The morning news. (Savannah, Ga.) 1887-1900, August 17, 1890, Page 4, Image 4
4 £jje ilctßS Morning New* Building, Savannah, Ga. SUNDAY, AUGUST I*. ISOG- Registered at the Pott iffl -e in Sonin lA. The Morning Nis is publish*i every day ie the year.ana is served t > subscriber* t*i the cite mt 25 cents a wees $1 ft) a month. #5 00 for sis months an 1 $1 > on for one year The Morning N..ws. Ay mail, one month. SI 00; thre- mouths, $- -50; six months, 85 00; one year, $lO 00. The Mohning News, h.u moil, six times a week (without Sund.iv issu- . thres months. $C ft); *Jx months. J 1 ft); one year. ft) Tie Morning News. Tri-Weekly. Mondays. Wednesdays and Fridays, or Tuesdays, Thurs days and Saturdays, three months, $1 25; six months. #5 50: on • year, $5 ftX The Sunday News, by moil, one year. $2 00. The Weekly News, by /a nK one year, #: 25. Subscriptions payable in advance. Remit by posal order, cheat or registered letter. Cur rency sen by mail at risk of senders. Letters and telegrams should be addressed ‘•Morning News." Savannah. Ga Transient aivertiserae ,ts. other than spvcial column, local nr reading notices, amuse ments and cheap or want column. 10 cer.ts a line. Fourteen lines of agate type—equal to one inch space in depth- -is the standard of measurement. Contract rates and discounts made known on application at business office. OUR MEW YORK OFFIC E. Mr. J. J. Flynn, General Advertising Agent of the Morning New*, office 23 Park Row, New York. All advertising business outside of the states of Georgia. Florida and South Caro lina will be managed by him. THIS ISSUE -CONTAINS TWELVE PAGES. index to W ADvmmm Meeting— Citizen's Sanitary Association. Special Mottoes "The Old Saying,” the Sa vannah Carriage and Wagon Company; A Card, O. T. Shaffer; To the Patrons and Friends of the School for Boys, J. R. Baylor, Jr ; One Thing Uncle Sam Overlooked, Townsend; Splendid Investment at Private Sale, R D. Laßoche, Real Estate Dealer; Chronic Constipa tion cured hv the Electropoise; Foot Race at Tybee To-day; "Pro Bono Publico," the RobiDson Steam Printing Company; Tinsmith, etc , E. C. Pacetti; Georgia ‘ late Building and Loan Association of Savannah; Empire Steam Laundry; Savannah Steam Laundry Amusements— " Above the Clouds." by the Fleming Dramatic Association on Ang. 36. Educational —University of Georgia. Exactly!— L. &B.S.M. H. Auction Sales Valuable Property, Elegant Lots, by R. D laKoohe, Auctioneer. A Golden Opportunity— C. Gray A’ Son. We Mean Every Word— Dryf us Bros. Tailor and Importer— E. .1. Kennedy. The Bargain Seeker's Paradise—A. R. Alt mayer & Co.’s. The Great Slaughter Sale Continues—At Eckstein & Co.'s. For This Week Only— The Globe Shoe Store. Furnaces—J as. Douglass. The Largest Vehicle Dealers in the South— The Savannah Carriage and Wagon Company. Bargains in Pianos— Davis Bros. Boys’ Suits— Jackson, Metzger & Cos. The Sacrifice Bargain Sale Morrison, Foye & Cos. Cheap Column Advertisements Help Wanted; Employment Wanted; For Rent; For Sale; Lost: Personal: Miscellaneous. Gallium, the most valuable metal in the world, is worth #3,350 an ounce. Speaker Reed ought to be presented with a tea service of solid gallium. A miniature likeness of Gen. Meade brings #I,OOO now—when it appears on the new treasury notef of that denomination just issued. Rarities always come high. An Indiana county treasurer, who was the manager of a base ball club, Is short in bis accounts. This is not surprising. There is no money in base ball for managers; only for players. Mr. George Wallace Delamator, republi can candidate for governor of Pennsylva nia, has made a general denial of the ctharges of corruption against him made by State Senator Emery. He says in effect, ‘•The charges are not true.” Now let the country hear from Senator Emery. Col. Shepard has finally been brought around on the reciprocity issue of the ad ministration, and in the issue of his paper on Thursday last, he remarks significantly: “Every intelligent man now knows that the President is in thorough accord with the rec iprocity views of Mr. Blaine. We regard the combination as irresistible.” Asa result of the increase in importation costs under the new customs administra tion bill selling prices have been advanced to a proportionate extent. The increase in price comes out of the consumer, of course, and if the McKinley tariff bill, which raises taxes further, should become a law, there would be a another increase in selling prices. The increase is merely an addi tional tax on the consumer for the benefit of the favored manufacturer. The im porter derives no benefit from it. He raises the price of his goods in proportion to the increased duty. The cry against perpetual pensions has again been raised in England: Those which have incurred the strongest hostility are pensions of #45,000 a year to the Duke of Richmond. $34,500 to the Duke of Grafton, and that of over #BO,OOO which is paid yearly to the Prince of Wales. The government of the United States also pays pensions which are almost perpetual. Hundreds of pensioners, not satisfied with having Jived for many years at the expense of the gov ernment, marry young women when they have one foot in the grave. The widows receive as a legacy the pension which their husbands had. The wor derful industrial progress of the south continues. One hundred and eight cotton and woolen mills were established within her limits during the last six months, Georgia leading with 33. North Carolina, South Carolina, Alabama and Texas follow with 18 eacn. Out of .85 blast furnaces and 68 electric light works established during that peiiod, 8 of the former