regqffFgPCfggrgffMg-pBMaJtti y 'P.JwuagswfyiQjyAiy A '-WJ'j"! IMj" W TffiHljg-ll ""Sp-V"? '-irWr! t '. ' THE, 'PITTSBURG- DISPATPH; SATURDAY-, , 'JANUARY 9, ,1892. 4 k. A JIIIWVIXTElt LITEKAUY TREAT IS" TO-MORROW'S DISPATCH. One of tlie features will be a vivid descrip tion of a stormy sea voyage ' BY UDBJtrjALSTEAD. Another will be Col. A. K. McClure's insido story of the relations of LINCOLN AND GRANT. Still another is "The American Claimant," the best story of the day, BI MARK TUN. Here Are a Few Other Features. Lies in Business. By ItEV. GEORGE HODGE. A Column oi Humor. 15y HOB BURDETTE. Xorthwehtcrn Slnle.Miien, By FRAN K G. CARPENTER. Hunting Grizzly Bears. By TnEODOUE ROOSEVELT. Printing Bank A'otcs. By HOMER LEE. tncle Davy, a storv. By MARY E. WILKINS. Star-routes of Allegheny County, ByL. K.STOFiEL. XewTork Gossip. By BRISBANE and MURRAY. The issue will be chock full of the best newspaper literature to be had. Both con tinents under tribute. Fnll news reports by cable. Leased wires to every great Ameri can city. A paper that always leads. DON'T FAIL TO BUT TO-MORROW'S BIG ISSUE. It will interest and instruct you. attfj. ESTABLISHED FEBRUARY 8, 1S46 Vol. 4. So. S. Entered at nttsburg Postofflce J ovember. ltsST, as second-class matter. Business Office Corner Smithfield and Diamond Streets. News Rooms and Publishing House 7S and 80 Diamond Street, in New Dispatch Building. ETTRV AnVF.RTISINC; OFFICE. ROOM 7S. TRIBUNE BUILDING. NF.WYORK. wlierecom-v-lcle Sles ofTIIE DISPATCH ran always be (bund. Foreign advertiser appreciate Ihp convenience. Home advertisers and friends ot THEDISrATCH, v. lule in New York, are also made welcome. 77TT l)TSrA TCH In rtpuprrlv "v nle at Brentinn's, t rrtirm Square. Xm York, and n Are del'Opera. Pari. Prance, trliere anyone ichn haft been disap pointed at a hotel nn stand can obtain it. TERMS OF inE DISPATCH. rClSTAOF TltF-V IN THE ITNITFD STATES. TAII.Y DISPATCH. One Year $ S 0.1 Daily Dispatch, Per Quarter 2 00 DAILY DispATril. One Month TO Daili DisriTCii. Including Sunday, lyear.. 10 03 Daili Dispatch, including Sunday, 3 m'ths. 250 DUIl Dl-PATrn. including Sunday, lm'th.. 80 FcndaY Dlsi-ATCn. One Year I. TO VtlEKLTlIisrATCH. One Year 13 The Daily Disp tTCH is delivered by carriers at J5ccnts per week, dr. including Sunday Edition, at 10 cents per week. PITTSBURG. SATURDAY. JANUARY 9. TWELVE PAGES THE OLK CRITERION." There is a striking contrast between profession and practice in a deliverance of Secretary Foster, the other day. concern ing that much-discussed bit of patronage, the collectorship of internal revenue for tliis district. Secretary Foster is jirom ineitas the finance minister of this ad ministration, and also as the dispenser of its most remunerative patronage. He lias made deliverances in both capacities; but a comparison of his speeches on silver with his utterances on the patronage ques tion will show that his principles of action are much more direct and easy to be un derstood on the latter point than on the former. It might also be said that Secre tary Foster knows what he wants much more clearly with reference to the offices than with reference to silver. The Secretary declared to Congressman Stone, according to a Philadelphia Times , special, that "the administration was look-'i-ng after its friends, not its enemies, and tliW Quay was counted amongthe latter." Moravian that, among other very decided assertions the Secretary is reported to have made the inclusive pledge that "no one known to be for Quay would re ceive any consideration in the shape of patronage." This was for the very cogent reason, in Secretary Foster's opinion, that "Quay w as engaged in the pastime of de claring himself every other day against Mr. Harrison and in favor of Mr. Blaine for the Presidency." All this is clear enough, and no one need find any difficulty in understanding it; but it sounds queer when we lay it side by s.ue with a somewhat prominent and defi nite pledge by no less a person than the head of the administration, which is now, according to Secretary Foster, en gaged in "looking after Us friends." It was the declaration of Benjamin Harrison when he became a candidate for the Pres idency, that "the fitness of the candidate should be the sole criterion in making ap pointments." In view of the appearance of another and more controlling "sole criterion," it is pertinent to state that it does not make much difference to the people whether the Federal appointments are made for the pur pose of building a Quay machine or a Har rison machine. But some idealists may consider it of importance to the public that a man elected to the Presidency shall keep his public pledges. A LIBERTY STREET PROPOSITION. There is a novel and interesting phase in the proposition of the Pennsylvania Railroad to the produce commission trade that the latter shall remove iii a body to its transfer depot at Twenty-sixth street. Experiments in moving any line of trade en masse from cne quarter to another have heretofore been attended -with little success. Such changes usually take place as gradually as the changes in conditions which affect the trade. Whether a great corporation can succeed where lesser pow ers have failed remains to be tested by experience. In some respects the proposal presents favorable features: and in others there are objections of such a nature as to make the': project a doubtful one. Prominent in the latter class is the fact that it would take the commission houses a mile further away from 60 to 75 per cent of their customers. When this fact is -so prominent as tocom pel a universal recognition that, unless the commission merchants moved altogether, those who remained behind would have a decided advantage over those who moved, WJieB it is clear that there are commercial con veniences in the present location of the trade. "While'the adoption of this movement is doubtful its suggestion warrants the addi tion of a further feature. If the Pennsyl vania Railroad would add to the removal of tho commission houses the removal of its tracks on Liberty street, it would pain an enthusiastic public support That change will be a step toward making Lib erty street what it should be, the great business avenue and backbone of Pitts burg. THE FUEL, WASTED. The duration of the cold wave developed its full proportion of evidences of gas shortage. One traction company which in the public-spirited endeavor to avoid the smoke nuisance had placed too implicit a reliance on the gas supply had to suspend J operations for a couple of hours until coal could be secured. A decrease of pressure was also reported from various parts of the city. Domestic consumers using ap pliances which require only a small por tion of the normal pressure escaped with little inconvenience; but those whose needs called for the averajre volume of supply were warned by experience that their previous exemption from trouble this winter had been due to mildness rather than adequacy of supply. This fact will strengthen the already existing impression that the natural gas resources of this vicinity cannot be ac cepted as the sole reliance even for the domestic fuel supply. It will be a partial resource for many years to come, and perhaps permanently. But the inability for two seasons to meet the demands of both the manufacturing and domestic consumers gives new force to the thought that this is the time when vigorous effort should be directed toward reinforcing the natural gas supply with manufactured fuel gas. The importance of developing all the possibilities of gas-making from cither coal or petroleum have' been urged in these columns for the past year, butthe present juncture makes it pertinent to offer one more. Mr. Carnegie, in his recent letter with regard