The morning news. (Savannah, Ga.) 1887-1900, October 22, 1890, Page 4, Image 4
4 C|e||lnnung|lch)s Moving News Buildine, Savanna*, ua. ■WSDSaDAI, OCTOBERS’.’, IKOO. Registered at 'he Pottofflce in Satnnn ih. The Morning News it publishei every day in Ihe year, and is served t i subscribers in the city at 25 cents a weea. $1 00 a month, $5 00 for si months and $lO 01 for one year. The Morning News, by mail, one month. $1 00; three months, $2 50; six months, $5 CB; one year, $lO 00. The Moss ino News, by mail. six times a week (without Sundav issue three months, $J 00; Six months. $4 00; one y ear. $8 00. The Morning News. Tri Weekly. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, or Tuesdays, Thurs days ami Sat unlays, three months, $1 25; six months. SS 50: one year. *5 Oil. The Sunday News, by r.i til, one year, 2 00. The Weekly News, by mail, one year, $1 25. Subscriptions payable in advanoe. Remit by pos al order, check or remastered letter. Cur rency sen. by mail at risk ol Benders. Letters and telegrams should be addressed “Morning News. ' Savannah, 'da Transient advertisements, other than special iolunin. local or readmit notices, amuse ments and cheap or want column, 10 cents a lir e. Fourteen lines of agate type—equal to •ne inch space in depth--is the standard of measurement. Contract rates and discounts made known on application at business office. OCR MEW YORK OFFICE. Mr. J. J. Flynn, General Advertising Agent of the Morning News, 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. The Morning News Is on file at the fol.owing places, where Advertising Rates and other in formation regarding the paper can be obtained: NEW YORK CITY— I. H. Bates. 38 Park Row. B. P. R. WELL &. Cos., 10 Spruce street. W. WSha r & Cos ,21 Park Row. Frank Kiernan & Cos.. 152 Broadway. Dauchy & Cos., 27 Park Place. J. W. Thompson, 39 Para Row. American XEwsPAPkaP’.'RLisHSRs' Association, Potter B aiding. PHILADELPIUA- N. W. ater & Son, Times Building. BOSTON- B. R. Niles. 256 Washington street Pettengill A Cos., 10 State street CHICAGO- , , t __ Lord A Thomas, 45 Randolph street C NCINNATI- . Kdwix Alder Comp ant, 66 West Fourth street NEW H\VEN- The H. P Hubbard Company. 25 Elm street 8T LOUIS— Nelson Chesman A Cos., 1127 Pine street ATLANTA— , „ Morning News Bureau, Whitehall street MACON— Daily Telegraph Office. 597 Mulberry street INDEX TO NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Meetings—Golden Rule Lodge No, 12, I. O. O F.; Savannah Castle No. 8, K. P.; Nacoochee Tribe No. 24, I. O. R. M : Savannah Soap Works. Special Notices—As to Bills Against British Steamships Grandholm and Holyrood; Tele phone Notice, R. B. Rood, Manager; Fried & Hicks' Ladies’ Restaurant; Do You Want a Home? C. H. Dorsett, Real Estate Dealer. Amusements—“ The Great Metropolis," at the Theater Saturday. Oct 25. Success Flour— L. J. Dunn, Southern Agent. Proposals— Wanted for Material at the Charleston Jetties. Auction Sales—A Capital Bay Street Comer, by C. H. Dorsett. Bio Vegetable Sale—A Ehrlich & Bro. Legal N iricics—As to Claims in Favor of and Against Joseph Ealen’s Estate. Cheap (iolumn Advestissments Help Wanted; Employment Wanted; For Rent; For Sale: Lost: Personal; Miscellaneous. Arkansas expects to send at least five democrats to the next congress. That ■would give her a s lid democratic delega tion. Good for Arkansas. Rumor hath it that Judge Gresham has received the appointment to the vacancy in the supreme court. No ma i would receive a more cordial indorsement from the whole country. Young Abraham Lincoln’s body ia to be placed beside the remains of his illustrious grandfather in the crypt of the Lincoln monument at Springfield, 111. Thus the lad la sheltered by the old man’s fame. It was big enough for two. Quarantine against American cattle in Belgium is hereafter “to be governed by circumstances.” That probably means that they are to be detained longer than the customary ten days in order to obstruct tbe increasing importation. Last Monday the first cargo of southern coal, consisting of 700 tons, was shipped from Norfolk to Liverpool. This is “carry coals to Newcastle” in earnest. It is proba bly but tbe beginning of what promises to be a very profitable traffic. Independent republicans in Pennsylvania are making life a burden to Quay and his gubernatorial candidate, Delamater, Re volt is breaking out on every band, and the kickers seem bent upon knocking the silent statesman’s “fat” into the fire. Crowds that almost amount to a mob at tend the lectures of Rev. Dr. Taltnage at the New York Aoadetny of Music in spite of the statements of a rival minister that some of his descriptions of the Holy Laud are incorrect. Fame catches the crowd. Oklahoma citizens are said to be still actively gunning for their governor because he vetoed the bill ordering the removal of the capital from Guthrie to Oklahoma, aud he is sedulously staying indoors in order that tbe majesty of tbe law may be main • tained. Jersey City is to have the largest passen ger station in tbe world to accommodate the trains and traffic of tbe great Pennsyl vania railway. Foundations for it have just been laid. It is to be magnificent in every way. If any road can afford such a luxury tbe Pennsylvania can. There is a rather improbable story cur rent that tells of a Shaker at Enfield, Conn., who was expelled from bis church for read ing the New York Sun. But his name is Wait Warner aud we are told that “All thingscime round to him who will but wait.” There is a fine Hold here for a barrel full of puns. But we refrain. That must have been rather an affecting sight when veterans of “the blue and the gray” knelt at Fredericksburg, Va., and united in prayer for the preservation and prosperity of the uaiou. Nothing more pathetically touching has occurred since tbe fratricidal struggle ceased. Partisan dissension has no legitimate pretext for existence after such a scene. It is said that the recently burned Syra cuse hotel was fired by an incendiary, and that it was consumed in ten minutes. That was called a fire-proof hotel. Prisoners serving life sentences should be kept in such hotels, where they would not be likely to escape. But discreet tiavelers will have to sit out on the stoop all night so that iu case of fire