The morning news. (Savannah, Ga.) 1887-1900, October 07, 1889, Page 4, Image 4
4 £|t|fiflnung Hctos Morning Nws * Building. Savannah, Ga. MOXD VT. OOTOBKR. 7. 1 **<>. ■ Register edmt the Pot; ofiler m SavamnnH. The Morning News is puDlisned overy Ist n. Mm j’esr, and is *• rrrd to suuacrlbern in the cift at K oents a week $ 1 00 a month, $5 00 tor six Booth; sod $lO 00 for on- year. * The Morning News, by mail, crm- month, $1 0$: three months. $8 50; six months. $5 00; foe year, SIOOO. nie Hording New*. by mail, six times s week Urtthoui sun. lay issue), three months. $2 00; clx months $4 00; one year $8 00. The Mornino News, Tri-Weekly, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, or Tuesdays, Thurs days and Saturdays, three months $1 26; she months $0 50; one year, $5 00. The SrxDAT News, by mail, one year. $0 00. The Weekly News oy mail, one year. $1 25. Subscriptions jwynble in advacoe Remit by postal order, check or registered letter Cur rency sent by mail at risk of renders Letters and telegrams shoul 1 be addressed “Mousing News,” Savannah, Ga. Advertising rates made known on application. The Morning News is on file at the following places, where Advertising Kates and other in formation regarding the paper can be obtained: NEW YOnK CITY— J. H. Bates, 38 Par* Row. G. P. Rowell A Cos., 10 Spruce street. W. W. Sharp A C0.. 21 Park Row. Frame Kikrnan A Cos.. 152 Broadway. Dadphy * t'o., 27 Park Place. J. W. Thompson. 39 Park Row. American Newspaper Ptbushers'Association, Potter Building. PHILADELPHIA— B. W. Aver A Son, Times Building. BOBTON -8. R. Nii.es, 256 Washington street Pettengill A Cos., 10 State street CHICAGO— Lord A Thomas, 45 Randolph street CINCINNATI — Edwin Alden Compant, 66 West Fourth street. NEW HAVF.N— The H, P. Hubbard Company. 25 Elm street ST. LOUIS— Kelson Chebman A Cos.. 1127 Pine street. ATLANTA— Morning News Bureau, 3W Whitehall street MACON — Daily Teleorapb Dmct 597 Mulberry street INDEX TO NEWj ADVERTISEMENTS. Meetings— LeKalb Lodge, No. 9, I. 0. O. F ; Georgia Historical Society. Special Notice— Kensington Lots, Lester Hubbell. Steamship Schedules— Ocean Steamship Company; Bal imore Steamship Company; General Transatlantic Company. Fall and Winter Millinery- Mrs. P. J. Golden. Cheap Column Advirtissments —H lp Wanted; E nployment Wanted; For Rant; For Bale; Strayed; Personal; Miscellaneous. It seems l.kelv that by the time of the state election in Vi ginia, republicans will have been appoin ed to nearly every post offioe in that state. And yet ilahone will be defeated. The time approaches when the “deadly car stove” will begi i to get in its work. People have been ta king about aboli -hing car stoves for quite a while, but enough of them are used to add ..orror to several more railroad accidents. It seems to be a fact that under the Georgia cigarette law iniu >rs are pro hibited from buying tobacco In a.iy form. Young farmers, vh • tuink tb it they can’t do without tobacco, might make the experi ment of raising that article. Mr. “Al” Daggett, wuo recently con tracted with the government to print postal cards, is turning oat 3,010,- 000 cards a day at his factory in Birmingham, Conn.. Mr. Wauamakor says that they are greatly superior to tnosi now in use. Geu. E. Buid Grubb, who was a Pennsyl vauiau until tne day after he accepted the republican nomination for governor of New Jersey, is maxing a tour of New Jersey, and he finds it a very interesting state. It is thought, however, that after the election he will renew his citizenship in Pona.yl- Tania. William C. You >g, of St. Louis, was en gaged to be married to Miss Je nie Baron, of the same city, but the marriage w >u’t take place. Mrs. Baron concluded that sue had better make particular inquiry con cerning the man who expected to raa ry her daughter, and as a result of her in quiries she found that Young already had • wife and two children. She gave him a public cowhiding, and it will be generally Agreed that he got what he deserved. Mr. Murat Halstead and Mr. James E. Campbell, of Oh.o, a• at dag jars’ pointi. In an op in letter Mr. H date id says that Mr. Campbell was pecuniarily interests ii u a bill hi intro lucad in co ig ess, aid Mr. Campbell says t lat Mr. clalst tad is “a liar And ad >uble liar.” Mr. Camohell is tbs democratic Candida e £o • governor, and Mr. Halstead expects t > be the republic in can didate for United States senator. Tne campaign in Oaio is becoming quite lively. Postmaster Gen ral Wanarnaker has stated once or twice teat he had no interest wortu speaki :g of in the firm of Waia inaker & Brown, and perhaps he has not. Whether he has or not, however, he should give his brother a severe lec ure for dis tributing in Texas c.rculai s in which it is staled in a facetious way that a postoffice goes with every suit of clothes sold by the firm. Tfii: is pl ainly an attempt to use tue postoffice department for tne good of a pri vate firm. Dr. Thomas Keabl >r and Miss Ida Bo >th left Wilmington, DeL, the o;her for Cali;ornia. Dr. K abler was a prominent church member iu Wilmington, and Misi Boot i is the daughter of a former pastor of the Delaware Avenue Baptist church, and a second cousin of Edwin Boat i. Their elopement has created a sensation in Wilmington, .ad Dr. Keabler is roundly denounced, as he deserves to be, for leaving behind, uuprovided for, a son and a daughter. The Washington Post believes in the spoils system, and it doesn’t mind sayi lg so. The Post makes a mistake in opposing the merit system, but perha> s it is right wuen it charges the civil service commissioners with having persi teatly violated the law which they were sworn to obey. At any rate it declares that it can prove the charge, and it asks the commissioners if they will demand an inv -stig .tion. It the i'ost has evidence to support its charge, why not publish it? The woman suffragists and m’c seam to be making any headway in New Y >rk. O the contrary, they seem to be losing ground. At the convention of the Woina .’s Suffrage p it / of that state at Sarat >ga a few days ago, less than half ad ixeu and leg ttsi a ■ •'sored to he roll call, and at a private ****‘'' . at which alo g platform wu> °ly two delegates wore presint, *' UT * *bo i did u>t raac a. mg it. A *Tu_ l/ . * w appoint iJ, hut the dslegite. *" it. Mr., IJelva A Ml jj. ' Jri -out he elected President in Building Associations. The benefits to be derived from building and l‘>an assoc.ations are a >t confined to cities. They are within the reacn of anv community, and there are a great many of them. These associations encourage the practice of saving small sums, and tbi practice leads o thrift and industry. The small savings of money malts lager amounts, which are loaned to the members of the associa.ions, who use the :uo ey thus ob tained to buy or im Drove property, the loan being secured by mortgage on the property in whl h it is invested, and being repaid, principal and Imerest, in monthly inst i Until ts within the time agreed upon. By 'he improved plan of oper .ting these associations each member of them eooner or later, if there are no bidders for the money to be loaned, is compelled to borrow at the rate of interest prevailing at the time the loan is assigned to him. By the old plan t.iere was no such c impulsion, and those who did not borrow made those who did pay a pretty heavy intere-t. The old plan was a good one for those of the associations who did not become debtors. The possible profits in building an I loan associations have attracted the attention of capitalists, and there are now nat onal and state associations, which propose to do what local associatio .8 h ive been and still aredoi g. The local associations, however, have one great advantage over the others. It is that they are managed by those who are the friends of the borrowers, and if there should come a time when the debtor members needed help to carry their loans they would, in all probability, get it, be cause the managers would be in a position to consider all tue circumstances connected with the request for assistance, and to de cide whether it would be advisable to grant it. Tuere is another thing to be said in be half of home associations. It is that their members are, as a rule, poor men, who have to practice ecouomy in order to meet their engagementi to the associations. They therefore contract the habit of saving the pennies, and grad ally they beco ue thi ifty and well-to-do members of the com munities in which they live. They becotns interes ed in promoting the prosperity of their respective communities and take a pride in assisting in making improve ments. Every town should have a building and loan association. It will benefit the t >wn in which it is, as well as those connected with it, however small its membership may be. It may he able to build only one house aye ir, but that > ill be something. VVha, it does will encourage others to make im provements, and not the least of its benefits will be the ecouomic&l habits whicn it will help to form. Mr. Parsons Talks Nonsense. Mr. Louis E. Parsons, who was one of the leaders in the movemeut to organize a white man’s Republic in party in t ie s null, and who was recently appointed district attorney for the northern district of Ala bama, snid in an interview the other day: “Give mo en ugh mo .ov and I can carry Alabama for t e republican lionet at every election, and I will do it simply by payi >g men to be honest.” The men to whom Mr. Parsons referred were the election man agers. Tula is an indirect charge that the elec tion managers in Alaba na resort to dishon est metnod* to give the election to the dem ocrats, and it was intended to apply to election ma agers in all of the southern states, as Alabama was referred to only by way of illustration. Mr. Parsons only follows the lead of northern republicans who do not think that it would be to their pa ty’s interest to ad mit that the elections ii the south are fairly conducted, and who, therefore, assert tuat there is neither a free ballot nor a fair c )unt in this sectio i. They have been making this charge for years, but when did tuey eversubs;a .tiate it? Why doesn’t. Mr. Par sons substantiate it? Tne teas mis, doubt less, that they cannot. The southern elections are fairer than tlios <in some of the nortueru states. Iu fact, they are fair elections In many local ities thee .lored people are onsiderably in tbe maj >rity, and wue i that is t ie case the republicans take it for gran ed that tne full colored vote will be cast fir the republican ticket, if it is cast at all, a id wuen t.ie re turns how the election of democrats, they as.-ert that the ■ olor.d people were pre vented from voting, or that colored v tes were not counted. They ignore the fact that quite a .umber of col .red people in the south vote the democratic ticket, and that many others remain away from the polls because they have ceased to regard the right to vote as a very groat privilege. That northern republicans kuow that col red people in the south frequently vote t ie democratic ticket volu itarily was clearly shown a few da s ago, when it was decided to send colored republican speakers to the west to try to prevent colored emi grants from tie south from aliguiug them selves with the Democratic party of that 8 action. Mr. Parsons should, and pr ibably and >es, know auother thing, viz., that southern elect o i ma age s are not to be bribed. Tht-y faithfully perfor n their duties, and if Mr. Parsons were to invite o ,e of them in.o his room, and offer him money to pursue a oeitai i course, no m tter what, in the con duc of an election, he would discover that he had made a very great mistake. It he doesn’t believe that this is true, let him try the bribery plan. A Washington special says that Put master Geneva! W t >a nakar will defer the appol itmenc of Mr. Fisl 1 ai p t.u utzr at Paila lelpuia until Past natter tiar ity’s term is aooutoat, a; ha wnhutj bsci <- sistent in his ovn home witn the rule ho ad'ptei of all i.vinf p e ileatial poit n li ters agaiust wnom no chirgos are tntdx to remain in office u itil their terns expire. T.tis is ari liculou* state neat. Tie ither day Mr. Wana nakir appiiutod fifty-three presidential put auto s, and fitty-tw > democrats were reinived simply to make room for republicans. Bus Qia/ does l’t wa it Mr. Field appointed postmaster at Philadelphia, therefore Mr. Wnna na ier i. delaying tho matter as long as possiblj in the hope teat so nettling will turn up to relieve him of embarrassmeat. Some of th > rojubii tam of iCa isas are starting a mo veins it thac ba< for it • obj jot the d>t jat of Monitor I igalU’ re-elecu >.i. They say that Ingalls has sirveJ tire* ter .ns in the 'inat and has uavsr aoc >m plisuai anything f<rt is country. This s strictly true, and it inig it bealisltia: bis course in tne Stiats ha dins harm rat ir the <go nl. Htill, Ingalls will