and 25 of the latter were located in this state. Besides these there vtere -tablished in the southern states dur ing the six months 97 flour and grist mills, 94 foundries and machine shops and 45 water works. Numerous other • improvements also were male. The cotton rxup is a success, and w ill yield the south at iohst #4 O, UK), 000. The outlook for a pr *■ porous fall and winter season is, t ierefers, g od. Reed s Other Twin In Danger. The tariff bill ar.d force bill are Sneaker Reed's twins. Having bad so much to do with bringing them into existence he very naturally thinks a great dea! of them. He depends upon them to keep his party in power, and to make him a much g"eater man than he is. He has work and bard to get then) as far al mg ia life as fey are, and he resents every attempt to check their progress toward raatir.tv. When be re members that they would not now be in existence if he h <1 not used bis power arbi trarily and unconstitutionally to get a majority large enough to cirry them through the House, hie anger against those of his party friends who dare to speak an unkind word of them, or to put an obstruc tion in their wav, knows no bounds. One of tb -se twins is already in a mori bund condition. It is the force till. At the suggestion of Senator Quay it is to be abandoned virtually for this session of con gress, and before the next sessiou it will be so near dead that it will not be possible to revive it. Of course Speaker Reed grieves for it, but his anger is greater than bis grief, and those who ar i responsible for its unhappy fate may count him as their enemy. But the other twin—the tariff bill —is by no means a vigorous infant. The chief re publican organ, the New York Tribune, says that Senator Quay suggests! the abandonment of the force bill in order that the tariff infant might have a batter chance for life. It insinuates that a few rich men—pro tected monpolists—who are Senator Quay’s constituents are deeply iutero ted in it, and for that reason he plotted to sacrifice the force bill to save it. It warns him, how ever, that the tariff infant is in danger and that his scheming in its behalf may come to nothing. There are republican senators, it says, who do not approve of many things in the tariff bill, but who have supported it because they hoped by doing so to get the entire party support for the foroe bill. The real sentiments of the republican senators and representatives relative to these twin measures of Speaker Reed appear to be coming out at last. Speaker Reed and those who follow his lead favor both the tariff and the force bill, but there are re publican congressmen who are opposed to one or both of them, but who have been forced to support both by party pressure. The whole country has condemned the f >rce bill, and the prospect is that it will receive no further consideration. And it would not be surprising if the tariff bill should meet with the same fate that has overtaken the force biil. When the leading republican organ declares that Senator Quay wants that bill passed to oblige a few rich con stituents, and that there are re publican senator* who find many things in it that are objectionable, it is certainly time for the people to begin to ask whether they should not speak out strongly against a measure that is admitted to be against their interests. There is a steadily growing sentiment against the tariff bill, and it is among the probabilities that Speaker Reed will see his tariff twin abandoned almost as unceremoniously as his other twin was. Why the Knights bo Olten Fall. In face of the fact that they are already defeated, the strikers on the New York Central railroad contiue to assert that their strike is successful, and that the road will have to agree to their terms. It is difficult to understand why they make this asser tion. Tney certainly cannot help their causa by pursuing such a course. It can hardly be possible that all the newspapers are unaware of the true state of affairs or that they have conspired to publish false reports of the situation. It is true that the leaders of the strike say that the reports in the newspapers relating to the strike are not true, and they have arranged to publish two bulletins a day giving what they regard as the facts, but it is pretty safe to assume that the newspaper reports are not very far out of the way. As far as the public have been able to learn there was no cause for the strike. The employes of the road had not stated to the road’s management that they had griev ances. A few men had been discharged for cause, and their reinstatement was requested, but as the road has a right to select its employes, it is not a matter of surprise that the request for the reinstate ment of the discharged men was not granted. Several demands have been made sinoethe strike was inaugurated, but it seems to be quite clear that they were au afterthought, and were intended to create the impression that the strike was excusa ble.' The public are always ready to give their sympathy to those they believe to be in the right, and in the present case they would have supported the strikers if they could have found any reas >n for doing so. Tue truth seems to be, however, that the strike was brought about by incompetent leaders, or leaders who consulted th >ir own inter ests and feelings in preference to the inter ests of the thousands of employes who look to them for guidance. The Knights of Labor can hardly hope for much success in their battles with capitalists and corpora tions as long as they select unfit meu to manage their affairs. If the strikers have been defeated their