X THESCRANTOft TRIBUNE-SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1900, :KKK;Kn:5aTKUKKK S v Eg The World ;::K:;K;?K:;u:K;c:;ni:K;:y; At.THOt'Glt not much lias been hcaid during tlio week of the rumored base ball team for .Scranton this season, still thu men who are engineering the movement huvu been at work quietly itnd energetically the past two weeks. unci In a modest way "sawing wood." Three thousand dollars is desired to launch a team, and subscriptions have been gathered and promised which al most approximates the amount. Great Interest Is felt In the Idea of a local nine, and with liberal manage ment and a. team of hard working players theic Is no reason why base ball In Scranton should not be a suc cess this year. Sporting Squibs. JEHOMR KKOQK, the gieat Sn an ion pool player, Is likely to leave the city and settle lu lluffalo. This li what the Huffalo Enquirer has to sav about his contemplated move: "Jerome Keogh, the Scranton pool player, noted all over the sporting world as one of tin best experts at thu cue and ball name, Iuih decided after watching the ciowds at the local pool tournament and the Interest In the game here that Buffalo is Just about the city for him and In the futuie ho will wilte Huffalo. N. Y., after his name, as he w 111 become u full-fledged cltlen of the Queen City of the Lake's." Ned Ilanlon, the world Inmous oars man, Is getting tiled of his quiet, civil ian life, and has come out with a io ply to the challenge of the champion oarsman of London, Tom Sullivan, and accepts It. Hunlnn, at one time, was as much a celelnltv as Jeffries, Shar key or any ilstle star of the present day, but It seems that rowing Is now n dead spoi t and Ilanlon. anyway, seems a bit antiquated to try his luck at the aquatic pastime. Christy MatlhewMn, the Kactor) vllle. boy who forme! ly used to visit Scran ton, while plavlng full back on the Keystone Academy team, and who Is now at Pucknell, is certainly one ot the finest all aiound athletes in the college world. Mis work on the Huck nell foot ball eleven last season was magnlllcent. his woik In the game with the University of Pennsylvania, when he kicked two goals from the field, being especially good. Matthew son also plays on the basket ball team and is captain of the base ball nine. He Is a splendid pitcher and a good batter, and he Is sure to pi ?ve a big success on the collegiate diamond. Tn e) cling circles the most talked of cent at piesent Is the League ot American Wheelmen's national meet this summer In Milwaukee. This cltv has been requesting the honor of the meet for the past two years, and it is beyond doubt that the citizens will do their best this summer to make the convention a big success. Among the Pugs. WEDNESDAY night the rooms of the Htoadway Athletic club, in New Yoik, will be the scene of a benefit given Geoige Dixon, the now dethroned king of featherweights. Nearly all the big (Ighteis in the pio fesslon haw volunteeied their seiUces to make the affair a success, and some of the bouts will be worth going a good distance to see. Dixon deserves a benefit. A man who can fight In 110 bouts and only lose six of them Is cer tainly a gteat tighter, and worthy of Inning- something to show as a icsult of his long cuieer. Sailor Tom Slmikey took a little e eiclsp last week when he donned the mitts, at Detiolt, with Jim Jeffords, the herculean Callfornlan, who has done nothing but get thrashed since ho budded out as an nsphant for cham pionship honors. The bout was to go ten rounds, but In the second Sharkey managed to put his big opponent to sleep, and bring the mill to an abrupt close. This man Jeffords has certainly proved the most colossal take of any boxer that has foisted himself on the public slnco the arrival of the giant Irishman from Dublin, a few months ago, whom Peter Maher sent to grass in ono round with one blow of his good arm. Jeffords was heralded as a sec ond Jeffries, another "young Lochlnvar, coma out of the West." but he has been Knocked out and defeated with a surprising regularity. Sharkey seems to have gone Into the ring with him, only as a sort of gentle exercise, but It is to be feared that his muscles will grow flabby if that Is the only sort of exercise ho indulges In. Strikes and Spares. NOT COUNTING last evening's bowl ing contest, up to that time the teams in ...e local bowling league stand as follows in regard to number of games won: Won. Lost. Backus club 2 0 West End club 1 Elks' club i i Bicycle