proba bly u re-olsotei. i'ne Kns repjhlicaui eeoi to be please! With him ou account of something or other. | THE MORNING NEWS: MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1889. The World’s Fair Difficulties. The committee in New York having in charge the selection of a site for the World’s Fair thought tofat it had overcome its greates difficulty when it had c losea tie tract of laud ju-t uorth of Ce itrai Park. It appears, h iwever, that its difficulties are just beginning. A portion o:' tue tract is divided into lots, and bundrelsof po >ple have an interest in it. The majority of tie owners are willing tnat their lots shall he used for the fair, and they will not ask any compensation. There are others, however, who offer either to rent or lease their lots for sums far beyond their real value, aid not a few see n disp ised n it o permit any occupation of their lots. Of course a dozen or two lot owners can prevent the fair from occupy ing the chosen site, and it does not seem improbable that fully that many of them will regard it as their solemn duty t > do what ever they can to obstruct tle fair and dis appiint their fellow-citizens. Ii every community, whenever an enterprise of any kind is p oposed that requires the c i-opera tion of all 1 10 citize is, there are alwa s a few who insist iu pulling the wrong way. Perhaps tuey can’t nelp doing so. They are so constituted that they are not happy unless ihey play the part of obstructors an i disorganize™. There is not much reason to doubt that the fair will be iiN :w Y >rk. Chicago, -St Louis and Washingto i all have a Ivan . iges, but they have no such ones as New York. If the fair is in New York it will, in all probability, pay its expenses. If it is in any other city, it is pretty certain to be a financial failure. While the south feels very kindly to all the other cities, there is no and jubt that . 11 favors New Y irk, for tie reaun that her business relatio is are chiefly with that city, and als > became she hasex-e.leit rail and water transportation faci ities for reach ing it. The site chosen in New York is a very satisfactory one. It can be eas ly reachei from the lower part of the city, and if the fair is 1 icated up in it, tne m ia is :'o • trans porting t e people to and from it will be such as to meet all de nan Is. The Luvorne Postofflce. The order recently issued by P istmaster Ge eral Wana maker to abolish the p ist < 'fil eat Luver ie, Ala,, has not bee \ exe cuted, aid if Mr. Wanarnaker has any regard for the rig its of the people oi Luverne, or for the real facts in the case, it will not be. The dispatches stated that tho order was issued because the white p iopli of L i verne boycotted the newly appointed poitmastor, a colored manna ned G • noz. an 1 burned the huitdi ig which, with great difficulty, he had ob ained for a postofld -o. If tnis was the basis for the orde \ the Post nast -r General labor, and u ider a raisappreheusi m. The real fac.s are quite at variance wita this state ment Luverne is a town of 530 inhabit a its, nearly all of wh >m are white. It was expected that the democratic pist master would be turned out, but as there wore only a few colored people in the place, it was hoped that a w dte republican would be ap p >in ed. When Gomez was ap ointel the white people entered a digoifl-d protest. That is all they did in the matter. It is true the buildi g selected for the >ostofflca was burned, but thpre is no evidence tn t the burning was iuc -udiary. Go nez was not boycotted. He was treated very kindly by the white people, just as he had always been, and after t le bur i ing of the building a white citizen of the place offered to erect a postoffies for him on easy p .ymeuts. Gomez understood, however, that a white postmaster -vas pre ferred, aid about six weeks ago he for warded to Washington his resig latl n, whicn was not accepted. G -mez is a school teac ier, a id it is said that he has never manifested a desire to be postmaster. He says that he lines the white peoole of Luverne, and that he regardt them as his personal friends. He ia said to have tele graphs 1 to the postmaster ge eral, aski ig him not to have the order executed. The truth is tha Mr. Wana oaker should have ac -opted the resignation of Go n >z. and app >i .ted a whit< postmaster, and if a de nocrat had been selected it would have been all the better. The populati >a of Lu verne being almost exclusively white demo crats, it follows that a more satisfact >ry postmaster could be found atno g them. Mr. Wanarnaker pr desses to believe in the merit sys: em, but his course is not iu accord ance with it. A naval officer said to the New York Herald a day or two ago: "You can bet ail the mouey you have that Minister D luglass ami his white wife will never be asked to b. eikfast or dinner by officers of the Kearsarge. Tbe ni u who occupies the most e i barrasing position is Com mander Whiting. The mini-ter will, of course, invite him to dine with nun iu the c.bin, but whether Commander Whiti g will be afflicted with sea sickness on that date or not cannot be a-certained until the ship arrives at Hayti. You cannot ma,.e navy people recognize Douglass or his fa mily on a plane of social equa ity. Tney w n’t do it” The appointment of D uglass seems to have been a bad move for t e Harrison administration, although it was intended to make the colored people believe t .at the administration was very friendly to them. A fe v days ago a member of the White Man’s Republican Club of Houston. Tex s, said: “ The sout iere negro is as free to vote as you or I, but he is not relia le. He votes as often wi h the democrats as he and ies with the republic ms. He should lie disfrau cuised.” That is what it seems to be com ing to in the Republican party. As long as the negro could be depended upon to vote the epublican tic .et. no republican said a word in favor of disfranchisement, but when he began to vote the dem era tic ticket about as often as the republican ticket, then the republican leaders wondered i,' it was not a mistake to bestow upon him the right to vote. If tne negro is disfranchised, he will be disfranchised by repubi.cans. Some republicans are maxi ig a great t > do because Sun Joy is a do u ic-atic caudi da c f>r council nan in India ap >1 s a. tie election this weak. They streu ths fot that he was sa it tn th i penitentiary for election frauds, a id that he is uo v ad ana crotic ca ididate, bit h<y ignore th sf ict that he was pinions font of tae paiiteu tia y by Prsalient ifarriaon, at thi requsxt of s fine of the leading I idi ma repub icans. ll.ought to be in .he pniiteutinry now. What primped lui.aia re million is to petition fo his pardo il tVnat, prompted the Preside it to grant tue p.litionl r iese ere ques.ua. wtuou tue republicans organs rnignt consider. cusiißNr ciMMasr. That's About What They Will Do. Fro nt the Sew York World (Dem.). The republican acceshoas of congressional votes from the new states will cive mat party rop- enough wnerewitn to hang ita-lf. There is i blizzard's breath of cold comfort in tnis toougut. Unc.e Sam's Costly Peace Army. From the San Francisco Alta (Dem.). There are n ow in round numbers 484,000 pen sinners on the pension roll, ad t ey ca for an annual disbursement .