leader s ought to tell them so. It is wrong to keep alive hope when there is no ground for hope. A Hideous Freak. Mythology furnishes nothing more strange than the story of a baby which was recently born in Columbia county. New York. This baby has attracted widespread attention by its most singular conduct When sleeping it is like any other baby, but when it wakes up it neither lies still nor begius to wail like other ordinary babies. As soon as it opens its eye3 it raises itself, climbs over the cradle and leaps on the floor, where it has a regular frolic like a kitten. In fact, its actions and appearance have all the charac teristics of a kitten. One of the bsby’s legs does for it duties similar to those which a kitten’s tail sometimes doos for a kitten. While engaged in this sort of exerci e it will tumble heels over head, roll about the floor like a ball, doing itself uo more harm than if it were really a kitten. If a spool or some object of the kiud be thrown to it, this uncanny babe wul toss it about, threw it over its head and play with it in the same way as a cat would. One of the most remarkable things which this remarkable baby does is tais. By means of a rope it clambers up to the top of the tiedn t, whore it sit . surveying the spectators with an air of gaiety that is ap i palling to b'holJ in ono so you ig. No e uUnation of this pec iliar freak of nature is offered. And p-rnapi there is no le to offer except that name sometime* fur .i-hps tTange products. THE MORNING NEWS: SUNDAY, AUGUST 17, 1890-TWELVE PAGES. Why the Stralghtouta Withdrew Th > straigb'out dem sera's of South Caro lina stits nothin; in thiir address giving their reasons fo- w.thd rawing from toe convention at C dumb.a last U>l ieday that was not already known to the public. They sax tha' the convention was called by the state executive commutes of th? Demo cratic party to do only oie thing, viz; to dec de whether the and Megatei to the regular state convention in Seotemb’r should be ch-ise i by pn nanes or byconventi ms, and that. CHitrary to tne constitution of the party and to precedent, it did more than that—it aiopted anew constitution and elected anew executive committee. Doubtless the straijbtouta are right in saying that the convention exoedei its authority, but it doesn’t foil >w that they acted wisely in withdrawing from tho con vention. Th >y did not strengthen their po-it on by doing so, nor did they iaeraase their chances for boating Tiiima i in tbs .Septemberc invention. Had they remains! in the convention and pr itestei against the unconstitutional ant they woul 1 have been in a more advantageous position t lari they now are for appealing to the paopls, ii tle contest for delegates to the Se .temb3r eonventio 1, to put the stamp of disapproval upon the high-handed and ar bitrary exercise of power by the Till manites. Having withdrawn from the conventi n they are likely to be looked upon as malcontents who have taken themselves outside of their party because they were not permitted t> manage it their owu way. If that view should be taken of them, and it probably will be, they will finditd.ffiojlt to gain the sympathy of the people in the campaign for delegates t> toe September convention. Their aim being to prevent Tillman’s nomination they should have re* mained in the convention. Mr. Hoar and the Festive Codfish. A frolicsome, jolly old fellow is the Hon. George Fnsbie Hoar, United States senator from Massachusetts. Recently in a republican caucus be is re ported to have made some very unstates manlike and unwise remarks, to the effect that he would sooner New England work men should live on 50 cents a day and cod fish than that the force bill should fail to become a law. The language was reported by the press, but Mr. Hoar maintained a Quav-like silence, and the country accepted the report as true. The report of his utter ances and the statement that he was a man of wealth and no friend of the workingmen, which appeared in the Pittsburg Post, seein to have awakened him to a realizition of the outrageous uature of the as sertion attributed to him, and he at once wrote a letter to the editor of the Post. The letter is chiefly interesting for two reasons. The first is, that it is very different from anything that has come from the Senate chamber recently, and the sec ond is that it is a brief autobiographical sketch of the senator. “My dear man,” writes the senator to the editor, in that easy, good-natured way that is calculated to establish a firm belief in the equality and fellowship of man. “My dear man—Somebody has sent me a copy of your paper con taining an article of which you do me the honor to make me the subject. Who could have put such an,extravagant yarn into tho head of so amiable and good-natured a fel low 1 I never said the things which you attribute to roe in any interview, or caucus, or anywhere else.” Mr. Hoar here indulges in a few personal remarks, showing that he, like his father, was poor, and that, like a true martyr to his country and his cause, he got poorer and poorer during his public career. And he adds pathetically: “During all this time I have never been able to hire a housuin Washington. My wife and I have expe rienced the varying fortunes of Washing ton boarding houses, sometimes very com fortable, and a good deal of the time living inafas iontowhich no Pittsburg mechanic, earning $2 a day, would subjact his house hold. Your ‘terrapin’ is all in my eye, very little in my mouth.” But now listen to the glowing eulogy of the codfish, judiciously seasoned with a little New England puritanism. A truly royal dish, a relish