to the smoke, referred to the use of coal gas or coke as the sure method of completely abolishins the smoke. It is worthy pf note that firms who would go into the business of manufacturing gas from coal so near the city as to make it available for pipe distribution would have two smokeless fuels for sale, the gas and the coke, and could rely on a sure market for both products. There Ls little room for doubt that a large amount of capital would embark in that business if the pres ent system of pipes occupying the public highways were made available for the dis tribution of the gas, and that an abundant supply of cheap and smokeless fuel could thus be guaranteed for the entire city. PATITS SPECIAL STEAMER. There is information for the traveling public in the statement that the magnifi cent ocean steamer City of Paris was laid up for the winter, but when Adelina Patti found it necessary to cross that ship was ordered into service, which enabled the queen of opera to make the stormy voyage in comfort and safety. Perhaps there is no public right to chal lenge the action of the company in ap praising the comfort and safety of the worid-Tenowneddiva at a higher valuation than the ordinary traveling public. Natur ally if anything went wrong the news that Patti was amongthe lost would draw more attention to the catastrophe than the drowning of a shipload of ordinary pas sengers, which may have made it good policy for the steamship company to do for Patti what it would not do for the regular traveling public Still, the information that one of the leading transatlantic companies does not subject its best and finest vessels to the penis of a winter voyacc seems to convey a very strong hint as to the seasons of the year when it is wisest to patronize that company. NO ENTANGLEMENT NECESSARY. The XewTork Sun opposes the ratifi cation by the United States of the Brus sels treaty for the repression of the Atriean slave trade and the sale of gun powder and rum, because it would engage this Government in an entangling alliance which would ratify the .European grab game to various parts of the Alrican con tinent. The United States certainly cannot properly take any action which looks like n guarantee of the seizures of African countries by European powers; neither can our Government refuse to recognize England, Germany, France and Portugal as the de facto possessors of certain terri tories affected by this agreement Con sidering that the present era lias seen propositions for an alliance with Peru to restore her certain territories taken away by Chile as a result of the war in the early partof the last decade; an alliance with Nicaragua for tho purpose of spend ing $100,000,000 in building her a 60,000, 000 canal, with other propositions of the same sort, the warning against entangling alliances is pertinent though applied to the WTong proposition. The proposed treaty or international agreement need not pledge the United States to a single objectionable point. If it contains any line or hint looking like a ratification of the European grabs in Africa, the United States can interpose a ratification to its proviso that nothing in the agreement shall commit it to a support or guarantee of the seizures by European powers, but that it simply gives its in dorsement and support to the effort for the mitigation of the barbarities of the African slave and rum traffic. This is the action that should be taken by the Senate. It is not the duty of the United States to attack or indorse the means by which European govern ments have obtained possessions in Africa. But we cannot afford to stand aloof from the rest of the world in the work of re moving that blot upon civilization, the African slave trade. IN A "WHISPER TO WIVES. The petticoated philosophers of Sorosis have been discussing a beautiful but some what profound problem, to wit: The management of husbands. Singular to say, the sisters seem to be optimists to a girl, or rather woman, for all the dozen who debated the question with one excep tion are married. They think that man in spite of all his savage traits and tendencies may be harnessed safely and driven comfortably in matrimony. This is a heaping spoonful of hope for man. When Sorosis admits so much, the less strong-miuded majority'of the fair sex may be fairly expected to melt far more positively. But, lest the -heart of man should be too much rejoiced at these blessed tidings, it may be well to add that Sorosis, while admitting the amenability of husbands to management by their wives, is careful to define the only method that can be regarded as infallible. This means to a glorious end is described in sugared terms, but brought down to pith it consists in the delusion of man, the making him believe that he is having his own-way, while in fact his better half is having hers. This sounds both sweet and simple. Only one of the sisters doubts the ability of the wife to put this policy into prac tice.' Mrs. Kavenhill remarks with a sigh that wives can hardly hope to break in their husbands all alone. "Husbands need to be trained from the time they are born," she says. ' Though she does not say It we presume Mrs. Bavenhill's ideal mar riage would take place at the cradle of the husband, insuring for the lucky man proper uxorial management from his in fancy up. It would enable a man to do without any female relations but his wife and manager. She would be his wife and his nurse, foster mother, sisters, cousins and aunts, and in course of time -his grandmother, roiled into one. A grand economy, but not likely to prove popular for the present. Luckily it is not essen tial to the management of man, and wives have a tolerably clear chart to steer by in the matrimonial voyage, thanks to the sweet solicitude of Sorosis. TALK OF TWO CENSUSES. R. P. Porter takes rather undue credit to himself in a communication to the Sec retary of the Interior, in which he asserts that the cost of taking the Eleventh Census will not exceed 57,000,000, or a little over 11 cents per capita, while the cost of the Tenth Census was 15,000,000, or a little under 10 cents perVapita. Mr. Porter seems to think that the increase "of only one cent per capita" is a triumphant vin dication. By what logic is it that Porter creates the expectation that it will cost more per capita to enumerate sixty odd millions of people than fifty millions? The presump tion is the other way; while the details of the comparison he suppresses make it all the more unfavorable to his work. The Tenth Census was planned on a scope never rivaled before or since. The com pletion of its special' reports took the greater part of the succeeding decade; and it was recognized before the -next census that so varied and expansive a census was unnecessary. The Eleventh Census was planned on a much less expansive scope. On the scale of work ordered, Porter's census, done with the same thoroughness and accuracy as General Walker's, ought to have cost about 6 cents per capita against the General's 10. Besides which there should be some ap praisement of the value of the goods de livered at the price. The Tenth Census gave so reliable an exhibit of the popula tion and industrial condition of the United States in 1880 as to be fairly worth 10 cents per capita. Mr. Porter's work will be most accurately appraised by the state ment that it might have been worth while to pay him and his subordinates 10 cents per capita to leave it alone. Amono the phenomena of this winter is tho abundance and size of snakes, which de velop very large proportions in New York bridge bills introduced into Congress. "Mr. Bulkeley remains in the Gover- j nor's chair by tho decision of the courts, but it is none the less a shame to Connecti cut that her hvns make