>f nearly 5100.000.iWU. Now tuere ais over 800.0J0 applications for pen sions on file and unacted on in tie pension office. Should all these applications be acted on favorably, we should hare, without enlarge ment of the laws or passing the ~ropo-ed de pendent or serv.ee pension acts, a total oi 1,300,- OOJp nsioners, call ng fo an annual disburse ment of sometning like $260,000,000. Should om , oath. From the Philadelphia Recorder (Dem.). In the proposed tour of the dele ates to the Congress of American Nations the south, be yond Maryland, Kentucky and Miss uri. will be .eft out. The industrial possibilities of the s juth are rapidly being rec gn zed, and tne representatives of America i cou tries to the soutnuarJ. icopied largely by iubibi.anta own ing to tue same Latin ongm as a majority of he white (8) illation of the so it icrn s ates, would doubtless profit greatly by au oppor tunity to study the s end and economic condi tions that prevail in the gulf states. Mahone an i His Tricks. From the Boston He aid (/ad.). There is one aspect of Mahoneism which has been very little discussed, althou .u it is perhaps more imp >i taut than any other. As is well known, Ma ione’B chief resource is the negro vote, and to ootaiu tuat he goes to all lengths in tne present campaign, at he has done in former campaigns. The colored man Is cajoled, coax and, frightened, anil induced in other and even wor-e ways to vote against tue democrats. Even the negro women, as we showed the other day, are made to serve as tools for Maho .e; and it is alle red that the degrading arts of voo dooistn are call -d into play, Tnere is nothing to surprise a iyb dy in this charge. Mahone is a cool, cynical hand, thoroughly acquainted with toe African nature and restrained by no scruples. BRIu Hi tliXr. Artemus Cnmcus (to his friend Daubstick)— You ought to rely less on your color and more on your relations. Cousin Florence—Why, Artemus, Cousin Ned depends wholly on his relations.— Life. Natal is —o, Mr. Decourcv, I am tired of this frivolous life! How fatiguing to sit and hold one's bands all and ..v! Mr. Dejourcy—Why not employ so ne one to hold the n for you?— Hanseys We-kly "R there!" said the gen.al oyster to Corpo ral Tann r early in September. “If you and I had only known how to keep our inou hs shut, we wouldn't have been in this fix." Then both went into the soup with a melancholy plunk.— Life. It is reported that a company of Chicago men have arrange i to build a cog-wheel railroad to the top of Pike’s Peak, Col. The report ig evidently false. Chicago men are not endowed with sufficient modesty to travel in cog.—Nor ristown Herald. Mrs. Rustler (to her husband)—X certainly wish, dear, that you would keep up appearances more and dress bet er. Now, look at Mr, Slasner. who nov s In our se., how stylish he is. Ru-tlei —You f irget, dear, that i was but recently that Slasher failed.— Clothier and fur nisher. Farmer Allen of Pennsylvania did not be lieve that his hired man kept a good watch on the stables, and so he disguised himself, went out. and began banging around, and the first thing he knew he had a charge of shot In his leg. The hired man was right on deck.— Detroit Free Press. “Mamma.” said Tommy, os he watched his little brother squirming in tbe bath-tun. “Wiliie is like a piece of flannel ” " iV’uat makes you think so?” asked his mother. “O. because he shrinks when he’s washed.” —Boston P . st. She Prefebred More Durable Joys —Mr. Prett boy—>lirla n, if you will be mine, our “lisa will know no ai oy. Mn ia n Sm -it (whose father is a gold refiner) —No Mr. Prettybby; paph, assur a me that anything above 18 karats fine doesn't wear well.— Jewelers' Weekly. Mr. Millionaire My dear, here is my pock etbook, and I wish you would take care of it until I get back. lam going out this evening, and I prefer nut to have any valuable* with me. Mrs. Millionaire—Mercy! Are you going into a dangerous .eighborhood? Mr. M.—O, uo. I am going to a citizens' meeting iu aid of the world's fair.—A’eui York Weekly. Equally Unpleasant to Contemplate.— “Fatuer,” said Mr. Sidnnpnliut's eldest son. w ith blood in nis eye, “taa ho se of ours is a treacherous bea-t. He’ll be tile deata of me some time, or 1 11 be the death of him.” “Tnen 1 11 sell him.” repl.ed Mr. Ski mphlint, gloom ly. “A funeral would cost me every ulained cent the animal is worth”.— Cnicayo tribune. Marriage Not a Failure.—“ How is your darter Nancy gittin' ’ oug since -he rnarrie i an' moved out ter v ’ahf rny ?" said the first Indiana man. “Is she doing wet ?” “Doi ig well Why, bless ye, she’s gittin’ 'long perfectly lovely. Her first husband died, leavin' her 85,000 in cold cash, an' ’twaru’t three months 'for she tie ion ter a consumptive w orth $lO,OOO. 0, but she's a rattler, that gal is!”