T3M JPITTSBTTRG IDISPATCH. SUNDAY; - DECEMBER -25. 18921 I Wje Bigfeaftt iSTAHLISHED FEBRUARY S. 1SK. Yol.74. Xo SM-Entercaat nttsburg rostoffice JvOTember, ISM, as second-class matter. BUSINESS orncE, Cor.Smlthfield and Dlamohd'Sfreets. Tews Boomv and ruMUMnej. Hoaw, 78 and 80 Diamond Street, New Dispatch Building. rA'i'KitN AnvniTisTXG ornrr. tioom -. TRIBUNE BUILDING. NEW YORK, where complete files i THE DISPATCH can always be lound. THE DISrATd! Ison sale at LF.ADTNO HOTELS thronghontthe UmtedTStitts, aircrarBrentairo-, .Union Squaw. New Tort; and 17. Avenno de T Opera. rar vFrance. XEBMS OF THE DISPATCH: TCTAGE THEE VS T1TE TOTtTSD STATES. rn.T TnerATClI. One Year. ....i....?-8 00 Dailt Disr-ATcn. Three Months S 00 DAILY DlsrATOi. One Month 70 DAlLYlilsr-ATCn. Including bnnday. 1 year.. 10 00 DailtI) srATCii, IncludlngSunday.am'ths. ISO Daily DisTATcnt inetudTnic Sunday; J month SO EcxDAYDlRrA'CH. One Year Zpa Weekly Dispatch, One Tear.. ......... - 115 The Daily DisrATCii is delivered by carriers at :!cintspirweek, or. Including Similar Edition, at i cents per wccV. EESIITr ANTES SHOULD ONLY BF.MADF. BY CHECK. 3IONLY OKDEit; OR-JtEGlSlERED-LBTTHK. TObTAGE Sunday ine and all triple number copies. Ic: clngle and double number Copies, le. Voltntars; contributors should keep' copies of article. If compensation is desired the price expected must be named. The courtesy of re vrning rejected manuscripts irilt be extended: uhen stamps for that purpose are enclosed, but the Editor of The DisrATOH iritl vnder noctr cumstances be responsible far the care of unsolic ited manuscripts. This issue or THE DISPATCH contains 24 pages, made up oT TUBEK PARTS. Failure on the part of Carriers, Agents. Newsdealers or Newsboys- to snpply- patrons with a Complete Number.shouia beprompti ly reported to this office;. PITTSBUKG. SUNDAY. DEC S. 1S3Z. TWENTY-FOUR PAGES. THE CHRISTMAS SPIRrT. The return of the Christmas season this year is rich with the accompaniments which tradition has surrounded it with as typical of its peculiar joys. The sharp weather, which meteorologists learnedly describe "as an anti-cyclone" with "an extraordinary piling, up of the atmosphere to 3L10 inches," means in the older phraseology "a white Christmas, and that is typical of the festivity and pood will of the cold and snowy holidays. The thrones in the great- stores, the street cars crowded with holiday buyers laden with packages, the wealth of Christmas cheer in markets and grocery stores, and above all the happy aspect of the people gener ally, all tend to the conclusion that this is to be an old-fashioned Christmas, full of wonder and delight to the little folk and of peace, content and good will to then elders. Such a season of festivity and enjoy ment is always to be contemplated with satisfaction. The best reality in life is that pleasure which is bom of content, and the mutual pleasures created by the manifestations of love and good will toward our fellows. It is rightly typical of the Founder whose name the festival bears that the truest happiness is to be fouad by cultivating the controlling sen timent of peace, contentment, good wi'l and enjoyment of mutual and innocent pleasures. It is well for the world to lay aside at stated periods the strife and labor of the year, in order to enjoy even though ue faintly realize the ideal of Christmas, the temporary reign of its controlling in fluences, and to experience the happiness that can exist when those influences are predominant It may be that there are too many stern realities in the world to let the spirit of Christmas reign the whole year round. But it is" certain that the world will be none the worse if it can take those influences to heart so as to give them a greater sway in its constant life. Besides the general prosperity which we can perceive in the festivity of the season, one of the most gratifying features of the present Christmas is the good ground for hope that the unprosperouahave not been forgotten. While we are compelled to the know ledge that there are many reduced to poverty by influences the exact opposite Df those which rule this" season; there is compensation in the knowledge that the spirit of peace and pood will prevails suf ficiently to repair partially at least this drawback. We can enjoy the Christmas feast with a better appetite in the knowl edge that organized and universal effort has been made to give those who have suffered by strife or been burdened by misfortune an assurance that the love and good will toward men of the holiday does not omit them. Every human being should have some reason to rejoice in Christmas; and one of the greatest pleasures of the day is in the thought that especial effort has been made this year to realize that ideal. With these thoughts on. the high and sacred spirit that rules the day, The Dis patch takes pleasure in that old-fashioned and hearty wish A Merry Christmas to all! THE OPPOB-TONITriN WEST VIRGINIA The special correspondence from Cam- den-on-Gauley, West Virginia, which appears m this issue of The Dispatch, concludes the review of the splendid nat ural resources which can, with slight ef fort, be made tributary to Pittsburg. In connection with the articles that have ap peared before, it shows that to the south of us there are rich and undeveloped materials for wealth, which it is peculiarly the function of Pittsburg capital and Pittsburg enterprise to exploit. A single point indicates one source of wealth that is especially important In that embryo city at the terminus of the Davis and Elkins system of railways, there is a lumber plant with a capacity of 30,000,000 feet per annum with a supply for 30 years. The diminution of the sup ply of lumber from the old sources has re--ently become an important matter to this city, and indeed to this entire, .section. The opening up of a new district, with tupplies of this magnitude at every point, Is of the first importance, and promises the establishment of a great commercial interest But beyond the lumber supplies of West Virginia, its coal and iron fields are of vast Import to Pittsburg. Connected with our interests they can be made'to extend and strengthen our. supremacy in the great staples. Forced to independent develop ment, they may create a rivalry in which their mass would disturb if not divide that leadership. All these things lying within easy reach of onr city belong to its trade and industry, and can. only be permitted to establish a separate" existence by the utmost neglect on our part. When it is the fact that less than a score pf miles of new railway is necessary to "brin;-. Pittsburg In close communication with all this natural wealth, it is plain that only stupid indifference can prevent our city from improving the opportunity rosecorethea; as tributary to her enter prises. WORK FOR- THE CANAL. The Dispatch publishes this morninga series of interviews with prominent busi ness men of Cincinnati on the Oliio River and Hake Erie Canal, a? furnished by a staff correspondent The vigorous in dorsement of this project, and the enthu siasm evinced In support of improvements for the OMo river and inland navigation in general, are evidence that Cincinnati is thoroughly alive to the advantages of these things and intends to do all it can towanLsecuring them. And the Queen City can do much to aid in a grand co operative rally om behalf of an under taking that means mucti to the country as a whole, and still more to Pittsburg In particular. There- Is no doubt that the plan for the canal to Lake Erie is entirely practicable. A survey has been made by a State com