THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : StTNDAT , 4 , 18U2-TWENTT-FOUR PAGES , Various Problems Disstusod in tbo bcr Magazines. DOES , POLITICS OFFER A CAREER ? Wnvr * of Temperance nnil Intemperance 'flio Yo einltn In Wllitrr rnpulnr r.diicntlon IlinlcwoU IScoollco- tloni of Jriiny Mint. "Does Politics Offer a Circor ? " Is the question discussed by ex-Senator Ed- muntls of Vermont In the December Forum. "Tho Ilrst duty of man , " no enyfi , "is to provide by honest mnans for the mnlntonanco of himself und hla fam ily , that Is , If ho hnvo a family. Hon est politics nsji pursuit docs not furnish such moans except In the small class of administrative employment * , and then only in a very meaner decree. Every person , certainly In a republic , ought to bo a politician in some way , but to pursue a political career as such Im plies much more. Assuming , as maybe bo safely done , th'tt the great majority of young citizens are * honest , the chimcoa for them of a good political ca reer have many attractions , but If that career is to bo exclusive of the private pursuit of some business or profession it will bo found dlllloult and disappoint- In p. Indeed , only those of assured com petence could enter it. "In the century of our political exist ence there have boon very few , if indeed nny , Instances of the pursuit ol politics ns a curoor otherwise than In the lowest nnd worst forms to which wo have al luded. The politicians who have boon most largely useful to the country and most often in public service have been men still engaged in ono way or another in occupations common to their follow citizens , and they have boon called Into public affairs by considerations far other than personal self-seeking. They came to possess and oxoroiso power , not its professional experts looking for em ployment , but wore called as the licst representative exponents of the social and political views of the com munltios of which they wore homo geneous parts. This is the essential idea of representative government. Ho Is the best politician and will have the best political career whoso overy-day life and occupations are in contact and sympathy with those of his follow men. lie accepts public employment and exor cises public power as a duty , ana it maybe bo as a pleasure , when called to do it , nnd thus ho Is able in the changes and chances of political movements to lonvo them without regret and feel hinr.self again happily at homo In his former place among the people. It would Rcetn to follow that politics as a career cannot bo looked to by young Americans as the boat choice of occupa tion in life , and leaving aside considera tions of individual happiness and the faculties , tastes and ambitions that alTect it. the very principle and structure of a republic would seem to bo opuosnd to the idea of the profession of politics to bo taken up and pursued as In.wor medi cine or engineering are. A political | class in a republic must always be in danger of becoming , or tryinsr to be come , the master and dictator of politi cal movements a trust of bossism and corruption , of which there is already an overabundance. " The Dlirnoo of Inebriety. I "Is Alcoholism Increasing Among 1 American WomonV" is the title of a paper in the North American Review by Dr. T. D. Crothors , in which ho says : "Statistics of persons arrested 'for in ebriety , extending ever long periods , will point to certain years in which a mnximum in numbers was reached , fol lowed by a retrograde movement bad : to a minimum. This tidoliko move ment is sometimes clear , then obscure. Often It is marked by both epidemic and endemic waves and is traced in the I prevalence of inebriety in towns and Icities , and in the reaction noted [ by tompornnco revivals. This psycho- i logical ebb and How was pointed out by > Dr. Wcstphal iti Sweden many years | ngo , and an interval of seventeen years < was indicated lib the time between the 1 maximum and minimum periods of ink - k ebrity in that country. Shorter periods have been noted by other observers in different countries. Many very start' ling facts point to tins wonderful cycle and drink orbit , and help to explain the strange temperance revivals which i spring up and sweep over the country I dying away with the same mystery ant ] I suddenness. Such movements are un L doubtedly the backward swing of higl f tides of "inebriety. The