— lime. PERSON AU Congressman Isaac Struble, of Plymouth county, lowa, isau e ithusiavtic prohibitionist, and sa.s of tue dquor traffic in lowa tnat it is practically dead. C. P. Dull of McVeytown, Pa., has made a fortune out of a sand bank. He is the owner of tne sand de osit fro n which tae plate-glass manufacturers of Pittsburg draw their sup plies. Dwight L. Moody, the evangelist, is back in Chicago again saving sinners. With t e ex ception that he nas grown a little grayer and a little stout r, ne looks much the same as he did ten years ago. Quran Victoria’s rheumatism has been ratuerbid igain during tne last few days, and it is sai 1 that .n-r majesty wains witu great d.fficulty. The Priuce of Wales, too, is still far from being well. The father of W. Clare Russell, the novel ist, was once a resident of -ew York, tie was known as Henry Russell, t.ie soug writer, and be wrote ‘ Caeer Boys, Cneer” and “A lAfe on the Oo an Wave.” King Otto or Bavaria seems to be in a very bau way. A telegram from Munich says t lat bis majesty is al.ernatMy the victim of violent excitement and fits of unconsciousness, las ing for Uours, and that he sometimes refuses to take any food. Lord laktington has consented to make an mportant addition to his already numerous pou leal engagements during tue rece -a of par liament. H wifi tase the lea ling part in a demonstration which is being organized for tbe last week in October by tue unionists of Wol vertiampton, and will be supported by the Hon. C. P Tillers. the venerable ine noer for that borougn, a .1 by most of the leading unionists of the district. Charles Ranlett Flint, who. with Cornelius N. Bliss, represent i New York in the Cougress of American Nations, has be n engaged iu the South American trade either as merchant or clerk for tbe ast twenty years. He has traveled all through most of the countries of South America, aud is looked upon as an expert upou trade with those countries. Mr. Flint is an en thi.sastic yacntmau, and was for many years owner ot the Uracie when she was one of the crac boats aoout New York. Sir Edward Arnold lectured to the students aud pi lessors of Harvard o Mle.e on Tuesday evening in tne oolieg theater iu Cam arid .e. His subject was the phi osop.iy of the ilrah nius, and in tue course or >is remarks he said tnat ”ln India, with its 200,030,000 nuabila ts. t iere never occurs a marriage of inclination. Yet there are more happy marriages in India, more happy homes, more pure domestic relations turn iu any otuar part of tne wor.d.” Tins statement delivered with great impressiveness, evidently slag .ere 1 the a idience, but the lecl ur.-r weutou to fortify his assertion with facts. Within a stone's throw of each other, on Capitol Hill, says tue Wasulngton Cap ful, r sine two men noted in the history of this country, but tuey do not apoear to be very socia iy inclined, if gosaip can be believe I. They are Gin. B. F. Butler, who has a faculty •if co uiug to the front when least expected, and Judge Advocate General Joseph H At, who b vcauie conspicuous durtug tue trial of u.e Lincoln aeassiuation conspirators. Both are smooth fai'ed, ueavv set nieu. aud although a quarter of a onntury has elapsed sine they ac -o upliahel th - task of buoouiiag pmuiueni. ti ue has apparently dealt gently with them. G in. But er drives about tb city in a cuupa ilr iwii liy a wbne none, aSid, as if be had a reel lug In comiuou. Judge Holt also has a white buns attached to hi* clone earns,*. Only a Question of Tima From the Chicago Tribune. “James.” said the und rta er, “have you heard how Mr. Hawkins, tao sick old gentleman at the ot ,er end of the avenue, is gelling aloug this evening?" “Yes, sir." responded the shop boy. “The doctor gave him a d bse of the ’iix.r of life last night, aud—" “1 think, James, said the undertaker with Cheerful sadness, "you may set tua' lamp in t e win low and turn the light up a little. If anybody shou.d call for me in tne next half bour Is lad be iyin - on the lounge just inside the door of tbe back room.” Hia Name Against Him. fYom the Madrid Comico. After twenty yea • of loose iving in Bo hemian fashion. Ricardo comes in for a legacy of 10,003.000 reals. “Now’s the time to pay off my creditors,” be exclaims. The latter begin to call upon him. One of tbeiri, all smiles and otxejuio js ioss. reraarics: “You see. i iave not trouolevi you nuen. and therefore consider wysilf entitled to be paid before the rest.” “If I ly remember/ 1 says Ricardo, “your name is Zoilo Zamora?” “Exactly!” “Then, my rood friend, I am sorry to have to teil you that Ia n paying my creditors in alp ia be *cai order, so that ii will not be your turn tiU laat.” Destroying the llius.on* From the Texas siftings . Dr. Nachtiral, the celebrated African ex plorer, was once the of a rich Hamburg merchint. T e merchant’s son. a youn uan of a somewnat sentimental tern erament, said, among other things, that his de-ir st wis i wan to ride across the desert on the back of a camel. He thought such a ride must be very poetic in deed. “My dear young friend,” replied the explorer, I can teil you how you can get a partial idea °f what riding a camel on the deserts of’ Africa is like. Take an ortlce stool, screw it up as high as po-isibie, and put it in a wagon wi.ho.it any springs, tnen seat yoursoif on the sto 1, aud have? It driven over roc .y and uneven ground, during t >e hottest weat ier of July or Au just, after you had not anythin' to eai or drink or twenty-four hours, and then you wi 1 get a faint idea of how deli 'htfuily po -tic it is to ride on a ca nel in the ■> ilds of Africa.” A Street Episode. From the New York World. Two girls were standing on the street corner engaged iu a social chat when a suddsn gust of wind lifted a li lit veil from the nat of one of them and carried it down .he street. Presently the owner of the veil missed the adornment and tbe following co wersation ensued: ‘ Now, Mary Ann, give up that veil or Oi‘ll knock yer two eyes into wan!” “To the divil wi i ye and yer veil. Oi haven't got it, and Oi wadn’t wear th 1 loikes av it if Oi ad.” “Give It up or Oi'll bang ye wan in the ja 1 !” Some more words passed, in the course of which the o vner of the missing veil re ninded the owner that she bad eft her la t pa e be cauke she carried away m ire sug ir ana cofT -e than the family used, aud at last they fed to blows. “3V hat's the matter here?” yelled a police m .n, as he came running up aud separated the combatants. ” ary Ann stole me veil." “Yer a lyin’ thafe I haven’t seen yer veil.” Just the.i a boy, who had see 1 the ved disap p..ai, came back and r st .red it to the owuer, and the two girls went aw r ay arm in arm. The Telephone Girl. From the Columbus , 0., Dispatch. I’m a Central Union telephone girl, Ting a ling-ling, ting-a-ling-ling. I come when you give your 'phone handle a whirl, Ting-a-ling, ting-a-ling, ting; I'm queen of a bun red holes here ia a row, A hole for each telephone nura >er, you know. And for each of these holes I've a cheery “Hello!” Ting-a-ling, ting-a ling, ting. I can hear every word that you speak o’er the wire, Ting-a-ling-ling, ting-a-ling-ling, E’en down to the wh s ere ot love’s fickle fire, Ting-a-ling, ti g-a-ling, ting; I know all th. secrets there are iu the town, Where