they can get away before the house falls on them. Prices WUI Rise to the Limit. Trying to bolster up a cause with plausi ble sophistries is, to reasoning minds, tanta mount to a confession of its innate weak ness. ReDlving to a pithy statement in which the New York World siys “every time rhat a man buys s gold c.gar or a good coat now he is reminded, by the increased price, of the beauties of the re pub. lean law to ‘reduce revenue’ by raising taxes, the Chicago Inter-Ocean beg: the question in an attempt to prejudice the pubii’ mind by deciari g “that is simply saving ‘there are no good cigar' and Hi good coaC except such as are manufactured abroad," and gdbly continues to assure us that “the real fact is that the multitude wili go on wear ing ‘good coats’ and sm iking ‘good cigars’ made on American soil, aad neither should be dearer to the purchaser under the new la*.” “Neither should be" is good. Unless we shall be so uncharitable as to lelieve that the Inter-Ocean is deliberately attempting to imp se upon the credulity of its readers, c mat in courtesy compels the assumption that the writer of the above statements has not the faintest understand ing of the important subject he has at tempted to dispose of so airily. Americans, he should weii know, are not in the habit of holding their productions, of whatever character they may be, in such light esteem as to regard them inferior to similar articles of foreign make without verj' go and cause. And they are altogether too thrifty to sell their goods for anything less than the highest market price for their class and quality. Th refore any conces sion in price may fairly be regarded as a pretty conclusive evidence of Inferiority in quality. * American manufacturers are not so philanthropic as to religiously adhere to a low price merely to illustrate by contrast the disparity between the cost of the home-made article and the foreign product under the beneficent operation of a high tariff. They go In for what they can make every time, and may be relied on to avail themse.ves of every favorable circumstance to promote their own advantage. If the tariff raises the price of a foreign article 60 per cent, above the present or former price of that article here, there is no reason why the home manufacturer should not get just as much for his product of equal grade. At best he would not do more than shade the price of the foreign article, say 5 per cent, or less to monopolize the trade. So the consumer may buy the best article at an advance of 45 per cent or the inferior grade for 30 per ceub more than the best formerly cost. To tell us what “should be” done is merely idle. That has nothing to do with the case. It is not what shiuld be doue, but what is done, that we have to deal with. Riches and Respectability. Before the chancery court in St. Louis is now pending a case that Is not without the elements of romance; Yet it carries with it a strong moral. It involves the owner ship of a very large sum of money. For the past fifteen years the heirs, who are very poor people, have been struggling to establish their title to the property,and now that they seem about to succeed, some singular events of the history in two lives, and curious phases of human nature, are revealed. More than a hundred years ago John Miillanthy and John Walsh jointly owned a fishing boat in Ireland which they oper ated in partnership. They divided the profits until Mullanthy suddenly disap peared with all the money. Arriving at 8t Louis in 1804 he prospered and grew rich, and his family affected aristocratic airs. It was his cotton that precipitated the historic battle of New Orleans. That only lends additional interest to the case. Afterward he cleared from that cotton over $500,000, which was the foundation of his immense fortune. All these years he had toon as silent as the hinges of a tomb con cerning his early life, and when he came to die his burdened conscience seems to have impelled him to make restitution to the heirs of the man ho had wronged. Ho he willed to the heirs of John Walsh their due. With Interest it now amounts to $5,000,000 or more. Meanwhile his old partner died poir, and his family scattered. His nearest living relative appears to be Mrs. Powers, of Laurel, Md., who is 73 years old, and has spent many years and all tbe money she could raise trying to establish her claim. Now comes the most singular part of the whole affair. Until lately it has been inex plicable. While the descendants of Mul lanthy do not appear averse to tbe award of the legacy to Mrs. Powers, they seem horrified that she has found it necessary to enter suit, and thus bring out the whole early history of the elder Mul lanthy for the delectation of their social rivals and five hundred, more or less, curious friends. Such an exposure means great humiliation to them and tends to explain some of their actions that have heretofore appeared unaccountable It ac counts for the always manifest reluctance of this family to discuss their ancestor, and the absolute refusal of one member, who had established a charitable fund, to di vulge any particulars of a biographical nature. When the case comes to trial, if it ever does, the evidence offered for the claimant can but prove very painful to the innocent family connections of the man whose career is to be thus publicly reviewed. And it is very likely that his surviving relatives will make strenuous exertions to stop the con test. This clearly demonstrates the absolute necessity for a good fou idation on which to start a family. Yet there are many very conspicuous families in this country—. especially in the east and west—whose claims to respectability rest upon an equally rickety basis. Still they are al ways the most rigorously pretentious aud imposing in their demeanor. Some excitement among c mnoisseur9 in art has been caused by a picture represent ing "The Crucifixion,” which was recently sent to Dean Wagner, of Windsor, Ont., at the dying request of the mother superior of an Ursuline convent at Prague, Austria. Though the coloring is somewhat faded by its evidently remote aatiquity.it has been positively ide itilied a3 a painting by Hans Hetnmling, that has been vainly- searched for more than two hundred y-ears, and from which