histories , o ! largo cities and towns bupph I many startling confirmatory facti f of periods of inebriety aw [ intense temperance revivals follow ing each other with a strange , fasoinat f ing mystery. I.iko the ebb and How ii politics , religion and the great socia | movements , those drink cycles of wave I point to ranges of causes and condition i awaiting future discovery. While man ; > of the causes of inebriety as seen in tin [ Individual are both preventable am [ ' curable , there are other unknowi [ psychological and physical forces tha I control the form and direction of th [ Inebriety of both soxes. Whatever ine I brioty is in Europe , or _ may have boo I in the past , it is in this country a brai r and nerve disease , marked by montu I and physical failure , exhaustion am I central degeneration. " i Tin ) Yoioiulto InVlntcr. . I "Snowstorm folluwa ' snowstorm , I writes James Carson in tlio Dccombc I California ! ! . "Winter has arrived wit I his llogo lora the frost-king and h I llorco ally Boreas. . lie has spread h I lev mantle ever the Yosomlto. TJi I mighty cliffs and domes look down upo a the valley MB in the summer months , In I it is with forbidding statolincss , an > I with throateninir tiapeot. How change I the scene and dilToront the attr.ictioii ! I The smiling vale is no longer gay wit l gorgeous bowers and bright with gruo I meadow liuulf ; no longer is it rosunai I with tho.hum of busy insects , tiio inu I muring lullabies of slumbering htronm I anil the joyoiib sangs of summer bird I zophvr no longer whispers to the pli L fronds us ho tlouts softly through tli [ forest , and cuho no longer repeats tl I oxelamatloiifl of glad visitors. Tl I Merced rolls its swollen current impel1 * ously through the valley , Hooding man I an ncro of the meadow land for rain i I well ns bnow hna fallen ; the woods ai I hoarse with protesting against tl I fierceness of the ttorm-blastB ; the sno\ I slide holds the beholder in awe as it rac I with the waterfall In its doivnwai I pluncro , nnd blabs of talus and 'unshapo I chunks of rook loosen thuir hold of the I parent ell IT , us wntor and weather ' i I their work , and are wathed with d I nnd headlong spend down into the vi i loy. It is true that such terrifyii I storms do not occur with frcquonu I but ono such was witnessed by M I Hutchlngd and his family during tl I winter of IfcOT when they were the on residents in the valley. On that e coplioiuil oocasion the rain poured do\ incessantly for tun successvu days ; i the meadow Innd was covered with surging Hood ; largo trues were awe over the ridge of the upper Yosoml uud shivered into Irugu cnU ou t Diapcrics , Brass and onyx tables , Curtains , Parlor chairs , Hall chairs , Portieres , Reading chairs , Silk scarfs , The Policy of Price Doubled Oair November Trade. Turkish rockers , Silk pillows , Fancy rockers , Rattan chairs , Large comfortable rockers , Rattan rockers , Gilt chairs , Child's chairs , Corner chairs , Divans , 1 ' ' " 'Kids' rockers , s Sofas , "Kids' " half chairs high , Leather lounges , Costume'rs , Corduroy lounges , Mahogany parlor chairs , Cretonne lounges , Maple parlor chairs , Nothing better can be found for a home present than an article of furniture. Rug lounges , Inlaid parlor chairs , Our stock , this season , is by far the largest we evqr carried and our building at present Tapestry lounges , Hall chests , ilt parlor chairs , is filled to its utmost capacity. Hanging hall racks Parlor x Having been obliged to buy a new stock during the months of October and November , ( lamps , , Standing hall racksi we found many factories whose fall trade had been light and we bought new stylish goods in Imported shades , Umbrella racks , many instances from 20 to 40 per cent discount. We therefore have many decided bargains Chiffoniers , Curio tables , throughout our store. Brass beds , Curio cabinets , * * Having adopted a policy of marking all our goods at a low margin of profit m plain White iron beds , Fire screens , figures , customers cannot possibly make a mistake in price in buying here. v Maple bureaus , Easels , Goods bought now will be held for Christmas delivery if desired. Maple chiffoniers , Hanging medicine cabinets , All goods marked in plain figures. Shaving stands , Blacking cases , Large wide chiffoniers , Small chiffoniers , Carpets Rugs , , Charles Shiverick & Co. , * Wardrobes , Folding beds , Parlor cabinets , Sideboards , China cabinets , Side tables , Dressing tables , ' Furniture , Carpets , Draperies. Buffets , Cheval glasses , - Bookcases , Dining tables , bookcases Secretary , 1206 1208 1210 Farnam St. Parlor tables , , , . Ladies' desks , Card tables , Men's home desks , Hall tables , Music cabinets granite rouks , and pines and cedars were blown down and piled in confusion upon each other by the wind storm that followed the rain. " llns I'opulnr Uiluciitlon rnlleil ? "It cannot bo denied , " writes Presi dent Eliot of Harvard college in the December Forum , "that there is serious and general disappointment at the re sults of popular education up to this date. In spite of all olTorts to make edu cation universal , all classes complain moro than ever before of the general conditions iof society. Yet after two whole generations it seerns as if some increase of tronuino reasonableness of thought and action in all classes of the population ought to bo discernible. .Many persons , however , fail to BOO In ' the actual conduct of the various classes of society the evidence of increasing rationality. . , "Tho educated critics of the practical results of public education complain that lawless violence continues to break out just as it did before common schools were thought of , that lynch law is fa miliar in the United Statos.riot common from Berlin to Soattlo.and assassination an avowed means of social and industrial regeneration. Even religious Dorsecu- tion , these cities say , is rife , The .Tows are ostracised in educated Germany and metropolitan Now York , and in Russia aroiobbed and driven into-oxilo by thousands. Are votes less purchasable now than they were before the urban graded school and , the state university were known ? "On the other hand , the least edu cated and most laborious classes com plain that in splto of universal elementary - montary education bocioty does not tend toward a greater equality of con dition. They allege that the rich man in modern society does not boar , either In peace or in war , the grave responsi bilities which the rioh man of former conluries , who was a great landowner , a soldier and a magistrate , was compelled - polled to bear. They point out that wars are more destructive than ever , this century being the bloodiest of all the centuries. If universal education is cannot abolish or oven abate in seventy is years the horrible wnsto and cruelty of 10 war , can anything great bo hoped from in it for the laboring classes ? " Lit Litd Why .Jenny 1,1ml l.ult tliu Stiic > . id "Ono matter which must bo of inter est to every lover of dramatic art and which lias been an enigma to many in people , " says a writer in the December it Century , "IB now for the Ilrst time dealt r- wllli by ono with authority to discuss rs , the question. Why did Jenny Lind quit the st'.igo at the moment of her ; o greatest glory and many years before 10 her unrivaled powers had begun to 10 sull'or any decay ? Some have perhaps 10 reluctantly accepted the widely prev 10u alent idea that she had coma to uiy regard the dramatic profession as as an unholy thlntr which no pure- ro Boulodvonmn could remain in 10 without contamination. Happily this notion can bo entertained no longer. es Her intimate friend , Frokon von Stud- rd Ingle , with rofuronco to it says : 'Many iy suppose thin resolution to bo the roaull ilr of plotlsm. Jenny Lind is as Godfenr .io ing as she is pure , but had nlotism boor in the cause she would not hcraolf have to the which she declared she il- gene % . . play . , . . . . _ . _ . . . _ , 1 t A - A * i ' f t. - f like to do , to see others nut. The fac Is thut to iipproclatu her motive foi leaving the stauo la to uutlorBtund tlu ho whole charnutor of the womnu. Hui dUtiibto for it EOQtiii > to iuivu bogur with her ilrdt great Europcun buuuess uiul Btuudlly grow ua her furoo sprout ! ixllu In 1840 Bho'hud lived for ton yours u llfi u of iiiccsstuit hurd work on the ata c ipt vut in the following year she wrote fron lie Paris : 'Life on the bt.i.ro ( has in it some ho EO fuBolnatlutf that I tbiuk , bav ing once listed it , ono cannot 'ovor fco'- ' truly happy iiwuy from it. ' But in 1815 , just nftor her traiiFcondont success in Berlin , the idea of leaving the sUijjo had not merely ocuurrort to her mind , but had alroudv bscomo a fixed dotormination. Among the dom inant notes of her character were love of homo and craving for domestic peace. This craving was to a great extent sat isfied while she romivinod in Stockholm helm , and especially during the time she lived with the Lanblaci family. But when her destiny druw her in relentless triumph to Berlin , Vienna , Copenhagen , Londo'n , her domestic instincts were wrenched and tortured , and she found no compensation in all the glitter of her success. 