mission, able engineers have pledged their reputation to the feasibility of the work and have approximately estimated its cost Since then improvements have been mado in lock construction that will facilitate the enterprise. A private syndicate has ap plied for a charter for a canal from Lake Erie to Montreal and New York. Here is at once a recognition of the opening for safe and profitable investment In inland waterways, and the inception of a work that would add to the value of the Ohio River and LakcEne Canal. There is more than enough traffic actu ally visible to guarantee a return for money invested in the waterway which would connect Pittsburg with the Lakes. Evidence or the insufficiency of railroad facilities is constantly forthcoming. Rail road extortion, insecurity and injustice in general are rapidly becoming a byword among shippers. The construction of in land waterways is the natural remedy for this stato of affairs. And the most merit orious of the projects now before the pub lic is the Ohio River and Lake Erie Ship Canal. Its construction would benefit all the industrial districts" for miles on either side of its course. And' in the Jong-run it. would be a benefit to the very railroads which now scoff at and object to the pro posal. It is a matter for grave regret that Pittsburg's Chamber of Commerce is not represented on the National Board of Trade which :s to discuss this along with other important subjects at Washington next month. With the interests of the city truly at heart, the' Chamber cannot but work hard for this undertaking. This city must seizj every opportunity for dis playing its importance, and' inproving its condition. It must make such opportuni ties wherever possible. The Ohio River and Lake Erie Canal deserves the ardent support of Pittsburg, andstrohg concerted action is all that is needed to secure this and other invaluable boons. Public spirit and public effort are the means to progress; public apathy necessitates retrogression. NOT ALL THE FACTORS. A correspondent of theNew York Times, writing from Minnesota, is the latest to en deavor to relocate and reform the iron and steel industry. He starts out with the assumption that the protective tariff has permitted pig iron manufacturers to locate their plants without reference to the greatest economy in production; conse quently he avers that, when the tariff is reduced, the great iron and steel produc ing plants will be driven from tho Interior to the shores of the great lakes. He pro 'ceeds to the effect that a ton of ore can be laid down at the lower lake ports for S3 15 and on the shores of Lake Superior. Con sequently he believes that plants must be located on the shores of both lakes. The vessels which carry ore to the lower lakes will carry back coal to the upper lake works, and thus, it is asserted, "our iron masters could produce steel rails at 512 per ton." The correspondent who thinks that the pig iron industry is not driven to seek the most favorable locations should study the regular reports of furnaces in and out of blast When he discovers there that about one-half of the furnace stacks in tho country are constantly Idle, he will run against proof positive that when furnaces are not located where there is the greatest economy of production and marketing, they are turned into dead, cap ital by the competition of those that are most favorably located. After he had perceived that fact he might further dis cover that the furnaces which are most steadily in blast are not located on the lakes, nor are those which stand idle by reason of their bad location all in the interior mining districts. The fact that it takes- about three-, fourths of a ton of coke to smelt a ton of Lake Superior ore has often impressed those of a superficial knowledge with the idea that blast furnaces should be located at the iron mines. One ox two experi ments have been founded on that idea at very large cost to the experimenters. The syllogism, that as h costs less to transport three-quarters of a ton of coke one way than a ton of ore the other, therefore it will be cheaper to make pig iron on. Lake Superior than in Western Pennsylvania, sounds very conclusive. It would be if the bulky coke could be transported as cheaply as the heavier ore, and more than that, if pig iron were the final product. If those things had been true, the entire pig iron industry would have been located on Lake Superior years ago. But when these gentlemen discover the further fact that it takes from one and a half to two tons more of coal, or Its equivalent, to convert the pig iron into finished iron or steel, they may percelvo that there is a further factor. The ques tion, then, is not that of the transporta tion of three-quarters of a ton of coKe against a ton. of ore, but of transporting a ton of ore in preference to transporting from two to four tois of coke and coaL As long as that is the case the most econ omical location of iron or steel Industry will be near the fuel, rather than near the ore. The correspondent of the Timet is right in asserting that there is economy in the ability of vessels to carry ore one way and coal the other, although he does not seem to be aware that tho practice is al ready in operation. Its economy can be greatly increased when, by the construc tion of the ship canal, vessels can unload ore at Pittsburg and load with coal back again. When that is established, if tho correspondent will furnish us with Lake Superior ore at $3 15 per ton, Western Pennsylvania will not ask .any odds against European competition. THE PENDING ISSUE. The renowed appearance of cholera at Hamburg and its steady persistence In Russian Poland, even in winter, warn this country that only tho strictest vigil ance can preserve it from an epidemic next season. What measures are to be taken to secure that protection must be settled within the next ninety days. In the meantime steamship companies I an? claimln&the rigta. to bring shiploads, of infected immigrants to our shores, Tammany politicians am? aataRpnizing a national quarantine for: the salfe of the new patronage; and it Is even doubtful if the SVato politicians will supply ne wata Board of Health with, the funds to make an effective fight against the spiad"of infection,1 if is should ever gain a loot hold. Itis gettlnft;to,be time to have a square test made,- whether the whole-nation is to besubjected to jJ. fatal pestilence, rather than diminish, tho profits it steamship companies, or. the perquisites of politi cians. THB-.FBEItteH TUE31CW The turmoil of French politics hag reached a point where.it Is impossible to predicate the future. "The conrmentator carronly recognize the elements which have brought the politics ft France to this scandalous .pass, and expwss the hope thatrtlutnatural strength of the republic may enable it to throw off il ailments. The evil, of course, started with financial joohery extending its contipting in fluences throughout politics, aLd bringing the press to the level of hired retainers. But-the outbreak- first obtained activa force through political jealousy. Jki pur pose was to kill off political rival.!. , The exposure once begun became so stvitillng and far-reaching that instead of one politician orone faction Doing ruined", the wholo republic was besmirched. Of course the mrmentthe republic is brout'Jit into discredit the old monarchist and ha perialist hopes take a sudden revival. On one day the lost cause of the Bona- partistais agitated; on tho next the long standing claimant- of the Bourbon suc cession is brought forward by his follow ers. Back-ottbeinall