T THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : SUNDMV MAY 20 , 1SOJTVENTY PAGES. 13 Ladles' hemstitched and ombrolitorc'l hand kerchief * , regular value 16c. 16c.UNDER UNDER COST AT 5c Ladlrs' hemstitched , scalloped and embroi dered handkerchiefs , actual value ISc. UNDER COST AT 7c Ladles' fine hem stitched and cmbrol * derod scalloped edge Icerchlof , regular prlco 30o , UNDER COST AT 13c Gents' ht'tnutltched handkerchief with col ored borders , nctual ' Value 25c , UNDKK COrfT AT' 9c No. 12 , all silk niotra ribbon , regular prlco 200 , UNDER COST AT 9c No. 22. all Bill ; satin ribbon , former prlco 85c. 85c.UNDER UNDER COST AT I7c Nos. 1C and 22 , satin and grog grain all allk ribbon , UNDER COST AT 9c NOR. 7 and 9 , satin nil silk gros grain rib bon , UNDER COST AT 5c 70-Inch damask , fern leaf pattern , SPOT CASH PRICE , 97c C2-lnch damask , cloverleaf loaf pattern , SPOT CASH PRICn , 42 c % napkins , UNDKR COST AT 50c doz 11-4 bed spread , act ual value $1.50 , SPOT CASH AT 95c 8-12 Turkey red table covers , actual value $3.00. SPOT CASH PRICE , $2. P. D. Donlta , our best corset , extra long , made of Italian cloth , regular $9.00 corset , SPOT CASH PRICE. $6-93 Silk chemise and drawers , elegantly trimmed , actual valua $7.00 , UNDER COST AT $3-5O HEREDITY AND PUTICS ? A Now Element Entering Into Political Discussion. , BRIEF STUDY OF HUMAN PARASITES / I'rnctlcnl lIliiHtrntloiis ot the Chronic I'uupor mid Criminal with KugcoR- tloiM I.ooltliiR to the Itomotly for n drawing Kvll. 4 , ( Copyrighted. ) It Is a known fact of biology that when ever any series of organism nro withdrawn from active lite and the process of natural selection no longer offers a premium for solf-actlvlty , degradation sots In , Organs are lost as their lunctlons are abandoned. In this way the descent of the Inert barnacle from the active crab-llko forms Is accounted for. In similar manner the degraded para sitic Saccullmi Is shown to bo of crustacean or crab-liko origin. The young Sussullna and , the young crab are essentially alike fern n period after their birth. The crab con tinues and dovolopes an active life. The Saccullna thrusts Its feelers Into the body of tlD ) crab on which It Is to feed. Its organs of eating and swimming disappear. All structures connected with Independent Ufa become atrophied and finally nothing 'a left of the Saccullna except Its sac-llko body , ItE feelers or roots which ramify through tho' blood vessels of the crab , and Its repro ductive or Kan a by which the brood of parn- sltca Is kept alive. When the habit of parasitism Is once established the struggle Ipr existence simply Intensifies It from generation to generation. The most effectiveSaccullna Is the most Jvgonerato oi.o. In like manner whenever u race or family of men has fallen away from self-helpfulness the forces of evolution Intensify Its parasitism. The successful pauper Is the one who retains no capacity for anything else. The loss of all other possibilities Is the best preparation for the life of the sneak thief. HUMAN PARASITE ALWAYS WITH US. Recent studios , ns those of Dr. Dugdalo , Mr. McCulloch anil others , have shown that parasitism Is hereditary In the human species ns In the Saccullna. McCulloch has selected the Saccullna for special Illustration of the like results of llko processes In the human family. Like produces llko In the world of ' life. Those qualities In the grandparent which made him an outcast from society era a burden upon It reappear In the father and again In the son. As In ono case , so In the other they determine his relation to society. The pauper Is the victim of heredity , but neither nature nor society recognizes that as an excuse for existence. The forces of na ture take no account of motive and are no rcspectont of persons. Dugdale 1ms shown that parasitism , pauperism , prostitution and crime- reappear generation after generation In the descendants of Margaret , the Mother of Criminals , Oscar C. McCulloch , speaking of the paupers of Indianapolis , uses the fol lowing language ; A STUDY IN PAUPERISM. "Wo start at some unknown date with thirty families , Those came mostly from Kentucky , Tennessee and North Carolina. Of the first generation of sixty-two Individ uals wo know certainly of only three. In the second generation we have the > history of eighty-four. In the third generation we havu the history of 2S3. In the fourth gen eration 1810-1860 wo have the history of CM. In the fifth generation 1860-1880 we h vo the history of 679. In the sixth gen eration 1SSO-IS90 wo have the history of fifty-seven. Hero ls a total of 1,760 indi viduals. Ileforo the fourth generation from WO to 1800 wo have but scant records. Our moro complete data began with the fourth generation , and the following are val uable. We know of 121 prostitutes. The