for the gods: “The chief carnal luxury of my life is in broak fasting every Sunday morning with an orthodox friend, a lady who has a rare gift for making fishballs and coffee. You un fortunate and beuighted Pennsylvanians can never know the exquisite flavor of the codfish, salted, made into balls, and eaten of a Sunday morning by a person whose theology is sound, ancF who believes iu all tbe five points of Calvinism. lam myself but un unwor thy heretic; but I am of puritan stock of the seventh generation, and there is vouchsafed to me also some share of that ecstasy and a dim giimpse of that beatific vision. Be assured, my benighted Penn sylvania friend, that in that hour when the week begins all the terrapin of Philadelphia or Baltimore, and all the soft -Bhelied crabs of the Atlantic shore, might pull at my trousers’ legs and thrust them selves on my notice in vain.” A man who regards the codfish as such a delicate morsol, a man poor, hut honest aud of Puritan stock, could certainly not have me mt to offer any indignity to the New England workmen if he did say that be would rather they should live on 50 cents a day and codfish than see the force bill fail to pass. Codfish is only another word for feast, according to the senator, aud a feast everyday aud 50 cents besides ought to sat isfy the most fastidious. Mr. Hoar’s cod fish story is bound to make an impression on all who read it, and the workingmen for whose benefit it is told will not soon for get it. Pretty Miss Falosof Newark, N. J., who went to New Haven a few days ago and woke up one morning aid found herself marr.ed to a blear-eyed young man named Stevins, tells a most remarkable story. She ays that she doesn’t love Stevins and wouldn’t have married him under any circumstances, and that she has no recollection of having gone with him to a minister and being mar ried. She doesn’t kn jw whether she was drugged or hypnotized, but she is sure that she was put under some influence that deprived her of her senses. She is asking a New Jersey court for a diverce, as 3he thinks life would tie a b irdea too heavy ts bear if she had to live with the blear-eyed young mao. John Rockefeller of the Standard Oil Company is going to put $30,000,000 of his surplus wealth in a Baptist university. He could hardly make a better disposition of if. His partner, Mr. Flagler, still has uml:min is bed faith in St. Augustiue, and continue* to add to the attractions of that superb winter resort. There are about 30 >,00) hy fever suTer ers iu the United (State*. Their seatjn for sneezing U about beginning. Gen. Butler on Pensions. At the grand army reunion in Boston the other day Gen. Butler said that tuoe who are Members of the grand army were onoe banded together to fight for the union, and tr.at they are now Daniel together to get wrat th) government owes them. Gan. Alger, the retiring commander of th i grand army, sail in th a course of bis adlrees that the grand army was now re ceiving in pensions *110.003,000 a year, and that within tho next twelve months it would tie receiving #150.000,000, very nearly half of the revenues of the government. Does Gen. Butler want all the revenues paid to the grand army? It certaioly ap pears so. Geo. Butler seems to have the idea that the gran I army saved the country and that now it o vns it. It and the pe .sion claim agents will come very near owning it if the republican party remains In power much longer. There are pens! n bills pending which, if passed, j would bankrupt the government. So.ne of the republican organs and leiders have called a halt in the pension business. They have become alarmed at the demands of the Grand Army. There are plenty of demo- ! gogues line Gen. Butler, however, wno will outinue to tell the veterans that the nation’s debt to them is not paid, however great the annum distributed in pensions miy be. The north is becoming filled with pau pers. The most of them are the product of the pension policy. The ex-confederates get no tie isions and the south is not over run with paupers. There never was a greater demagogue than Gen. Butler, and if he were poor he would be a very danger ous one. The striking anarchist cloakmakers who believe in an equal division of wealth, that is, a share for them cf somebody else’g wealth, have determined “to teach the wealthy manufacturers a lesson.” They have started In opposition to their employ ers a shop on the “equal share” plan, a sort of co-operative movement. The men have established a code of rules for their govern ment and elected a foreman and assistant foreman. The chief interest in the move ment is not so much the question whether the men will succeed in teaching manu facturers a lesson as in the question whether they will succeed with th ir experiment. The probabilities are that the leaders will castoff the yoke of equality, and quarrel. Working for a living is not in tneir line. The only practical tests they make are with their mouths. Mr. Quay, the proprietor of Pennsyl vania. has announced that he will not inter fere in the matter of local nominations iu Philadelphia He will allow voters to select their own candidates. Quay is not even a citizen of Philadelphia, but graciously per mits Philadelphians to do their own voting. “But he does this even only iu words,” says a correspondent. “The announcement, as made, is simply notice to Mr. Quay’s fol lowers that he. will not be angry with them if they combine to defeat the candidates backed by Mayor Fitler, against whom Quay cannot affor I to make au open flghf.” How is this for sublime impudence of boss nils? Gov. Bvrd, of Indian territory, called