MMMMW t - - ' 3 * * - ' . . - * - > * JMWJWR * ilUlW-iilli llll MUIJ. I ii-Ui . I IWI i-f Q ONLY FOUR WEEKS MORE TO LIVE. | M 37iIj ( Uie Jletl Missouri's Governor Can Do w/fm for Jlrootit , tlin Murderer. QJ St. Louis dispatch : Tho governor H this morning rcudoreil his decision in | E | which ho declines to grant a commuta- H iion of tho sentence against Hugh M. | B Brooks , alius Maxwell , but granted a H respite for four weeks. BI > The first news that young Brooks ro- M\ \ < ceived this morning was that tho gov- RH ernor had simply granted him a respito 13 for twenty-ono days. This ho construed ' * . to mean that tho governor intended to IlK take time to fully examine tho case. I'H ' Later Brooks received a telegram from wM his attorneys announcing a respito of IjH four weeks and stating that tho govor- 1111 nor refused absolutely to commuto tho IH flentenco or intcrfero in tho matter. mm This was a sad blow to Broolts' hopes , Ilfl tiud ho said that ho could not undor- l | | stand it. Ho had felt confident that tho II governor would t-co his way clear to I grant his appeal for commutation , but 1 : r uow all hopo is gono and ho must pre- 1S pare for the end. There was no oxcito- W { ' , mont and very little curiosity about tho I jail or four courts wIkmi tho news came , / and th re doesn't s o it to bo much in- M\ \ turost takou in thy mutter by citizens ' | genorally. Mrs. Brooks said , after the governor's decision was known to her : "I confi- < dcntly expected commutation for my < eon. The poor boy has never had a fail Mi' trial. In that , 1 believe every fair- El minded portion will agree , whether ho be i nn Englishman or of other nationalitj * . I Not an atom of justic hits ho had from ly tho lift rinuing to tho end. My son is Ml not guilty of murder , and I did hope Hi that Governor Morehouse would save his I ] life and spare his family from tho grief M { and shame that now hangs over them. I Mi don't know what f shall do. I have not I ) dotermiued on my plans. I wish I was I | at home. Bc3'ond the pleasure of seeing B | my son , mjourney of several thousand HI miles has fieen a fruitless one. I don't BJ lenow whether my husband will visit HI Missouri again or not. " Hf The lady broke down in her deep grief , Hi nod the sorrow and disappointment oi B | both her and her daughter was very B" great HI Tho Minneapolis Flour Ouiput. B | Minneapolis dispatch : The North- HI western Miller , in its issue of to-day , Hf says : Tho mills ran unexpectedly boavi- K ly last week , and averaged over 23,00 ( Ht barrels of flour per day. Tho weok'f HI -output was 152.500 barrels averaging HI 25-120 barrels dnily agntnst 100,200 bar- Hf rels the weekobefore , and 109,400 barrels Hf for tho corresponding time in 18S7. The H | West Side Water Power company has Mw some work to do which requires an emp- Hi tv canal , and tho water was shut out Bf- Tnosdiiy and kept out Wednesday and B\ Thursday. As all but three of the mills B' depend on this canal for their power , it B | will be readily seen that at least one- K third of the week's output will bo cut Bt off and look for to , znairy to-day prac- K tically end this week's operations with B | the mills on tho west side canal. The BI extremely hot weather lately prevailing B | makes the wheat grind much less freely , B | and cuts down the working capacity B | of the mills to quite a perceptible ex- B > tent There has been a very apprecia- Bi ble improvement in tho flour market the By past week , it taking the form of a con- Bj , siderably butter demand , both at home B | and abroad. The feeling is evidently B § gaining ground among conservative B | members of the trade , that values will B | rather advance than decline further , III and there is an inclination to bumore MS freely in consequence. Local quota- B tions for flour are the samo as a week B Jigo , but they are held more firmly with I ) buyers bidding quite freely at figures I ' higher than heretofore offered. Several HI orders of 10,000 to 15,000 barrels are ro- I j ported to have been booked for export , Hj . and this branch of trade is regarded as Bg of much more encouraging appearance Hj ihan formerly. The direct exports of BF ilour for the week wore tho largest for H .several weeks. They were 59,200 bar- R rols against 31,700 barrels the preceding Hi week. HL A Brutal Father Fittingly Punished. Mi Phillips , Wis. , July 15. An outrage Hj. -was committed by a father here that has Hi been seldom , equaled in the state , and one H | which was followed , by summary punish- H | znent by rightly indignant citizens. For HI some time past Gust Johnson , a home- K steader , has been punishing hia 10-year-old ; Hi buy in a most inhuman manner for soma , HI trifling misdemeanors. Last Sunday morn- ] He in ; : Johnson , who lives in the township of ( Hj "Worcester , tied the youth to a post with a K log chain and flogged him to a point where Hi death would have been preferable. Tha i H | little prisoner was not released after the I Hi Hogging , bnt left to sutler from his wounds ] Hi until Monday night , when he succeeded in = I ft making his escape to tho woods , where he It roamed about until Wednesday night with- Mt out food or shelter , lie wa3 found by ' M ) a Wisconsin Central station crew nearly j Rf fUmished and exhausted with hunger , | B | And as fnghtened &s a wild animal , lie , Hj reported his father's cruelty to the crew , HI .and , with other indignant citizens , they HI waited upon Johnson Thursday night , and , ' Hf with a rope , proceeded to string him up to ] Hi the limb of a tree , but he begged so hard ( I d pitifully and promised so faithrully K | never to whip the boy again that he was Hj lowered to the ground , and. after receiving ' Hi 2 sound threshing , marched to the railway ' HI tank , and was given a cold batb. i Rt It ha ? since come to light that Johnson j H | has been in the nahit of tieing his son with , Hi a lock and chain for weeks at a time , Hi feeding him on bread and water and ad- Hi ministering a whipping every day. The ' l | boy is now being taken care of by the < Kg people of the settlement ( m\ A Disastrous Cloud-ButsL ( H ? Wheeuxo , W. Va. , July 13. Adrices ( | from Hughes river , a small stream flowing ( I through Doddridge and Kitchie counties , , [ say hundreds of farmers in those counties j M\ \ are absolutely ruined. On Monday even- < j lag a cloud burst , and in a short time the It -waters wera higher than ever It known. Every bridge on the stream , | | is gene ; housej , barns , granaries , - , I ! and growing crops have disappeared ( I j entirely , and piles of drift and debris are < 1 ! left ten or twelve feet deep in the valley , i I' For miles soil was washed off as clean as a : ! I ] f oor. leaving a hard , smooth clay surface , i | | The loss is placed at f 500,000. On Wedi I ] nesday Terra Alta , Preston county , was 3 Ij visited by a cyclone. The track ot the cy- j l { clone lay through the heart of the town , t I' and twisted houses from their foundations j II vad carried roofs hundreds of feet from the , l ! buildings. ] I ! ' > The Republican Committee. ] 11 2Cew Yoek , July 13. The republican * I ! natwnal executive committee was in session i I- m to-day. Vice-Chairman Clarkson , of Iowa , j W\ \ presided in the absence of Senator Quay , t K Among the business transacted was the ] l | creation ot a sub-committee for Minnesota , i Wj. Dakota and Montana , with van3 , of Mint t K sesota , as chairman , and a similar subt K committee for California , Oregon , Nevada 1 B and Arizona , with De Young , of California. : H chairman. A committee consisting of t B Clxrkson , New , Dudley , Fessenden and m Ilobart was appointed to establish and open 1 ' national headquarters , and to act for the t I * < xecntiTe committee darinz recesa. 1 DJ r • . . ' i ii ! BASELY BETRAYED. Itobbetianil Desevtlon ofn Devoted JTittbaml bu III * Jtrtdn of a Month. MABYSViLLE , O. , July 15. Quito a sen sation developed in onr city yesterday morning by tho report that Mrs. Emma Bayley had left for parts unknown , taking with her over $800 of her husband's money. Mr. Sylvanus Bayloy is a hard working young man about twenty-flvo years old. 7 care and industry ho had , as a common laborer , accumulated about ? 1,000. On tho 13th of June ho was married in Springfield , Ohio , to a Miss Enimi Fleming , who , it is said , married him not for love , but in ordor to eavo her self from expsosure for intimacy with a wealthy and prominent married man of this city. Since her marriago eho has striven in every way possiblo to get possession of what little property he possessed. Ho de termined to go west , and , drawing his money from tho bank , placed $800 in his trunk , which sho immediately appropriated and desorteuT. I5oyloy immediately went to Springfield and ficcurod tho arrest of Mrs. Magaw , a spiritualist and fortuno teller of Spring field , as an accomplice , and brought her to Marysvillo this morning. Sho was released this altemoon. The detective who made the arre.it left on tho 5 o'clock train going ca'-t. While hero ho found a clew of tho whereabouts of Mrs. Ilayloy , and will ro- turu to-morrow , when ho will have some thing sensational to reveal. 3 IN MALE ATTIRE. A. Woman Masquerades for Six Years , But is Finally Exposed. Sioux Oitv , la. , July u. A lew days ago tho oflicer of tho Fort Madison peni tentiary discovered that a prisoner con victed and sent up for horse stealing at this placo was not a man , but a woman , and iho was promptly transferred to the woman's department of tho penitentiary. The woman was convicted under tho name of Charles Millor. She had lived in this place under that namo for six years and a half , and there never was a suspicion that she was anything but a man. She passed as the husband of a woman with whom she lived , and whom sho supported by man's work. For two years she worked on a rented farm , and then earned a living for herself and family as a barber. About a year ago she and her supposed wife adopted a child , taking it from the poor house. She took a team from a livery stable and was convicted therefor , having maintained the fraud as to sex both through trial and in jail. The alleged wife has suddenly dis appeared and cannot bo found. Whence Miller came or what the motive for the fraud can only be guessed. Getting Ready lor the Campaign. NEW Yobk , July 11. Tho republican national committee at 3 p. m. received the executive committee of tho league repub lican clnbs , headed by W. W. Johnson , of Nevada. Judge Thurston , of Nebraska , was introduced as their spokesman. Ho aid the coming campaign was one of war , and that hie committee camo to receive in structions as to thoir position in tho battle. Chairman Clnrkson in reply said the national committee appreciated their ad vice and were glad to have the co operation in the campaign. It was decided to request the national committee to ap point a committee to confer with the ex ecutive committee of the league as to tho beat plan of utilizing the support of the league. Mrs. J. Ellen Foster , of Iowa , tho woman's temperance advocate , was ushered into the rooms and in a long ad dress presented plan for the formation oi a woman's national republican club. At a mooting of the national committoe to-night Senator M. S. Quay , of Pennsylvania , was chosen chairman , and State Senator J. S. Fasaett of New York , socrotary. They were also appointed to hold the same oui- ces on the executive committee. The ex ecutive committee was chosen as follows : M. H. DeYoung , Samuel Fessenden , Geo. B. Davis , John C. New , J. S. Clarkson , W. C. Goodlee , J. Manchester Haynos , Garrett A. Hobart , A. L. Conger. The presidents of state leagues of repub lican clubs