is the specter of Communism, with a greater force-behind it tban either of the other enemies o the republic; only waiting, the chance to BSt its ungovernable elements into activity. In the presence- of such factors tho friends of stable republican government for France can only hope that she will pass the ordeaL m safety. There are- some grounds for such hope in the latest developments.. Franco has now en joyed, twenty years of republican govern ment, and, notwithstanding- the scandals, has been better governed than either under tho empire or tho monarchy. Moreover, late years have shown an in creasing ability on the part of that vola tile nation to settle its crises by constitu tional means. This alona gives, real rea son for hoping for the best It is above all things to be desired that the Govern ment may be purged, and justice done without a repetition, of the terrlblei slaughter which drenuhed Paris with blood in the days of the Commune- One point is worth remembering as an example to- all nations. The French re public could not have been brought to any such pass as the present but for financial jobbery and political corruption Other republics than France can find a profita ble lesson in that fact AlTiaiPORXANT TTKDICAIIOjr. There is satisfaction as well as justice in giving-prominence to the fact that a rigid inquiry into the methods pursued by General Booth, of the Salvation Army, in handling the funds put In his charge for relieving the poor of London, has resulted In a complete vindication of his integrity and efficiency. The plan proposed by-the Salvation reader was so comprehensive and thorough in its purpose of turning tbe outcasts into useful and self-supporting men, that it commanded strong support Intimations of loose methods of account ing for the funds were not surprising or even grave, as It was possible that an evangelist might fall short of the standard- of an accountant But when tho hints wenfcthe length of intimating actual misappropriation- there was a decided necessity for investigation. f The investigation has. been completed, and the only ground for criticism is as to certain methods pursued in large building operations. There is no reflection what ever on. either the integrity or efficiency of the head of the plan; and the intima tions to that effect seem to have been emanations from the powers of darkness. This result will permit the good work to go on, which seems to promise more for tbe actual redemption of the dregs of so ciety tham any plan previously devised. It would have been illogical if the. plan had been condemned, because personal mismanagement defeated its work. But there is no doubt that if tbe charges had proved well founded the work of the Sal vation Army would have suffered a severe check. The opposite is the case, however The Salvation Army can proceed with its ef forts, with its integrity unquestioned; and sincere men will recognize that, however wide its manifestations may appear, it is doing more to reach the fallen tban any other existing agency. MUCH TOO ONE-SIDED, While the Inter-State Commerce Com mission has taken a rather remarkable course in failing to attempt any enforce ment of the anti-pooling clause of tbe law under which it is acting, there is a point at which it is impelled to draw the line. It strikes the present movement to emas culate that section a vital blow in the fol lowing sentence from its recent report: "Until the law is mado -s strong as its framers intended, in the matter of fair and stable rates, equal treatment and suppres sion of all favoritism, it is idle to seek to protect carriers whose immunity under authoritative constructions of the law from restrictions Intended by Congress seems one of the most remarkable facts in current history." With this salient declaration on the official records, the movement to legalize pooling is put in its proper light A law intended to protect tbo public has been practically brought to naught, and it is now proposed to pervert it to the degreo of establishing a special privilege for the benefit of the very corporations that have defied and nullified it And that special privilege is to be the maintenance of the most powerful and far-reaching combina tions of the exact class which national legislation hy special statute has pro hibited as obnoxious to public policy and inimical to public interests. Tbe Commission has been notably in. different as to the enforcement of tbe fifth section of the act But the assurance of the railroads in asking an amendment for their special interest after they have reached practical success in defeating the effort of the act to curb their unquestioned abuses Is very suggestive, to say the least Christmas is not' a time for the vulgar display of wealth in providing material for gormandizing and orgies, nor for the exhibi tion of extravacanco in the purchase' of costly luxuries. It is a season of charity, a festival of peace and gopd-wlU. The law of self-preservation for the nonce gives way to the Dractlco ot selMorgetfulness. Would 'that this characteristic of those days could be more pievaleut throughout the yearl Xow is tho time above tUl otbers when the surplus of tbe well-to-do elces out tho wants of the needy. And proportionately as this voluntary division of tho go-oil things pf this world prevail, does tbe number of t boss good tilings Increase, and tbe world be comes 'a more and more happy sphere for the lives of hurremlty. The world would be better than it Is if none of chlldhood's-llluslons were shattered more painfull than Is the belief In Santa Clans by tho revelation as years go by that lie is pnly tbe instrument of load parents and loving fri ends. Music and Chnstmastide are Intimately related. The music of ohurch bells, tbe tinkling of sUdgh bells, the singing of carols are all associated witb the filadsomenoss of tlio season. Ttjere is music in the crisp crunch of tho tixyrr, there Is music in tbe 'swish of tho ice as the skate elides over its surface. There is music in the very ntr. But the boat of All Christmas rausio is the cheerful sound of human voices in loving converse, and the merry laughter of child hood's lmppy Innocence. May there be much of )t and may it last long! IT is typical of the blind intolerance of anti-bemitlclsm that Sara Bernhardt should mve been subjected to mob Tlolenee in Odessa. -Artutleaat Jsto be recognized as international, cosmopolitan, and without race distinction. Workmen in Ohio agitating for the en forcement of a statute demanding bi monthly payments of -wages are evidently in tbe right. A test cue cannot be made too sooii. If the law be upheld by the courts it Bhould be enforced, and any doubts as to its constitutionality ought to be set at rest one way Or theotiier once for alL When labor organizes for tlio observance of lair, publio opinion is with it in all enthusiasm. When tho laws of South Dakota are so reformed as to forbid Sioux Falls from mak ing divoico its leading industry, it will be time tor Kew Orleans to relinquish prize fights and masquerades as its leading at tractions. .Externax. weather is appropriate to all preoonceired. ideas of Christmas this year. Hut it is thetsunsuiue and cheer of the heart tbat are most essential to the season's propw observance. And como rain, come snow, come cloud, come shine warmth of heart trill always insure a happy, joyful time. TnER.E is one never failing reeipe for a mirthful Christmas in every household. Let each ma to tbe happiness of otbers the first thought. tnd the baulshment of all carols infallibly involved in the merrlness of all. The series