out the militia to make sure of bis re-election a few days ago. He got 106 votes for himself to 21 for his opponent. This shows what can be done with troops at the polls. PERSONAL. Dr. William Lomax of Marion, Ind., has given SIOO,OOO to the medical college of that state. The Crown Princess of Denmark is the tallest princess in the world. Her hight is announced to be 6 feet 3 inches. The Due d'Aumale has given up his splendid home at Brussels, and during his recent visit to Sicily his collections of pictures, books and artistic bric-a-brac have all been removed to Chantilly. Miss Alice Wood of Queechee, Vt., has just mowed a field of grass fifty acres in extent. She did the work alone, using a mower drawn by two horses. Next year she will be graduated fiom the high school. Hattie Harvey, Mine. Patti's American pro tege, denies that she has changed her name to Hattie Pattie. as she is proud of her own. She may be just as proud of another if the right man offers it “some day.” Dorothy Tennant Stanley received one strik ing wedding present. Stanley received £30,000 spot cash for his book, and rumor has it that he put tbe money In au ivory purse and presented it to his wife in lieu of jewels. When Henry Goorge returns from Australia a national conference of siugle tax clubs is to be held iu New York. It will open Sept. 1 and be held three days. Bet we n 400 and 500 dele gates will attend, representing twenty-five or thirty stat?s. Osman Diuna, who has lately been resus citated, after a number of supposed killings, is said to be a Frenchman by birth, a native of Rouen, whence he went when 15 years old to Cairo, to learn the art of wai fare with Capt. Merall. an ex-French officer. BRIGHT BITS. “I assure you. Judge, that my physician is responsible for my being a thief.” ”Do you meau to say he hypnotized you and compelled you to coram t a crime?” “I won't say that, but I do know that he or dered me to tako something beiore going to bed."— eui Yu, k Herald. “Mamma, you haven't given me any dimes aud uicKols," complained Jimmy Shattuck, after the physician bad gone "What do you mean, Jimmy?” asked Mrs. Shattuck in surprise. “Why. the doctor said I needed a little change.”— Chicago Inter Ocean. A.—You should marry. Women exerts a refining influence on man. What you need is a wife. B—Are you married? “O, yes: I've been married twenty years." “Why haven't you atul your wife been living toget her all i be.se years ?' '—Si/tings. Tbs Reward of Politeness.— Office boy (to busy merchant)—A friend of your father wishes to see you, sir. Busy Merchant—Tell him my tather lives at Kalamazoo, an i I'm sorry. Friend of His Father (after messaao is de liver'd—Very well; I'll place my SIO,OOJ order for goods elsewhere.—Ruck. CURRENT COMMENT. The Point of View. From the Kansas City Star (Ind.). This is the difference: Secretary Blaine is an international man; preside it Harrison is an ißUianapolis man. Depew on the Strike. Frori the Cincinnati Enquirer (Dent.j. They do say that Queen Victoria asked cur Chauncey whether that strikj was "a tbree haser or a home run," and that he replied. "Madam 1 , the umpire, w o can be relied upon, will decide that." ™ United and Btronsr. Fr ri the Boston Ad’vrtiser (Rep.). From Maine to California, from Minnesota to Mississippi, from Mount Washington to Pike's P ak, from the Falls of Niagara to the Falls of the Yosetn.te from tin land of tie pine to the land of the palmetto, the people of toe union sre a milled people. Evldoncsfl of Civilization. From the Baltimore American (Rep.) The appearance in Fort Worth of a man with a sash is taken by the (~"sette of that city to me.u that it is tune to tare it out of tbe tut of frontier towns Wueu tbe woman with the ■■.>•••> front shirt and the mau a necktie and co.lar dazzles the eyes of the eiiizeosof that Uiwti.U* people wifi doubtless thin* tbe tune has arrued to make it the capital of the nation A Fugitive From Justice. Tom Maul was the best catured man in the county. He bad so many friends that they em barms-el him. He had to become a total ab sta ner in order to Keep from becoming a drunk ard. It was only in ton manner that he could shield himselr from the genrro-tty of his fr. ends i One day he was elected sheriff, says the Pitts burg DitDatch. This was a compliment, spon taneously extended. To he sheriff in that c unty meant to draw a salary Tom. whose ; trade was doing alittle ot everything in general an i nothing in particular, was delighted. He bought a g'.ld watch with some money he had laid up for a rainy day During the first three months of ms service Maul mode four arrests. He had a couple of sa'.-s He was affability it self. It was almost a pleasure to be sold out by him. He apologize! to the men oe ar rested, and trade as many excuses ’or them as possible in court. He spent most cf his time in finding homes for stray dogs, and seeping de erf pit norse, off the street. One day the oou ’ty was electrified. A mur der had been committed within its precinct— hnh-rto guiltless of bioed. Torn Maul arrested the murderer That night when he sat a one in his room old Dr Tudd called “I want to ta e your t"mperatura, Tom. said he He bad been present when Maul was norn “One hundred an i five." he remarked, wiping his thermometer. "Are you coiiig io hang that man if iie is fou ud guilty." Tom sh dde ed. The country court was not a busy one There was plenty of room on the and ic<er for the trial of amn derer who had k lied a g ,od icizen. Tom Mad was more sociable in a way At least he no longer refuse 1 to drink, tho ign, on the orher hand, he had ceas and to laugh or t il his funny