club o 3 The blcvcle club has not stiuck Its proper pace so far, and has also been handicapped by Captain Wat dell being laid off in ono game and Herman IMtz in two. Van Wormer. who has been put on the team, has been doing splen did work, however, and will probably play regulatly now. Warden made thej club's highest scote so far In the series with 194, but Worden has done the uniformly best work. Charles AVelch- el has been the only Elk to bowl his game, while on the other two teams nearly all the men have now struck their pace and are bowling In good style, Theie seems an odd fatality about the number 211! In local bowling elides. Although In mere piactlce and ordin ary games 229, 230, 240 and 250 scores are made, (whlle not plentifully, still occasionally, In the match games 212 is the highest that any of the tollers seems able to go. Wright, of the Wilkes-Bane West End team, is high man so far In the tournament, with the 212 he bowled dU The Best Washing Powder Iraml1 SHIHsVi KMXK of Sport. H Feb. 9 on the Elk alleys. In 11 match played between the same teams on the Elk alleys before the league was form ed, both Hartl and Madcnspacher bowled 212. In another game "Doc" wardell, of the Blcvcle club, scoied 212, and In jet another Will Welchel and Hopkins, of the Backus club, ench made 212. Base Ball Brevities. THE 1'UETTIEST 'play I ever saw made In a game?" said tho short legged base ball rooter to his companion with De Wolf Hopper ex tremities. "Well, that's a pretty haul question to answer off-hand. 1 think, though, It happened In New York some time ago, when the team that was Justly called the 'Giants' was playing St. Louis. It was In the seventh Inn ing, which period of the game, as you know, has fiom time immemorial been consldeied New York's Jonah Inning. "Two men got on bases, there was one man out and New Yoik was one 1 tin to the good. One of the lit owns was on third nnd the other on second, nnu even a long fly to the outfield was good for one run. Big Roger Connor stepped to the bat and waited till he got one wheie he wanted It. Then he smashed at It and, gracious heavens! how that ball did go. u sailed wav out Into (entei Held and eeiybody thought it wits good for a homer at least. Van Haltren was pla)lng center for New Yoik and the time and the moment ho hcaid the whack of the bat, ha turned nnd ran. Van's a ptutty good spiintei, own et, )nu know, hut then he seemed to fairly fly. "He ran like the veiv biases and at last came to a stop by colliding with the fence. It didn't phase hlm.though, and he Jumped 011 the lower beam tun ning aiountl the fence, just In time to grab that ball nnd rob Hoger Connor of the best hit of the game. The man on third had traveled all the way home on the hit nnd as a icsult It was 11 double play. You needn't giln at this story, because It's an actual happen ing." "Dear me, I wusn't smiling In doubt of your story, but was Just thinking of Its comparative smallness when com paied to my yarn," was the lesponse. "Just listen to this. It happened at Hlnghamtou several ears ago, when Hilly Keeler, in '97 and '98 premier batsman of the National league, and one of the most clever little plaveis that ner ran the bases, was playing base on the Parlor Cltv team. Billy hadn't attained the prornlnence th-u as an outfielder that he has since ac quired, but was considered an exceed ingly clever little inflelder. "Well, to icsume, In this game, I thlnK It was with Elmira, Keeler was playing preltv far off his bag when ono of the opposing batsmen was up and was looking out for a bunt. Con traiy to his expectations, however, the iiattcr banged away at the leather and inlsed a very high foul. 'It was the catcher's ball and he snatched off his mask and lloundeted around with the sun In his ees trying to locate the ball. Keeler, howevir, lushed down to the spot, and Just as the ball was descending' stood behind the catcher. All this, of couise. was done twice as fast as 1 can tell inn and only took up a few seconds. Some how or other Keeler must have cot It Into his head that the catcher was go ing to drop that ball and sine enough i.e did. "It was a ciltical hinctuie and thu big ciowd of spectators gave the open ing notes ot a howl of dlsmav that was turned into one of rapture, for lit tle Keeler 1 cached down and giabbed that ball as It slid thiough the catch er's mlt, when it was about half a foot from the ground. "It was tho pettiest play ever seen on those grounds and I believe as