'I um convinced , ' s'lid Herr Broclchaus , in April , 181G , 'that she would glndly exchange all her triumphs for simple homely happiness. ' That was the secret of tlio whole matter. And bo she formed the resolution to quit the stage for over , a resolution in which she never wavered from ISIS , when it first tool : definite shape , till she carried it out in London in the summer of 1810. " Ilcforo tlio liny * of r ttiii ; < > Stumps. December St. Nicholas : Before the uso'of postage stamps various sums were paid for the dolivary of letters. The amounts were regulated by tbo distance and were collected on the delivery of the letter. In the early part of this century tlio postage on a single sheet of paper was 8 cents and ever forty miles the rate was increased ; so that over GOO miles u single sheet was 2o coats. But after a time those rates wore gradually re duced until in 18I5 a letter weighing not ever half an ounce was 5 cents under I500 miles and ever that dlstanco 10 cents. Sir Rowland Illll.wbo win at the bond oftho | Po'jtofllco department of England at this tlmo. introduced the use f poU- ago stamps in 1810 , and also lessoned the charges for postage. In 1817 the United States adopted the use of the postage stamp , the lowest-priced ono boinglivoconts. But railways and steamboats had now taken the place ol the oldfashioned mail coaches and postboys ; and with the moro rapid aonding'of the mails , tbo cheaper rales of postapo , and the growing population of the country gradual changes and improvements took place in the postolllco H.vstom , And hero wo arc , In 1SU2 , receiving our letters - tors from the Pacific coast in six days also from England in the same time ; and a few days or hours will place us in direct communication with our friends und correspondents in almost every part of the country. \ Tlio I.nit .Mornliicr on tlio .trie , Brooklyn Life : "You look blue this morning , " said Mrs. Noah to the old gentleman. "Aro you worried about anything ? " "i am , my dear , " returned ! Noah , "When I think of our big family to support.'I don't see bow wo can make a living when wo got out of this ark."C3 "I wouldn't worry nl'out-that , " said Shorn , "There will bo plontv to do. " "Certainly"said Ham. " 111 take tbo animals nnd start n circus. " "And I"said "can become , Japbot , an undertaker. Thoro'll bo money in that when the Hood goes down , " "True , " put in Shorn. "And I shall become coroner. WJiJ't dad , the core ner's foes alone would bo Bulllolent to enable the whole family to llvo in the city and wear diamonds. " "By jove , boya , " said Noah , "you arc dead right. Head her for land and lot's get to work. ' ' lutltt on getting Cook's Kxtra Dry Chair. pagne tf you want a pure article } there are i no boadacho * in It. _ _ , GOSSIP LITERARY PEOPLE An Era of Eejuvanation of the Big Monthly Magazines. A CHAT WITH OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES \Vliit : 1-ltnrary I'ooplo Are IJcilnir lUclirxril Harding Oinii us : v I'liiywrlglit A Glimco Over tliu I'crludlcul Field. N > .vv Yomc , Doc. 1. ICorroapondonco ot Tin ; Buu.J The close of another yonr will put emphasis , so far as the periodical Hold m Now Yorlc is concerned , that this is a day In which only blp ventures can live bip ns ro- garJs resources and management. The room for the smaller , or snow-bouna maga zines or periodicals , as ivo call them is KettinK moro and raon contract.'U each yoar. It Is tbo old story of the big Ilsh oatlng up the little ones. A magazine , or periodical of anv sort tins always boon on expensive lux- urv for any man or sot of mon to possess , and it is raoro true today than it ever was. The maga/ines moat successful in NIJW fork today are the Century , Harper's ar.d Scrlonor's , with a revenue in the order nair.ed. The Century is a pavlnij institu tion In every reipoct. Of the magazine there is printed ut an avoraro 230,000 copies each month and there is a cooUly margin of profit on such an edition , buy