held a conferenc to-night with the national republican committee. A conference committee has been appointed , the leagues to confer with a similar com mittee of the national republican commit- tso to-morrow. The Iowa Railway Traffic. Dubuque , July 13. The last Iowa legislature passed a law requiring the R.R commissioners to fix a distance tariff for Iowa railways to take effect July 10. An order was obtained by several of the roads from Judge Brewer on June 2S , re straining the publication of the law , but the Commissioners claimed that the pub lication was completed before the restrain ing order was served. The tariff there fore went into effect on July 10. The Secretary of the jobbers' and Shippets' Association of this city telegraphed the Commissioners to learn if the new tariff was in effect. The Secretary answered that it was. The Dubuque shippers now announce their purpose to prosecute any railroad making a freight charge in ex cess of the rate fixed by the Commission ers. Under the law suit for violation of the tariff must be brought by the Com missioner ? , whenever such violation is called lo their attention. The nen.l'y for the nrst offense is a fine of not leas than $1,00(1 ( nor more than 33,000 ; for each subsequent violation not less than $5,000 nor more than S10.000. The Commission ers may dismiss suits with the consent of Attorney General of the State. The offi cers of a railway company , making ex cessive charges , may also he indicted and the penalty recovered by criminal pro ceedings. So far , agents of railroads centering in Dubuque have received no ' instructions to use the Commissioners' 1 tariff. Was She Killed for Blackmailing ! | Des Moines special : An Ottumwa special says Alice Kelly , a fine-looking woman 25 to 30 3ears old , was found dead at 7 o'clock this morning on the edge of the timber on the "Old Field" in the outskirts of tho city. A horse iud buggy standing hitched near at- ( tracted the attention of two passers-by , 1 who found the body coyered by a lap- i robe , tho throat cut , and head badly < pounded. Lying near were a razor and , an iron bolt a foot long. Miss Kelly's . first appearance here was on Juno 13 , , when she registered at Dick's hotel as ] hailing from Detroit , Mich. About two , weeks later sho left and went to a pri- , vate boarding house , and was arrested ] for jumping a board bill. She escaped on a point of law. Yesterday she left ber boarding house , the proprietor re- : fusing to keep her longer , and went to , tho Eevere house , where she took Gup- per. About seven o'clock last evening , she engaged a buggy and drove alone to the green houserwhere she got a bo- quet afterwards found on her body. An ' hour later she was seen on Third street ' done in the buggy. This was tho last seen of her. The nature of her wounds { show it to bo murder. She was a bright t bold woman , and the opinion prevails t that tho murder is tho result of her S blackmailing somebody. 1 - Overflowing Rivers. Wheeling , W. Va. , July II. Tho rise- in tho Valley river at Grafton yostcrday from rains for tho past two days was un precedented , and to tho lumber interests of this section is disastrous. Thousands of logs woro swept away , booms destroyed , and mills near tho river badly damaged , several building * were washed down tho river and crushed to atoms when they struck the strong iron railroad bridge here. This flood so far is moro disastrous to Grafton than tho firo of a year ago , and the loss to the town and section will not fall far short of $250,000. The dnmago at Raullsburg will reach $125,000. Around Parkcrsburg the railroads have been badly washed out in all direc tions. Farms are flooded and hundreds of acres of growing crops and harvested grain deluged. Millions of feet ot timber woro afloat in the swift current going to destruc tion. Every stream is out of its banks , and numbers of families have had to move 10 higher ground. Farkersburg losses are over $100,000. At Clarksburg twenty * houses were carried away and an ines- timable amount of property ha3 been ruined. Last night was a night ot terror. Tho water roached the highest stage at 1 o'clock , and by those who remember the floods of 1852 it is conceded that it entirely surpassed it. Tho loss to tho town and county cannot even be estimated , bnt is very heavy. A Papal Encyclical Letter. Dublin , July 15. A papal encyclical letter was read to-day in all tho Catholic churches in tho diocese of Dublin. In it the pope says he has heard with regret that excited meetings havo been held at which inconsiderate and dangerous opin ions regarding tho recent papal decree have boon uttered. Ho has seen forced interpretations put upon the decree , and statements made that it was propared withontsufficient inquiry having previously been made. Tho pone Bays his de cree was based upon tho most com plete information , H13 holiness re iterates his affection for tho Irish people , and says ho has always urged them to keep within tho bounds of justice and right. Tho bishops , ho says , must remove all conception and leave no room for doubt as to the force of the decree. Tho whole system of tho plan of campaign and boycotting is condemned as unlawful. Tho encyclical letter causes intense dissat isfaction. At Bray the peoplo left the church during tho reading of the letter. Horrors of the Flood in Mexico. St. Louis , Mo. , July 11. Late advices from Leon , Mexico , tho principal scene of the great flood , say that masses of people are packed in portals , stables and every available place of shelter , averaging one person to less than a square yard of space. Everything possiblo is done to relieve the suffering. Children up to 12 years of age are among these masses with out a thread of clothing , and at night are wrapped in whatever rags tho family has for covering. In view of tho nature of the buildings