stories. The murderer was found guilty. A day was set. acco dm ;to the law of tne state, for his execution by hanging. Tickets of admission to the hanging were extended to the press an i ih; prominent men of the city. The women toon satisfaction from the fact that the hanging was to be on Fr.day. Mrs. Maul awoke in the middle of the nigat" and saw the figure cf Tom over by his little son's bed. She beard him weeping. But sne was very sleepy and her eyes closed io spite of herself. The morning came with sleet and wind. Maul was not to be found. Mrs. Maul knew nothing. A deputy sheriff was appointed, and the exe cution took place. Maui was heard of by no one. But in ih* winter a body was found in the woods, half buried in toe snow, and iu tbe frozen hand was a bunch of seed pods.as if they had been the plaything of the man’s last mo ments. On one of these hands was a ring with a cameo. Mrs Maul recognized it. It had been worn on the hand of a man incapable of blood shed—a man who, in anew sense of the word, was a fugitive trom justice. He fled, not from the execution, but from the administration of the law. His Baby Friends. “Every day as I come down town." said a Bachelor Club tr.an. according to the Pittsburg Dispatch, "There is a certain door yard I look into, or rather I used to, I don’t now. The two prettiest children 1 ever saw in my life, 1 think, lived there. Little things they were. Georgie was about 4 years old—fat. pudgy little rascal ha was. Margery was just a step higher than he. It was funny to see the motherly ways she bad L used to see them playing keep house, and it was always Margery who would p'te.id' she was tiie mamma. Well, sir. it us- and to do my bachelor heart good to see them. I reme Ti ber how I learned tnei names. It was just as I was passing by when the front door opened and a sweet faced woman call and out; 'Georgie’ Margery: come in now and let me fix s'ou up, and we’ll go visit grandma " “In a minute. Dis as soon's we dit iss pie fixed." “Well, it got so that they came to know me, and they used to strike me for cigarette pict ures regularly. I used to look forward to meet ing them every day. Maybe you know how hungry a man gets for a little of tne simplicity of child-life now and again it was just about the latter part of April I was called away to be eone about, two weeks. If you rem mber. diphtheria was raging then, and many a ‘little white hearse went glimmering by.' "The first day after 1 returned you may be sure I looked at the cottage where 1 had so often sen the little children playing. It was silent now. The blinds were closed. There was none of the ringing lau liter and nobody shouting; 'Dit off. de tars is "topped." My baby friends were gone," "Dead;'" asked somebody, breaking the hush. "No; moved away." Tbo Quest. Donald R. McGregor in Phijadeln’iia Ledger. The Ca iph sits upon his throne. And all the com t is gay; But from bis own breast joy has flown. And why they cannot say. The fairest of Arabic maids. To music's sweetest sounds. Dance iieath the weirdly carved arcades, And every flower abounds. Before him every fruit is set. The horsemen guard the wall. And from the graceful minaret Comes the muezzin's call. But still the Caliph sits in thought; So one before him falls. And asks with what joy can be bought, And on their Allah calls. Now is the Caliph all a king; He issues his command: "Go find tne purest, fairest thing, And place it'at my hand." Then through the city, o’er the land, And in the deep blue sea They sea ch, they find all Allah plan’d. But moody yet is he. Thorns he has found upon the rose, The diamond's specks hassien. Life in the purest stream tnat flows— Then kneels his favorite queen. Now gloom is dashed into its grave. Now loud the loet's sing, "A wife, be she of king or slave, Is the purest, fairest thing." Bsnevolent Mr. Jones. We were wailing at the depot at Texarkana when a young man pulled out a thimblerigging outtit, and began to call for bets aga nst his game. If it was against the law no one inter fered with him, and in a few minutes he had worked up quite an excitement, says the New York .S'au I was with a friend from Buffalo, and we wer i not “in.” However, at we sat apart from the crowd a benign and banevoient lookir.g man about 50 years old came over to us and said: “Gentlemen, I am Mr. Jones of St. Louis. I have four sous. This is a wicked, wicked world, and I take every precaution to guide them in right paths. I have heard of this game, but never saw it before. I want to play it—just a little. I shall lose, of course, and that will make a strong point for me when warning my Ixoys against such temptations. I can prove to them that it is a skin game.” ••Well?” "Weil, I have no sma 1 money. If you could cbaag * a J2O bill for me l.thiok I'd lose about ;5 for the benefit of mv boys.” The Buffalo mau sad he and he only too happy to oblige, and he gave him four fives. The benevolent Mr. Jones disappeared at once, but we didn't worry aoout tout. It was only when my friend went to the ticket office and had the s'2o thrown back at him as n. g. that we went out to look for the benign father of four sons. The earth had swallowed him up. No, Sab! by Gad, Bah. “No, sah," sail Judge Riley of Accomack, whom a discriminating president has selected from 10,000 applicants to represent these United States as consul at Puerto Cabello, Venezuela, to a Washington reporter. “I do not fear to face the yellow fever on its native heath or in its native lair, so to speak, sah. Wherever my country calis me, there 1 go, by gad, sah I never know fear, sah, especially when the clarion call of duty