ot Columbian postage stamps to be Issued with tho New Year will mark a new era in philately. There is no reason why the precedent of combining artistlo work and liistotlcal instruction with useful ness should not be followed in all future designs of tlw little letter-carriers. Ecualizaxiox of taxation and the fram ing of a road bill are matters intimately as sociated. An Intelligent Legislature should be able and willing to do something satis factory ia, both at an early date. Pbesidcent-elect Cleveland is no doubt reserving those much sought after portfolios as valentines lor his friends. They are too big to be givenawayin a hurry, and be will hardly have time to make bis choice from the would-be and won't-be re cipients In time for the Son Year. Ax English society has been formed to put down gambling. The heir apparent to the British throue should be tbe first object, of Its solicitude. POOE Europe! France's Christmas is spoilt by the impendence of Panama scan dals and Germans are too bard up to make their usual ChrUtmas purchases. America is fortunate, and may good statesmanship always preserve the land's good fortune is the ardent wish of every patriot! Evxx a man-of sixty, and deaf to boot, can escape from tbe City Farm. Tbe wonder is that the retreat over has any inmates. Cabs for the motor-men on the exposed electric cars would have been and'always will be a seasonable gift. Theirs is not a happy lot in wintry weather. Passengers nre forced to put up with discomfort, Bat the motion companies-ought at least to care lor their employes. The glad tidings ot this sesionare of more importance to mankind than all cur rent mundane news. .Cable slots are breaking too many horses legs in this city. Constant Inspec tion of the tracks ought to be rigorously in sisted upon. And, at tbe same time, drivers cannot be too careful and horse owners should be particular about the shoeing of their beasts. This is a progressive and changeable age. But an "old-fashioned" Christmas is always welcome. PROMINENT AND POPULAR. Father Marttk, the new General of tbo Jesuits, is visiting Dublin on business connected with the Jesuit order. Mips Gertrude Vanderbilt dresses so plainly that ber gowns would be called cheap and quiet, even if worn by a poor governess. A xhk named Frulanda, who entered tbe Armenian monastary of St, Jacob, at Jeru salem, ft) years ago, died there recently at tho reputed age of 115 years. Empebob WdjLIAM has resolved that the Crown Prince shall have a public sehool education and has selected tho Eoyal Gym nasium at Kiel as tho school. The body of Miss .Mary A, West, the Illinois temperance lecturer who died re cently in Japan, is on its way home for in. terment. Appropriate ceremonies will be bad in Chicago. Senatob Cockbell, who Ja spare and wiry, has an elder brother, recently elected to Congress, who is very broad efface and heavily built. Both were Confederate brig adiers and tbe elder was the hero of tbe battle of Lono Jack. Dr. Alexander, the Bishop of Deny, whose Lenten sermons in this country this year are well remembered in Episcopal cir cles, Is about to celebiate the twenty-fifth anniversary of his elevation to his present offlce. Dr. Alexander is regarded by some critics as the most eloquent prelate ia Ire- J land. Lady Florence Decet, who is an ex pert in the use of rod and rifle, and who has done her share in shooting big game, has provoked the wrath of her sporting poin patriots by denouncing foxhunting and rabbit-coursing as wanton cruelty, aho ad vocates the substitution of the auls.bag chase. Conan Doyle, the novelist, writes to the London Times suggesting that it would be a graceful aot on the part of the British Government to ofTer three of the craok British bands, including tbe band of tue Guards, to play at tbe World's Fair in Chi, cago, and a squadron of the Life Guards to take part in tho opening procession. ' N A BfiW QA8 CQHPAHY, Several Gentlemen to Invest SJ00,Q0Q in Johnstown. Jobsstowk, Pa., Deo, IL. Special Anew gas company, known as the Manufacturing Gas Company of Johnstown, will shortly apply far a charter. The Incorporators are Senator K. E. Eobblns, C It Miller and C. B. Hamm.of Greansburg, and John Pendry, ot this city. The capital stock is to be (100,000. a large portion or wlileh will ba taken by Mr. Hamm. Mayor Hose, of this city, will ulsa tHke a -huge share. The new company proposes ta manufacture gas for domes tlo use" exclusively by a pro., cess'known as the Askin, having been tn vented by Joseph Askin, of Lima, O. Itis said that gas manufactured bythlssvstem will bj sola at a much cheaper price than the natural gas, Mr. Hamm will take charge of the new works when started, UVE NATIONAL T0PJC& A More to Protect American .Callroads Against Canadian Discrimination o Notice to Be Takn of Canada's Alleged Little Worships Other Matters of In-, terest. Washington, Dec. 21 The President has called upon tbe executive departments for all information in their possession rela tive, to freight coming into the United States oyer tho Canadian Pacific Railroad. Atten tion was directed to this subject by the President in his annual message to Congress, and since then tbe subject has been alive and interesting one in the Treasury Depart ment. The unjust discrimination against United States railroads made by law or rather by its construction in favor of the Canadian Pacific Railroad, by means of tbe consular seal system, has long been a source of complain tat the Treasury Department. This law was passed in IKi, and its sub stance is Incorporated in section 8102, revised statutes. TJn der this law reign ts are shipped from Canada to Interior ports in the United States under the consular seal system. The United States Consul certifies that the man i'est is correct; that be has sealed and closed the ear, and that certification carries tbe freizht through without insnection at tbe border, saving from one to two days' delay and tho costs of rehandlinc tbe freights, etc. When the law passed the traffic was small. It ia also rnn tmiriori at the Treasury Department that the freights entitled to tbe privileges of consular seal were cringinolly confined to the piodncts of Canada, and tho traffic between lC5 and IS70 being thus lim ited, the United states Cousuls could and did give personal attention to inspectingthe suipment or irelghr, making out tue mani fests and sealing the cars, as tbe law spe cifically directs they should do. But gradu ally the business has crown, and the law has been perverted, and now mure goods hav ing their origin in China and Japan are shlnped over the Canadian Pacific lor tbe United States ttiau goods or products of Canada. Enjoying this superiority over American railroads the Canadian Paciflo caused to be put into the Canadian tariff a discriminating duty of 10 per cent on all coffee and tea imported into Canada from the United States. It Is pointed out that as the truffle over tbe Canadian Paciflo has be come so great that it is impossible for United States Consuls to personally perform tbe duties required of them under the pro visions of the consular seat law, a due re gard for the revenue would warrant the suspension of section 3102 until such a time as Congress makes provision for its perfect enlorcement Should this be done It would, in the opinion of Treasury Department offi cials, put a stop to discrimination agalust American railroads and also be a retaliatory measure against Canada for her uniriendli ness of conduct toward us. No Notice or Canada's Alleged Warships. It is not probable that the Senate will take any action on tbe alleged