involved they being constructed of adobe and the great number of them which were destroyed , it is still believed that tho bodies of many hundred people are in the ruins. Some threo hundred were recovered , but the stench was so great that further search was abandoned. A New Counterfeit. Washington dispatch : Yuisse Cru- giera , an Italian , was arrested in a fur niture storo in this city while attempt ing to pass a counterfeit $5 silver cer tificate of the new issue. Tho appear ance of the note aroused the suspicion of the salesman , and Crugiera was ar rested. He said that he had just como from Now York , knew nothing about the note , and did not remember where he got it. The note was examined at the treasury department , and pro nounced to be one of tho counterfeit issue discovered last February in De troit. They are said to havo been made by Charles Johnson , alias Davis , a no torious counterfeiter who was arrested in Toronto for making money on hia own account. Calling Upon Gen Harrison. Indianapolis , July 12. A number of visiting delegations have called upon Gen eral Harrison. The principal event of tha day was the roception of a delegation of about 2,0 JO persons from Boone county , accompanied by three bands of music. D. C. Scull de livered an address on behalf of the dele gation , to which General Harrison replied , and concluded bj thanking thorn for their early interest in the campaign. After the speaking was over an informal reception and general handshaking took place. Brutality of a Father and Son. Decatur , 111. , July 12. Marion county is terribly worked up over a dastardly assault committed on Blanche Peck , the 17-year-old daughter of a well- to-do farmer living rear Argenta. The girl , who bears a clean reputa tion , was found this afternoon lied to a post , where she had been left by the vil lains after they had accomplished their pur pose. She charges Alfiod Williams and his son John with committing tho crime , and officers and farmers have been scouring the country all day in search of them. The Engineers Siand Alone. Cleveland dispatch : Concerning the statement telegraphed from Philadelphia that several labor organizations ol America would be consolidated , Assist ant Chief Engineer Ingraham , of the Locomotive Engineers' Brotherhood , says : ' "Tho Brotherhood of Locomo tive Engineers will stand upon its own strength , and will consolidate with 11c other organization. No such step has ever been contemplated by us. I know nothing of the intentions of othei unions. " Accidentally Disemboweled Himself. Laxcasteb , O. , July 15. Ex-County Commissioner Henry LaDgle , of Liberty township , met with a singular and terrible accident yesterday. Mr. Langle is a man of heroic size , weighing 325 pounds and standing six feet four inches high. Taking a large butcherknife and going into the yard use it , he tripped and fell , plunging the knife up to the hilt in his bowels. A surgeon was quickly summoned from the nearest village , who prononnced the ghast- Iv wound most orobablv a fatal one. Tho B. & M. has established a com mercial agency in Lincoln. This agency will look after tho commercial interests of the entire Burlington system in the west. west.The The Union bank of Pairmonfc hae closed its doors. It is not thought the suspension will be permanent. Secretary J. BT. McShane is sending ant the fourth annual premium list for tho Omaha fair , which convenes Sep tember 3 and continues till September 3. Premiums amounting to § 20,000 will be given. • - _ _ r. tw 5'.i..i. . . tiiAj. j - * . > s & * - > - UPON THE BALCONY. Professor Paul Microbe sat intently gazing at the houBO across the way , find for onco in his life lounged in a perfectly natural position , with a re laxed and human look on his face. It would have been plain to the dullest that for once in his lifo , any rate , the professor had forgotten all about him self , his stomach , his dyspepsia and malarial tendencies , his theories on bacteria , and , more than all , the im portant fact that precisely at 6:15 : it was his custom to partake of a pint of new milk scalded and two slices of stale Graham bread toasted. The professor was tall , lantern jawed , slabtided and sedate. He lived by theory ; in fact , life itself was a theory to him ; ho had a theory by which he fed his stomach , a theory by which he pruned his mind and made it sprout only on tho north or scientific side , a theory by which he raised his chil dren , and innumerable theories regarding diseases on which ho wrote books , taught in a college , lectured in Boston and killed people in an experimental way. He only ate certain foods , and then only at certain times , and in the ca pacity of a guest would have been , I fear , thoroughly impossible. A per son who sniffs at a salad and asks suspiciously "is that oil in it ? " who holds your hospitably offered cup of tea off at arm's length while he rudely queries "green or black ? " who can't or won't ride backward , nor sit in a room without an accurately measur ed amount of ventilation , is , I con tend , a thoroughly impossible person and not to be thought of as a chum , a guest or in any of the more inti mate relations of life. Professor Microbe lived in a city far removed from this gay , seductive southern town , and his duty was far from here , but what with his theories , his dyspepsia and his skim milk sys tem of starving his stomach , he had pretty nearly experimented himself off into the land from which no ex perimenter has yet returned , and had been ordered off south for a complete change of scene , food , air and mode of life. life.Said Said his doctor to him : "For heav en's sake , man , quit your fooling with yourself ; shake yourself together and live as God Almighty intended you should. You are a monster now a deformity. Eat plenty , drink plenty , laugh , go to the opera , to the theatre , dance , and , it Mrs. Microbe here will let you , fall in love. " "If that is your theory , of course , doctor , " said that sandy lady. Mrs. Microbe really was a lady who seemed to arit in the teeth. The professor had married her in pursuance of a theory , and the re sult of that marriage had been two or three surly , unruly , ill mannered cubs , who bid fair to grow to man's estate heartily hatingtheoriesand theorists. And so , to cut a long story short , the professor came south , leaving be hind him everything and everybody which comprised life from his point of view. The savants welcomed him , and made much of him , therefore he liked the south. A man would think it fair summer at the south pole if only thero was some one there to keep his vanity warm. But the hotel did not suit him. as he was constantly uncertain about the newness of his milk and the ase of his Graham bread , and so , by a stroke from Fortune a merry dame who marked him for a victim , and intended to have some fun with him he found lodgings m a charming old Spanish house in the very heart oE the French quarter. It was a room quite too lovely for desecration by a dusty old professor , however distinguished , who lived on theories and oat meal mush and was full of bacteria. It was a front room in an entresol over a furniture shop , with arched Spanish windows blinking out on a balcony of wrought iron of most exquisite beauty , In a corner of the balcony stood one of those grand old water jars with peeling sides of yellow , brown and salmon and which might have held two or three of the "lorty thieves , " but in stead was full of earth , for a splendid rose vine that clambered all over the railing and sent its tender , sweet per fume stealing shyly into the room so desecrated by microscopes and bot tles of liver pills and bundles of medi cated red ilannel , and the Lord knows what in the way of instru ments for the detection and location of bacteria. There was a faded Axminster car pet on the floor , a carved bed in which had slept a king of France and a prince of Spain , an arnioir large enough for a tomb for some Italian benevolent association , a dressing stand inlaid with mother of peai'l , cabinets , arm chairs , tete-a-tetes cov ered in frayed brocatelles that had cost a fortune a yard , a pier glass that one could not break with a sledge hammer , faded tapestries at the arch ed doors , oid marble vase3 in the niches where once some demoiselle had prayed to her shrined Virgin , and in the midst of all this the professor , or , to speak correctly , his belongings , for at the moment the learned mem ber oi a dozen scientific societies , the eminent Fellow and Ph. D. , was hang ing over the balcony watching the houseacross the way. Wax tapers burned on the marble table and the steam had ceased from the pint of new milk in its fragile bowl , but still he sat watching the house opposite. He saw lights , colors and many persons moving about , chairs scattered any how in a fashion that would have scandalized Mrs. Microbe , or the professor either , in his own house ; books , music , flow ers , magazines , an open piano , a gui tar , a dog all ruflled up in old gold ' ribbon , a cat jingling a silver bell at ' her blue neck , a tray with glasses on it and a bottle that was neither lime , wuter nor apollinaris , nor yet ginger beer , and moving about here and there a glorious woman with night ' black hair piled on the top of her ' beautiful head , with bare neck and 1 arms , daintily slippered feet and a ' laugh that seemed to stir the few re- ' maining bristles on the professor's < head as he listenad , so sweet and se- J ductive it was. She wore a blai and 1 white gown , and once she reached out i her long fair arm after red roses ' crammed in a blue bowl. She gather- | ed up a handful of the flowers and ' fastened them on her breast , turning her head as she did. so that the un- ' regarded looker on had a most deli- < noua profile of throat , chin and oval ' ' cheek. As the roses fluttered on their now , sweet shrim * , tho professor reach ed out his hand , lotting fall , un knowingly , a new work on bacteria , that he ought to have been roading , but was not. His fingers touched tho rich blossoms of a rose upon the bal cony railing ; the petals felt soft and cool to his nervous , acute touch ; the perfume came up to his nostrils like the sweot breatlfof a child or a wom an , and then his hand closed over the flower , tearing it from tho stem and bruising it beyond repair. Down in the streot all was gay and cheerful. Women stood in their shop doors chattering ; open carriages roll ed by ; somebody in the piano shop was playing the quartet from "Kigolotto , " and between the jalousies of a near house the professor could see a party of men and women playing cards at a round table. A man who believo * in bacteria will co to any length , and thero is no doubt the professor , eye ing them pitifully , thought their friv olity tho sign of unmistakable bac teria which he hoped to locate and discover some day. But to-night the professor was less disposed than usu- al to be critical or severe , and he leaned over tho railing looking at life from anew point of view with such an unmistakably healthy and human curiosity as would have delighted his doctor. A crowd of opera singers came out of the restaurant at the corner , and as the latticed doors swung like pendulums , he had winks of views of a sanded floor , round tables , waiters in white linen jackets , little hillocks of golden bread piled on the counter , little green forests of chicory , tumblers of red wine. Tho opera singers were talking away and singing airily scraps of Rossini and Verdi as if there was nothing in the world so common as grand opera , The women were fat and reminded him of the rue de la Paix and the boulevard des Italiens , and the