fancy a one as ever occuned on any diamond. Tne crowd fairly went wild and Keeler owned BInghamton from that day on. Now, what do juti think of that story?" "Tho chinks tne on me," answered the shott-legged crank, simply. President Die) fuss, ()f the re-oigau-lzed Pittsbutg Base Ball team. Is like tho old wman who "lived in the bhoe nnd had so many children," etc. In that he has so many steillng base ball play ers on hund that he doesn't know Just how to utilize them. For first base he has Kelly, who put up such an excel lent game at Louisville last season, and Frank Dillon, who wound up the sea son with last year's Pirates Jn a blaze of glory, and who plaved the earlier part of the season in Scranton with the late lamented Scranton Atlantic i-eague team. It Is likelv, however, that neither of these men will be lo rated at the Hist bag, as efforts nie being made to land big Dan McGann, last year the Senator's first baseman. The Philadelphia management Is ulso trjlng to secuiu the ex-Toronto player, as he is badly needed In the Phillies' intleld. With McQann on first, Lajole on second, Cioss at short and Lauder on thlid, piospects look blight for the Quaker City making a good bid for the pennant, and, In fact, theie nie few reasons as to whv they should not come In well In the lead. Every man on the team, with thu pos sible exception of doss, is a let title batter, even the catcheis banging the ball out way oei the .SuO maik. The men 11111 the bases well and aie the most gentlemanly ciowd or plujers In the league. A novel base bull game was played at Duquesne (iaiden, I'lttsbuig, Thuis day night between two local amateur teams, the diamond used being tho icy skating link of the place. The game was a modification of Indoor basu ball, a large ball and small bat being used. The playeis woie shoes sonmwhut like the toot-gear worn by foot ball playeis, not being spiked, but having cleats on them. The rofeiee of the con test was Bubo Maddell, one of Pitts burg's pitchers, who last year twilled such a phenomenal game for Louis ville. He won neaily all the games he pitched and in ono contest made tho sti Ike-out record of the season for the National league. Base ball leaders at Haivard 111 e al ready booming the national game nnd prospectB look bright for a strong team to represent the crimson this vear. Great confidence is felt In "Bill" Ueld, the hard hitting catcher, who, captains this year's nine and both his base ba'l and foot ball piowess have made him one of the most popular athletes that ever played at Harvard. The team will be coached by Ted Lewis, the Boston pitcher, who will look after the Inter ests of tho whole team, but will espe cially keep his aye on the pitchers. Things nro looking dark for the American association, nnd the storm clouds which have been hovering around It ever since the league was first suggested have burst with duo ef fect. Tho leaders in tho movement, however, are making noble efforts to keep It under way, and Anson, Qulnn and JIcGraw are working hunt in It; Interests. Philadelphia Is the "bete noli" of tho association and it all doubt was dispelled concerning the disposi tion of the Quaker City franchise the new league would be almost a ceitalri project. MR. LATHROPE SELECTED He Has Been Put At the Head of the New Philanthropic Move ment at Princeton. It will Interest Scianton people to know that Harrv Lathrope, of this city, a member of the Princeton ulas of 1901, has been selected as chief of the department of men In the new Phllanthioplc movement lately organ ized ut Princeton. It will be remembered that ex-PresI-dent Qrover Cleveland some years ago purchased a tract of land near Pilnce ton, over w hlch he established a theo logical student, by the name of Vioone, as supeilntelident of the farm, which was to bo used for the benefit of waifs and homeless boys In general. The ex periment, which attracted much atten tion at the beginning, has been con ducted with great success, many boys from the slums of New York finding a pleasant home theie, and proving lo the satisfaction of the promoters In the scheme that the criminal classes of the future will be matoi tally depleted If the poor, wretched boys of the "under sldfe" aie helped out of their environment. Not only have thu lesults of the plan had a marked success lu the benefit to the boys, but It has pioved a good In vestment financially, as the land has been worked accoidlng to the latest scientific methods, und the training le