It averages2.5 cants par copy , you have an incotno Irotn this source alone of $ )00,030. Then its udvortu- inp ; patronage moans , in cash , not far from $ 100,000 a year , it it does nor oxcsod that figure. Harper's prints 150,000 copies per month or in that vicinity and is , In lltorary and uriUtlo merit , perhaps the most uniform and satisfactory magazine printed In America. And this position its prospectus guarantees for the next year. Bcribner's , Using the youugor of the trio , has naturally not so large a circulation as the others , nor does it make as much money for Its owner * . It prints 115,000 , copies , and in its business department h par- haps us strong la judgment ana resources as any of Its competitor * . Tbo heavy character of its material has 'udquostlonubly acted against a larger success'and ; ' the announce ment , therefore , thnt'llurinc ' the uoxt vcar It will make proininoiit'tho ' oaiortalnln ? , rather than the thoughful quality In us contents Is well and wise. "ThoUosmopolllau" oomos fourth , and Is , too , nialiiinr money not pur- haps as much at tbo. lggor trio , but nets Its proprietor uol far fropi 150,000 per year. 1 DOSO this upon its printed editions of 103,000 copies and u hoalthy.'U' ' ' not largo , ndvortls- inc patronage. U Is moro popular in its con- toots than the others.nml ; this , by no means is n disadvantage. I , have repeatedly hoard people who road a gjroai deal say , in this re- soeut , that tttay nctuuUy road more articles in "Tho Cosmopolitan'1 during a year than in nuy of the olbor mniraziucr. With the letser periodicals that come from Now Yorlc it is moro or less of a stru Klo , Tula is , however , perhaps loss true ol tin North American Hevlaw and the Hovleiv ol Hovlows than the otners. Tbo first com mands a largo transient silo , and at its price of SO cents a single isnuo it is a pro ductive ploco of property. Tuo Hovleiv of KovlowB is unquestionably on the gala ; ana while it may never reach the circulation o the original English print , It Is forglntr abend with big stridiH. The Forum seams to have dropped behind ami is printing fewer atrlklng articles than ever , und , with au Illuitralod magazine , the strlldnK article is Its main bopo. Of the humorous other periodicals ono bears little , am X fnnoy the strugelo is a Ulttor one. know It u in the case ot tbo tiomo Matter for example , while in tha cases of Delford'a Munsoy's , ono scarcely knows whether the ; aio published. Tbo New York Ledger bat I learu , given up the tight , and will o baou to Iti old utaudards upon which It made tb ortunoj of its old proprietor , and can for its ow ones if tuov are wise enough to accept heinuvitablo. Goingoutsldoof ftew 1'orU , linasino sucuoss is not very largo with such loriodicals as Lippinoott's , the Atlantic , the vow England , and ethers , although , In a noasure , no doubt they ore makincan in- omo. In Boston the best Dieco of periodical > roperty is Tbo Youth's Companion , which ms returned n fortune to Its owner und nlods steadily on with a circulation of 503.000 , 0 which GU.OOO have boon added during the last year , 1 bollo'vo. The Dcuil Come to I.I To. Perhaps the most amusing thing In the lenodieal field during the year has been the ojuvotictlup of old magazines , nnd singularly enough , all the tnreo attornpts which have icon made hall from Philadelphia. Tbo lirat : o take unto itself u now lease of life wns jodoy's ' Lady's ilook , and , although u great splutter has boon made by the now manage ment , and a largo amount of money spent , .ho experiment has not taken on the health 'ul color of success , und monov has boon going out with but little coming in. Close apon tbo heels ot Godoy's comes the old Pe terson's Magazine , spruced up , and looking a hundred times moro attractlvo than It over did. Anil , thirdly , comes Arthur's Maga zine , whmh promises likewise to confuse its old readers by taking on u new dress , now material now everything , in faot. Vent ures of this sort are , I thin ! : , to bo oucour- iged , bluco anything fresh which cornos into the lllorary field moans moro reading , moro work for authors and artist , nnd , In every respect , has a good tendency. The result of nil this literary rejuvenation will bo interesting to watch , It is not an easy manor to change one's color , but it can be done with money , wltb good management , and with tuno. Thus far tha first has not been lacking , out Ilia second is wofully ib- t > cnt. Good editorial judgment seoins lack ing. In the case of "Uoaov's , " for example. 