Van Dyke copied his famous picture of “The Crucifixion.” It is now on exhibition at Windsor. If genuine it is certainly a priceless treasure. President Harrison adopted a very de vious and shamefaced way of approaching Maj. McKinley’s district to make campaign stump speec es. Directness would have been much more creditable. THE MORNING NEWS: WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1890. Consumption Among Firemen. Aside from the perils incident to his duties the occupation of fireman would impress the average observer as among the least likely to engender pulmonary diseases. Ye: physicians have lately maintained that fire men are particularly susceptible to cou sump ion. That seems ir.credibl“. Consid ering how much physical exercise they get ore would naturally suppose them to be among the healthiest of men. Exposure is the chief cause to which is ascribed the high rate of m- rtalitv among them. Recently Dr. Tho.nas J. Mays, of the Phila delphia Polytechnic Institute, contributed to tQe Medical mid Surgical Reporter an article in which he sets fortn statistics col lected from the fire departments of the principal American cities, tending to refute the argument heretofore offered to sustain the accepted hypothesis thit consumption is contagious, nud showing that the death rate is almost equally high among people engaged in open air pursuits as among those of indoor occunati ns. Explaining that firemen when they enter the department are subjected to tests no less severe than those applied to insurance risks, Dr. Mays asserts with apparent reason that the men start their respective careers upon the same hygienic footing. Among fire departments the average death rate from consumption amounts to 33.73 per cent, of the total mortality, while the death rate from the same cause among the insured amounts to only 17.61 per cent., or 16.12 per cent. less than the firemen’s death rate from the same dis?ase. Further Dr. Mays states that “the average mor tality from consumption among tne general population between the ages of 20 and 70, as founded on the statistics of a number of large American cities, is 27.29 per cent., which exceeds the death rate among the in sured 9.68 p r cent. Basing our estimates on the mortality of insured lives, we add 9.68 per cent, to 16.12 per cent., and this product, 2ABO per cent., represents the liability of the firemen to consumption over and above that of the general population. If we now add the latter to the death rata of the general population we get 53.09 per cent, which represents the relative death rate of firemen from consumption. In other words, if the whole adult population were turned into firemen, 53.09 per cent, of all their deaths would be caused by can sumption.” Lately Dr. George Cornet, of Berlin, pub lished statistics to snow that 2.83 per cent, of the nuns acting as nurses in the convents and monasteries of Prussia die from con sumption. As those nurses are largely en gaged in the care of consumptives thes? figures have been held as convincing evi dence that consumption is contagious. But after pointing out that the death rate among inmates of German prisons ranges from 64 to 90 per cent, from consumption, Dr. Mays brings out the further fact that prisoners undergoing solitary confinement are at least 20 per cent more vulnerable to the disease than those who are allowed to freely mingle to gether. Added to his own investigations an 1 ex perience the doctor thinks this evidence very strongly points to the conclusion that pulmonary consumption is not contagious. Firemen spend much of their time in the open air. They are never confined to sun less and ill-ventilated buildings. Here are eliminated all the sanitary and hereditary factors known to conduce to the disease. Yet when the death rate from consumption among them is compared with that of the general populace it is found more than 50 per cent, above. After closely watching the various stages of the developmeut of consumption Dr. Mays concludes that this very high rate of mortality is chiefly caused by the excessive exhaustion of the physical energies, whether or not attended by exposure to a specific germ. Certainly no class of men is more exposed to enervating physical influences than firemen in large cities. And it is, in the language of Dr. Mays, “the sudden transition from a warm room to active duty on a cold win ter’s night, sometimes the urgency be ing so great that they are compelled to fin ish their toilet en route to a fire; the daring, tbe excessive aud almost superhuman exer tion demanded in battling with the flames; the extreme oscillations of temperature to which their bodies at e subjected, bathed m perspiration at one moment and drenched and chilled by an icy stream of water the next; the necessity during emer gencies of wearing and even sleeping in wet clothing from one fire to another, are bur dens which no human constitution can long successfully withstand, and are unquestion ably some of the most prominent causes which undermine the health of these self sacrificing men and m tke them so vulner able to the disease under consideration.” Still, to look at the average fireman, no one would not be likely to suspect that he had to deal with anything more serious than maintaining his grip on ladders and eluding flying bricks and such things. Another thing the doctor ha? wholly overlooked: While the standard of physical requirements in tire departments is quite as high a< in insurance companies, yet po litical influence frequently aids applicants in evading many essential details of these requirements. Those valiant and sanguinary republicans who have not fonnd out that the war is over were probably concealed where they could not see the fighting, and only came to sight when they desperately decided they could not stay away from the provisions any longer. They are the ones who are most lusrily clamoring for pensions for losing a button jerked off while in the act of nimbly passing behind a tree to avoid an unexpectedly long range noise. Boulanger is no longer great aud no one is so bitterly hostile to him now as his own former parasites who fawned upon him when his star was in the ascendant. Still le brav generate, who is also somewhat dis creet, has saved many