celved by tho beneficiaries has In lt turn seived to'pioduce a fair Income for the ownets. This, of course, has been expended In improvements upon tho property. It Is now pioposed to extend this work in various dhectlons. The col lege settlement plan Is not to be adopt ed so much as a practical mission with a general headqu.nters modeled some what after plans put sued at Yale and the University of Pennsjlvanlir. President nnd Mis. Cleveland ate among the otlglnators and most earn est suppotteis. Walter A. Wyckoff, whose book, "Thu AVorkcrs," brought out In serial form, made such a sen sation, as he had personally gathered the material while serving In the vari ous capacities he described, was the prime mover In the Princeton mission scheme. He does not approve of "slum ming," according to the model n Idea oC that term, but believes In bringing the slums to the mission In a way of his own. This Is to directly Influence the lives of poor men and boys. They will be provided with occupation and lecre atlon for the employment of their even ings and a club house has already been fitted out with Improvements. Professor Wyckoff will be the chief adviser, and T. S. Evans, secietary of the Young Men's Chtlstlan association, will direct the details. Mr. Latin ope is to hae entire charge of the men, whll Arthur Poe, the famous foot ball playct, will conduct the gymnasium for the boys. Mr. Lathi ope Is veiv ptomlnent In many lespeets in Piiiuiton college life. He Is Ruder of the University Gle. dub, is an athlete and, beyond all this, Is fotemost as an eponelit of leligious and 1n01.il life In the unlveislty. thin demonstrating to the c nnti.it y the often quoted axiom that a pious hoy Is .1 cad In college. Ills 1 elision Is of the active, healthy type that has a ti emend ous moral influence over the mass of men who are apt lo imitate a popular leader. It Is understood that Mr. Lathi opu Iris lefused n proposition to accept a peimanent position In connection with the new phllanthioplc movement at Princeton, but that he will be actively engnged In Its Interests dining the te-muindci- of his stay. At piesent Mr Lathi ope is 111 and unable to plan for the piospeetlve work of the mission. SHIFTING STEAL HOURS. When Dinner Was Served at Nine in the Morning. Man Is not less a gieguilous than 1111 omniveious animal, and oiiu of his eaillest developments as a social bclu was the habit of dining In company. When his dinner depended mainly on the spoils of the chase thu hunter made It as and when he could, being only too happy to compound with his necessities on that footing. But as society took fotm and Ideas atose, men began to realize the convenience und even the obligation of a fixed hour. But this has always shown the most accommodating splilt. It has adapted itself to thu demands of piogiess and the behests of fashion; It has, In fact, yielded to the necessities and even the whims of society in all ages. Now, thu woid "dinner" Is ethnolo gic ally obscute, and has been eiy loosely applied. Whatever It once de noted, It now means our principal meal; and while doctots generally aro disposed to think that It is partaken of at too late an hour, the investigators of ancient manners point to thu fact that mediaeval Eutope "dined" ut or 10 in the mottling. The hour for taking tho meal spuken of In the old tecotds as "dlmiei" has changed fiom a in the motnlng till about 1 p. m while the so-called "supper1 time shows a similar vaila tlon in having shifted fiom 4 In th iifteinoon to 8 or U o'clock in the even ing. Dinner at 12 und supper at 4 was the custom under tho eatllet Tudois, whllu lu the telgn ot Elizabeth these meals were severally udvanced to 11 a. 111. and 5 In thu afternoon. This telattve pio giesslon continued, and lu the time ot Chailes II, dinner was taken at 12 or 1, and supper at 7 or h o'clock. In the telgn of Anne the "dlnnet" assumed something of Its modem sig nificance. Attention began to be con centtated upon It, and supper to play a less important pail. Thu foimer still continued to get later, und finally sup per wni pushed over thu "edge of the night." With the accession of the house of Biunswlck, "dinner" became, In fact, tho pilnclpal meal of the day. Four o'clock was the court hour In the earlier part of Oeoigo JH.'a long reign, while dutlng tho regenc-y and telgn of his successor it crept gtndually omvaid to C. William IV. left It at 7, and soon after tho queen's accession 8 o'clock was tegarded as the "correct" time. The