fa.thless men smile and suspicious wives frown— It would take me a year just to write the half down, Jhng-a-ling, ting-a-ling, ting. I am just as curious as curious can he, Ting-a-ling-ling, ting-a-li g-ling, The faces of all ny patrons to see, Ting-a-ling, tinz-a-ling, ting; If I could but see as I hear o'er the iine, My knowledge of things would !i - semi-divine, Aud my job I would never, no n ver resign, llng-a-ling, ting-a-ling, ting. Would Have Cost Him Dearly. From the New York Star. The last time I saw Gen. Russell A. Alger of Michigan in New York he told a remarkably good story upon himself, which is worthy of rep.'titi n. While stumpiog the wolverine state during '.is gubernatorial canvass the gene at was ac co npamed by “Tom” Applegate, one of Micui gan’s best known co ntry editors, whose subscribers admired "Tom” .or ids Jeffersonian simplici yin dress and manner. Alger, ns a general rule, in making a politica. canvass, trave s in oriental splendor, with a train of attendants, and in his private palace car. In going through Applegate s district, Gen. Alger had it fully impress and upon him by the plai i editor tue fact that it would be more in keeping with the granger sentiment to tie up the palace car and travel in a hay cart. Tue presid ntial aspirant reluctant y prepared for a heavy wagon jolt ever the Michigan hills. After reacuing Burr Oak, wh re Alger was announced to address the farmers on oleomargarine, a pure ha.lot and purer milk, the two politicians were covered with dust. Gen. Alger bad no sooner ascended the platform than he drew from a neat russet leather bag a si ver-bacsed plush trimmed clotues brush with which he ener getically proceeded to brush the dust off his garments. After he had finished the task he handed the tancy brusn to the country editor, aud said: “Here, Tom. brush off your clothes.” Tom looked at the richly ca ved silver backed brush, and with fear and trembiin r, after taking in the faces of tho grangers pre ent, said: “Gr at heavens, general, put it up. If I used that brush on this coat of mine, before th se old uiossbacks here, I’d lose every subscriber I’ve got in twenty-four hou s ” 'lhe Vokes Family’s sta;e Debut. From the Inter Ocean. Victoria Vokes has been tell ng a friend how the once celebrated Vokes .amity came into theatrical existence. “My faiher,” she r lutes, “a hearty o and gentleman, was a uianu,actor r of naval and military uniforms iu London. A friend of his was Manger Creswicz of the Surre, theater, who once gave him an order for a lot of trappin s for a gorgeous co npany t major-generals who were to appe r in a spectacular piece. We children were ail ta ;en to see this spectacle. Mr Civs vick gave us a box. I was a baby in arms, but I went wita tue re t. and on that very evening I ma le my debut before the admiring pu lie. In the piece was a baby. At tbe lime that the oaby suo.i.d have been brought on to be kissed by its per ecule.i, on ner-way-t -Sib ria m tiler it was taken with the colic, ana tbe management were in a quandary. At that point I lifted my voice and crowed at Fred, w o was trying to stand ou his bead in a corner of the box, to the agitaiion of my mot .er, a id Creswicg sa.v his salvation. He rustied around to us. ” ‘Lend me your baby, Voke ,’ he cried. “ ‘But, my dear sir ’ exclaimed my aston ished father. " ‘Oh. that’s all right. Mrs Vokes can stand in the wings. Now give me tue baby and saw the scene.' "i was deposited, with my legs and fists going like windmills, in Creswick’s arms, and my mother followed, Fred clinging to tier ssirts, and mj father ringiug up the r--ar. I was p.aced i.i tue arms of the 'afflicted countess’ and slowly carried to the lootliguts, where I was kissed aid wept over. Ail througn it I crowed heartily. A big round of applause greeted ray efforts, and wnen 1 was snatched ,rom the embraces ot the affli .-t and couniesg’ by one of the fiercest of the major-generals, tueac.ion wasieceived with a storm of uis-es fro n pit an gall ry. I was iest red to my legitimate mother and my debut was over. "For the u-xt five or six years we children had ttie run of the Surrey tlieater, and my fatuer's business with theatrical people in Cieased, unli by and -green tbe rtav,.r of tbe siaga permeated tbe whole famtiy. We b came ac cust ml -d to h ‘ariug about first ights ana the 1 git and fat parts, and a we went, to the theater s j often our games iu tbe nurs -ry w re in imita tion of what we were constantly seeing and nearing. Then first oue of us, then the other, aud sometimes all four of us, Frederic*. Jessie] Rmi .a and myself, Would be given |>ari in au toimo.es -the happiee occurrences of our litt e Bves—and we tok to the foo liguts as though we had been horn tuere. and me day we were described 11 all the pap ni as tbe clev r Utile Vokes family. That sealed our fate. Father's business was not as prosperous a. it had been; big riiunej was offered torus, and we became professionals Bkkcham a Fills act like magic ou a weak stomach. ITEMS OF IN TERE3T. The pockets of the British infantry coat are to be sewed up till the me i are on active duty. Eigrtsen tons of stzel disappear daily on the singie system of tae Lon ion and Northwestern rad w ay through wear and rust. The chestnut and walnut crop* in Connecticut will be the smallest in years this season. The mouth of Septem er has passed without a hard frost, and ;hc onestnut harvest is rom t u days i to two weeks later than usual. The belt ot ter ritory from the Connecticut river westward is generally the most productive of c..estnuts. Tins year, however, there wdl not be half a crop. The chaperones of Paris have struck. Cases are on record where as much as fifteen hours of consecutive duty uas been tha lot of a ch ip erotiing mutuer, and the natural result is a revolt. The affair is being conducted in a ady ike manner, and it is hop and will pass over quiet! ’. Tue plan of ca opaign is tor ladies with daughters to gently but firmly hand over their wa:cu-dog duties to t-eir husbands. “Daughter," wrote Mme. de Sevigne in a fam j is phrase, “go and t 11 your daughter that her daughter’s little girl ,s crying." There i a family at Rjscoif, in France, in which such a rem.irK would be appropriate, since there are five generations of it alive at tn s moment. Tue oldest member of the farail is a great great grandmother of 03, and the youngest a small descendant aged 1 montu. Tney all went to church to ether the other day