bright little francs as memento*of the eminently baug up times he once had. They tend to console him in the loneliness of exile among the fair dam sels of Jersey Isle. There is something suggestive of the com ical about the recent reunion of the s ildiers who followed Gen. Bard Grubb in the late war. It doesu’t seem to bo much of a tribute to their valor that they only fought under the inspiration of Bird Grubb. Explorers on Mount Saint Elias, in Alas ka, report the discovery of many beautiful flowers and ferns amid the glaciers in that frigid latitude. How these frail little plants manage to exist Is a mystery. South Dakota is said to be suffering for “wool, water and woman suffrage.” But it seems that she ought to manage to pull through the winter if she cau only get tbe wool and water. PJtRSOK A L. The Austrian emperor subscribed $500,000 for the relief of the sufferers by the floods in his dominions, and his brothers gave $400,000 more. BBoca, the French anthropologist, declares that the broad-head*,-d race now represented by the reopie of Central France are the true Gauis or Celts of Caesar. In his letter from Florida Gen. Francis Spin ner says there i3 litt.e change in his condition. His cmcer is slowly growing larger, and he hues “it wul soon carry him tohiseter:^ rests." Persistent rumors are current in royal circi-s that Luke Guenther, brother of the German empress, will shortly marry the Princess Maud, daug-t-r of the Prince of Wales. Alexander C .auk of iota, the recently ap pointed minister to Liberia, Is spending a few days in Ne e York before starting for his post, and receiving many atientions from his colored friends. Roeef r Lotus Stevens s, the noveli t, is ex pected in England next month. He is return ing with the intention of arranging his affairs in England and settling permanently in Samoa. By the will of the late J C. Newton of Wor cester, Mass., the buL of his estate of SIO,OOO is left to An h-irst Coileg-' as a permanent en do vment for C ,e chairs of Greek and the art of sculpture. Gen. Grenville M P ge, at the urgent re quest of Gov. Boies an ! others, has presented the state of lowa with a life size portrait of himself, which will be hung in the capital at D -s M lines. Fraclzin Helene Lange is said to be one of the most influential women in Germany at the present time. She is a lecturer and essayist, with a remarkable pow r of critical analysis and originality of thought. Col. William A. Dian, who is running for congress in Clifton county, Ohio, bat been a candidate for co.,gres-. six times before, but was n oer elected. His motto is. if at first you Doan succeed, try, try again. The painter Muneacsy, who is visiting Buda- Pesth, has promised to pain: a colossal picture for the new parliament house of the Hungarian O'a. ital, toe subject being tne first appearance of the Hungarians in Europe. Rev. John M. Worhall, who succeeded Dr. Burchard in the Thirteenth Street Presbyterian church. New York, has r si.-n-d from the pres bytery to accept a chair in tao Danville Theo logical Seminary of K* ntucky. California friends of Gen Fremont propose that his remains shall be removed from New York—the vault of Trinity church—to San rrancisco, to be interred probably at Lone Mountain, where a monument will be erected. Senator Stanford says he came near being a newspaper man. He was appointed editor of a weekly jour: al in the ea,t. but the propriet rs failed in their arrangements to get the concern started, so he remaine iin the west- In a fit an cial point of view the senator, with his $100,0U0,- 000, is perhaps as well off as if he bad got his weekly publication under way. Aunt Dinah Mosley, who lives in Boone county, Missouri, is sail to be 133 years old and the mother of twenty children, all of whom are dead but the “baby," wno is 76 years old. She is an old Virginia pla-itatiou Legreos and un doubtedly th oldest person living in the United States, has never taken a spoonful of medicine, and has smoked a pile fur 115 years. She has been blind for six yea*’*, but can walk yet and sing the songs she sang when Washington's army lay at Valley Forge. BRIGHT BiTa. A young bachelor is an nsi! fellow, and some woman is always trjftug to get even with him.— Washington hatchet, A Boston child, becoming impatient at its mother's delay in he a, tig rs evening prayers, exclaimed: "Come, ma uma, Dod's a-waitin’." Ltiwell Mail, “Muggins, how many more times are you go ing to deal? Seßfns to me It’s my turn." ‘ Huggins, do you see, that sign? Tills is the ‘I deal Whist Club." ChicagoZTnbune, He—No sensible girt will ever accept a wid ower’s proposal. She—Why, pray? ** He—Because a man who can’t profit by ex perience is certainly a fool.— Munaey's Weekly. First Summer Girl (just returned from a long, lonesome shksoil at- the summer and autumn resorcin—O, how delightful the city is! S-cond Summer' Girl—Perfectly heavenly! Broa Iway is just black with men.—. Vein York Weekly. “Nature,” says Seappleton, “never makes a mistake.” “Oh, I don’t know about that; look at the dude." "Yes; but she didn't waste any brains on him," —Washington p. st. Travers—Can I get off two hours, sir, to buy abut? Head of Firm-Two hours? For gracious sake! What and > you want so much time for? Travers—Halt an hour to buy the bat, and the rest to establish my credit.— Clothier and Furnisher. Farmer’s Wife—Couldn’t you sell the pota toes, Hiram? Farmer—Naw; the grocers said they wan’t good for nothin’. Farmer’s Wife—Well. I wouldn't lia' brought 'em home when you owe the editor s'7 for bis paper.— Judge. “And you mean to say that your train crossed the c.ia m where tho bridge a 1 burned without being t r eked? Heraarkabie! What kept it from going down?” “As good luck would have it, just at that mo ment. it was being held up by train robbers." Chicago Post. Author Mr. Director, may I ask as to what the committee think of my drama? It is per haps accepted. “The three members of the reading com mittee wer of the opinion that one of the three acts ought to be struck out. but each wanted to cut out a different one.”