it possible for the hold-over representative of minority to keep Ills grip upon the Executive office," re marks the Democratic New York JEvcnlng Sun. This is much more coriect than previous denunciations of Bulkeley as a usuiper. But could not the bricht Democratic! luminary have something impartial to say about the same kind of "shame" in the holdinc-oyer of a Democratic Governor of West Virginia under exactly similar circum stances u few years ago? Is it a shame only when the Republican Governor stays in? Indian troubles will cease when the Indian Bureau shows an ability to honestly cope with the question or more properly, when the Indians aro exterminated. There is" satisfaction in the information that those rigid moralists of New Jersey who, beoause a yonng woman's conduct wai not quite up to their standard, tarred and feathered her, have been convicted and sen tenced. The punishment of fine and im prisonment is wholly inadequate to tho cowardly crime of maltreating a defenseless girl. But the demonstration that the prac tice of mobbing defenseless women in the interest of morals cannot be carried on with out some interference by the law will proba bly have a restraining influence on the en thusiasm of this cla.'-s ot reformers, whom it would be cross flattery to dignify by the name of men. Those who should know, assert that the present famine in Russia is only a slight indication of worse sufferings of thu kind to follow in tho near future. Reports from that trial of the Mian tonom.ih so far include in the list of hor achievements tho breaking down of her steam steering gear, the jamming of her for ward turret, and a narrow escape from sink ing a schooner by one of her experimental shots. The latter shows a disposition to revenge the navy on some of its old antago nists: but, on tho whole, the record does not indicate that it is j-et time to start this ves sel out on its mission of wiping up the ocean with the navies of other nations. Tolstoi is proving, by vigorous action for the lellef of the Russian peasants, that he is no lonser visionary, but a thoroughly practical philanthropist. The story about the Grand Duke Sergius, Governor of Moscow, while in disguise hav ing been hustled by the Russian policemen, and telling how three of the functionaries committed suicide when their mistake was discovered, illustrates tbe radical difference between Russian and American policemen. Tbe free and independent guardians of the peace in this country would have made it all right with any Grand Duke, by telling him how efficiently they woull cany their precinct at tbe next election. The 'raid on a club of bomb-manufacturing anarchists near Birmingham, England, is a more important event than most of the recent scares. Commenters on the building of that tor pedo boat" at Dubuque have abandoned the projectof having tosleam across the prairies to the Chicago World's Fair, but content themselves with charging that this is the first instance of building the hull and en gines of a naval vessel on the Western rivers. Tet Pittsburg built some very live ly, though nondescript, vessels during the war, aud they did some real fighting, as well. Perhaps the turbulent men of Kansas are only patriotically seeking to prove the inefficiency 'of their country's military or ganization. In the discussion occupying the columns of the New York papers on, which of two balls on Wednesday night was the most glit tering buccess or the most complete failure according to the partisanship of the re spective papers let us hope that, as In the Chilean affair, a practical settlement of tho issue can be reached without "blood-letting. The .New York police force seems just now to be suffering from a very discreditable epidemic of alcoholism. The law prohibiting Chinese immigra tion expires in less than four months. The danger for American workmen In the event ofno re-enaet'ment of the measure is ad mittedly due as much to grasping employers a to the competition .of a class who can lire comfortably on what are less than starva tion wages for citizens of the Rep Jblic. The , death of Egypt's Khedive will not tend to relieve the strain in Anglo-French relations. A man who forsakes his wife and child should be eminently fitted for tho propaga tion of a sect believing in the final unity of persons, or the formation of a neuter being from the blending of the male and female in one eternal structure. It was a highly respectable cold wave, but Jthe hard winter docs not yet seem to arrive. Let the Law and Order people devote themselves to the reform of their own agents: and If the accomplishment of that end leaves them with any superfluous energy they had Detter confine it to attacks on office-grabbers.' Inclement weather and natural gas shortage continue inseparable companions. Dr. DepeW seems to take time in the keeping of his word. No step has yet been taken toward the realization of reforms in railroad crossings he promised to Buffalo nearly four months ago. OCR MAIL POUCH. As to Auditing City Finances. To the Editor of The Dispatch: Now that there is some probability of a Councilmanic audit of the fiscal affairs of the city of Pittsburg, it may be observed that the hist formal audit of that kind was some 30 years ago, nnd ias as follows: To the Select and Common Councils of the City or Pittstnirg: ' Gextlemo" Your committee appointed to 'audit and adjust tlie accounts of the city officers, from February 1, 1881, to January 31, 1802, in clusive, respectfully report: That they have examined the books, accounts and vouchers of tbe Mayor and City Treasurer, and have found the same to be correct, excepting some small dis crepancies as must unavoidably occur where the accounts arc complicated bv passing through so many hands. Tlie.only correction ol any note is where the Treasurer failed to charge himself with error In addition. ; chicle license. 6, andS1870t received from Mayor Wilson, lor tines anil for feitures, during the month oi October last past. Alter correcting the error .ind one of &9 cents in lavor of the Treasurer, the balance remaining In me treasury amounts lo f.-tto yi. We will also call attention to the fact that a por tion of the slnkiug fund Is disbursed on warrants drawn by the Ma or without intervention of the Controller, while the residue Is certified for before the Mayor issues his warrant, 'nhich ba a ten dency to complicate the accounts. This can be remedied by Instructing the Controller that In all cases where lunds are transferred to the credit of tlie sinking rund to debit appiopriatlou Jw. 19, and permit no disbursements without issuing a certln cate therefor, subject to the regulations in respect to said lund. Your committee, before closing their report, de sire to bear testimony to the courteous and gentle manly deportment of eT-Controller Steele, Con troller McCargo and Mr. Alllnder, of the Treas urer's office, ani thank them for the kind and valuable assistance rendered the committee throughout the entire auditing of tlie accounts. All of which is respectfully submitted. 1 . 