criminal record Is very largo petty thieving , larcenies chletly. There have been a number et murder , The first murder committed in Silk gowns In all the delicate shades , beau tifully trimmed In point de 1'arls and Va lenciennes , regular (12.00 gowns. UNDER COST AT $6.50 Extra length chemise In fine lawn , elegantly trimmed , regular value 12.00 , UNDER COST AT $1.23 Prlma Donna Im ported fine xatln cor * net , extra long , actual value J2.r,0 , SALES PRICE , $1.95 American Lady In 5 nnd \hook , regular $ 1.25 quality. UNDER COST AT 89c Men's seamless hose , color tan , actual value 20c , UNDER COST AT Men's 35o under shirts , made with fancy neck , UNDER COST AT 19c Men's flowing end Four-ln-Hnnd Ues In the new silks , regular DOc quality , ACTUAL COST , Boys' extra pants , SPOT CASH PRICE , The Mother's Friend waist , unlaundcrcd ACTUAL COST ' 37'c ' _ 100 ladles , ' flno nil wool capes , very nicely trimmed with braid and Inserting , actual value $7.50. SPOT CASH PRICE , $3.75 All silk wash waists , regular $5.00 goods , SPOT CASH PRICE , $2.87 DRESS GOODS AND SILKS AT ACTUAL. COST OR UNDER. Frptich challles , act ual value 75c. CASH PRICE , 45c All vvool serges and lienrkVjus , lilt ( colors and black , actual value C5c , CASH PRICE , 42c A lot of flno printed cashmeres , actual value Jl.OO , UNDER COST PRICE , Novelty black dress goods , latest styles , actual value $1.25 , UNDER COST AT 57c the city was In this family. A long and celebrated murder case , known as the 'Clem' murder , costing the state Immense amounts of money , Is lo cated hero. Nearly every crime of any note belongs here. Between 18GS nnd 1888 not less than $3.000 has been paid for 'pass- Ing' these people from place to place , each township olllcor trying to throw oft responsi bility. The records of the city hospital show that taking out surgical cases , acute , gen eral diseases , and cases outside the city 75 per cent of the cases treated are from this class. The number of Illegitimacies Is very great. The Board of Health reports that the number of still-born children found In sinks , etc. , would not bo less than six per week. Deaths are frequent , and chiefly among children. The suffering of the chil dren must be great. The people have no occupation. They gather swill or ashes ; the women beg , and send the children around to beg ; they make their eyes sore with vitriol. In my experience I have seen three genera tions of beggars amongthem. . I have not time hero to go Into details , some loath some , all pitiable. STRIKING ILLUSTRATIONS FROM REAL LIFE. "One evening I was called to marry a couple. I found them In one small room , with two beds. In all eleven people lived In It. The bride was dressing , the groom wash ing. Another member of the family filled a coal-oil lamp wbllo burning. The groom offered to haul ashes for the. fee. I made u present to the bride. Soon after I asked ono of the family how they were getting on. 'Oh , Ellsha don't live with her any more' Why ? 'Her other husband came back , and she went to him. That made Ellsha mad , and he left her. ' "All these are grim facts ; but they are facts and can bo verified. More , they are but thirty families out of a possible 250. The Individuals already traced are over 5,000 , Interwoven by descent and marriage. They undcrrun society like devil grass. Pick up ono and the whole 5,000 will tie. drawn up. Over 7,000 pages of history are now on file In the Charity Organization society. "A few deductions from these tlata are offered for your consideration. First , Is study Into siclal degeneration or degrada tion , which Is similar to that ) sketched by Dr. Lankaster. As In the lower orders , so In society wo have parasltinm , or social deg radation. There Is no reason to believe that some of this comes from the old convict stock which England threw Into this country In the seventeenth century. Wo find the wandering tendency so marked In the case of the 'Cracker1 and the 'Plko' hero , 'Movln' on , ' Tlioru Is scarcely u day that the waKens are not to bo scon on our streets ; cur dogs ; tow-headed children. They camp outside the city and then beg. Two families as I write have come by , moving from north to south , and from east to west. 