1 know of not , less than a half dozen stories and manuscripts purchased by thorn which nearly every magazine in the land ha * had and rejected. With "Peterson's , " the same Is also true , where tbrco "features" for ono Issue are announced , all of which have boon several times declined by other editors. It is poislolo , of course , ( bat the other editors may bo at fault in judgment , and that the purveyors at tlio head of these now ventures may bo right. All thU remains to bo seen , and In the meanwhile there U not ono of us , I am sure , who will not wUb success for tboso or any other now departures in the periodical Held , l > r. Unimex Itoforo Ills 1'lru. A tow days slnco I was sitting In the com fortable library of Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes. Tno day was raw outside , und it added to the cheerful welcome to ba asked to sit down before the open Ilro In tbo grate. Wo had boon talking of various things , and then ' , as will happen , a sllnnco full not the si'encbof depression , but the sllcnco of roat- fulness nnd ease. It cuma Just after I asked of the famous poet : "Now that Whittlurhas gono. are you not beginning to feel a llttlo lonely doctor ! " Ho looked into the tliu , thought a moment , and then said , in a low tone , inmost inaudl bio , as if he bad forgotten my presence : "Lonely ! Is a man ever lonolv with his books mm his work around him ! I have my woru. And yet " and then came tbo alienee. Wo were both way down into the depths of two of tha easiest chairs in tbo room. The log In the flro sputtered a llttlo , then broke into two places und , as the released llumo shot upward and muilo a wlerd but strong llcnt , 1 turned Just a little and looked at my companion la slloaco. Tbo face was still strong , only tbo shadows of the bright tongue of llamo acomed to deepen the linos- Itttlo. Or , was It alone the dancing ahudowa of the llumo I Even with eyes lost In medi tation , they wore still bright and full ol luster. The mind WAS just as uctivo , out il seemed to enjoy its little moment of reposa. Ttio lingers tnat have written no much unt so beautifully loyod with the gold eye-glass chain as 11 wound itself round and round , at If It were ai fond of them as is tbo work of reading men and women. There was lltllu to indicate the man of 60 , except tbo snowy wblto hair , and as I looked at Oliver Wendell doll Holmes sitting tbero , so picturoique In his oaio , 10 tranquil in bis thoughts , I could not help thinking Just a moment of the clos ing lines of "Tbo Last Loaf. " Longfellow gonel Thoreau , Emerson Parker , JJeeoher , Lowell , Alcolt. all cone And , lastly , quiet and Quakur-eouled Whit Hot | nut Oliver Wendell Holmes ktill tar rlcd , ana ever youthful and bright , as I real zed when , taking * the oard a servant had broueht in , ho scanned It nnd said to mo : "Escape for your life ! Hero's ft woman vlth a long tonguo. I bavo to endure H ush , but you needn't. Escape now , butcomo gain soon. " Then there was a hasty grasp of the band , ind from its heartiness and strength I felt as sif I had not soon the "Autocrat of the Breakfast Table" for tbo last tirno. "Dick" Unvls as a Playwright. Richard Harding Davis , or "Dick" Davis , as ho is known to his friends , bas leaped Into an enviable position in the dramutio ranks vith ono Jump through his dramatization of The Disreputable Mr. Uoagan. " Sottiorn > reduced it ; the host clement in Now York ocial , literary and artistic Hlo came to see it ; ( Ira. Cleveland was brought to tears -by it , and in less than a week the voung author inds hlmsalf sought nftor by "ncarlv all the irominont managers in Now York for plays rjm bis pen. Tnerj is rather n funny story attached to Hie rehearsals of his plays. Soth- orn could not for the life of him got the Now Yorlc "oro uo1' necessary for the character , nnd although Davis tried hard to show Soth- crn the "trick , " both failed In tbo attempt , i'hus , one day , bothorn nnd Davis started to gether for the Bowery , nnd the saloon of itovo Brody , the notorloui bridge-Jumper. Brody can plvo you tbo tip , " said Davis to Sntborn , and Brody was undoubtedly a innpy selection. And thus with the help of n few days instruction from Brodv , Sothorn vaa able to typify