intention of Great Britain to strengthen her armed force on the great lakes with war vessels under tbe pseudonym of revenue cutters. Senator Frye, of Maine, Chairman of the Committee on Commerce and a leading member of the Committee on Foieign Affairs, a recognized authority in marine matters, and who is noted for his interest in affairs relating to Canada and this conntry, will have much to say as to tbe policy of the United States in the matter of protection on tholates.andhfs influence will have welsbt In deciding the matter, pne way or the other. It is or inter est, therefore, to know that Senntor Frye places no credence whatever In the allega tion that Great Britain is contemplating tbe structure of a strong armoied lorce In tbe great lakes in violation of the agreement be tween the United States and Great Britain' forbidding suoh action. He believes the present agitation of the matter, apropos ot revenue cutters, which are being built in Canada, is "all poppy.coak." Proclamation of tbe President The President has issued a proclamation reserving for timber and fish culture pur poses the Island of Afognak, Alaska, and its adjacent rocks and territorial waters, in cluding the Sea Lion Bocks and Sea Otter Island. The Secretary of the Interior and tbe Commissioner of Fish and Fisheries, nnder the directjon of tbe President, have investigated this subject and, finding that he has the authority by law, strongly recom mended that the action should be taken. The Commissioner of Fish and Fisheries has selected Afognak Bay and A'ognak Elver Lake, and tbe tributaries thereof, with a mile of land from the shores of the river and lake, for the purpose of fish culture under the statute authorizing bim to do so, and this Is included in the proclamation of the President. Tbe whole comprises a national reservation and all trespassers are required to remove theiefrom. There is a cannery on the island tbat will have to be vacated, but those of tbe former subjects of Russia there, a few la number, will be protected In whatever nzhts they may have under the Bussian treaty. Suppressing Bio Grande Lawlessness. Secretary Elkins had a conference with General Schofleld at the War Department to-lay with regard to the best method of effectually suppressing the apparently in creasing lawlessness along the Bio Grande. Captain J. G. Bourke, Third Cavalry, who has been summoned from Texas for con sultation on this subject, will probably reaah here Monday nightv No official re ports in rezard to these troubles have been received lor tbe past two days. Mr. Allison Will Be Home Soon. Senator Allison, Chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, will be at his desk before the holiday recess Is over. The Senator sailed from Europe on theLahn, December 21, and is expected to reach this city next Wednesday. He will return to Eurone in time to attend the adjourned meeting of tho monetary conference in the spring. Indians Summoned to Washington. Secretary Noble to-day dirteted D. S. Hall, the Chairman of the Chippewa Com mission, to bring to Washington six chiefs and head men of tbe Mille Lae band of Chip pewas, for the purpose of conferring with the President as to the necessity for their removal to the White Earth reservation. No String on the Populists. "No political party has a mortgage on the Populists," said Mr. Peffer, this morn ing, speaking of the situation in the West, and having in his mind tbo statements of the two parties relative to the election of United States Senators from the doubtful States. Mr. Peffer repudiated in strong terms tbe idea tbat any party had a right to advance tbe theory that the Populists were inclined In oue .direction or another. "In those States where we have the votes and can elect onr Senators." continued Mr. Peffer, "we will do it, and ask no questions of anybody. There are, however, certain States in which we do not hold the power, and In which one or two of the two parties maintain the balance and have sufficient votes to combino with us in the eleotlon of a Sonator. In such case wo will make the cora pi omlse that will be most advantageous tolas and that can be made without sacrificing any principle. We will combine upon the men who are nearest to us in the matter of legislation affecting our people. Naturally, three out or every lour of the members of the Populists in the Western States are Be publicans 'who have been driven away from the party because it has been drifting toward Wall street rather than toward the people. We are In love with neither the Re publicans nor Democrats, and when we combine, where we are compelled to pursue that course, it will be on the roan who most nearly comes up to our standard of what the lepresentatlve of the party in tbe United States Senate should be." Mr. Peffer inti mated very strongly that the members of bis party were not In the-buslness or pulling the chestnut out of tbe fire for Democrats or HepubllcacS, but they were arranging their plans to mako as good a play as possible, with the sole objeot In view of bettoring the political opportunities of the party and the principle for which they stood. A BIG LOSS OP OIL. The Crescent Pipe line Company Loses 2,000 Barrels of the Greasy Stuff. Huirrixaoox, Pa., Dec 21. The Crescent Pipe Line Company, whose line of pipe through the lower end of this eounty Is be ing put under ground, sustained a loss or about 2,0(0 barrels of oil to-day by the break ing or a section of their pipe on Blackleg Mountain. In order to removo an oostrneting portion of rock, tbe workmen set offa grand powder blast whieh shattered a section of the pipe line from which flawed a continuous stream or oil aawn the mountain side for six hours. The oil formed in a pool at tho base where larmers and others living in the neighbor hood gathered it up in backets and ban els and carted it away. The Nicaragua Canal Next. St. uoals Republic After Franorf ges through with De Leweps ft Co. it has permission to patronize the great canal epierpvise of our own Warner Miller,- ' t , ' m CHAMP HOPES FOB ALL CONTBACIS. B?e Says the Beport That the California Firm Got One Is Incorrect. PHiCADixt-HiA, Der. St. Charles B. Cramp, L President of tbe William Cramp ft Sons' .Ship and Engine Ballding Company, re turned from Washington to-day, whither he had gone to consult with Secretary of the Navy Tracy resorting the docking of the cruiser New York and the progress of work on the war vessels now being completed at tbe company's yard here. The dry dock at the League Island Navy has been repaired, and December 28 was agreed upon as the day for the docking of tbo cruiser there. After her bottom has been thoroughly overhauled, preparations for her trial trip will be pushed forward with all possible speed. Tbe test of this latest addition to the navy will be made very early in the spring. Mr. Cramp said to-day, in speaking of contracts for the cruiser Iowa and the battleship Brooklyn, tbat dispatches from Washington stating that the Secretary or the Navy had expressed a desire to award the contract for building one or these shins to tbe Union Iron Works, or San Francisco, were uninten tionally incorrect "I am not worrying," said Mr. Cramp, "for I am sure the contracts for both ships will be given to our firm according to law and rtebt, and I am awaiting with calmness a formal notice from the Department to that effect There has been no delay in awarding the contracts. It has been tbe in variable custom to lay all bids, before the law officer ot the Navy Department, who in vestigates tbem, and the result ot his labors is placed before the