when the new est generation was christened. For a month past tbe people in the eastern part of MoLeau county, Illinois, have been ter rorized byastraige wild animal whic i they thought to be a pant ier. Tie animal Killed a large oum .er of calves, pigs and sheep, and would attack larger ani als. It was of af. ro cious u ature, aud the farmers were greatly alarmed at its presence. Tney organized hunt ing parties, auu after several chases succeed, and in killing it. Its s ill was presented to the Wesleyan University museum, and the animal proves to have be n a Canadian lynx. It was of a dark brown color, and weighed about 100 pounds. The only jack-rabbit farm in the country, so far as known, is situated on a flat alkali section near a town ia Central Ka isas It and iti jack rabbits are tne property of a coursing assoca Gon,which will n t sell a rabbit to any one else, and which depends on its farm for the supply of h ires t ikeu to other cities in park coursin z events. A year ago the proj ct irs of this novel farm had only about thirty jack rabbits, which had for tue most part beeu purchased when young from farmer boys who had found them. To-da., owing to accretions from similar sources and to the very rapid multiplication of the species, there are be we n ZOO and 300 full g owu jacks on the farm, and the question of supply may be fairly said to be settled. “One of the youngest, if not the youngest female princ pal of a public school in New York," says Mr. John P. Faure, “is Miss Mary Pierson, .ho has just organized the ‘Female Ssuior Evening School’ at No. 239 East Houston street. It may s -cm a startling trutu, but trutn it is, neverthe ess, that iiss Pierson's is tne only school of the kind f r young women in all t at vast area east f tue Bowery and soutu of I ifty-seventh street. There are tuoueands and ho 18a ads of girls in that part o: the city who work for their living, and wnoseoniy oppor tunity for fitting themselves to preside over an inte ligeat no ue is offered in tuis institution free. A w /man who devotes the best years of her youthful life to helping her less happy sisters is surely entitled to have ner hands upheld uy ail men.” The bass viol is the most expensive of all musical instruments to its owner. Its first cost is not the greatest ex ease. It is so large and awnward to carry around that it is continually getting injured by accidents which would n t happen to smaller instruments. Somebody may wick a hole in it by dancing agai is; it in a room, or it ma. be knocked against something while carrying it around. It is most frequently injured on street cars while tue musician is cair, iug it to the place where be has to play-. After a man has had an instrument fra long lime i e comes t - look upon it as actually wort i ad the m i ey that it has cost him, and in this way a bass viol is value I at SI,OOO or so by its owner. A musician who sued a railroad co - for $5,000 for a viol lost in an accident actually got $3,800. A remarkable mistake was made at the ope u ing of the industrial fa rat Toronto. Sir Joh i A. Macdonald nad made uis opening speech of congra ul .tion, and before ca ling upon him to press an electric button starting the machinery, President Wi brow invited oue or two otue speakers to deliver addresses. One of t em was John L ys, member of the provincial parliament tor Toronto. He advanced to the front and laid his heavy white bat right on top of the electric button. Instantly tuere was a slirieKing of whistles, and the machinery in the building began 1 1 run. Tie crowd roared with laughter, and after much gesticulation and running about tue managers stopped the pro ceeding, and the machinery was started by Sir John aud Lady Macdonald. Orlando Brown, of Wa erford. Conn., had been mowing roadside wends, and athirst he went to drink at a wayside well. The well was da ik an 1 dark a id slippery, and overgrown with tores, and as Orlando stooped to let bis buck -t do *n a stupid adder thrust its head from a crevice in 11 a ston curbing ana hissed at him. He stepped asi eto se.ze a clan, his fe t flew fro 11 beneath hi n, and he slid down the shaft, taking the alder along with him. Tue water cl sed over him with hissing ouobles and a plaintive plu ik. Orlan lo wasn’t gone 1 mg, He eame up sputtering and wrathful, and the sight of the adder, w.uch had b-trayed him into the ell, gliding across the wat r into tue wall, did not aid to appease his anger. He made a grasp for the ssrpe it, but he didn’t get hi u, and thougbtfu ly he climbed out of t.ewe l He was so ireful that he went away without drinki.ig. At Fulbeck, near Grantham, England, there has just passed away a most eccentric charac ter. He went to Australia some twenty-five years ago, and returned home in 1985 with a large fortune, which he began spending very freely. He purcnased valuable articles and invariably destroyed them. A gold watch was stnashe I up tue moment it was bought, the baea of a silver watch was wrene led off so as to be more convenient for winding up, the straw was taken out of anew mattress t\>r pig bed ding, springs taken out of anew easy chair, shelves out of the house for firewood, clocks broken up and thrown a vay, oread bur ed daily in the fire, legs of mutton ands des of bacon were buried in the garden, valua le plants and trees wer bought aii ch >pped up. He huilt a greenhouse and knocked it to pieces. A little pig that refuse l to be driven up stairs, where a bed had been prepared for it with g et care, had its career eu ied by a blow on the he id with a hammer. He died a poor man—m fact, a pauper—and was bur ed b, tue parish. News has been received in Sn Francisco from Alaska, by steamer, that Joe Tuckfieid, a trader, returned to Point Barrow Aug, 5, from a year's exploration in Eastern \laska. He went in a whaleboat to Herscbel Islan ', w lich he de scribes as a para lise for hebui.te ■ in the sprint., lie found tile n stives a friendly an 1 primitive peopk, who had never tasted liquor. They were powerful in n, averaging five and a naif feet in hi cut, and were nomadic, living on game and berries. He says t.iat twe ty mil •, from the c ait be found dense spruce forests and lowlands cov red with a rank growth of willow and marsh gra s. At tue mouth of the Mackenzie river h - found the fresu water had caused i h ice to melt, and formed a large, open body of water that abounded in spring with seals and white whales. The Point Barrow relief