resounos within the convoluted c lambers of my ear, sah, with a salary of $2,000 a year attached. Besides, sah. I nad the yellow fever many years ago when I had the honah of representing m.v country as consul at Maracaibo. No, sah, lam not aware, san, that an at ack gives you immunity from a second; but in the equatorial regions, where veilow fever is ind genous to the soil and to tne climate, sah, it is lighter and less dangerous than in more northern latitudes. If the yellow fever broke out in Boston now, by gad. san, ninety-nine out of 100 would die of it. But in the far south, sah, yellow fever is no more dangerous than our home brewed bilious fever on the eastern sbo’ of ole Varginay. by gad, sah.” Didn't Like the Medicine. Some time ago a patient, evidently of Hiber nian extraction, nays the st. Paul .Pioneer Press, consulted a doctor for his ills, and the man of medicine gave him some quinine la capsules, alter he bad made av with these be returue i, and the doctor decided that a little tonic was necessary to brace up his system. "All roigbt, door her, Oi've no objection to the tonic, but Ol don't want enny moore av tbim little bottles.” “What s the trouble with the little bottles?" Inquired the doctor liivil a lolme Oi've had gettin tb sbtuff out av thini,"ua the astonishing reply as a grim ace of disgust played over the features of the invalid. "But m? dear sir," Interrupted the doctor, "all vou have to do l to awalicw them,” • Swallow Hum dum bon * ■ exclaimed the patient, as lie started up. “do you think Ul'd be afther ruinin' tne stomack?” ITEMS OF INTSBE6T. An event has happened in Keaaington, N H , which has set toe inhabitants wild with excite ment The first house to be built in the place for thirty years is ap;roacn:ng completion, and a grand celebration is expected when the inmates tase possession. Get. Booth has taken steps to stop smoking in the Saltation Army. He has issued an edict announcing that no member who smokes shall receive a promotion, anl that sergeants, bands men. sergeants-major. secretaries and treasur ers must resign office or give up smoking. An English scientific person has discovered that sitting down is an acquired habit. The majority of mankind do not sit, but simply squat, or. as it is sometimes said, sit oil their heels. This oviticn. toe scientific person thinks, is the natural one. while sitting on a chair is an artificial one. The ways of auctioneers in d.fferent parts of the world vary greatly. In England and Amer ica the seller b-ars the expense of the sale, bet in France the purchaser be irs the cost. 5 per cent, b iig added to ms purchase. In Holland it is still worse, trie buyer b sing required to pay 1) per cent, additional for the expeuses of the sale. A peculiar freak of nature was discovered at Palmyra a few days ago. A farmer's wife brought in from the poultry yard a large hen's egg. On examina ion it was found to contain a we 1-developed yo.k and whi.e together with a 'veil-formed egg or smaller dimensions, the size of a guinea's egg, with a shell as solid as the outer one. A social cycloxe is reported to have raged at Bar Harbor in consequence of the hostess at a reception setting apart a private room, where she feasted some naval officers and a few friends in a regal manner, while the remainder of a large company of the elite were turned into a large dining room to hustle for refresh ments of an ordinary quality. Among the examination papers recently sub mitted by candidates in San Brrnandino county were the f dio ving answers: “Seattle is on the west coast of Africa;" “Seattle is in the southern part of France;" “The town, of San Bernardino county are: San Francisco, Oakland, San Jose. San r.afael and Sacramento." Another gem: “Toe Gulf Stream is a cool, moist breeze that helps to cool the air." "While prospecting for borax.recently in Salt Well Valley, Cal., Dr. Woodin found some petrified bones of an extinct animal. The ball part of the hip joint is nearly as large as the crowu ot a derb .• bat. The corresponding bone of an ox is about the size of a hen’s egg. The siz ' of the extinct animal may be inferred from t his comparison. Other parts of the skeleton of the same animal were found. T. J. Mitchell, who lives on the National road, three miles east of Greenfield, Ind., dis covered a large stone weighing 500 or 600 pounds in his cornfield one morning last week, and. as it was not tnere when he last plowed the field, Mr. Mitchell does not know how to account for its presence. Large numbers of people have seen the stone, and many think it meteoric. Its size, formation and the uninjured condition of the corn seem to preclude the fact of its having been carried there for a joke. A correspondent writes to "American Notes and Queries:” My uncle having made inquiries concerning tbo price of board in a country town, received this teiegram in reply: "Board, s2l a week, including washing up the carriage and piano agent. Robinson.” He wrote, in answer, that, though both piano agent and carriage required cleansing, he wa not accus tomed to such charges in a board bill; and soon after learned that tile original copy had run thus: “Board, S2O a week, including washing, use of carriage and piano. Agnes Robinson." Two young electricians were disputing as they rode on an Albany (N. Y.) motor car the other day as to whether they were m an elec.ric field or not. The Aigus says that one strenu ously insisted that no electric current passed through the car. and urged that all the fluid went underneat.i the floor. "I will prove it otherwise,” replied the other, as he drew a bunch of keys from his