'Hunting work ; ' nnd yet wo can glvo work to 1,000 men on our gas trenches. UNCHAST1TY PREVALENT AMONG PAU PERS. "Next , note the general unchastlty that characterizes this class. The prostitution and Illegitimacy are large , the tendency shows Itself In Incests , and relations lower than the animals go. This Is due to the depravation of nature , to crowded condi tions , to absence of decencies and Cleanli ness. It Is an animal reversion , which can bo paralleled In lower animals. The physical depravity Is followed by physical weakness. Out of this comes the frequent deaths , the still-born children and the general Incapacity to endure hard work or bair climate. They cannot work hard and break down oarly. They then appear In the county asylum , the city hospital and the township trustee' ! ofllce. "Third , note the force of heredity. Each child tends to the same life , reverts when taken out. THE FACTOR OF PUBLIC RELIEF. "And lastly , note the Influence of the great factor , public relief. Since 18(0 ( relief has been given to them. At that time we find tbat 'old E. HusaUis1 applied to have his wlfo Barthcnla sent to the poor house. A pre mium was then paid for Idlenea * and wan dering. The amount then paid by the town , ship for public relief v rie * . rising aa.hlRh as $90.000 In 1876 , sinking In 1S78 to $7,000 and ranging with the different truiteei from $7.000 to22,000 | p > r year. Of this amount fully ttireo-fourUis has gone to this closi. Public relief , then , U chargeable In a largo degree with the perpetuation of this stock. The township trustee la { radically unlimited In ) l , .iri , q * ? . - tt Jt SoT irt P. ! ni ! at 11 ' , . fine Tinder- skirts In flno E .tlncs , alpaca nnd grata cloth , actual value $2.00 , UNDER COST AT $1.00 150 lndle.i' all wool jackets , all colors , act ual value $5.00 , UNDER-COST AT $1.98 95 very fine nil wool Jackets , $10.00 gar- tnonU , UNDER COST AT $193 A QUICK CASH RAISING SALE FOR GASH ONLY- THE MORSE DRY GOODS CO. Men's $1.60 Monarch , Gowns made of ex made of excellent percale cellent muslin , trim cale , 2 collars and med with embroidery , cuffs , regular value $1.00 , UNDER COST AT sr UNDER COST AT JH 53c 75c I c Drawers and corset covers , trimmed with j C No. 16 , black j grosgrain embroidery and hem- grain all silk ribbon , sUtclicdt regular value regular 22c , ! 75c , UNDER COST , AT . . . ; UNDER COST AT f 47c j his powers. Ho can give as much , as he sees fit. As the office Is a political one , about the time of nomination and election the amounts Increase largely. The polltl il bosses favor this and use It now In the Interests of the republican , now of the demo cratic party. It thus becomes a corruption fund of the worst kind. What the town ship trustee fails to do , private benevolence supplements. The so-called charitable people ple who glvo to begging cMldren and vomen with baskets have a vast sin to answer for. It Is from them that this pauper clement gets Its consent to exist. " THE PROBLEM OF THE UNEMPLOYED. In every American city , as In Indianapolis , there exists a large number of people who. In the ordinary course of life , can never be made good citizens. Our free Institutions do not make them free ; our schools do not train them ; our churches do not contain the means of their salvation. It Is well to face the fact that the existence of the great body of pa'upers and criminals Is possible only by feeding them In one way or another on the llfeblood of the community. It Is the pres ence of this class that adds terror to poverty. It Is they who make hard the lot of the woithy poor. The problem of poverty and misfortune Is a dlfllcult ono at best. It Is tendered many times moro dllllcult by the presence among the poor of those whom no condition could bring to the level of self- helpful nnd self-respecting humanity. The dlfllcult problem of the unemployed becomes far more dlfllcult when associated with the hopeless problem of the unemployable. It Is not Important to our present dis cussion to consider how these conditions arose. It may be an Imperfection of human society that the law of natural selection has not had Its perfect work. The destruction of the unfit has not kept pace with their power of production. Wo may blame the kind Influence of the help of our neighbors. The Indiscriminate char ity of the middle ages Is responsible for , much of the misery of ours. It Is only In very modern times that charity has had any relations with justice. It Is only lately that sclcnco has shown that charity Is to bo judged not by its motives but by Its results. "Charity , falsely so-called , " says McCulloch , "covers a multitude- sins , and sends the pauper out with the benediction , 'be fruit ful and multiply. ' Such charity has made this clement , has brought children to birth and Insured them a life of misery , cold , hunger , i sickness. So-called charity joins public relief In producing still-born children , raising prostitutes and educating criminals. HEREDITARY INEFFICIENCY A FACTOR OF CIVILIZATION. Whatever the causa of the existence of hereditary Inelllclcncy , It exists In our civili zation. It Is ono of the factors In our social fabric. It Is an element not less difficult than the race- problem Itself. The nice problem Is Indeed a phase of it , for when a race can take euro of Itself , It ceases to have a problem. Hereditary Inefficiency Is therefore a fac tor In society. U must be a