the character for Davis. Urody was liberally rewarded ; SoUiurn was ) ! eascd ; Davis was as happy as u child , and 'Mr. Heagan" will bo used by Solburn as a 'curtuinraisor" to "L-itterblnlr" on the actor's tour through the country. < ii > HHl | > of 1.Horary IVopIr , A. B. Frost , the artist , who is a full- Itdgoa farmer , with 120 acres of Jersey land .0 till and plow , "cut 'cross lots" u few days airo to the house of his ; nelghuor , Frank It. jtooktou , and astonished thai man ot letters by saving : "Wall , Stockton , I have hit upon tbo secret of bow to make a farm pay 1" Tbo author of "Tho Lady or the Tiger ? " blmsolf with lands , was at once Interested , and dropped his pen immediately to ask : "Why , what is ill" "Pave It solid , " said Frost , as ho reached for tliu door , John Ivoudrlck Bangs tries all bis chil dren's stories upon his youthful heir , und if tbo original of "Jlimnlobogr.spt the father's effort , it Is given to tno world , This mnv partly account for tbo flattering success accorded tbo humorist's latest children's ' book , "In Uump With a Tin Soldier , " of which the entire Ilrst edition was sold bofnro tbo sheets left the presses. "Jiinmioboy , " whoso adventures in the boolc in "Tiddlody- wlnk Land" caused so much umut > eniont lust year , also lleurcs in the now boolc for the children's holiday stocking. The authoiued biugruphy of Wbltticr wijl not bo ready for several months , as tlio abuii ; dant mnterial at band require * tlmo to tie carotully edited , The poet's entire cor- rcspondenco with Charles Sutnnor , "William Lloyd Garrison , Lydm Maria Child and Jumos T , Fields bus been found intact , uud tbo executors ilnd so much of importance ) in this newly acquired material as co justify the belief that the public will bo a rich gamer in Its Knowledge of Wnittiur as a statesman and reformer when the work is Issued. Spoaklne of vVhlttlor , reminds me bow llt tlo reliance can bo placed upon tbo numerous "lives" nnd "biographies" of which great mon bavo indicted upou tbom. It is not so long ago that a certain "Life of John Grconluaf Wbittlor" appeared , und a copy Jailing into the bands of the pool bo carefully - fully roud It. Then ho sent it to u friend , with tbo modest comment : "Thco will no tice I have torn out homo pages , " Upon ox- amiuallou it was found that dozens ot pages had boon torn out of the book , and of those remaining the poet had drawn bis penol ! through nearly two-thirds of the uontcncos and paragraphs ) J remember bow a well known New York Journalist on en compiled a so-culled "lllo unc biography" of Mr. Ileccher , II was jus' ' before tlio great preacher's death , uud ai ordercame to him from a publishing house to "got up a life of iJceclicr and let us b vo manuscript iv.ithlu three daysl" Taking a muss of nowaptpor clippings , and depending upon his imagination for tbo facts not aup piled by tbo clipping * , this journalistic geiilui repaired to the Aitor house , workei steadily for two days , day and night , at tb H60K GLOVES Ana FOSTER'S ' PATENTS , OR LICENSED UNDER FOSTER'S PATENTS. J1SH'J.JIB QX1 IMITATIONS I YOUR EYES ARE TROUBLING YOU ! \Vfillromo and h'iv thorn oiiunlno I by our optician freuof Lharico , nnd.lf iiiieDnsurr.llltoil with ujmlrof oiir-l'KltKKtriloK'1 HI'KOi'AOl.lCS or BVK I/LA8S- HI ? - the hoit In I ho world. K ) ouilo not neocl glasses wo will Icll you NMIM.I . 11 lvl TOU lint to do. ( iOI.I ) SI'IICI'ACI.IM or KVI1 ( lI.AbSK.S KIIOM WJrj Ul' . I'lnln , Kiimko , blue ) or whlto nlmaua , fur protecting ( hit t'/eu , from Wcu imlr up. Bleyer & Bro. Go. Jewelers and Opticians. Kuril urn anil Klftuctnth BtrootB end of which tirno tbo manuscript of 253 pages was evolved. Curious ns to Its nccurncv I took a copy to Mrs , Heccher , and after a day or two I said to lion "Did you find It nocuntol" "Accurate , my child I" said Mrs. Boechor. "Accurate } Oh , very I Why , it is so accu rate in its absolute falsity that neither I nor the boya onn find ono fact or data given cor < rnctly , although wo have studied over it for two days. Kvou the year of Mr , lieochor't birth is wrong , and that is tbo smallc& > error I" HnwAiti ) W , Uoit , An unknown person , uid to he a Now Yoru millionaire nlt-h up In KpUcopallan circles , has donated J.WO.OOQ toward the fund for the bullulnic of the now I'rotestanl Episcopal cathedra ! of St. Jobu , theUlvlno. The church will oost to.O