doctors protested, but fashion pre vailed. What It may be n the twentieth cen tury is u forecast not likely to bo ven tured on. NOTES OF. INTEREST FROM WASHINGTON THE FINANCIAL QUESTION PER MANENTLY SETTLED. A Republican Congress and the Elec tion of Mr, McKlnley Also As suied What the Financial Bill Means Pueito Rlcan Question Will Be of Much Importance The Snake Story Falls to Frighten Ap plicants for Position in the Census Office General Gordon's Cure for Sectionalism. Special to the Scranton Tribune. Washington, D. C, Feb. 21. The financial question Is permanently set tled this time. The financial bill Is in conference, but tho end Is in sight. For all practical purposes the election of McKlnley and a Republican con gress, following the repeal of the Sher man law, disposed of the question as a political Issue. But there vvete peo ple with vagurles who Imagined that they believed lu the possibility of free silver through some Impossible mishap In the election of a Populist president. The election of McKlnley was a tri umph for common honesty nnd sound business pilnclples In the ndmlnlstin tlon of the government's fiscal obliga tions. The business men of the coun try elected Mr. MvKlnley and empha sized the vlctoiy bv the election of a llepubllc.iu congress. When honest business methods means general pros perity It Is well enough to accept lt Judgment and uwalt further results. Exactly that thing has been done In the pending financial legislation of this congress. The count y Is blessed with prosperous conditions. It Is the icsult of Republican poli cies business methods. T uut these conditions hevond the reach of the Popullstlc agitator, whose pxcupp for eltonce Is the cieatlon ot social, po litical and financial chaos In our do mestic economy, Is the main object of the Hepubllcan flnanclnl bill. When It 'becomes n law- nothing short of a French levolutlon can change It. Be fore that ein Is reached the country will have settled down to honest busl-iief-. methods, and the evangelist w ho Is now turning the country and talk ing everv hour In the day and every day in the week, desecrating Lincoln's memory by living to fool the plain people of the countiy by glittering and meaningless platitudes and hand-me-down sophlstiles, will be without occupation. Exit Bryan. It will b the last of him and of the hybrid ag gregation known as the Democratic opposition. WHAT THE FINANCIAL BILL MEANS. It means moie than the establish ment of the gold standaid. It Is more than nffirinatlve legislation. It means, according to the hlrhest fiscal authoi lty, an addition of moie than sltv million of dollnis to the genoi.il cir culation. And away be.voml that it means confidence. Theie Is 'no longer anv dl-pute about what ".specie" or "coin" meatus. The word Is gold In big letteis And people who know troie about finance In one second than 1 could find out by a year of Indus ttlotis application tdl me th't gold menus the nifliinv nf elm w.i.M ,m.i that eveiy time It fin 1- Its wav Into our laws it means the ttluinph of AmeilcMii btiFlnc"-' methods and the peiuianeiit gtovv tit or our nuiiitiy In the comiui'trial wot Id. That once whs the "Yankee of It." now It l.s the hon est, plain Amei Ii an way. When one wants advice In financial matters, one Is not apt to go to the man or party who lives a hand-to-mouth exblciiio He Is Hush today, but it muy be .1 flee soup-house tomonow. That fel low Is an alintchlst, not because he would destioy thu government, or tutlilcs,sy tear down any ot its Insti tutions. He l simply a new dispen sation Demoeiat, moused to Hie vital vlitue ol self-piesei vatlnn. It Is a harmless f.uullni. It was never In tended that such i-entlmeiils should domln ite the iiieatcst nation and the giandest tepubllc on eaith THE 1'OltTO UICA.V QUESTION It Is un Impoitant question because It Involves a constitutional Interpi ela tion, but mainly because it inoppor tunely comes up in a presidential election .vear. Theie l, too, an up patent vexation lu the determination or a taillt pulley. The picsldent ha 11 commended flee trade, because af ter thu moat cuietul and exacting in vestigation the conclusion has been reached that Potto Illcan pioduct.s will not mateilally compete with Amei lean pieiducts. But the small politician steps to the front and with an array of figures nnd statistics that bewildeis and appalls ptoves that the tobocco grower nnd sugar beet gioweis will bo ruined unci begg.ucd ly the ftee admission