factor In civil affairs. In what way does U affect the problem of government ? In municipal gov ernment Its evil effects are at once appar ent. A single group of related families , all helpless and hopeless by heredity , forms In the clean and healthy city of Indianapolis some \ per cent of the population , 5,000 In perhaps 125,000. In other American cities , notably San Franclaco , with Its mild climate and proverbial hospitality , the percentage Is greater. In no city Is It absent. Belf-gov- ornment by such people Is a farce. No community was ever built up by thieves and Imbeciles. The vote of the dependent classes IB always purchasable. The coordination nation and sale of this vote and of the allied criminal vote Is the work of the most dangerous of the dirty brood of politi cal bosses. It U stock In trade of every king of the slums. This vote can bo bought with the money of candidates. It can be bought with the spoils of office. It can bo bought with public funda set aside for pur poses called charitable. The various forms of outdoor relief con stitute , as McCulloch has shown , "a cor ruption fund of the worst kind. " America has virtually failed In the management of her cities. This failure Is most complete -uijD | puu Bjadnvd jo J0)vi duviu | oqj ojai [ . & -OJOK 'OArpajP wow pirn i84pioq i suu [ | over , the effluvium ot municipal corruption flows out and poisons politics of the state and the nation. MENACE OF THE VENAL VOTERS. Kvery venal , cowardly or Ignorant voter U a menace to the safety of republican in stitutions. The essential purpose1 of popular suffrage Is not to secure good government , but to produce an Interest in civil affairs that will sooner or later bring abo'lt good government. This growth In civic knowledge Is Impossible without a foundation of Intelli gence. The choice of negro suffrage was the wisest choice among the many evils having their rise In negro slavery. It was the least of the evils , no doubt , but an evil never theless. Every evil Is likely sooner or later to become a suppurating ser In the body politic. The dangers of foreign Immigration lie In the overflow to our shores of hereditary unfltncss. The causes that lead to degrada tion have long been at work among the poor of Europe. The slums of every city In the old world are full of the results. Apparently few cases of hereditary Inefficiency exist In America that could not be traced back through similar lineage to the dependent classes In the old world. It takes many generations to found a pauper stock. Mis fortune , sickness. Intemperance , the weak ness of old age often lead to poverty and per sonal misery. But personal causes do not lead to hereditary pauperism. The essential danger of unrestricted Immigration Is not in bringing In an alien population , strange to our language and our customs. Language and customs count for little if the blood U good. The chlldrc'h learn our language oven to the forgetting of their own. Love of country Is just as genuine In Norwegian or German dialects as It Is In English or Irish. There is little danger cither in the violent opinions of Iconoclastic theories , The red flag of anarchy will not wave where real oppression does not exist. GERMS OF PAUPERISM AND CRIME. But the Immigration of poverty , degra dation and disease * make government by the people moro and more dlfllcult. Every family of Jukes or Ishmaels that enters Castle Garden carries with It tha germs of pauperism nnd crime. They boar the lep rosy and crime of the old world to taint the fields of the now. The "assisted Immi gration" at Jamestown years ago has left Its trail of pauperism and crlmo from Vir ginia across Carolina , Kentucky , Indiana , Missouri , evan to California. Wherever Its blight has gene tho.ro are the same Ineffi cient men , sickly women , frouzy children , starved horses , barking cur dogs , careless ness , vlndlctlvcnesa and neglect of decency. The withdrawal from the competition ot life , withdrawal from self-helpful activity , aided by the voluntary assistance from others those factors have made the tribe of Ish- mac ) . Those conditions bring about the same results In all aoand , among all races among the lower animals as well as among men. The same efte'dts of similar causes are scon In the decline * ot the royalty and nobility of Europe , OB , well as the degrada tion of European cretins , and thieves. There Is no development without activity , and no race la so perfect that judicious weeding out could not Improve It , iI : What can be done , tp remedy this source of evils ? To know the .evil Is to go half way towards Its cure. Penal reform , charities reform , civil service reform , the prohibition of pauper Immigration. ! education In social science all theje look. , In the direction of cure. In knowledge lies the surest remedy for most social