11. McMillan. ) D. M. Lose, J Committee. D. OEtLL. ) Pittsbueg, March 31, 1852. This document shows that tho audit of 1S62 was an "audit" in fact not a mere per functory work, and the minor discrepancies alluded to serve to show how impartially and discriminatingly the auditors did their work. Objection is now made in some quar ters to an audit, on the alleged ground that it is unnecessary or would reflect on somebody. This is quite absurd, as "audit ing" is in official act provided for bv law, but nnfoitunately fallen into "desuetude" theso later days. It occurs to me that any objection to an impartial audit by the pioper committees at once raises the presumption that the fiscal affairs of the city cannot stand an audit, and as a plain matter of fact, that presumption is founded on fact. The fiscal affnirs ot at least one depart ment of the city government as formerlv constitutcdhavenever balanced within Jlifl" 000, aud I am led to believe that-ihe "nn- . explained balance" is considerably in ex cess ot that, rmny add that tui3 is not a mere opinion of mine, or a vague insinua tion. The discrepancy has been of long standing, ha been quite notorious in certain circles. Explanations have been asked for at times by the press and by "snarling critics." like rmself, with but one result delay after delay, with, perhaps, the well-founded expectation that no formal or responsible audit would be attempted until tho central figures in this scarred history had passed away nnd "dead men would tell no tales." No city officer, or employe, or Councilman, who has done his duty, need fear an im pnitinl audit, andlf any pnblio srvnuf Uas been criminally or negligently derelict in their sworn duties, surely it is the business of the public to know all about it. James W. Eiu:en. Pittsburg, January 8. FAVORITES OF FORTUNE. The Czarina is ill and is unable to leave her apartments. S ne receives no visitors. The managers of the asylum in which M. Guy de Maupassant is confined says that the insanity with which the author is suffering dates back two yeais. Lord Randolph Churchill, who has been for some months traveling in Africa, arrived at Southampton yesterday. He is enjoying excellent health. Jules Verne's wonderful tales, in which science-and fancy go shares with him, are written in a little observatory on the top of his house at Amiens. Gen. L. V. Stephens. Missouri's State Treasurer, and famous as "the man who had that silver talk" with Mr. Cleveland, is said remarkably to resemblo Starter James Bow e in featnres. Secretary Elkins, Postmaster General Wanamiiker, Judge Nathan II. Goff, Senator John G. Cailiile and Senator Arthur P. Gor man are among the most conspicuous smooth-shaven men in public life. Melancthon Smith, rear admiral of the United States navy (retired). Is danger ously ill with an attack of the grip at his home in this city. His physician considers his recover- very doubtful on account of his advanced age. Dr. Lyman Abbott, whose address in Boston tho other day created such a dis turbance in the religious atmosphere, is quite unlike his predecessorin the Plymouth Church pulpit, Mr. Beecher, In physique at least. He Is tall and slender, and he looks as if his health were fragile. Prof. F. Kicholls Crouch, who com posed the music for many famous songs, but for none more famous than "Kathleen Mavourneen," is a veteran of 83 years. He is a man of medium stature and stoutly built with coal-black eyes and few indications, even in his slowly whitening hair, of bis great age. LATINO UP 'HEAVENLY ST0BE& An Aged Wealthy Man Disposes of His Property Before He Dies. Uhios Citt, Mich,, Jan. 8. Ezra Bostwick, of this place, is the most eccentric person in Southern Michigan. Ho owns land in neatly every State of the Union, and Is very wealthy. But he works hard every day, in spite of the fact that he is 70 years old, and be never wears anything VeLter than a $10 suit of clothes, wh'ch he says ls good enough even for Vandeibilt. Determining, however, to lay np heavenly treasures, he he has recently given $100,000 to Albion College and $50,CO0 to Olivet Col lege, both of this State. Last month -he gave $10,000 toward the support or superan nuated Methodist ministers, and $12 000 to the Union City Methodist Episcopal Chutch. On New Year's Day ho presented the Con gregational Church of this place with $5,000. The City Dead Without Sunday Papers. Philadelphia Record. There will be some fun in Tittsburg for the Sunday newspapers and for the Mon day papers, too if tho Law and Order So ciety shall carry out its declared intention of pressing against the newspaper employes the serious charge of violating the Sunday law of 1791. Unless tho newspaper men shall be able to show that Sunday papers are necessary, and that" Monday's issue must necessarily bo got out by Sunday work, the agitators will have them on the hip. We should like to see the experiment tried in Pittsburg, of course. A city of over 250,000 population deprived of its Sunday reading by the operation of an obsolescent statute 1C0 years old would present an interesting fin de siee'e spectacle. They May Punch the Nickel. Chicago Inter-Ocean. ' ; Colonel Watterson predicts that ''this will be a 5-cc'nt Congress." If they don't punch a hole lii the nickel they will do well. LIVE WASHINGTON WAIFS. Washington, D. G, -Jan. 8. The con tested election cases before the House of Representatives will be taken up in the fol lowing order by the House Committee on Elections: Craig versus Stewart, from Penn-' sylvania; Noyes versus Rockwell, from New York; Reynolds versus Shonk, from Penn sylvania; McDuff versus Turpin, from Ala bama: Greevy versus Scull, from Pennsyl vania, and Miller versus Elliott, from South Carolina. This order wis agreed upon by thp Elections Committee at a meeting this morning. The contestant and contcsteeand other interested parties in the Craig versus Stewart case, which is first in the list, will bo notified to be present at the meeting of tho committee next Tuesday, as the date for hearing the contest will then be fixed. Representative Durburrow, Chair man of the World's Columbian Complssion Committee In the House, has returned to Washington from Chicago, wheie he has been spending tho holidays, nnd where he has been in conference with the Ealr offi cials. In speaking of the position which the Fair would assume before Congress he said: "Tho people nnd the city or Chicago each contributed $5,000,000, or a total of $10,0:0,000, which was sufficient for the plans of the Ex position ns originally drafted. These plans, however, have been broadened, and the scope of the Exposition has been widened at the instance of the National Commission- appointed by the President under the au thority of an act of Congres. The result is that tho local committee finds that tho sum or $10 000.000 is totally inadequate for the purpose of tho Exposition as now planned by the National Commission. As the latter is responsible for this increased expense, the local hoard takes the ground that as a matter of jdstice the National Government ought to make provision for carrying out the jvork of Government asents. The board therefore proposes to come to Congress ami ask an appropriation of $5,000,000, this appro priation to ho made upon the b jme basis as the stock subscriptions ot the citizens and the municipality of Chicago that is, tho Government is to share proportionately in the" profits of the Exposition. Tbe bill ior this purpose is being drawn In Chicago." The first formal meeting of the Senate Committee on Privileges and Elections was held this morning. Tho only businoss trans acted was tho appointment for Tuesday next for the hearing of arguments in the contested election case of Dubois and Clag gett. It is not expected that any testimony will be given or witnesses examined, and the hearing will probably be devoted entire ly to legal arguments by attorneys on the questions of law Involved In the case. Itls thought that the arguments can be con cluded In two or three days, and the case soon disposed of. On Thursday the Call Davidson contested case will consist mainly of argument by Davidson's attorney in sup port of the legality of tho Governor's action in giving tho certificate of election to Davidson, the contestant. Another subject before the committee Is the right of Mr. Chilton, of Texas, who succeeded Senator Reagan, to hold his seat, the only question Involved being the legality of the appoint