men had beautiful throats rising above their low cut collars. And then he looked over the way again. She was at the piano singing , with her beauti ful head on one side like a bird's. " 'Monsieur Microbee , Monsieur ! Your new milk will be h'old if you do not soon drink it up , " called laughing Nanette from the balcony above the 1 entresol and pelted him with a rose. J I Professor Microbe smiled. Not the way he smiled when he evolved a new theory or when he read his scientific papers , or even as he smiled in the stillly starched bosom of his own fam ily , but a genuine smile that said , "I don't care , Nanette , " and he caught the rose and fastened it in his button hole. hole.The The beautiiul woman was going to the opera : A carriage was at the door.and she stood before the mirror , pulling out the rich puffs of her night black hair and fastening a red rose behind her ear. Her lovely arms were uplifted , and a song and a laugh came from her red mouth. Some one wrap ped a cloak about her , gave her her fan , glasses , gloves and flowers , and then she was gone. Is it necessary to explain that Pro fessor Microbe followed her to the opera , nearly paralyzingNanette when she met him in the corridor dressed in faultless evening attire and looking sc distinguished and every inch a profes sor ? ' He looked about the grand olc | building , crowded with women and here and there the black oasis of z man , and he recoanized with amaze ment and relief the familiar faces and bald heads and peculiar bumps of quite a number of learned professors and distinguished M. D's. These sat listening to the music of "William Tell. " grunting contentedly over the sweetest passages and at the difficult bars , saying broadly and loudly , "Bravo ! bravo ! " as if grand opera and not bacteria.music and not meta physics , was the very best thing in life. Under the mummy cloths in which the professor had persistently wrap ped his soul , he was a good deal like other men. There wasn't anything he wouldn't do , nothing he wouldn't en- joyif only he was kept in public coun tenance by those of his own kind , and the sight of those familiar bumps for no man in the world who knew of such things could fail to recognize the ' bumps of our 'learned men , once he had seen 'em did more to revolu tionize the professor than gal lons ot papsine or whateve might be the stuff dyspeptics are made of. He at once and forever flung his theory about midnight suppers to the deuce , as his doctor had ordered , when he heard her say to some favored mor tals : "come home to supper with us after the opera. " | And that night after the opera he folI I lowed her home , and went again to his balcony to gaze into that free , jolly , joyous dining room , where no blinds were pulled down and where people sat about eating chicken salad with oil in it and boned turkey and cold breasts of pheasants with dry champagne. He went into his room finally , and , , heating up a little tin of water over ! the gas , took his nightcup a cup of boiling water. What would Mrs. Microbe say to yon scene of revelry and cold turkey , to the piano trolling out in the midnight air , to the gay voices , to him listening and watch ing outside ? His thoughts went back to the pure if stiffly starched bosom of his family in their far off : home ; he remembered tho sedate or der of everything , the rule3 governing j his always tidy home , the regular < hours , the day3 for doing this and the days for doing that , the absolute : correctness of everything and every body. Life went on in a groove , and was narrow , but pure and sweet and clean. He had the best of it , he knew ; there much tinsel and • over was flip- pancy , and too much laughing and , singing. He liked that too , or he thought he would if he might try it 1 ' once. It was a little hard that oatI I ] meal mush should be so tasteless and | ' chicken salad so full of flavor. What . : would Mrs. Microbe say to a mid night supper in her leather hung din- ' ' ing-room. By no flight of fancy could | ' he think of her as sweeping her hand around in a genial , general way , and j' ' saying to all who might be present : I "Come home to supper , all of you. i' We will find something to eat , I j < know. " < Professor Microbe wrapped his , dressing gown around him and crept out upon the balcony. How jolly , thev were across the wav , singing , " "Wflliam Tell. " After all , did his J theories and his oatmeal mush diet and his laws of abstinence do him any more good than "William Tell" and l boned turkey ! "Live as God Almighty . intended you should. Eat and drink , and enjoy this beautiful world It is ] a good world , be good and happy in 1 it. God hates a sordid heart. " The prolessor reached out to Nanl ette's lovely roee vine , he plucked off ' every royal sweet blossom and , like a J boy throwing snowballs , he flung , them across the way upon tho bal cony. And tho noxt day , in writing up items for tho paper , ! mado tho fol lowing : "Profehsor Ebonezer Microbo , tho distinguished scientist , who has been spending some timo in tho city , returned homo this morn ing , finding that the climato of the south did not agroo with him. " Catharine Colo in New Orleans Picay- .une. Justice in Nevada. Two husky-looking men , wearing high-topped boots and broad- brimmed hats well smeared with grease.met at the corner of Broadway and Seventh streettho other day.says tho Oakland ( Cal. ) Herald. "Hello Jim ! " said , the tallest man , "I thought you wuz up in Nevada. When did yer come down ? " "Jest got in , " replied tho other. "How's things been goin' up thar fur ther two ? " 1 past year er | j I "Sort o' lively. Er littlo while after you left Swaphorse Gulch I wuz er- I lected chief ov perlice , " "Sthat so ? " j I "Yaas. Er few months after that I i knifed Billy Botta fur makin' or five- card draw an' catchin' four aces agin