station is completed, but traders are com plaining because Capt. Borden, the kee er brought up a arge stock of g ods on the reve nue cutter Bear, with whirh he proposed to trade with toe Indians. As other dealers pav heavy freight on their goods, they propose to coin lain to the gov rnment. “The mysterious but effectual way in which so many institutions absolutely dependent on public c .arity are maintained in New York is,” said a we 1-kno.vn surgeon of tuat city, “one of the most surprising and gratifying develop ments of the .ay. There is a prominent one legged veteran in tnis town who makes a hand some annual lonutioa for the purenasa of fruit and flowers for tii ■ inmates of the Cuarity Hos pital on Blackwell's island. W.iac is uis name? You may guess, uut one condi ion of tue gift which is handled by Mr. Jonn P. Faure a gen’ tieman widely identi ied with the executive department ot the New Y ik charities, is that the identity of this gahaut veterau be strictly concealed. Sunday after Sunday in the after noon 11 teen or twenty young ladies, under the direction of Miss Mary Pierson, principal of the new unlit scn.iol for girls on East Houston street, go in a body to Blackwell's Ida id Hos pita w ltn th * fruit and flowers provided so generously by the tender-hearted old cripple. 'They are m feet,’ he says, an t they never weary of well-doing.’ Instead of giving the lielpl ss suffer, rs iracts and good advice, they gladden their Leans with a bunch of roses or a Utile basket of del.cious fruit.” W lee W Oman Will try and preserve her charms. She m.y 1 tek eta sic outlins of form, but she should use SOZODONT sud retai l tns beauty and usefulness of her tee b, A fine sei of teeth is one of the highest charms. SOZODON i will do this work. MEDICAL. Few are Free FROM Scrofula, which, being heredi tary, is the latent cause of Consump tion, Catarrh, Loss of Sight, Eruptions, and numerous other maladies. To ef fect a cure, purify the blood with Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. Begin early, and persist till every trace of the poison is eradicated. “I can heartily recommend Ayer’s Sarsaparilla for all those who are afflict, ed with scrofulous humors. I had Buffered for years, and tried various remedies without effect. Finally, Ayer's Sarsaparilla gave relief and pin. nie in my present good healthy condition.”— E. M. Howard, Newport, N. H. “My daughter was greatly troubled with scrofula, and, at one time, it was feared she would lose her sight. Ayer's Sarsaparilla has completely restored her health, and her eyes are as well and strong as ever, with not a trace ot scrofula in her system.”—Geo. King Kiilingly, Conn. Ayer's Sarsaparilla, PREPARED BY Dr. J. C. Ayer h Cos., Loweif, Mas*. Price $1; .ix bottles, $5. Worth $5 a bottle. MKTCKS CURE Sick Headache and relieve ail the troubles Inci dent to a bilious state of the system, such as Dizziness. Nausea. Drowsiness. Distress after eating, Pain in the Side, Ac While their most remarkable success has been shown in curing SICK Headache, yet Carter's Little Liter Pitta are equally valuable in Constipation, curing and preventing this annoying complaint, while they also correct all disorders of the stomach, stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels. Even if they only cured HEAD Ache they would be almost priceless to those who suffer from this distressing complaint; but fortunately their goodness does not end here, and those who once try them will find these little pills valuable in so manv ways that they will not be willing to do without them. But after all sick head ACHE Is the bane of so many lives that here Is where we make our great boast. Our pills cure It while others do not. Carter’s Little Liver Pills are very small and very easy to take. One or two pills make a dose. They are strictly vegetable and do not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action S lease all who use them. In vials at 25 cents; ve for sl. Sold everywhere, or sent by mail. CASTES UESICINE CO., New York. MWI Small Base, Small Price, MWmR’S f \ I Or.at I OTi SfOTRtorJ \ $ Blood Portlier, FlMkj | MxkerahdNorT.ToDki^ V dk tk * IA Caret Malaria. BUtoamewl BMB Iff® Scrofula. Dyepepaia. Leaj D*V/ce.q w (or Removing rimplra and fa mm m dh. Beautifying CoraolexiniL nfl I f$ Small; nugar coated 7oh)i id 8 I I % bottle. At Druggist* U)j H B-aJ mall, 40 ornta. Aleiaulsg £ Naw York. ( Money Returned by follow ing druggist* if Alexander’s Cholera Infantum Cure, Cholera Morbus Cure, or p lo Ointment fails to cure; Butler’s Pharmacy, W. M. Mills, L. C. Strong, Reid & Cos., Edward J. Kieflter, W. F. Reid, W. A. Pigman, W. M. Cleveland, J. R. Haiti .vanger, Wm. F. Hendy, J. T. Thornton, W. A. Bishop. Symons & Mell, A. N. O’Keeffe & Cos., M. Johnson, David Porter. WHOLESALE BY LIPPMAN BROS. They have been tried for over fifty years, and are to-day the moat popular in tue. Tour fathers and mothers used them. They in the Safest, Purest, and Best Remedy for Linr and Stom&oh Diseases ever oompoundedi For Sale by all Druggists. Price 25 cts. per box j * boxes for 05 cts.; or sent by mall, postage free, on receipt of price. Sr. J. H. Schmck A Son, Phiiafa it/ PoMtively cured in 60dnyt Belt Trunn.combined. Guaranteed the only one la §• /; world weTiVmtlnpr contirr sAI 5 nous Electric and Magnetic current n&L >/ Jw Scientific. Powerful, Durable, Comfort able and Effective. Avoid frauds. Ovflf 9.QP<> cured. Send etamp for pamphlet „ Also electric belt* fob diseases* Ch. Horne,Removed to 180 Wamsn Ave..Chkm 9 CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS. Red Cross Diamond Brand. The only reliable sill (*r Bale. Safe mi •ere. Ladle* ask Drucgtet for the IMe mend Brand, in red metallicboxe*, •**■** with bine riWbon. Take no other. S*od4. (•tamps) for particulars and 44 Relief for Lmllea,” in Utter, by mail. Name Paoer. which eater ChemicalCo., M.a<ilaoa Sq., Fhlinda, ra nanff/ A preventive and sure cure IJ ft U i 1/ for Malaria, Fever and nUI]! 11 Ague. Contains no quinine U it U w 1% >r arsenic, absolutely vegeta ble compound, at Druggists 50c. LIPPMAN BROS., Agents. HARDWARE, fata! Stans Supplies, WAGON MATERIAL, FOR SALE BY Edward. Lovell’s Sons 155 Broughton street and 188 and 140 STABLER. . Tennessee Sale and Boarding Stables. HORSES BOARDED, and the wrr bast at tention given, at sixteen dollar* Jzl month. Special rates for sale stock. ** stable, and nothing but first-class hand* „i, yet CHA& R MOTS in<JEB.