of Porto Illcan pioducts. And tho howl comes chiefly fiom the politicians In conguss who denounced the president as a coward because ho did not pteclpltate the war with Spain months befoie the Amei lean ultima tum was announced. Public clamor has done its woik In the usual way. The majoilty of the wa and means committee accepted the president's recommendations and ngtced that the Ameilcnn policy of fair play was the logical and honest thing 10 do In deal ing with the Pen to Ileitis. Hut a piislelentlal election year makes a Kieat lot of ellffeteiicv as to whose o Is goted. ATMOSPHERE ' OF CONTENTION Theie has been moie talk about the constitution in this eongiesfi, said a veneiable new.spnper man to The Tilbune cot respondent, than at any time within the last liny je.us. and it lemlnds me, he added, of a debating society. It seems to bee thu fad. It Is twisted und toi tured, construed to suit tin uigument or condemned for its sllemce. It is ptotest or pialse, and le calls Mi. Lincoln's udvleo to 11 oung luwjer. "If you have a good case In law," sild tho gie.it man of the peo ple, "talk to thu Judge; If you havo n goud cose In fact, talk to the Jury; but If you have no case at all abuse the lawyei.s on the other side" That Is osactly what tho Demociats ato doing In their discussion of our fuiclgu poli cy. In the most elaborate, eutldlte speech that is iniiele the a Is a panto mime exhibition of constitutional in clination, but a single cheer lands the fienzicd orator on both feet In the center aisle and with pugilistic demon strntlou ho pummels mid mangles, ttbuseH and denounces the Hepubllcan part. Tho result is a gieat, sldo-spllt-tlng laugh on the Republican side. It has become n standing Joke. And af ter his ebulltlon has subsided tho ora , torlcul Democrat sneuks across the Stop "yOU will surely get thinner and thinner, until at last you are starved to death. Stop feeding your hair and it will starve. - Then it falls out,' turns Jray, keeps short and rough. Feed it with Ayer's Hair Vigor and it ' can't keep from growing. It stops falling out, too; and becomes so ft and glossy. Always Restores Color to Gray Hair " A year ago my hair was coming out very fast. I bought a bottle of Ayer's Hair Vigor to stop this. It not only stopped the falling of my hair, but made it grow very rapidly, until now it is 4; inches in length and very thick." Mrs. A. Boydston, Atchison, Kan. July 25, j 899. Write the Doctor If )ou !o not obtain all the ben efits joj dedre from the me of the Vigor, write t!ic Doctor about it. He wi'.l tc'l jcj jut the right thing to do, ailwi't lend )oi hit book en the Ha'r and Scalp if jou re quest it. Addrcsi, Dr. J. C. Aviie, Lowell, Mast. ra'!dlEi9MA$aiMra9IHHEiflHliM alse with 11 dry giln on his face sas to the (list Republican he encounteis, "Vou fellows undei stand me; of cours-e you Know I didn't mean all that I sttlil The tt tit Ii Is I rather like you fellows, becaus' jnu have got the pluck to Mtund no in what .vou think N right, iiiity or no put " II Is not an im-ual thing In the house. Hut th le aie congicssi'.- mid e ougieises. What on eu th nosMsed the Daugh ters of the Amei lean Itevo'uilon to lej-ohi' Itself Into 11 congress was haul to unele istund at til Mt, but ubseiueut piocetMllngs makes it pcifectlv plain. Tlie Daughtei.s ate in ni'Sfiun hen this week, the ninth annual tongiess be gan yi'steielav. Theie Is a big tight on hand over the Uncage ijucxtloii ami the new tieatv with (lie.it l'.iltaln conicinlng the Xlcatugimn canal. Thin coni'iivs will leitalnly be deeply In tel istlnvr, and it woman Is "the com ing man." the avenge man would pre fer the thotough-bieel as his successor in the political ateiiu. now Yor sni:, xow vou do.vt That's the status nf the Quay' case after the p.irllamentaiy vvniugle In the senate today. Tor absolute peifeetlon ot vagueness us to telling Just wheie the ease stands or whethet It stands at nil or not icaills the itistle urchin's 1 espouse to u wayfurei'.s leeiuest to be shown the light way to a ceitaln place. "We'll eu go up that hill to the lop, then jou go thtee IooKh be yond that, then jou cio.ss the biook, then you tuin tight or left I don't bMidly remember which then jou go two moie looks nnd a peep, tuin aiound HI Jones's red bain, and then somebody'll tell you the test of the vu" It Is plain that the opposition is whipped on a squau vote In the m-ii-ate and all this delay and dust and fog and dodging simplj- meant) nn ef tott to defer action on the case until the next session of tongiess. Whether this cowardly way of sneaking nut of a whipping will pievall or nut lemalns to be vee.11. 