Secretary. This gen erally requires two weeks. We are not agita ted concerning the matter, and neither does the Secretary appear to be worryingbimself about it. Mr. Tracy, being a thorough law yer, will know exactly what to do, and we are content to leave tbe matter in bis hands. K'MILLAN A GAS MAGNATE. The Senator's Latest Purchase Said, to Be for the Standard Company. Detroit, Dec 24. Senator James G. Mc Millan has added to bis holdings of the stock of gas companies in this city, by the purchase of the Detroit Gas Works at a price said to be $2,000,000. Recently the Senator purchased tbe Mutual Gas Works for $1,500,000. Itis said the two companies will be consolidated. It is also said tbe pur chase of the gas companies is in the interest or tbe Standard Oil Company. The great monopoly bos been for some time buying out gas companies in other cities, and it has large interests in Detroit. The discovery of a practical method of manufacturing fuel gas at low cost has made its introduction at an early day very probably because of tbe dissatisfaction irequently caused by tbe low pressure of the natural gas. Senator McMillan U also Interested m the Michlican Gas Company. CLEHENCEAU AND DtEuULEDE, The latest style in French duels is the "low-down safety." Chicago Dispatch, Fsxkck duelists as a class ought to be remarkable for longevity. Wheeling Reg ister. FORTUNATE that neither Clemenceau nor Deroulede earned tbe deadly unloaded pistol of every-day American annals. New York World, Oca French friends should stop using pistols in their polite affairs of honor. It endangers the lives of the spectators. &. Louis Republic Duxls like that of MM. Deroulede and Clemenceau do more to abolish dueling than any numitartan agitation can. They make it ridiculous. Buffalo Express. Clemescbau and Deroulede may be clever statesmen, but they nre very poor marks men. They are scarcely up to the Winkle standard Baltimore American. t It might be worth while to say something about tbe Clemenceau-Deroulede duel if it were worth while to say anything about it. But it isn't. Earriiburg PalrM. The bloodless dnel in Paris softons the French situation. There must be a decline ana fall In tbe temperature and the excite ment. Brooklyn standard- Union, The Freheh duel remains bloodless and frequent. There is room for a suspicion that tbe weapons intended for French duels are especially manufactured with a view to securing safety. Washington Star. The French duel has its uses. After the burlesque performance between Clemenceau and Deroulede, nobody In or out of Paris will be preparod to admit that the political situation is serious. New York Tribune. What a miserable farce the whole busi ness 1st At five, seven or nine paces they might have had all tbe satisfaction they wanted. They should agree on that distance next time or stay off tbe field. Philadelphia Inquirer. Prom the Stable to the Church. Detroit Jodrnal.1 Someone remarks upon the frequent changing of abandoned city churches into stables. The approaching Christmas sug gests that Christian worship began in a stable. Good in One Way. Philadelphia Times. Why should the opponents of vivisection waste all their sympathy on the dogs. Look at the number of fleas tbat as a necessary consequence starve to death. DEATHS HERB AND ELSEWHERE. J. H. Crozler. J, F. 'Crozier, long and favorably known as tbe agent of theUoion News Company and DIS PATCH at Oil City, died at bis residence yesterday at 0:30 p. M. Mr. Crozler bad been connected with the Union Neva Corananv for mny years, andhia large circle of a"quilnUuces in Cincinnati, Pltts b.lrg and Baltimore, as well as at HI City and vicinity, will regret to learn of his demise. By cioie attention to ounuci, ana uTcr.uiK nis neaiin cave war tome months since, and In spite of the beneat ne nopeu tu receive iroia a trip to Hot Snrln and El Paso, be returned home ime last week to breathe hla last, surrounded by his grlef stricJcen family. General Frederick T, Dent. General Frederick T. Dent, the dis tinguished Union soldier and brother-in-law of U. S. Orint. died Friday in Denver. He will be burled In tbe Military Cemetery at Ft. Leaven worth, Kan. General Dent had been In Denver for the past four years, enjoying a peaceful old age afteraiareerof energy and movement. He was born in MiMontl in 1SJJ. received an appointment to west Point from that State and served with honor In the Mexican ami Civil wars, la the late war he served on the staff of General Grant with tin rink of Lieutenant Colonel. In March. ISE5. he was made Brevet Brigadier General. Brntflsch, Budolph's Cabman. Bratfijch, the noted Vienna cabman, who drove Crown Prince Rudolph, or Austria, to the chateau atMelrling the nlxht the Prince met with his trigla death, died yesterday or apoplexy. He kept secluded for a long time after tbe death or the Prince, not being permitted to live in Vienna. At the memory of the scandal faded, however, he was allowed to return to the Austrian capital, and He was not again beatd or publicly until his death was announced. Josiah U. Flake, Financier. Josiah M. Fiske dropped dead while entering the American Excpange National Bank, In ftaw York, Friday. Mr. Flike bad been a director of the bank for 46 years In continuous service, being the dean of the board by many years. He bad come down town to attend a directors' meeting. Mr. Flike was passing the paying teller's window when, without a word, be staggered and fell forward. He was unconscious ami appeared to be dead. The probable causa was heart disease. John Baker, Revenue Service. John Baker, of the United States Beye nue Marine Service, commanding tho cutter Seward on t lis Gulf station, died Friday at Pas Christian. Mils., of peritonitis, aged 61 years. He was a native of Salem, Mass.. ana had Imrn la the service of the Uovernment since 1901. His remains will be sent to Salem. Obituary Notes. Box CnAKLis Riciiabdsox Miles died In Charleston, S. C, Friday. Jlits. Elizabeth schuckeks died Friday night at Masslllon, aged 74. She was the widowed mother or J. M. 8chuckeri, oasbier or the First H aUonal Bank of tbat town. GEOnoi B. KxAL,-a wed known Tarkersbarg cltlrtn. dropped dead yesterday miming from heart disease. He lived there all lus IUV, aud bat occupied many prominent position!. Mas, Captain N. M. Wilsox, or Homestead, whose husband it a znemtjer-elect from the Sixth Legislative district, died yesterday morning. The burial will take place Monday afternoon at Eliza beth. Coloxel Samuel" Mosbt, State senator, cousin of the famous General Mosby, and a colonel In the Confederate army, died at Linn. Mo., yesterday. For 3 years he has been prominent in the Demo cratic politics or JIUsQtul. Wiuib Weaver, the young man at Canton, a. Who was JoJ urcd by the accidental discharge of hi gun while out hunting, has died or bis rniurles. tie was a ll.tmuer of a prominent (amtiy and numbered hi friends in Cauloa by tlis nuadred, A VISIT TO VERSAILLES. iwairrur roa Tint dispatch. After a month of wet weather, we concluded to wait no longer for a fair day to visit Versailles, lest tbe snows should overlap the rain?, so on Tues day we set forth witbont waiting to see what tho morning promised. Wewent in a meek little train from the Gare St. Xazare, Paris. To onr delight tbe sun came out warm and bright as September, and dogs and bare kneed children in bibs and blouses over Sowed the streets to bask In it, after being cooped up by careful housekeepers in dread of croup and muddy floors. The fortifica tions were passed and the trainshot through a couple of long, dark tunnels, across a stretch of tiny martt