rat has been sliced off and transplanted to the forehead of a cat By de grees the grafted member became1 indissolubly one with tbe body of the cat though it took, to itself no fur and failed to swell and lash when Its new owner began to spit fire. A Chicago Alderman -who visited Bos- ton got lost f onr times in two days, and he was a day and a half trying to find the station by wbicb fo get a train West He finally hired a hack and a policeman and had tbe latter bdy his ticket and put bim on the train. A doctor of West New-York, N. J., at tended a patient who had scarlet fever. A drop of saliva from her mouth struck him in the eye. He told friends that he feared inoculation with the fever. His apprehension was realized, and he died In two Weeks of scarlet fever. An Illinois sheriff, who has made a good thing out ot selling tickets to see the scaf fold npon wbicb he hangs his prisoners, on be ing warned of the indecency bf so doing said He thoiicht tbe indecency cams' la in refusing him the right to sell tlcxets to see tbe machina when It was being officially operated. A famous surgical scientist mentions the case of a railway guard who had met with so serious an accident that he was compelled to have his elbow, including the elbow joint, cue out At tbe place of lesion the bones, with balls and sockets, membranes and ligaments were reproduced, and the arm became as good as ever. Some months ago the city authorities of Mexico, Mo., caused the arrest of a man on hid refusal to work out his poll tax. He was fined ja 40, which he paid. Later he brought suit for 15,00(3 damages for illegal arrest Judgment was rendered inhis favor for the amount stated. Last week, it Is reported, tbe City compromised by paying $1,000. A curious phenomenon has been re ported from the village of Kirnnjarwi, near Paja, Lapland. Dnnng the winter the earth became spontaneously heated in many places to such a degree that the snow and Ice melted at those places, ana it was impossible to touch those spots without burning one's hand. Xho cause of this phenomenon is not yet explained. A pneumatic chisel has been introduced into a stone cutting establishment. In Germany. It resembles id appearance a syringe, which ths Operator holds with both hands,and as he lets it slide over the surface of the stono or metal tho chisel chips off splinters and particles. Com pressed air acting on a piston imparts a rota tion of from 10,000 to 22.000 revolutions per minute. Americans use an alloy of one-tenth copper in making coins to harden them. Tha English nse less one-twelfth. Some time ago tbe English Government filled two spinning cylinders with coin, one with ours and one with theirs, abd set them both revolving. Tbey ac knowledged tbat theirs wore away much more under the shaking than ours did, but tbey were too conservative to change their standard. Tn the telephone an alteration of timbre, consisting of a disagreeable snuffling which distorts words, is said to be due to tho fundamental note and harmonics of tho diaphragm being super-imposed upon those ot the voice, without becoming cenfouuded with tbem, and producing a disturbance of the elec tric waves of tbe movements of the diaphragm molecules and, therefore, of the sound waves which reach the ear. s-It is stated that soap in India is re garded almost in the light of a natural curi osity, for it is rarely It ever to be obtained of a shopkeeper there. Of course, it is sold in ths larger towns; but the amount used by the na tives must be very small, seeing tbat the total consumption ot soap ih India last year was only 5,000 tons. This means that the amount used Dy each person for tho year was consider ably less than one ounce. EASTER ETCHINGS, "Johnny, is your sister at home?" said the young man at the front door. Walt till I light the gas or hold on-Ji you halrsandj?" "Why, no," replied the abashed youth. "Rave you got a mustache that curls apattha ends?" "X no. I don't wear a mustache at alL" , 'Hum. Have you got a large teal ilng on the fouttb finger of your left hand?" iio, 1 haven't." Then." said Johnny, eonfldently, "she ain't ' at borne, "ahd he shut the door without faltosr ', to io.Washinalon Post. "Italy wants blood, I'm told." "Well, let Chicago bars the contract There Is enoush blood running to waste in the abattoirs every day to supply all .Europe. Seio Tor ifsr, aid. A TWO SIDED? Now Panny declares that Egypt'i queea " -Was fair, and almost fat: While barah says her build was more On the style of a wooden slat Bnt both the ladles are perfectly right. And both of them should rejoice, For the crowd will rush in the usual way. Pay its money and take its choice. Eroostyn Sagls. Loquacious Dade I wead the othaw day lhat a Euwopeaa antlsthaj made a wawtchen tlawlyofpapaw. Jeweler What about the hairspring? LOqna:lons Sude-Uh, I weckon he made that of Jute or some othaw imitation otasit,u.Jruter' Witkl. tuiinent Citizen Mr. Blaine, I have been deputed by a large number or .Republican to askyoa to be our candidate for President Mr. ilalnel am sorry, bnt ss a Cabinet illn Ister 1 cannot antajtohlic mr chief. Ihavs been gserned all my life by one great principle. I would rather be boss than be PreMldent-CAfcdio Ttihtt. . A Philadelphia chemist foubd 250,000 llttlS WHgziIng fcfili&ati IB IT liutin nT ttrmm tear. .TTrt sugar U,mltel c&as tee cheese. -JttHH- f .. - javx t. .A ,-, wcv. zA'-vqiq&ikatauL iita..l P'v 1-!. -"2;,;-1 .ASaUl!i.e5aKrjfe3ii3i-ia, fit.fc3 ,t-S &&;st jww;. !WkviHiB9aAucf& ffffffijjgj-