1'OOIt WOMAN! It Is no inflection on a woman's cotii age to say that she will go Into a con niption fit over a .snake or an Innocent, row ut dry little mouse, she Just can't help It. In his great lectuiu on "the lust dajs of the confederacy" Genei.il Uoidein telated 1111 Incident which u oven In a tellcltlous way how the biavest woman 011 earth will scieech over a mouso anil inn, with uplifted skills, for her -veiy life. (Senetal Gor don's devoted little wife, "one of the sweetest and biavest women on eaith," he sajs. went with him to the wai. Sim was by his side tluoughout that teulllc war fiom ISiit to Ifcti.'. Often she was only kept fiom thu thickest of tho buttlo by the physical foice of the sol dlei.s who loved and w 01 shipped her. Hut at Winchester, Vu., she esc aped their vigilance-. .Sheildaii's dashing Hoops had ended their famous valley lido and was thundeiln; thiough the stieets of that Hfeautlful valley town. Tho Intiepld little Geoigla woman was Jn tho hottest of that day's memorable battle. On the stieets she was neeii waving the Southern Hag ami cheeiing tlio Southern boys, urging thtui to stand against Sheildan's Inlslstlbln legion. Sho faced tho shower of death and flte without flinching, and. jet said (icncial Got don, "I huvu known this buive Ilt tlu woman to tun up thiee flights of stalls from a nioiihc." Somebody who hcutd tho lecture must be lespoustble for the Census building snake stoiy. Hoinebodj', tho stoij goes, has dis covered a snako colonj under the now census building, Tho length, color, size and varletj' of the teptlles ute given with great particularly. "Tlio hissing sound ' und ull that Is mentioned. It Is a mean, cowardly attempt to f tighten Eating! 7 :S1 0 I the thousand or moie deserving women who nie seeking emplojment In the Census Buu'.iu. Census woik Is par ticulate In "woman's sphute" and theiH aie one thousand applicants for every place lu the Tim call. So gte.tt was the tush toi appoint ments a ilgld civil sei v ice examination was lesoitcd to as the one effectual way of stopping it. It didn't woik. The number of ap plicants, it seems, onll In le.isiel 1 was said 'y the census ottithiW that meiit, not political Inllllenee. would only count in uiakiiii; appointments. The bate mention of a civil setvice examination thtows the average wo man lu to a state of consternation and hjsteiks, and Is moie dieaelcel than shot 01 mice. Ami so the snake stoiy h is been put out 11s a last resort. How It will constinlii leinulns to be se.cn, but It was a mean thing to do, and if any able-bodied man Is at the bottom of It be ought to be plac.11 ded as a Uoacon Miietoi Poor woman' When misfortune 1 ompels her to become an ofllce-seek-i't her lot Is not to be eriv led She then gets her til Mt teul taste of tiouble and teallzes fully the bitterness of disap pointment. THH LAST DAYS OP Till. CON- ki:i)i:hacv. It would tin 111 theheait of eveiy true American to hear General Goidon on this subject. Then is no better, no moie jiattlotic, no mine effective curj for sectionalism. It bteathe.s tho true American spirit und such deliverances coming fiom one of the gieat lighters In our civil conflict, and one of tho most distinguished citizens of our 1 ('-united counttj-, dooms Inevitably nil the ran cor ami bad passion gt owing out of that disaslious war to a certain and lesunectlonless death. The lecture, deliver ed In the Congregatlonallst rhuich In this city lust week, was an Impressive demonsttatlon of this pio phetlc 11 vet ment. There Is u .sttong New Kuglnud element and a vety pro nounced Grand Aimy sentiment In the congiegatlon. Not long ago the' pastor, (not Dr. Newman the piesent incumbent), tilled the grout edifice until there wai not "standing loom." He Is ,1 gieat preacher of gio.it pow er and a divine of eminent distinction. He filled the 1 hutch with people eager to hear 11 stinging, evuspeiatlng, paitisau ami sectional discussion fiom the pulpit. Hven those who differed fiom him and who vehement!) piotestcd against political discussion in the pulpit as a deseciatlon listened spell-bound under his luatchli'ss eloiiuence and stltilng iheloih. A godly, blg-heaited, docile, kindly man In Dr. Newman, siimcdcd the gieat pulpit oiator. He pii'iiehes peace and good will. He pleaches to gieat audiences, com posed of people- who go to chuich