my four king ? pat , an' by er speshul erlection I wuz mado mayor ot ther town without er dissentin' vote. " j "Yer don't say so ! " I "Yaas. Purty soon after that I got stuck on Dave Sweeney's wifo , tilled Dave with load , got him planted t out in ther corpse patch , an' married ther woman. Ther citizens showed 1 ther erpreciation ov mo by givin' mo er gold-headed cane an' er interest in j ther town-site. " > I "You wuz bavin' er run ov luck. ' Whut made yer pull out ? " j I "Waal , I got mad er few weeks ergo ' an' made er fool ov myself. " I "How ? " ! "Twurz erbout er horse bolongin' ter Joe Comstock , ther drayman. Yer see , Joe's horse got inter my yard one day , an' begun ter eat up somo flowers my wife had planted out in front ov the house. I got mad an' throwed er stun at him. It hit him on ther leg , an' made er ringbone. Ez soon az ther horse begun ter git lame Joe told ther citizens erbout it , an' they started out ter string me up to a tree ; but I got onto 'em an' skipped ther town. " "That's tuff. " "I wouldn't care so much erbout it , but I've jest heerd that sence I left , Joe's gone ter livin' with my wife an' is wearin' my black hat an' gold- headed cane , an' I hear thar's er move on foot ter elect him mayor in my place an' run him fur the Legisla- tur' next year. " A Curious Lightning Stroke. Atlantic Constitution. The lightning's freaks have been strangely illustrated in Burke county , where the fluid struck one of the cab- ins on McMaster's place. The house , a small , one-room cabin , was occu pied by an entire family of seven. Tho house was struck upon the cone , the current running along the edge of the roof for several feet , thence to the insidewhere it ran down thestudding , which was about six inches in diame ter , tearing it into splinters , this within two feet of the head of a bed occupied by two children. These were not even shocked , but the light ning flashed across the six feet inter vening between the other bed occupied by the mother and three children , setting the bedclothing on fire and severely burning three of the children , but the mother was left unharmed. Thence the current ran into a chest under the bed , setting fire to the clothing in it. The eldest boy , 13 years of age , hasn't the smallest vestige of skin left on his back from his neck down , and is perfectly raw , while the next , a boy ot some 5 years old , has the skin burned off from the small of his back to his heels , and his hand is terribly burned. The third a baby,2 years old , has the skin burned off from the hips down. e Equilibrium of the Sexes. In Europe there is a greater excess oi women in the north than in the states of middle Europe and the east , in some of which the women are in , the minority. Through Europe as a 1 whole , the number of women is very < definitely in excess appears to be in- ' creasing. It was very great after the ! Napoleonic wars ; then the numbers ' gradually tended toward equalityand 1 nearly reached it (18-i7 ( to 1S0O. 1,009 to 1,000) ) ; then they diverged J again , and stood in 1870 , 1,037 to 1,000. The phases of increased differJ ence are generally observable after I wars , and , latterly , appear to be the J result partly of the enormous emi- j gration which has taken place to oth- * er quarters of the earth. In America , as a whole , and the Australia and I Africa , on the other hand , whither ( this emigration with its preponder- ance ot males is tending , the men are in excess , and the excess are increas ing with the constant arrival of new * parties of emigrants. Nevertheless , c a near approach to equality prevails * over the earth as a whole , and this r whether we regard the white , blackor s red races , or their mixtures. c s Easy to Hit. r The following anecdote admits of 1 wide and varied application. Most of us can apply it to ourselves if we will , j It was the story of a minister who , A preaching in the pulpit of a brother f clergyman , said some thing3 about t racing and fast horse3. c He was told after the sermon that r he had touched one of their best mem bers at a tender point. I "Well , " said the preacher , "I cant ; not change my sermon for him. " r In the evening the man was intros duced to the minister who said , "I un derstand that what , I said touched t one of your weaknesses. I assure you e that I was altogether unconscious of o > the weakness when I said it. " u "Oh , never mind , " said the man. "It is a poor sermon that does not n hit me somewhere. " si _ fi A few days ajo a drunken Kentuckian ot the name of "Dick" roamed around to _ the cafe of the New York hotel threatening S1 to "do up" any one who would not acree C ! with him in all things. He declared that p he waa a Southern "fire-eater" and was 9 ; looking for blond. Finally a well-dressed , " : ; ood-looking young man walked up to him and knocked him down. Before the Ken tuckian knew what had happened ho reJJ ceived a Bound thrashing , and was glad to h make his escape. The good-looking younj b man was Fred May. ti * * .1 , ' rff nfflZf * * * * * A Home In India * Tho Quiver for May. A mud paved court , opon to the sky that glorious sun-illumlnod sky ot India , that gives poetry to every thing , but enclosed with walls and f surrounded by a sort of arcado or I veranda. Within it threo or four 11 women wearing tho looso trousors of II Mussulman women and colored sarces II liko the Hindus and sovoral young II girls. Thoy were not handsome , boing j | | rather of tho thick-lipped Nubian II typo ; but several of them , and es- 11 necialljr the elder woman , who teaches | | in the little school , looked intelligent , II and thoy received us with courtesy II and apparent pleasure. Tho children II from outside wore not present , a | | circumstanco for which tho older II woman apologized ; but sho brought II forward her own children to bo ex- | | amincd , and thoy acquitted them- § 1 selves with credit , reading fluently II from an Indian primor and answering ; II all tho questions my fiicnd put to jl them. II This family , poor as thoirsurround- II ings seemed to be , enjoys a moderate jl prosperity. Comfort , as wo under- 1 II stand it , is unknown in Indian homes. I II Our next visit was to be to a j II Hindu family of the poorer class. J II Our scramble over rubbish heaps and 1 jl drains recommenced , and landed us ] II at tho foot of a breakneck flight of ' lm stairs whichwhen wo had ascended , ] we came upon the funniest littlo cor- ] nor of the world in which it has over II been my lot to find myself. It was jl part of a house , but what part it was jl one found it difficult to make out. jl To mo it seemed liko a balcony or I ledge , hung on tho sido of tho house. I On 0110 side , guarded by a high par- I apet , it was open to the sky , and I looked down on a large , baro court ; I while on tho other sido was a range I of untidy looking cupboards and cells. I In this curious nest a littlo flock ot I women , young and old , with a few I children wero gathered together. I They received us with the utmost courtesy a grace that novor deserts I the Hindu at homo set for us the wicker stools that are kept for visit- I ors , and drawing their sarees around I them , squatted around us after their I fashion. Ono and another , in tho meantime , were pouring out little I ejaculations of welcome , which my friend , avIio is a fluent speaker of Hin- I dostani , answered smilingly. Present- I ly there came out from asmallenclos- I ure. which was moro like a bathing I machine than anything else 1 can I think of , a young and very pretty woman , with a small baby m her H arms. The little creature , who ap- H peared to be the latest arrival in tho H crowded nest , was handed round , H kissed , praised and commented upon , while the young mother stood by smiling. I learned , upon inquiry , that H she was eigiiteen years of age , and H that this was her fourth child. H The baby having received tho fitting H amount of attention , a bright little * girl , with eyes as brilliant as stars , was brought forward to read her les- H son. ; She was only seven years old , H and her readiness , intelligence and H pretty , winsome manner made her H one of tho most bewitching little crea- tures I had ever beheld , while I must H say : that no English child of her years H could havesurpassed herin knowledge. H Other little ones , who were not so H brilliant , follollowed , and then the H women took their turn , spelling out of the Indian primmer patiently. H Collision With a Hairpin. I "Marchy weather , " remarked old H Mr. Bottle , as ho seated himself at H the breakfast table and examined his H napkin to see whether ho recognized I the stains. H It was one of those rare mornings I when all the boarders had come down H early to breakfast an incident , the H Landlady remarked , which restored H her flickering faith in human nature. H No one answered old Mr. Bottle's H remark. He took the conversational H trick , as it were , and everbody waited fl for his second lead. The Bank Clerk was bending all his H faculties to decide whether the egg he H had just opened was genuine or a H counterfeit , and the Younger of the H Two Maiden Ladies , who disliked con- H densed milk in her coffee , was watch- H ing : for an opportunity to appropriate \ unnoticed a goodly share of all the | natural articles on the table. \ As for the Young Lady Boarder , \ she was busy with the marriage no- | tices in the morning papers , and of M course could not bo expected to an- \ swer. Old Mr. liottle " finished hi3 H oatmeal , and finding that he had left \ his spectacles up scairs gave up at- M tempting to read the paper. \ "Thanks , Mrs. Codhooker , " he said H affably , addressing the Landlady , \ "you may give me a bit of hash this \ morning. The fact is , " added the old \ gentleman to the table generally , "I \ find it delightful to be in a really | H homelike boarding-house , where I can m\ \ ieel that thefood is trustworthy , and I M am not continually tortured by the M profound conviction that every article MM ol food I eat is composed of alien sub- | stances. MM "I remember. " he continued genially , MM 'when I was at college years ago , we M aoarded in commons , and you never M : ould tell just what you ate. The M ood was fearfully and wonderfully M nade. One day my chum , who wa3 | sitting next to me eating apple pie as M : almly as you please , all at once M struck a stratum of unmistakable M kerosene in that pie , real coal oil , M nixed with the pie crust , and ap " | Old Mr. Bottle suddenly stopped M lis reminiscences. He was on his last | H nouthful of hashand there seemed to f M lave been a collision of some sort. M IVith an agonized expression on his M ace , he slowly produced a piece of M jent wire. There was no room for U loubt. Even the landlady had to ad- M nit it. It was a hairpin. M There was a pause before old lir. M bottle gathered strength to speak , and M hen he spoke m tones of deepest sor- m\ \ 'Off as of one whose confidence is M shattered : M ' 'Mrs. Codhooker , I did not expect M his of you. If I were young and my t yesiaht sound , I shouldn't mind , but M ' me , an old man , and my spectacles M ipstairs it's cruel. " M The landlady , in a horrified state M nurmured that it was a mistake. But M omehow the excuse didn't seem very \ itting , and the kerosene pie episode M emained unfinised. Old Mr. Bottle | at in silence shipping his coffee in a M uspicious manner , and the Bank H Ierk remarked to the landlady that H lerhaps he had better take another H gg and be on the safe side. M It is said that a man named John B. | lurray , a wealthy citizen of New York , | as been abducted by his maiden sister , | | ecasehehad married a. youns wife ot M wentv. |