ment of Mr. Chilton by Governor Hogg one day before Senator Reagan's resignation was accepted. When Mr. Chilton was sworn in Senator Hoar requested that his credentials be referred to thn committee to inquire Into the legality of tbe Governor's action, and it is expected that the matter will be disposed of in a week or two. It is thought by some Senators that the appointment of a Senator to fill a vacancy before the resignation of the sitting mqmher had been accepted was a bad precedent to establish, as In some in stances tbe resigning Senator might recon sidor his determination to leave tho Senate and request that his resignation be with drawn. It is not probable, however, that Senator Chilton will be ousted, and even if ho should be it Is regarded as cortaln that he would be immediately reappointed by the Governor ot his State. The Senate Committe on Public Build ings and Grounds held its first meeting of this session this morning. It was determ ined to report favorably all bills for the erection of pnblio buildings which passed the Senate last session but failed of action by theHous", and this will probably be done wben the Senate meets Monday. The total amount represented, in those bills Is over $3,000,000, made un of appropriations ranging from $50,0C0 to $100 000. Among them'are bills for the erection of public buildings at Allen town and Bradford. Senator Teller intends to push during this Congress a bill he has introduced pro Tiding for the introduction of reindeer into the possessions of the United States in Alaska and the islands adjacent thereto. An excellent object lesson on thesubjeetadorns his committee room on Privileges and Elec tions. It is a fine, large robe made of the skin and fur of four reindeer. The fur is a beautiful dark brown color. It Is, the Senator says, perhaps the warm est lur known, and the skin makes excellent gloves. Tho fur is used by whale vessel men, who And they cannot put on other clothes enough to keep warm while two suits of reindeer yfur afford pro tection from tho most Inclement weather. Mr. Teller thinks it would be an excellent aitlcle of clothing for drivers and others In the cold regions or the West. The animals cost$10ach,and their flesh and the milk tho live animals yield are tho principal food of the Laplanders. A considerable number of the natives on the Aleutian Islands, be longing to t ne United States, have heretofore subsisted on the sea otter, but this source of supply will soon cease and Senator Teller thinks that not only commercial reasons (and he believes commercially it would be a piylng Investment) but human considera tions should induce the United States to ap propriate 15 000 for the purchase of a tuffi cient number of reindeer to stock our Alas kan possessions. The House Committee on Foreign Affairs has notified Congressman Morse to appear before it next Thursday, when the resolu tion offered by him upon the subject of the persecuted Hebrews in Russia will be con sidered. The unexpired sentence of suspension in the case of Lieutenant Commander George A. Bieknell. formerly attached to the Galena, has been remitted from January 7, 1892. J. B. SnelIi, of Missouri, has been ap pointed clerk to the House Committee on Coinages, Weights and Measures. The House Committee on Invalid Pensions held its first meeting to-day and completed an or ganization. William II. Wilson, of Watash, Ind., has been appointed clerk to the com mittee. The President has commuted to imprison ment for life at hard labor the sentence of death imposed in the case of Samuel Moore, kthe colored man convicted of killing Jahn- oon, a jeiiow prisoner in tne jau oi tne Dis trict of Columbia. He was sentenced to be hanged January 15. Dr. Irving A. Watson, Secretary of the American Public Health Association, is now traveling through Central and South America, arranging for the next meeting of the association at the City of Mexico in'No vember, 1S92. Dr1. Wats'"!, has lndnccd the authorities of the Mexican Republic to enter into a pian oi international ana mter-stato notification of tho outbreak -of contagions diseases such as already exists betw een the United States and Canada. Major KcKlnley'4 New Title. Omaha World-Herald. Next week he will be known as Governor McKinley. 0DR ENYI0US NEIGHBORS. Whkt Pennsylvania has anything so live ly and exciting as a feeling, it is quite likely to be a good, stroug one. Oticaqo News. Is the sudden and unexpected reappear ance of ful-bearing animals in Pennsylvania the ie-ult of "flee hide.?" Louisville Courier Journal. Tuk Pennsylvania Supremo Court decides that bank directors need not always direct. A great many of them are thus vindicated. Boston Herald. ' Penssylvakia stands proudly pre-eminent overall the States In respect to the amount of embezzlement for 1S91. Peuuylvaula is welcome to her pre-eminence Detroit -Free Press. There Is a man in Pittsburg who dreams of oil w ells while asleep, and describes them next day. JL'he people of the city take every pains to make him ros't long and peacefully. Boston News. The result of pouring oil on the water is , not very soothing in the case of the All'e- u . -.i.. r:i, i. .. gheny river at Pittsburg, where the bouse- ' wife can fill her lamp at the hydrant. Springfield Womankind. ' S0MEQ.TJEBIES ANSWERED. Effect of the Swiss Town Hall System on Public Affairs. A reader, who is in search of information propounds the following: To the Editor of The Disoatch: The published statements of the reformed poli tician, Buckeley, regarding the indifference of voters in public affairs, has suggested considera tion of the "town hall system" for cities. By answering the following questions many readers would feel obliged: 1. What ls the modus operandi of the Swiss town hall system? 2. WhafMs its effect on public affairs? 3. Can a munlclpaUty recall franchises granted to street railway companies? can municipal ownership of street railways be inaugurated in cities of Pennsylvania without special legislation? X, PITTSBURG, January". The questions open a tolerably wide field for discnsMon, but one capable of being nar rowed by the supposition that our hetero geneous population might not respond to the same influences that make bleak Switzerland prosperous and happy. That our people would not is not an argument against the system, however. The differ ences in population, resources.cllmate, area, etc., should be kept n view. The Swiss have always been celebrated lor their jealous love of liberty, and have given morefoice to the motto of West Virginia, Montani semper liberi, than any other modern people. When one considers that a fctate one-third the size or Pennsylvania has an export trade of about $I0O,COO,00Oand imports very nearly as large; that agriculture and manufactures are both remunerative; that schools are good, education of children com pulsory; that religious toleration is as freely granted, by all sects as in our own country, and, In fact, more freely, and that though ine people speaK tour or uvo umcrent lan guages yet aro almost homogeneous; that thev have no standing urmv; that the largest city in the country is'not one-fifth the size of Pittsburg, counting all the immediate neighbors, Allegheny, McKeesport and the boroughs contiguous, aud finally, that the debt of the whole country is not more than half that of Pittsburg and all the Swiss are usefully employed, it will be seen that the Government which renders them pros perous and happy might not fit Pittsburg at all. The canton corresponds to our city, but ranges in size Irom 11 to 2,744 square miles. The cantonal constitutions are pure and representative democracies. In the first the rights of sovereignty are exercised by a general assembly of all citizens, which meets once a year, votes