pocket. Tossing his keys on the floor h nodded to his friend to pick them up. He did so, but found a percepti ble resistance. Another part of the floor was tried, and it was clearly shown that a strong electric current was passing through the floor. "Well." he remarked, as he handed the keys back to his friend and removed his watch to his upper pocket and buttoned his coat, “I believe it now.” From Cook county, Wyoming, comes the news that citizens ’of that district are indignant over the attempt of a Mi s Kent to file the i reemtion on the 1 0 acres on which the Devil’s Tower stands. “The Devil's Tower is said by geologists to be the most wonderful specimen of basaltic crys talization in the world It is a natural obelisk nearly 1,200 feet high. 897 feet in diameter at the base and 35 feet at the top. The ground on which it stands has heretofore beeD regarded as public, ad it was intended by tbe citize: s that it snould remain so. It has been discovered that an English iaiy has filed a preemption on it and is endeavoring to prove up. It is not known what she intends to do with it, and, as the ground is worthless for agriculture, peti tions have been sent to the land department, at Washington, asking that her application be rejected, and every effort is being male to prevent Miss Kent from proving up on the land.” A STORY is given to the press from Lowell, Mass., of a wonderful electric man which has been constructed by an ingenious citizen pf that place. The automaton is described as appeal ing like a fine-looking young man of about 25 years of age, 5 feet 8 inches in bight, and with an open, intelligent countenance. He (the elec tric contrivance under consideration) is dress-e I at present in a suit of gray-mixed goods, white shirt, colla- and cuffs, soft felt hat, kid gloves and No. 6 tan shoes. The account says that "there are none of the je ky movements that are so commonly seen in mechanical figures.” but that on the contrary his motions are easy aai natural, aud that he is as much at home in the draw ing room as on the street His walk is particularly natural and he has a firm, springv step that suggests the trained athlete. At present this combination of cast-ir6n, elec tricity and o:her things is engaged in pushing a sort of overgrow n baby carriage about town in which two or three persons can ride, and the dispatch closes by saying that be lifts his hat gracefully when he receives a fare. Some time ago a man named Metz bought a ticket at Kansas City for California, and, after cbf c ting his trunk there, boarded the train. Upon ois arrival at Canton, Cal., he discovered that his trunk had gone astray. He waited a reasonable time for the railroad aompany to produce the trunk, and, failing to do so, he put in a claim for $350 damages. Over S2OO of this amou t was for jewelry for female wear, and the railroad claimed it was not bound io pay for it, inasmuch as it was not his personal bag gage. Metz brought suit in the Los Angeles county (California) court and recovered judg ment for the full amount, and the railroad company appealed. The supreme court, in de ciding the case, said the railroad company is obliged to pay only for the luggage of the claimant, and luggige meant in law only such things as the claimant needed for personal use on his travels. Had Metz been traveling with his wife there would be no question as to the raiir .ad company's liability. But Metz was a singl -man ad trave log alone. The articles of female jewelry in his trunk could not, there fore. be regarded as luggage and the railroad company need not pay for them. The court ordered ihe judgment reduced by the amount of the jewelry. Patrolman Thomas MpGrath , of the eleventh precinct, Brooklyn, asserts positively that the City of Churches is the haunt of a genuine ghost, and that be has 6een It with his own so ber eyes. He appears to be thoroughly in t amest, and, in telling his story, acknowledged t at he was exposing himself to ridicule, but he declared that what he said was “solid truth,” and that he was not the only one who saw it Mr. McGrath describes with particularity his discovery of the ghost, whicli he at first thought was only an every day, mortal woman; how he followed it u ;til they were near together, and how the spectre disappeared before his eyes He says: “We approached to within ten feet of each other, and were coming still closer together, when the woman completely disappeared I was going toward her -1 bad my eye on her, aud there was nothing between us and the electric light was shining full on her when she disap pearea. The woman was young. I saw her face plainly. She was very pretty. I should think she was 18 years of age, and she was and essed from head to foot in white, she wore a Mother bubbard gown and a Nellie Bly hat She mowed very slowly and her footsteps made no sound; neither did her dress wave about as a woman's dress does when she is walking I fell you I saw that. I trembled like a leaf, for I knew I had seen a ghost.” . fter recovering his n.rve McGrath got a lantern and searched the Vicinity, where, in the full glare of an electric light, the ghost resolved itaeif into dew or some otner iuvLiole form that defies arrest and laughs at club*, but he found nothing Country Epito* iout West)—This has been a luelty day for me. Fanli ui Wife Has someone been In to pav a aubscriptloat Editor—Well, no. It wasn’t as lucky as that; but I was shot at and missed -ffo.tua Beacon. CHRISTOPHER GRAY <*- BfVN. I Gil iptiiiij THIS WEEK AT OKAY’S PRIOR TO STOCK TAKING MANY INVITING BARGAINS AWAITS YoU C. 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