— Fliegende. Blatter. “Do you know." she said, “that clock reminds me of yon every time I look at it. Do you no tice anything peculiar about it?” "Why, no; I really can’t say that I do," he replied, as he drew bearer, "except that it doesn’t go.” Then be got red in the face, and in a few moments vanished. —Washington Post. “Does your cyclopedy tell anything about the toottiacue?" “I think so. mum; it touches on all useful In formation. We haven't published the T volume yet.” “Well, you e.tn put me down for a T volume, an’if it goes ahead of ouralmanick on tooth ache cures I’ll take the whole set.’’— Munsey s Weekly. Rev. Mr. Jones—Sister White, it grieved me las’ Sunday ter see you at church in deep mournin', an’ at de same time er wearin'yaller strings on yer bonnet. Dat ain’t zactly de way ter mourn, sister. Sister White— Brudder Jones. I wears dem yaller ribbons in memory obmy ios’ lubhed one —who wuz er bright mulatter befo’ he up an' died. —Texas Siftings. Employment Agent—Th’ top o’ th' mornin’ t’ ye, Biddy Maloney. Oi've found a place fur ye. Go to the strafe an’ number ye foiud on this card Domestic—Sure it’s a noice neighborhood. Oi’U go. Agent—Wait a minute, Biddv. Take off that French cap. It's not a French maid, but an American gurl they wants.—. Vein York Weekly. CURRENT COMMENT. And Puts It on tho Consumer. From the. Chicago Inter-Ocean (Rep ). The McKinley bill relieves 700,000 from the payment of internal revenue taxes formerly assessed. They Are a Fly Pair. From the St. Louis Republic (Dem.). A maiden at Oregon, 111., has eloped with a drummer after twenty minutes’ courting. This is an age of pernicious activity. Und ir tha Pi o 7 si in Wagon. From the Philadelphia Times (Dem.). Considering the number of applications put in by tbe pension sharks, one has to wonder where the extra soldiers kept themse.ves during the war. They Coma Cheap. From the Chicago Tribune (Rep.). Col. Bussey, who wants to go to congress from the Fit teenih Illinois district, is a rich banker and has for manv years “loved the farmers” of bis district at tbe rale of 10 and 12 per cent. He can afford to buy several republican weeklies. The declining po a ers of old age may be wonderfully recuperated and sustained by the daily use of Hood’s Sarsaparilla.— Ado. His Opinions Didn’t Count. The following inci lects in the career of Alphonse Daudet are related, says Public Opinion , by H. H. Boyesen, who enjoys Ibo privilege of a personal acquaintance with the distinguished French author: “Alphonse Daudet. a little, de.icateman, with eard pa-ted at t ie chin, heavy ringlets like a lion's mane surrounding fcis head. soft, dreamy eyes, and extremely robust chest—such he is' vVn-'i a boy, h.s lather failed, and for some time Al phonse lived with him i'i penury at Lyons. But an elder tirother procured a position in a glass store a Paris and Alphonse went to live w ith him. They t ok the cheapest lodgings in thecitv. for money was exceedingly tc tree. In fac:, Daudet t ravelled to Paris in a freight car. wearing a pair of rubber boot-;, inside of wnich were neither slippers nor stockings The jour ney occupied two days, an I the boy di 1 not taste food during th • whole t.me. Finally, when Paris was reachei. he was nevrly frozen as weii as starved Tnere they dwelt, far up in the atec of a building six stoi ies in he.gnt. But neither of the brothers lost heart. Both had an abiding rai;h that the vo ingerpovsess-d genius. “One day a stray volum- of Daudet s poems found its way into the Tmh-nes. Tne Empress Eugenie was de i rh*ed with it. and exclaiinel to her brother-in-law: ‘Can't w e do something for tne boy who wrote taese?’ The duke re plied: *ls e can do everything for him if your majesty so desires. ’ ‘Tuen find out about him and offer him assistance i’she cried. Tne next day Alphonse loosed down rom his attic win dow in surprise to se * a great carriage, bearing the imperial coat-of-arms, stop before the door. In a moment a huge, impressive, dign.fie I, liveried lackey came ponderously creaking up the stairs. As he kn eked heavily on the do >r Dauuei reeled forward half in a faint. What could it aii mean? What would b ippan? Noth ing. the lackey said, except the duke sent his card to M. Daudet, wlio would plea->e call on the duke one wees from that day. “Ah, what prepa atious were made for that visit: Sur *ly Daudet could not go to the palace in rags and tatters, so he searched the clothing stores of ail Purls, trying to hire a drees su t, but- wir gto nis peculiar physique none could be fmnd. After many trials be succeeded in getting bold of a tailor who mad** him a suit on the strength of the duke's card—for Daudet had no money to pay for it—and on the ap pointed day be went to the palace. A score of o:h rs were present, but he waited his turn, and it came. He was ushered in to where the duse sat. ’Can you write?’ ‘Ye;, sir,’ replied Daudet. ‘Very good; I want a secretary. Pay, 5,(00 francs. Good morning.’ The boy was nearly overcome. He bad never imagined that any one was paid that much a year—about £2OO. But he suddenly remembered that he differed in politics from the duke, and, drawing himself up. announced the fact. Instead of bring deeply moved by this heroic course, the duke said: ‘Oh. go and get your hair cut. I don’t care anything about your political be liefs.’” Overcome by a Woman. There were four pretty tough looking charac ters sitting on a teach in Battery park the other day, says the New York Sun, relating their adventures to each other. One had been in a mutiny at sea; a sec ond had been a terror to a whole country and a third intimated that he had once trained w ith a band of pirates. The fourth was a lanky, long-faced man with a sunken chest, and when the others had finished he said: "Gentleman, why was I run out of Chicago? Because the papers called me a holy terror and put the police force on to me. You prob ably remember of the five policeman who were found dead in a bunch ? I had to do it. “Of cours you did,” they assented. “Why did the governor of Kansas set a price on my head—3l',ooo. dead or alive? You prob ably saw in the papers that only one man out of the thirteen in tne sheriff's posse returned alive? Didn’t want to do it, but had to.” “Certainly, just our case,” they replied. “I'd Use to go to St. Louis," he continued, “but it wouldn’t be prudent. You probably saw the account of my stealing a steamboat and run ning her off?" “Of course we saw,” replied the