on lawsflxes the tax rate and elects cantonal officers. The executive is called the Landroth and consists of the cantonal officers and councillors elected by the several political communities. In the repreentative democracies the people elect a legislative assembly called the Grand Council, which chooses from its own members the executive, which is called the Little Council. In many of these cantons where romesentative democracy Drevails, the people have the right of vetoing every bill passed by the Grand Council. It will be seen that in the Swiss canton the people have much moreseirgovernment than they have In Pittsburg and they use it wisely. Would they do so here? As to the third question it is tolerably safe tosuythata municipality cannot lccnlln franchise from a street railway company so long as the company does nothing to forfeit the right granted. If it refuse to comply with the conditions annexed to its privi leges it may be proceeded against and char tors may be forfeited, but the proceedincs must be legal and formal. Regarding tho fourth question, it may be stated briefly that powers conferred on cities and towns by their charters aie metely those necessary to empower them to govern. The right to collect taxes, enforce necessary laws, keep strets and fidewalks, etc., in order in brief, to do what is necessary to accomplish those objects and others not specified in the charter of corporations are ultra vires, and the power of corpora tions, such as common carriors, is sufficient to prevent cities from getting charge or anything of this kind worih having, though why a city might not get power by securing a control'ing interest in a street railway company's stock is not apparent. If it had control it might dictate terms. Cities have subscribed to the stock of rail ways, and there seems to be no reason why they should not get enough to control, pro vided they could go about it In a manner that woul'd prevent suspicion. It is needless to say that the latter would be next to an impossibility. THE SKELETON OF A SOLDIER. It Was Found in a Tennessee Cave and Wore n Blue Unirorm. Hilas, Tesit., Jan. 8. Saturday the little town or Henderson was excited over the dis covery of a skeleton. Some workmen were engaged in constructing a residence on a large hill near tho town. The house was up and the chimney wasbeing built.when, with out a moment's .warning, the ground under neath gave way, precipitating the chimney and part or the house into what appeared a cave. The debris was removed, and among the rubbish was found the skeleton of a man. There still remained clinging to the bones pieces of blue cloth. The visor of the cap was also found, indicating the body was that of a Union soldier. Within a little leather case, badly decayed, was found a note to Miss Wena Lanty, Connersvllle, Ind. The signature was rotted, and could not be de ciphered. Tortions of three other bodies were found. The skeleton is on exhibition. The? Conditions Are Not Cheering. Boston Herald. Congress doesn't reassemble under the most cheering conditions. The grip appears to have assumed the proportions of a na tional calamity. DEATHS HERE A.D ELSEWHERE. Dr. Walker, or Dunbar. Dr. Walker was found dead in his office In Dunbar yesterday morning. The doctor was one of the beat known physicians of this part of the country. lie was addicted to the morphine habit, and It ls believed that his death was the result of an overdose of the drug. When last seen alive he was in fewearingeu's store, ordering oysteis to be sent home. This was at 10 o'clock. Tne position lu which the body was found Indicates that he died Instantly. He fell In a corner, breaking a pane of glass In the door. Morphine wasfouudon the stand In front of which he fell. John Dean, .4ctor. John Dean, who personates Cy Prime in Demnan Thompson's Cld Homestead Company, died suddenly yesterday at his hotel In Cincinnati from heart disease, following a slight Illness contracted while attending the funeral of Mary Bird, the actress. This makes the fourth death In Cincinnati within a week among members of theatrical companies. Mr. Deau was 49 vears old. aud Was born In Haverhill, 31ass. His body wlU be taken East for burial. Ernest W. Brneke, rbyslolojist. Ernest Wilhelm Brucke, the well-known German physiologist, died Wednesday at Berlin. He' was born in Berlin. June 6. 181S. Pror. Btucke was the author of The Physiology of Colors" and other works on that subject. Among the books written by him was one on "The New Method of Phonetic Transcription, ""explaining his system of teaching tbe pronunciation of lan guages without oral instruction. Obituary Notes. Rev. N. M. Jounsox. pastor ot the Mahoniug ton Presbyterian Church, died yesterday. Jonx Ajiblkr Smith, a member or the Forty third Congress from Virginia, died in Wasbinnton ..Thursday. Timothy Mullin; the well-known oil man. dlea at his home lu Parkersburg, after a short Illness, yesterday. LetticeLeeBowex, aged 10) years and three months, living at the village of Gayjville, Vt., ls dead. She never inarritd. REAii Admiral C. R. P. Rodgebs. retired, died in Washington yesterday evening of heart'trouble. He had been 111 for some time. William Firkins, boss roller at Conln's Iron works, Masslliou, and well known throughout the country in his trade, died Thursday evening alter a long illness, lie was agon o years. Hox. Urbax D. Meaciiam Is dead, at Free port, III., at the ae of 75 3 ears. He was at one time one of the prominent leaders of tbe National Greenback party, ai.d was an ex-Mayor of his city. Michael Skilly, wholesale groser of Wheel ing, died yesterday, aged 54 j ears. He was In the grocery business since la3. aud was lor several years Chairman of tbe Democratic Mate Commit tee. GCSTAVBS Uoktox, ex-Mayor of Mobile, died suddenly Thursday moi-nlng, agil 81 years He was born at Boston, and went to Mobile at Z) years of age. His maternal igrandrather was Captain WlUlaui Warren, of Bunker llhl iauic. SIRS. Claba Baluick, widow orDr. J. P. Bar rlck.anilinotherof Attorney FraukL. Baldwin. was found dead tu bed )esterday morning, at the homeot her son in Masslllou. The cause of her death is given as apoplexy, bhe was aged 78 years. MBS. Claba Bakeick, of Masslllou. widow of Dr. J. T., Barrick ar..l mother or Attorney Frank li. -Baldwin,, was found dead in bed yesterday morning at I'ltcrtaidence j nee of tici own. iiicmusevi her death .;was apoplexy? Mrs". Barrlck was the oldest resident of jfassllton, having been "jorn mere u years ago. Lewis Pugii, founder of the Scranton, Board of Trade, and a nromluent and hlzhlv resnected real- dent of that city, died Thursday afternoon, in bis J?rC!'lfc u? """. LJ member of.'tbe Constitutional' C'ODventJon-In 1873, and distinguished himself as the cliampiau of the new-county section. He waai chosen Presldental Elector ror,Hayes aud again for Uarrlion. LIFE-SIZE PORTRAITS. Complete List of Tableaux to Be Presented by tho School, or Dcslsn What tho So ciety Paragrapher Finds in a Day's Peregrinations. The entertainment by the Amateur Art Association of the Pittsburg School of De sign will be given on Tuesday, January 19, at the Club Theater. The following is a cor rect list of the tableaux which are taken from celebrated pictures: "Finding n Poso," "Lady of the Xake," "Honner's Heads," "W"nen a Man's Single and When .n Man's 3iarrie J," "Toilet of Death," "Rope Dance," "Gleaners," "Past. Prpsent unci Future," "On the Terrace." "One Ton Many," "Grecian Game oi Roses," "Fancy Dance." "Jennie Wren's Dream" follows the tableaux which will be Interspersed by music and singing. There will also be fancy dancing by Miss Hamilton's pupils. The programmes are finished nnd are said to bp ver3' beautiful. The School of Design has o many friends