PERSONAL GOSSIP. The late John Gilbert, the actor, left an Stato worth $41,000. Lord Salisbury is one of the beet amateur tisnnis players in fashionable London society. It is said that Henry Irving has grown fo stout that ho lias been obliged to resort to boating. Wagner is to have a statue in Munich, built by funds obtained from ladies throughout all Germany. Barnum is counting upon the skeleton and Wde of Jumbo as one of his chief attractions m England. Paolo Tosti, the famous song composer, bfl= lately taken unto himself a wife, Mmo. Bal'li, an opera singer. i-utile Zola is opposed to tho guillotine, be cause when he was a boy he witnessed its operation and it sickened him. A monument has been erected at Gosch toen to tho memory of Louis Favre, who Rimmed the St. Gothard tunnel. Dan Lamont is at the head of a syndicate in Mew York which is gathering in the street railroads with a view of organising a trust. Tho Protestant Episcopal bishop of North pnkota is having a car mado for his official traveling. It will be both chapel and hotel. Professor Euglisch, the famous champion, la'ely played thirty games of chess simulta neously, and all were won within five hours. Mr. Kendal, the famous English actor, carries a typical English bathtub with him i)u his travels. It is rubber, and is strapped ix> his trunk while en route. , Professor Todd, of Amherst, before sailing for Africa to observe the solar eclipse, was thoroughly "coached" on the general subject qf Africa by his accomplished wife. Tho Hon. L C. Lewis, of Meridou, Conn., (las given a line new block of buildings iu that City, vulued at $73,000, to tho local City Mis sion society. Thus lie celebrated his 77th birthday anniversary. Gen. Stewart Van Ylict is tho oldest gen eral on the retired list iu the army. He is 74 years old, mid has been in the service fifty two years. He served iu the Florida and the Mexican wars and during the late reboilion. Sir Julian Pauncefote reads every day ac counts of baseball games. Ho lias not had tin opportunity yot to learn the game by ob- C vation, but ho takes a warm interest in the irt and is anxious to become an expert as a baseball crank. Dr. Aveliug, tho socialist, who visited the tJnitod Stutes not long ago and made lavish Expenditures of cash at florists', livery stables, #tc., to the scandal of some of tho weaker brethren, has lately been brought to book in point by a London type writer, to whom he owed S2O for copying. A. M. Bisbee, who arrived in Washington fecently as a delegato frdtn China to the in ternational maritime congress, is a transplant ed Yankee from Cape Cod. Ho now holds ibe rank of coast inspector iu tho imperial jnaritime customs servico of China. There qre only two officers in tho service who out rank him. Mr. Petrie, the Egyptian explorer, is de scribed us of a good height and rather slender build. His hair and coloring generally are fiark—so durk that ho is mistaken for a for eigner, which impression is aided by his sin gularly eastern cast of features. But he is English and of Scotch descent. The mode of Ufo he is life in a tent with the sand for carpet. AGE OF ANIMALS. A bear rarely exceeds 20 years. A lion has been known to live to the age of TO years. A tortoise has beca known to live to the ago of 107. A dog lives 20 years; a wolf 20; a fox 14 or 16 years. A squirrel or hare lives 7 or 8 years; rab bits 7 years. Camels sometimes live to tho age of 100. Stags are long lived. Elephants have been known to live to the great age of 400 years. A swan has attained tho ago of 200 years, febcans are long lived. Sheep seldom exceed the ago of 10, and cows live about 15 years Cuvier considers it, probable that whales sometimes live 1,000 years. Pigs have been known to live to tho age of SO years; the rhinoceros to 20 A horse has been kn.> a to live to the age of 02, but averages fro, . 20 to 80. Insects, as a general rule, are short lived, tli gh there aro a go i many exceptions to th. rule. —Mail aud Express. HOBBIES OF GREAT MEN. Grover Cleveland yearns for hard work. Henry Villard is an authority on comic Opera. Russell Sage prefers chess to the stock market. Tho historian, Bancroft, is an expert in rose culture. President Harrison collects bric-a-brac and ancient coins. Charles A Dana delights in chrysanthe mum culture. John Wanamaker's Sunday school is the apple of his eye. Joe Jefferson, the artist, encroaches on the time of Jefferson, tho actor. Mr. Gladstone chops down trees, while Bis marck prefers seitzor water. John D. Rockefeller makes a hobby of churches, especially the Baptist. Jay Gould is passionately fond of flowers; While his sou George prefers postage stamp : Collections. George W. Childs is fond of collecting nu- ' thoi's' manuscripts and tho letters of grout men.—Philadelphia Republic. ROYAL FLUSHES. The queeu of Italy has been growing stout er and stouter, much to her annoyance. Emperor William of Germany recently discharged an attendant who had been read ing a French novel. King Humbert of Italy has given fS.OOO to , tho sufferers by the recent storm in the prov ince of Cagliari, Sardinia. Speaking of Queen Victoria's literary tastes £ recent writer sayst "She still finds pleasure m Trollope's novels. Tennyson is her living Mol." The shah of Persia was so delighted with Elo performance of "Excelsior," which ho Witnessed at the Paris Eden theutro, t hat ha determined on having a representation given in his palace at Tehuran. The emperor of Russia has ordered the Mil known Russian artist, Professor llogyn wt, to point a pcture after the style of rtsliH)iano, rcprinen ting the entrance of Em j&itf Will taw Into the harbor <U lit St