three. The lanky man was ready to relate another chapter of his life, when a lame woman with a few pears in a basket came along and said: “Come, now, move along, and give me a bit of the bench.” No one moved. They hardly realized her presence. Tney were busy thinking what des perate men they were. "And that’s the kind of gentility ye show a poor, lame woman, is it!” exc aimed the indig nant female, and, dropping her basket, she seized them one after the other and flung them into the middle of the patch. As the last one went she sat down in the middle of the bench, got a brace for her-feet, and continued: “And now lot's see the whole four of yez trot me out of this! They didn’t try. Humbly, meekly, and lamb like they sauntered away to find an ther bench, totally ignoring 'the fact that they were desper ate men of decided villainy. He Cot the Cash. Col. M. A. Aldrich tells a good story on the late Alexander Mitchell, onee president of the Chicago. Milwaukee and St. Paul railroad, says the Chicago Herald. It was at a time v-hen the colonel was col lector of tne port of Milwaukee, and was somewhat a leader of the Democratic party in the Cream City. During a campaign it was de cided to organize a large torchlight procession aud go down to Racine to stir up some enthusi asm. Of course they would want a train, and the colonel called upon Mr Mitcheil to secure it. He broached the subject by asking the president how much it would cost for train to take about 500 persons to Racine and return. Mr. Mitchell stammered over ihe problem for awhile, evi dently figuring in his mind the coances of the company getting its pay for the servics. "Will the money be all right?” he dubiously inquired of the colonel. “Oh, yes," replied that diplomat. “There will be no trouble about tho money. That is all arranged for.” “Well, well, I don’t know about the price; I must ask Mr. I win., ox,” and the presi dent sent for his right bower. Ben came in bris; and smiling, and when the question of price was asked figured on his shirt frout a mo ment and then named a sum “Is that about right?" asked the president of the colonel. “Oh, if Ben Lennox says it's right it’s bound to be right,” said Aldrich, "and if you are satisfied w ith the price lam not going to kick. It's all ruht, tnen, Mr, Mitchell, is it? Wu cau have the train?" “Yes, yes." said Mr. Mitchell, “you can have the train." But you are sure that the money is all right, colonel?’’ “Why, certainly, no troubleaboutthat at all. When the affair is over I shall come direct to you for a check for the amount.” ’1 he colonel says tne president’s face was a picture for a moment and that Hen Lennox we'nt out choking with laughter. The torchlight procession went to Racine just tte i-a ue and the colcxel got the check from Mr. Mitchell. My Neighbor Jim. O F. Pear-re in the Blcominaton Pantagraph. Everything pleased my neighbor Jim. When it rained He never complained, But said wet weather suited him. “Tnere’s never too much ram for me, And th s is something like.” said he. When earth was dry as a powder mill, He did not sigh Because it was dry, But said if he could have his will It would be his chief, supreme delight To live where the sun shone day and night. When winter came, with its snow and ice. He did not scold Because it was coll, But said: “Now this is real nice; If ever from home I’m forced to go. I’ll move up n rth with tho Esquimau." A cyclone whirled along itß track; And did him harm— It broke his arm. And stripped the coat from off his back; "And I would give another limb To see suen a blow again," said Jim. And when at length his years were told. And nis body bent. And his streugtu all spent. And Jim was very weak aud old; “I long have wanted to know,” he said, “How it feels to die,’’ and Jim was dead. Tho angel of death had summoned him To heaven, or—well, I cannot tel; But I know that the climate suited Jim; And cold or hot, it mattered not ’ It was to him the long-sought spot. The Way Made Clear. One of the. most serious obstacles to success in the way of man is planted right in the mid •dle of the road to health. How to restore and to maintain a regular habit of body and diges tion is too often a source of needless, and un happily, of yam inquiry. It is not necessary to inveigh against drastic purgatives. They who have used them continuously know the 'oonse ' quence. A remedy which unites the action of I a regulating med Kine for the bowels with that of a tome Doth for those organs, the liver aud the stomach, is Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters sanctioned by the best rnedioal authority and receiving daily the indorsement of our fellow countrymen. M ith this effectual, though gen tle. laxative at han 1, it is possible to and -fv those of temperature productive of cor.stipa tion, as well as constitutional attacks of hil S® Ma'aria!*dyspepsta BSS the'Bitterss —Md remßalel &Ud P^ated'by ITEMS OF INTEREST. So PHI 7 France, aged <F> years, has sued So'o rroi Ovistt, also aged 60 yeans, for $2,000 for stealing a kiss. Both parties are from Akron, O. A gigantic dam is being built across the Mis souri. It will be *-00 feet long an i47 feet hi h and the reservoir will cover an area of 429 square miles. Conservative Londoners are shocked at the prop >sal of an American insurance com pany to purchase the historical Mansion house for the headquarters of its English agency. Our Chinese brethem make bold strikes for free opium. Some time ago the Americm vessel Halcyon was wrecked on the Japanese coast. In a fresh water tank was found 560.00 J worth of tie drug. It was supposed to be in tended for British Columbia. Ir is stated that patent medicines have paid to the British g ivernmeat in 1390 the enormous sum of £220.000. or §1,000,000, in the shape of duties, and it is estimated that before lie end of Ihe year *1,500,000 will have been expen led by the owners of these nostrums. Dec. 11 will be the hunlredth anniversary of the storming of Ismail by the Russian troops. There still lives a veteran who was present on that occasion, and received a gold cross for bravery Col. Gritsenko has been on the re tired list since 1815, and is now 117 years old. Rochester, End., is vain of a prodigy 5 years 6 months old, distingnithei fir his wi n derful