that any or its projects cannot fall to succeed, so that the xpected enter tainment is being looked forward to with great interest. Madame Del Sakte.wIio will be in Pittsburg next week, is a woman of remark ably fascinating appearance. She is not beautiful, but she is charming. Somebody has said she looks like Sarah Bernhardt. The resemblance is not readily detected. For one thing she is very dark with plenty of dark brown hair. She is very French in appearance- Of course, the chief living ex ponent of Delsartism has a finely modu lated voice. Of course her walk is a poem of motion. Of conrve, being French, she complacently does not sneak Englib, and yon have lb chat with her in the best French you have, and being American, your French is probabl v veiy bad, al most as bad as if you were English. Max O'Relis lecture to-morrow night is exciting interest in polite society which will be niore largely represented on the occasion of his present nppearnnce than at any audience ever this entertaining gentle man has succeeded before In obtaining. The young mpn of the Dramatic Club of the Western University aro to act as ushers, their names being. "Messrs. Walter Riddle, C. W. Davis.C. De Moss Emmons, J. D. Scott, E. B. Goehring, Dudley S. Liggett. H. M. King. E. C. Shaler, D. Favccetr, P.' B. Elkins, L. L. Bobbins. U. F. Close, W. MacD. Dor- Ington, Joseph Griggs, Jr., W. T. Kensitt. Mr. Blnuet will arrive in town at noon to day and be driven at once to the Kenmawr Hotel, where he will be the guest orPro fessor Henri Kollin Parker, Secretary of the French mission. He wiJI bo Introduced on the stage at Carnegie Hall to-night by tho Chancellor of the Western University, Dr. W. J. Holland. Social Chatter. Another of the season' announced debut antes is Mi"-s Alice Chalfnt, the young daughter of George A. Chalfant. of Etna. She is a pretty and popular girl, and there is no danger as far as she is concerned of wallflowerdom receiving another floral con tribution. Thu French Mission meets on Sunday af ternoon at 4 o'clock in the chapel of the First Presbyterian Church, when the usnal exercises will be followed. The Glee Club will be In attendance, and Mr. Carl Better, as heretofore, to preside at the organ. Dr. Williabd's daughter, Miss Alice, will defer her coming out until next season. PENNSYLVANIA POINTERS. Protection, in a fair, square stand-up fight, always wins as witness Ohio, In tho late election. Bearer Times. The Senatorial contest out In Ohio fur nishes another strong argument for the se lection of United States Senators bv popular vote. Reading World. A tew more derisions by the Snpreme Court and the general impression that bank directors are Intended to direct will be en tirely removed. ConnellsviUe Courier. The election in Pennsylvania this year will be an important one in several respects, and that apart from the choice of PresU dental Electors. Armstrong Republican. As bad weather and roads approach, the question of the improvement of the latter becomes a burning question among the more public spirlie d citizens of the country districts. .Bearer Falls Tribune. Each nation, Just as each individual, must light the battle of life itself- and tbe very fact that the McKinley act operates to the contraction of the field of Ial n European countries demonstrates that i proportion ately expands in ours. Reading Times. Ex-Senator Wallace says that the chief aim of the Democratic party in Pennsyl vania should be harmony. Tbe ex-Senator, as well as all other good Democrats, view with regret the efforts of a few men of the party to gain notoriety at the expense of the party. Willlamsport Snn. . WORTH $344,000 TO THE TON. Rich Mineral Specimens of Silver Ore From a New Mexican 31. n p. Portland, Ore., Jan. 8. Donald Ferguson of Seattle, a well-known mining man, was in town yesterday. Ie had a specimen of chloride of silver which assiys S24,9?3 a ton. Sir. Fereuson paid the speci men came from the Lake Valley sliver minp in New Mexico, which i situated about 160 miles south or Sante Fe and 110 miles north of El Paso. "The mine is situ ated in the foothills of the Black range," said he, 'and was discovcied in 1881 by a ranchman living in the neighborhood, who was searching for some of his horses which had strayed away. The mine can be reached in a buggy, so easy is it of arj-ess. This mine was one ot the richest ever discovered on this continent. For a long time it paid a dividend of $75 to $100 a month on each share or stock. The ore graded generally as rather a low class one, but pockets were frequently found of exceeding-richness. One or these pockets, w liicli was called the Bridal Chamber, was discovered only 19 feet below the sur face. It covered a space about 40 feet squire, and from that pocket alone $190u000in silver was taken out. At no time did the excavations reach a depth below 80 feet. The mine is still being worked and is paying, bnt Is showing signs of ex haustion. Mr. Ferguson also had a piece o' quartz from the Homestake mine, near White Oak, N. M., which, he said, assayed $314,000 a ton. CUBED BY BEING BLESSED. Catholics Who Claim to Have Been Re stored io Health by a Priest. Beloit, Wis., Jan. 8. An examination of the records of the burials in the Catholic cemetery In this city, discloses the fact that very few of the deaths are from throat diseases and this led a reporter to talk with the Rev. Father Ward on the subject of the throat blessing of the Catholic Church. Father Ward said that for the last three years ho had bestowed the throat blessing of the church oft all who applied for the act, Catholic or Protestant. So far as he knew there had not been n death from throat troublo of one who had received the bless ing. Some Catholics have not seen fit to re ceive the rite, but nearly all the members ot Beloit and Janesvillo churches have done so, and there have been no fatal diphtheria cases among those so blesed. "Yon know or the Beloit people," said Father Ward. "Now think or this matter and you will observe that it is a striking fact that the Catholics or Beloit have been spared rrom the dreaded diphtheria." Father Ward said further that he would willingly bestow the ble-siing 'on any who may desire to receive It, Catholic or other wise. SECRETARY BUINE'S ILLNESS. . Mr. Blaine has great recuperative power. and we trust that he will be hlmselfagaln in a few days. New York Advertiser. The eutiro nation unites In the hope that the Illness of Secretary B ainemay not prove lasting or serious. Oiieago Mail. The country will wait hopefnlly but anx iously for Mr. B'ainc's complete recovery .from the illness that seized'him yesterday. New York World. It is painfully plain that the Secretary of State is not in good physical condition, and ,that it will be necessary foriim to spare himself as much as possible from work nnd worry. Regretable as this ls, it Is useless to try to conceal the truth. Phitade'phia Times. Under the pressure of work and worry a permanent recovery from his last sum mer's trouble sceins somewhat uncertain. But partisans and opponents of Mr. Blaine's policy will alike join in wishing him a prompt return to health. New York Horning Journal. Every step of tho arduous labors to which the great Secretary has been subjected has brought higher credit to his country, and It "would be a grievous disappointment If these exertions Impaired his health or ended serv ices highly prized by every patriotic citizen. iVtiatfe(pftia Press. CURIOUS CONDENSATIONS. In Buffalo one line of street railwaY crosses 51 railroad tracks In its course. A letter recently went from Atchison, Kan., to Brussels in Belgium in ten days. Forty-eight stage coaches carrying tho United States mails were held up last year. A hole one-one thousandth of an inch