gardens where small vezetables woro being "raised by hand- under glass globes, and out over a high bridge above a winding country roadbord 'eredwith poplars and hedges. A small ceme tery twinkled by, looking like some glass exposition, or the North Pole done In alum. Thickly strewn upon every grave and hoisted upon the crosses at tbeir heads were hideous funeral wreaths of flowers, made of black, purnle and crystal beads; here and there was a stiff wreath of dyed Immortelles, but not a single natural blossom to be seen . Tbe effect to American eyes is ghastly and horrifying. Tbeir very durability makes them more unendurable. It is as much as to say: "I've mourned oace and for all, ac cording to the fashion, and now I shan't need to think of it again. These things'll last!" Madame De Malntenon's Tula, It was a pleasant journey, so we arrived nt Versailles in a mood to do it thorough ly and took cabs to the Grand Trianon. The glassy waxed floors of Madame de Atalu tenon's beautiful villa look as if no loot had trodden there since her time, and mucn of tbe aucient furniture remains, carefully guarded from profane touch. In the Salon des Giaces stands -a magnificent round taDle which misht almost have served King Arthur and his knights. The great slab, nine leet in diameter, is made of a single piece ol oak; such kings of the forest I-no longer exist in France. We stopped to admire a beautiful marble group in the Grande Vestibule, representing France and Italy exchanging tbe kiss of peace. It was' a gift, some 30 years ago, from the ladies of Milan to Eugenie, then Empress or tbe French. Whether by chance or by design, the resemblance of tbe statelier statue to tbe ill-starred Zmpress herself is very marked. The Playthings or a Queen. The Petit Trianon, where Marie Antoin ette spent her happiest days, stands near by with her beloved dairy on tbo margin or a little lake. Ontstdo the dairy, under a thatched shed, are tbe stone beeches where the lords and ladies or her court used to sit and drink milk and pose as shepherds and milkmaids, with all tbe picturesque improb ability Boucher has immortalized on sorcens and fans. The lovely gardens and walks were almost deserted notwithstanding the beauty or this mild November day. The dead leaves were still tailing and rustled pleasantly under our feet as we walked through the cross and picked some lato bluebells and buttercups, with nobody to "shoo" us back to the road. Toe leaves were drifted thick, too, In the quiet little moat around the Temple de l'Amour, the open-air theater where Marie Antoinette and ber ladles acted plays. Some workmen were repairing the little time-stained marble temple, and their ham mers and the twittering of the sparrows were the only sounds that broke the silence of the woods. It was even lonelier about the tiny mill and "hamlet," with their painted imitations of ancient stucco, fallen away to show the painted pretense of bricks. It is most pathetlo to come upon the elaborate simplicity of these pretty toys of a Queen, which have survived two mon archies and two empires, and which three repuDlics have spared, and even preserved, in pity of their harmless triviality. A Costly and Almost Endless Work. The day was dry and pleasant,but moisture dripped from the beds of moss that covered tbe thatched roofs, and the grass, through which we strolled toward tha gardens and the palace of Versailles, was very wet. The dank, swampy ooze of the soil still makes ltselC seen through all the labor- that countless bands have spent upon it through more than two centuries. It is easy to believe that A million peasants starved to build Versailles: to diain froggy marshes, plant forests of alien trees, build a palace a quarter of a mile long, and cram It with all tbat was raro and costly; to erect magnificent fountains. and to construct aqueducts to supply them, which (on account of the unwholesome nature of the work) destroyed a greater number of the unlucky soldiers who were compelled to perform it than many a battle that has decided tbe fate of nations. There was something really uncanny in the sight of the vast and elaborate gardens, adorned with tbe colossal statues and foun tains, the interminable broad walks, and the lmmenso flight of marble steps leading up to a palace which has been inhabited by 10,000 people at a time; all in perfect repair, apparently as void of lire as the mountains of tbe moon. It was like a scene from tho Sleeping Beauty, or Hawthorne's new Adam and Eve, exploring tbe ompty city. Some of the Striking Pictures. It would be hopeless to attempt a descrip tion of the endless galleries of pictures. To me, the most Interesting of all was oue of Napoleon as First Consul; a thin, keen, handsome face, with a look of quiet control, as if he felt the reins In bis hands, and the power to hold them. I believe it is not a particularly fine thing from an artistic point of view, bat, as a bit of historical enlighten ment, 1 admire and value it more than Mels 6onier's"lS07,"orany of the multitude of paintings of the Emperor's countless bat tles and triumphs. Another picture, historically enlightening (to Americans, at least) represents "le Comte Roobambean and le General Wash ington giving tbe final orders at the battle d'Yorcktown" where Cornwallls surren dered. The title is a little misleading, lor the chubby little Count Rochimbeau is giv ing the final orders all by himself, while Genoial Washington (life sized, though very French looking) stands meekly behind him, rebuking, with a gesture, an eager young ofileer who is evidently appealing to himforlnstruotloni. "Don't you see tbat this gentleman knows much more about such matters than I dot Ma voai n, foolish boy!" Now, one doesn't mind if tho French are a trifle vainglorious over their Henry ot Navarre and Napoleon; but that they should reach oat and appropriate tbo American Revolution to add to their hall ot triumphs, it seems like carrying tbe thing too far. Full of Historic Suggestion. It was 4 o'clock when we, together with several hundred others whom the fine aft ernoon, bad tempted to Versailles, were gently beaded to tbe doors by the guard ians, and we were astounded to find the rain falling fast. Oue can never depend for an hour upon Parisian weather, bat we con cluded to ride back to Paris upon the top of a buss: and taking a last look at the little Swiss lake, which Madame, our guide and companion on this Interesting trip, said her grandfather had seen red with the blood of the King's guards whoso bodies were flung in to it, after tho heads of many had been cut off and set upon pikes, we walked slowly down to tho huge iron gates tbat open upon tbe Place d'Armes. It was a pleasant ride of two hours along the broad avenue from Versailles to Paris; tbe rain, stopped, aud tha sun set golden red. Old "bouses along the-road bore upon their facades tbe fading Inscription: "Llbcrte, Egalitc, Fraternite," and it was all most In teresting andnlcturesque. But what seemed most real after all, was the tact tbat it was by this samo long Avenue de Paris a seven hours' vra Dolorosa to them that the King and Queen, and tbe little dauphin, who was crying with hunger, surrounded by a savage mob bearing tbe beads of their defenders upon pikes, returnod prisoners to the capi tal, which none of tbem lelt alive. . Paws, Dec 18. A PrrrsBuna Gicl. Its Persistence Is Suspicious. Boston Herald, If Tamtnitny doesn't stop saying it doesn't want anything from President Cleveland, some peoplo will begin to doubt It, CURIOUS CONDENSATIONS. East India gives us guttapercha. Seven hundred Columbus