pronunciation," “marvelous gestures" and ’'remarkable m raierv.” He d-livers lect ures bv Dr. Talmvge. recites fanny sketches y Mark Twain, and is au all-round elocutionist. Sunday observance is steadily gaining ground in Paris. In the west end the great majority of the shops are closed, and the railway companies nave lately a rreed not to reckon Sundays in charging for the warehousing of goods. Tha postoffices, too, an: to close in future at 6 p. m. instead of 8, aud the two evening letter deliv eries are to be abolished. It is becoming “the correct thing" for En glishmen to wear wedding rings. The fashion able design is said to be somewhat more ornate than the plain broad band which a lady deems toe only permissible form of nuptial circl t. and bears a true lover's knot, white a motto or posy is freqnently inscribed inside, after the fashion of our grandmonhers. The oldest printed boos in Germany ha; lately been acquired by the Royal Library in Berlin, says the American Bookmaker. It is au early edition of the Cninese art treasurer. “Po- Ku-t-u-io.” printed from m tal blocks, aud dating from the y -ars 1303 to 1312. The impres sion of both the text and tne illustations is said to be beautifully clear and distinct. A burglar got fast in the window of a house occupied by John KoachJ of Paterson. John is a moralisi, and he dressed himself an 1 sat down on a chair and talked to that burglar for two long hours witnout a break. Then the burglar asked to be eitner knocked on the head or let go, and Mr. Roach talked to him one hour longer and then suffered him depart. In round figures, 25,000 square tneais have been served in the House of Commons this session, namely, 15,000 dinners and 10,000 lunch eons. Members have had 12,000 dinners aud 8.000 luncheons. In the strangers' dining room 1,125 dinners and 1,142 luncheons have been serv ed, and there have been 1,614 dinners and 325 luncheons in the terrace dining-rooms. In an Episcopal church, near Boston, the other Sunday a lady in passing up the aisle caught Ler dress on a corner of a pew and tire it. As the process of tearing was very audible to the congregation the feeling of the lady may be imagined, when, at that moment, the clergy man began the service by reading the sentence, “Rend your heart and not your garments." The old New York Marble Cemetery on Second street, between First and Second avenues. New York, is notable as containing not a single grave. The ground was fi led up from thebegining with the sunken stone vaults, in which the uead are jNhced. Tuese vaults have a thm covering of soil thrown over them, which is now laid out in gr..ssy plots and walks, Robert Fulton, of steamboat fame, is buried in this cemetery. The natives are making preparations for the coronation of their young king and chief para mount of the Swazli nation, says the New Castle Chronicle. An imp! has been sent out hunting for a lion, tiger, buffalo and a large snake. Part of the ceremony at the cor na tion consists of tne king eating a portion of the hearts of the first three animals to give him couare, afterward being anointed with the snase’s fat to prevent him bemg bewitched. “We can give a point to New York people about getting their money’s worth out of these little movable electric bulb lights,” said an Ida hoan the otfcer day. “Out our way we take them to bed with us. For keeping one com fortable on a cold night they are as good as a roaring fire in a room. Ruober bags, tin boil ers and other devices for holding hot water get cold. When I begin to get ready for bed I put the lights between the sheets. By shifting it about very little while it takes the chill from the bed by the time lam undressed. As I slide in I push the light down with my feet, and usu ally fall asleep with it there. ” Some time since a hansom cab was driven at a very rapid pace along the strand in Lon don. and passers by observed, to their horror , there were two men inside engaged in an ap’ pearantly deadly conflict. Fearing that mur der was about to be committed, they raised an alarm, and some bold individuals rushed to the horse and brought the animal to a standstill Thereupon the two persons who a minute bA fore seemed to be engaged in a life or death stru.glequitly leaned forward and distributed among the crowd some handbills inviting them to go to such and such a theater to witness a certain performance. A little town near Providence boasts a Con gregational church whose pastor, besides being an eloqnent preacher, is a man of stalwart pro portions. At one of hi3 everting prayer meet lugs, say the Boston Globe, the services were disturbed bv two young men who audibly scoffed at everything they saw or heard Fiually the pastor remonstrated with them on their behavior, and asked them why they at tended the meeting. "We came expecting to see miracles performed," impudently replied one of tne rascals Leaving the desk and walking quietly down tbe aisle, the past r seized one after the other by tne collar, and as they disappeared out of tne door, with the imprint of his boot in their trousers, remarked “We don’t perform miracles here, but we cast out devils." Sir Rowland Hill’s great discovery of the value of simplicity in vast undertakings, says the London -Yens, se- ms to have produced little impression as yet upon those who l ave the management of our railways. In Paris the directors of the queer little line which runs right round the city inside the fortifications aud torus a means of communication between all the great termini, have just made a consid erable advance in the right direction Forthe future the fares will be reckoned by the mtm her of stations one passes in traveling For tne first two stations the fare will be 2 nenee beyond these it will be three pence. One has only to remember that first-class i 8 j ui< t double the price of ,he ordinary or se ond-dass and that return tickets are issued for a fare and a half, and one can, by looking at a plan, see at a glance what one has to pay. Why not trv sinie such plan on the District railway in Lon don? J An English woman of some fame wrote re cently, in response to an invitation to si eak in public on the freedom of women: "I wish with all my heart this question of woman’s righ s were settled. I have been tired