in diaHietcr can now be bored through a dia mond, a sapphire or a ruby. It is the Roumanian practice to plant a flower on tte wall of every cottage in which, a maiden lives. When she marrie3 tho flower is effaced. The new census of thePenobscotlndian tribe shows tho tribe to number 336, a gain of nine during the year. They raised 3,509 bushels of potatoes in 1891. The noted Australian lyre bird is threat ened with total extinction. In a single foit night one agent alone imported 1,000 of their tails into the United States. Several kinds of rhinoceros in Africa have two horns, one behind the other, but tbe extinct rhinoceros, known as the dycer atherium. had a pair of horns on his nose side by side. The severity of the recent drought in Maine may be realized when It is stated that for several days a Machlas farmer was obliged to give bis cattle elder to drink, no water being obtainable. A late census of the city of Lima, Pern, shows it to have a population of 103,356, of which 49,350 are males and 54,103 are female': 70,951 of tho inhabitants can read, and 32,903 can neither read nor write. A petrified ''green" pine limb was found recently by a Georgia man near Bnena, Vista. "The limb is perfect, showing where the straws made indentations and the grain, of the wood. It is somewhat white, and re sembles coral wreath." London is rather slow in adopting im provements. It is only recently that exten sive use has been made of the telephone. The City Conncil is now considering the in troduction of the police- patrol wagon so well known in great American cities. Boise City, Idaho, is developing and building up a strong opposition boom to Sioux Falls. South Dakota, in the divorea business. When the courts opened in the former city last week there were overtwenty divorce cases on the calendar of the District Court. Last month rain fell on 23 days in Ore gon. The heaviest rainfall heretofore re corded in Portland was 20.14 inches, in De cember. 18S2, but last month's dampness broke the record. On an average rain falls 18 days in the month of December in Oregon. A writer in a German paper gives the following as the proper temperatures for different sorts of beverages: Water, 54; cltzer water and beer. 57 to 60; red wine, 62 to 663: white wine, 60; champagne, 4S3 to 50: coffee, 73' to TS3; beef tea. ICO5 to US0; milk, 60 to 61; hot milk, 93 to 0i. The conductors of all the street cars, omnibuses and other vehicles for public ac commodation in Warsaw, in that part or the city between Novaya Praga and the suburb of Brudno, are women, and fulfill their duties more accurately and to tho better satisfaction of the public than men. The first people known to have domes ticated cats were the ancient Egyptians, on. whoso monuments representations aro found as early us 1GC0 B. C- It is on a tomb erected about 1300 B: C. that puss first ap pears unmistakably as a domesticated creature, being shown seated beneath a chair. A short time ago a boy baby wa3 born in Salt Lake City who had a birthmark of a blood-red blotch Immediately over its heart. The mark was exactly like a bullet wound, which killed a brotherofthe child'smother. Charless Wanless by name, over a year be fore the child was born, which the mother had seen. Tbe labor statistics of Colorado show that 19,624 persons are employed in the industries of that State who last year earned $12,951,703 55, or an average of about $3 per day. The majority of the female wage work ers earn less than $11 per week. The aggre gate value of the manufactured productwas $70,027,854 50. Cyclones and tornadoes are both wind storms with more or les3 rain, and they both whirl; otherwise they are very unlike. The cyclone is from 200 to.L500 miles across. Is generally born at sen. does mo3t of its work tnere.and lasts several days.sometimes even weeks, before dying out. The tornado Is a land storm, measuring bnly a few hundred feet in diameter. Tho whole thing can bo discerned at a glance. The "Passion Play" is to be performed by redskins at a great gathering of Chris tian Canadian Indians in Kamloops, B. C., next Jnne. The Rev. Father Lacombe is organizing the meeting, and it is expected that some 7,000 Christian Indians from vari ous parts of British Columbia and many pagan reds will be in attendance. The "Passion Play" is to be bat an incident of the gathering and not its main reature. It is very easy to secure a divorce in Idaho, and, as a local paper remarks, "people in adjoining States are beginning to appreciate the fact." Six months consti tutes a legal residence, and some county seats in theStatearesoremoteand secluded that actions are never heard of until after they aro decided. It is as easy to tie as to untie the matrimonial knot m Idaho. No license is required and few questions are asked. A missionary who has arrived on the coast from the inferior of Africa says that one of the Enropeans who took part in tho disastrous battle between the Zarewsky expedition and the Wnhebe natives, is now a nrisoner in the hands of the Wahehe. Scattered through Africa are white men who ato in bondage or have voluntarily taken up their residence there. Dr. Nachtigal's servant is an example. He deserted his iristerin the Sondan, and at la-t accounts he was living near Lako Tchad, tho only white man in that part of Africa. On the land of David Gowan, in "Tonto Basin," in the northern part of Gila county, Ariz., is a natural bridge that should bo placed on the list of champion wonders. Be tween the rock walls more than 700 feet high it spans a cavern 200 feet wide in a single arch. The width is 600 feet, and the average thickness or the arch I 40 reet, though in one place near the too it is scarcely six feet thick. Here, throngh a circular hole, may be seen the waters dashing along so far below. From the numerous caves and cav erns in the vicinity, in which abound beau tiful stalactites and stalagmites, it has been, suggested that the now open canon was onco a subterranean passage, and that the natural bridge is the last remains or the roof that once covered the entire passage. The roct is a limestone. dOKLLETS FROM JUDGE; Hilow Miss Plypp learns every catch phrase as soon as It ls out." Glim Yes; she's a master of the EngUsh slan guage. She saw him off upon the train, And showed that parting was but pain. "At every stopping place, " she said. Be sure you write, then go ahead." "What is your name?" said St. Peter to the arrival at the gate. "Viola Flimsyfluff, sir." How did you occupy your time on earth?" Soubrette. sir." Soubrette?" mused St. Peter. "Suppose. Viola, you go baclc and get a doctor's certificate that you're dead." MissBlcecker (of New York) Did von hear that Mr. Gurley was short In his accounts? Miss Emerson (of Boston) Yes: I learn that his computations are somewhat abbreviated. 'Tis better we should part, I think, don't you? iqwlll not break your heart .so go, now do. And at some future time let'd hope to meet As we have done to-day. In this same seat. But we must part, my love, so please away. Tlie snn now sinks to rest; 'tis clo? of day. And papa's coming soon; so wc must part Till to-morrow afternoon. Goouby, sweetheart. She I find, sir, that you are eugaqed to three other girls besides me. As a man of honor can"you explain that? He Yes; I forgot to tell yon that lam a Mormon convert. Mrs. Meddergrass Oh, Nathan, I've run a big nail Into my foot! Fanner Meddcrgrass There you go again! And nails A)i centra pound, too!" , Do not despair, oh loving heart, If a maiden now says no. Herthoughtsmay undergo a change In twenty years or so. - ' Snooper If you saw- the gentleman drop the bank note why did yon not restore It to'hlm? Jaysmith We had never been Introduced to each other, and I felt a delicacy about addressing hist. ,