to hear the woid of God and not the ihetoiic of a sensational expounder of sectional politics Ilcciiulug to General Goidon he Minted an incident that happened at Gettysbuig, which made the sympathetic! audience sob and laugh aiul iheer by tuins. Killing over tlie Held when the (list da)V battle wus being stubbornly fought, Ijlng on the ground with his. face expeued to the blazing July sun, he discovered Major Getnrul Hallow of the Union foices. Attiacted by his uniform h dismounted, administered the contents of his canteen and hud him lemoved to u mar by shade. General 11 11 low, 4t beenicd, was shut to tlio death. At most, thought thu luave South erner, ho could live only a few minutes, About to leave) him, for the battle was still In piogiess, Genet nl Harlow opened his eyes, motioned to his Inside coat pocket, and theie Genet nl Gordon found a package of letters fiom the bravo - , , , "3 7w man's wife. At that moment his speech leturned to him and his dying teeniest was that Gencial Gordon should com municate with his wife who was then at Genetal .Meade's lieadquai ters. "Tell my wife," he said, "that 1 died .1 sol ellei's death at the head of my Hoops and that my hist thoughts weie of her." Night put 1111 end to the clay's slaugh ter. ' General Gordon communicated with Mis. Hallow under a flag of truce. The Incident was almost forgotten, when later In the night n 01 deity ap pioache'd anil announced the piesence of a lady It was .Mis. Hallow, ant accompaiiie'el by a staff officer she was clllectecl to the spot vvheto Iny the de il bodv of hei gallant soldier -hush mil. Hut he was not dead With the daw 11 ot the appio.ichlng day the battle began anew, and the Hallow incident went eiitlielv out of General Gotdon's mind. it was not uncommon. Fifteen yean later Geniral Goidon was a member of the United States senate. He was tho guest of Chuksou Potter, then a mem ber of the House, Horn New Yoik. Gen. Unilovv was also a guest. In thr couie of the dinner In talking over war Incidents ho asked Genetal Har low If ho was related to Genpral Hat low, of the Union in my, who was killed on the fiist day'a battle at Gettysbuig.' "No," replied General Hallow, " don't know of anj General Harlow who was: killed at Gettysburg. Hy the w ay Gen eial, added P.arlow, aro you related tr the Gencial Goidon Who was killed In the last d.iji of thu war at ltlchniondr Yes said Got dull, 'ho was a cousin, and bole the satna name." "My God.' exclaimed Hallow, are you the Gordon that-aved my life at Gettysburg'.'" They fell into each others arms anil sobbed and wept and laughed and hugged each other. The audience wus in tears too Turn ing to Dr. Newman, General Goidon added botto voce "a practical demon stratlon of thu doctrine of the lesiu-i rectlon," (leneial Goidon was both the light and left arm of Lee's aimy utter Stonewall Jackson's death He- Is ev eiy Inch a soldier in looks. Up lii tho seventies, hlshalr Is t.ijen blackund he Is as straljtrigs anit row. "The little wife.". p .(tftan , 3 n 1 so tendeily icf cried to In his lectin,. s, is a little bit e'n'lo'KIiiMhiriicr of two, stioiig, liand'i'TJic'.si-vfjtjr i.s who love her witli a de.vjtei"'yhi. Ii is both luie and beautifuT" P( litis).' KNIGHTS 0r MALTA. "' Pilnre of Peace 1 omrnandeiyrNnO, Knights ot Malta, of WIlhes-HaireVi -celveel a e! iss of slt)-thlW lioVlri'.sT lit Its hall, 5.1 South M.Uu Sfieet, last ev.Vn Ing. The Hist two degiCcii W,Ty wtfjked In full by the degiee t'nni u thc,iiter noon. Supper was .served, by fjpi 5 fieshment committee, nt i cejoek, 4ml sevetal songs and lecltu'.lijiis .vij'io given by members of t,b( nivmCU'i v while supper was leiii!f,.kier,pd,, aXioi' which Grand JlvcoiUi-r, Sir ncmj;.;.,i. Pleice, of Philadelphia, WliiDllilaUho higher degiecs. Several iniunbtfi s,,jij)iii uut of town coijiinandt)ile.s .vej (pres ent and received tjio hlKher dgie,es. This mukes tho second clans, tjccclved within thiee montjis, making 117 new members this i-uaiter., A t,h'Ml,ncljisi will bo leeciveil in the, ner future Th prcllinlimiy steps vvete taken fust nBht In the; way of organizltiR-.vin-niaildety lu Gl ej.it Itldge, TJiere hvo been ninny ieeiiests from that-plne-for sumo time past for the orfi3Jllzaten of a commaudery theie, 1 Antlnndte commaiulery-of tre cen tial city nominated ofuVets,' Turjyur night. Prank H. lleeset will bo the next; sir knlijlit eonimanderi u '. Mis. Dewey has a brooch ofMluntrtTiiN set hi steel fiom a Spanish vc-kI sun' at Manila. J