biographies are extant. The fly -honeysuckle came from South Africa in 1752. New York City lays-claim-to Aver 00 womea "bicycle riders. In China every villagiS has its theater; every city has severaL Catherine de Medici imported muffs into Frames from Italy. Pork was the most highly esteemed flesh at tbe Soman table. The telephone has been known in In dia for thousands of year's. Many raits of armor worn in tbe four teenth century weighed 17j pounds each. Boman ladies dress their locks in eight different styles with numberless vari ations. Sparkling chaTflpajjnB -ras the discov ery -or .Petrns Perlgnan, a jraonk, who died in 1715. The shield of Hector, -when slung at his back in walking, covered tbe body from neck to heel. Four-fifths of the engines now working in tbe world have been constructed during the last 2Syears. Among tbe French dainties of the fifteenth century were fried loeches and bashed porpoise. The Union Pacific has IS long and a great nnmber of short tunnels, tbe aggre gate length being 6,000 feet. During last year the number of electric railways increased from 033 to 469. tbo capi tal stock :rom $155,0S7,lT3 to $205,870,000, and tbe mileage from 3,916 to 5,1(6 miles. It is reported tbat there is a coal famine In South Dakota, and the farmers of that State have "been compelled to resort to primitive fuel in tbe shape or twisted hay. A hay saver, consisting bf a three-sided device which enables tbo horse to Insert bis head into the manger, but does not permit any lateral movement of It, is a late inven tion. The stewards of St. Nicholas Society, New York, have an annual "testing dinner" prior to each regular annual dinner in order to decide upon the catererwriom the society shall patronize. Four thousand new postoffices were established during the past year, and 537,6(6 unmaflablo lettors poured in the bonces, 32, 612 of them wholly without any outside sign, symbol or address. Our boldest bridge jumpers were out done by a Sam Patch of tbe middle ages, tho Austrian Knight Harms, wlto survived a leap from tbe top of a cliff to the valley of the Zohoppan river, a vertil-al distance of (00 feet. x In England, Prance, Germany and Bel gium tbe nnmber of births per thousand of population is steadily lalling. The rate of decrease is slower in some of these coun tries, but is marked in all. All the gold in the world not counting that still in a virgin state) would not make a block of more than 613 cubio yards. A cubo of the above dimensions could be put in a room 21 feet each way. Dr. Bicbardson, an English physician, who has investigated the matter, states tbat the men who are employed in the Paris sewers are as healthy as the average person, and no other 800 men ia that city are so free iroin zymotic diseases. A new genus and species of blind cave salamander is reported by Mr. LSteinger in the "Proceedings of the United States No tional Museum." The discovery of such an animal in North America is regarded by the writer as a most Important and interesting event. Tbe best lighted city in Europe is Milan. American machinery only is em ployed in its two central stations. A curious feature of tho svstem of distribution is tbat tbe wires, Instead of being carried on poles, are suspended from the brackets nnder tha eaves of the houses. Tbe State of Oregon has 36 nurseries, covering 1,576 acres and containing about 9,COO,C00 young trees, and orcbardists have npward of 100,000 acr03 of growing trees. One-half or this acreage is In prunes, one fourth In apples, one-tntU in apples, and tbo remainder in various kinds of fruits. Tt is reported that tbe telephone has been put to a new use at San Leandro, CaL According to the authority, a man who is afflicted with leprosy was placed in a cabin away from the hospital. A friend of bis bad a telephone put In tbe cabin and connected with tbe hospital, thus enabling the patient to converse with his friends and acquaint ances. The popular idea that water is purified by freezing baa been again disproved by re cent careful experiments, which show that tbe average amount or impurity retained by the ice is 84. per cent ot organic matter and 2L2 per cent of inorganic matter. As organic matter is the more objectionable of tbe two, the case is worse than was formerly supposed. The waters of the oceans and seas of our globe bold not less than 60,000,000,000,000. 000 tons or salt in suspension. If these fig ures are correct and the ocean should be en tirely dried up. there would be a deposit of salt 450 deep over every foot or tbe great basin, irtakon out and spread upon what is no w dry land it would give usa salt cover ing nearly 1,500 feet thick. Prof. Virchow has analyzed "hunger brod," the bread eaten by tbe peasantry la the famine-stricken districts of Russia, and finds that it is much mare nutritious than tbe rye bread mado in Germany. The latter, according to an analysis of bread baked ia Berlin, contains but 6.04 percent of albumen and 0 43 per cent ot fat, while the "hunger brod" contains 11.73 per cent of albumen and 3.79 of fat. The severity of British justice was well illustrated at Northampton the other day, whore a trial for murder was in progress. The Jury having been permitted to partake of a lunch in their room, one of tbeir num ber took this opportunity to step out aud post a letter. The Jude. bearing or this, promptly gave the offending Juror a strong lecture and fined him SUO. He dismissed the jury, and a now one was impanelled. In Shakespeare's day there was no scen ery used on tbe stage; the only decorations were tapestries and curtains. In those days the actors and actresses had to do more than merely repeat their lineo: they had to supply tba scenia effect what little there was as w ell as the action of the performance. They had no races with real horses and a moving Eanorama, nor any saw mill, with a real uzz saw and real logs, to fall back upon. The professors in tbe colleges of Spain are miserably underpaid, often, receiving no mora tban $M3 per year. They endeavor to make a small profit out of tbeir textbooks, each requiring his own book to be used. These books are frequently In manuscript, or. If printed, aro sold at unusual prices. The students, also poor, resort In conse quence to second-band shoDS and the annual lair, where a specialty Is made of collegia's textbooks. OKIGINAL AND JOCOSE. nzRE'a to tot. "With my glass filled up to thervcry brio. With good old Tom and Jerry, I drink and wish you every one. X Christmas rich and merry. A WASTE. a charitably inclined woman. (!She was Her dally work consisted In going around to tbe different merchant and families soliciting aid for tbe poor. Tbe other day she cailea on a Grantstreel coal dealer, and asked for Christmas coal for sweet charity's sake. "Madam," said the dealer. "lam very sorry, but 1 think I have done my share for one year, at least, though, to be sure, it did but little good. This morning I sent a CO-busbel load to a poor fam ily near the Point, and not a lump of It reached tbem." "Was it stolen?" "No : It met with an accident. It xot away from the yard all right, and started down Diamond afiej. passed Smlthfleld street In good condition, and a little while after turned Into Wood: went on down past Fourth, Tnlrd, Second and First ave nues, and ril be banged, if It didn't turn Into Water and, ran in to tbe river." BURPRXSETA I kind of knew what presents I Wonld get en Christmas morn. I knew 'twould be some Jewelery, My person to adorn. T(t when received surprised was I To,altImnst confess; I found tbe price a hundred was. Ana I expected less. . ( . . . . ' .'.'. 'i sSSrr. K !