of it for a very long time: but I am something more thantir-d of tne smoki g. slanging, utterly unwomanly specimens of our six which one meets too often nowadays. It was only the other day that I heard from the Ups of a fair young girl the astounding statement, made seriously too that the home now was an exploded notion ! I cannot see what us the use now of simply preaching for or against the habit of woman smoking. I was at a pretty little public func ' aay - ari *r luncheon. I saw at .east half a dozen girls smoking. Among them was a distinguished foreigner, but she of cour e, simply followed the custom of ’ her country, so she may pass; but to see nice 1 okmg young English girls puffing away bJ fr*me b " r ’ " at 0S ’ t 0 me ’ sh °c k mg j D th(< ex . Mexican onyx is a form of marble and its colors are formed by oxides of metals In the earth over the caves through Whicn the calcareous water passes Gold is represented by purple, silver by yellow iron by red, copper by green, and arsenic and zinc by white. Volcanic eruptions and earth- Sf h . ave almost destroyed the caves in L'f *'? n >' x Mists, and the native Indian* who mine it i.ave to cut through masses of ruins Blocks of the material are quarried in a ve n way ’ ,n or ; ler nt to shatter the sub “ t. D T P r ° UI v h a9'S are drilled by hand on a line. In each hoie is inserted a snugly fit eutf t l6C en° wo ° d * hich has been grooved from tr™ ? v Ho L water is poured into tba F “.’* 8 at This swells the wood, and the TANARUS? nn l S| *l a onK the line w >thout damage, nwiuh s S ? B ’ the blocks into slabs and P” l s o h thPß urfai?e by r and. Each piece is serni ’ ““d when placed between the eye a remarkably beau tiful effect in form tod color. MEDICAL, It3 peculiar efficacy ig NOTHING J£.7? Uch lo “ P process und nuthino skill m compound.ng as to LIKE IT the iDgredic-nts themselves. Take it in time. It checks .. . , li-seases inthe outset, <>r if they be advanced will prove a potent re So Ho® stall to Wittont It It tabes the place of a doctor aud cosl I y pre scriptions. AU wlio lead FOR WHOSE sedentary lives will find or-*,,-*,.. It the best preventive of BENEFIT and cure for ludiccstion, Constipation, Headache, Rilionsness. Piles and Merit al Depression. \,, of time, no interference with burin* “i while taking. For children it is most in nocent and harmless. No dancer from exposure after taking. Cures Colic. Di arrhoea, Bowel Complaint s. reverish liess ami Feverish Colds. Invalid ’and delicate persons will find it the mildest Aperient aud Tonic they can use. ' in;,, taken at night insures refreshing i .m and a natural evacuation of the bowels. A little taken in the morning sh-r-pe's the appetite, cleanses the stomach and sweetens the breath. “ A PHYSICIAN’S OPINION. “I have been practicing medicine for twenty years and have never been able ta put up a vegetable compound that would, like Simmons Liver Regulator, promptly and effectively move the Liver to acti :i and at the same time aid tinstead of wet;! ening) the digestive and assimilative powers of the system.” L. Al. Hinton, m.d., Washington, Ark. Marks of Genuineness: Look forthe red Trade-Mark on front of Wrapper, and tha Beal and Signature of J. H.Zeiiin 4. Cos in red, on the side. Take no other. Sick Headache and relieve nil inci dent to a bilious state of the system, such as Dizziness, Nausea. Drowsiness. Distress after eating, Pain in the Side, &c While their most remarkable success lias been shown in curing Headache, yet Carter’s Little Lrvzit Pills are equally valuable in Constipation, curing and preventing this annoyingeompiaiut. while they also correct all disorders of the stomach, stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels. Even if they only cured Ache they would be almost, priceless to these 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 theia But after all sick head ACHE 53 the bane of so many lives that here is when I we make our great boast. Our pills cure 3 I while others do not. I Carter’s Little Liver Pills are very small I and very easy to take. One or two pills mats I a dose. They are strictly vegetable and do I not gripe or purge, but by their gentle actios I please all who use them. In vials at 25 cents; I five for sl. Soid everywhere, or sent bv mail. I CAETEB MSUICINE CO., Nsxr York' I UH k3E Smites I p/ISJSHKiRHIy I l TWO BOX L iiED HO. tt § Carroll, la., July, ISS9 I I was suffering-10 years from shocks in my K head, so much so, that at rimes I didn’t expect ■ to recover. I took medicines from many dec- K tors, but didn't tret any relief until 1 took ■ Pastor Koenig’s Nerve Tonic; ihe second coid ■ relieved mo, and 2 bottles cured me. H W. PECK. B vanished! I Rev. H. McDONOUGII. of Lowell, Mass.. ■ vouches forthe following: There is a case of which I have knowledge, und I am very glad H to avail myself of the opportunity to make K know’ll the good derived liom the use of Bjj nig's Nerve Tonic, The subject is a younu K lady, who had been suffering ironware H childhood. Oil my recommendation she pro* ■ cured your remedy, and for three mnntlo B fits of epilepsy to which she has been so H subject have ceased entirely. ■ Our I’aniplilet for sulferors of nervoal B diseases will bo sent free to any adcirew, and poor patients can also obtain tho nte* ■|| icine fre© of charge from us H This remedy has been prepared by tbeW verned Pastor Kcenig, of Port Wayne. i-L for the past ten years, and is now r<ri-ns B| under his .direction by the KOENIG MEOICJME CO., §§ 60 W. ll(lion,c#r.Cllnt<?r' Nt., C'llli'AalG" Igt SOLD BY DIWCCJSTS. ■ Pric* $1 nsr Kn‘tl. :>.)tt!n ftr* B LIPPMANBROS., Agents, Savanna’!, ■ Stop tbht 1 1 I CxßOHic Cough Nowij I ; Fnr if you do not It may become 1 B J sumptive. For Consumption , Scrofula, H j General I>ebilitj/ and Want iit $ K | there is nothing like ■ bU 8 8 vil | Of Pure Coil Liver Oil HYFOPHOSP HITES 8p Or Lime /.>,<( Seda- . ||||. j It Is almost as palatable as milk-_.“f j better than other so-called Ewu*s*o • J A wonderful flesh producer. ! Scott’s Einalsisiil ; There are poor Imitations. Gut the HE DID HE PIPN^B Five years ago botfi t [OUR wewbook] M explaissall. Its advice is Vital. If’’’",.. rcbM *7l HEED OUIv TTOfS--II PERFECT MANBOODb| ~r=- x B Strong, THE MAKITON < U- IU Park l'lac- j