and political evils. Lot us see our enemy facolto face and wo can strike him. What wpje can be done ls the work ot students of aoclal science to deter mine. Ono thing Is certain , In the words ot Dr. Amos G. Warrtt/r. / that the "function of charity Is to restore to usefulness those who are temporarily unfit and to allow those unfit from heredity to become extinct with na little pain as possible , " Sootier or later the last duty will bo not less Im portant than the Urst. Good blood as well as free schools and free environment Is es sential to the making of a nation , DAVID STARR JORDAN. A Mother1 * Hucrlflre. "George , dear , " said the loving wife , "I do not see how our little ono can go any longer without a new pair of pantaloons. The only ones he has have boon patched until he can wear them no longer. " Wlht a deep sigh her husband laid down his paper. "I don't know what I can do , Madeline , " foe said , "I pa n't afford to buy him neW ones just at present. " "Then , my darling , " replied hla better half , with a despairing gofeture , "tho worst has come. I shall have to have my bicycle trousers made over for him. " HELPING HAND TO WOMEN Work Now Being Done in Omaha by the Travelers Aid , DEPOT SERVICE WILL BEGIN TOMORROW A llcnovoloiit anil llescuo Organization Ex isting In Many Largo Cities Details of ltd MlnU trillions AVho Are Ilccolvetl uutl How They Are Cured For. About ono month ago , under the auspices of the Woman's Christian association , the Travelers' Aid located In Omaha , and opened quarters on Douglas between Seventeenth and Eighteenth streets. Until that time there was no night lodging for desti tute women In Omaha but the city Jail. The chief object of the Travelers' Aid Is to pro cure and give lodging to destitute women and children. No ono Is turned away , but those who can are to pay the prices ro- aulred. These nro very little. Lodging Is 15 cents per night , or 75 cents per week. Meals are 10 cents. Everything Is clean and orderly , and there Is nothing objectionable about the Institution. The matron , Mrs. M. P. Sullivan , says the homo has not been without less than four slnco it opened , Had It been better known doubtless the number would have been greater. The place can accommodate twenty persons. Tomorrow the Travelers' Aid will send Its representatives to meet the Incoming trains. This is ono of Its works. It will be something new.In Omaha , but In most of the eastern cities the Travelers' Aid Is represented at the depots. In many places they have established quarters , and make a specialty of looking for women and chil dren who stand In need of their aid. In St. Louis alone , In the past year , nearly 500 girls have been helped , and some saved by the representatives of the Aid. The representative sentative- the Aid wears a badge brought diagonally across the breast. It Is white , and boars the words , "Women's Christian Association Travelers' Aid. " The uniform Is usually gray. The good work that can bo done by such an Institution Is readily seen. Women and children coma In at all hours , often without money , and no Idea ot a city. Some lese their money or addresses , and they know not what course to take. Not a few girls have been rescued from the grasp of procurers. This Is made a special object with the Trav elers' aid and all glrla under suspicious guid ance are examined. Some have been Raved when they told the representative the ad dress to which they were going. Other girls are kept at the shelter until work Is found for them. The only ones refused admittance- are those under the Inlluenca of liquor. The home closes at 10 o'clock and the Inmates are required to bo orderly nnd ladylike In their manners. Upon application to the mat ron they are permitted to use the laundry. The sick are cared for , but cases are not taken for treatment. There has been a call for such an Institu tion In Omaha , and some of Its citizens have been liberal with It. Many donations have been made , but the cause stands much In need of moro , especially bedding and single bedsteads , The promoters hope some one will donate a cooking stove or range. At present they are without ono. They are always ready to accept any donations which the public are pleased to make. The Institution on Burt street Is bettor known In Omaha. This Old Ladles' home has at present eleven Inmates. But three pay anything. What Is paid amounts to Very llttlo , $2 and $3 per week. Three of the old women are perfectly helpless , and ono has not been able to leave her bed In two years. The matron , Miss Anna Wl ( ; llamson , has the care of all the Inmates. Aside from ono servant , there U no one to assist her , The so Institutions must not be con founded with the "Young Women's home , " 113 North Eighteenth street. This Is a boarding house , with all the advantages ot a homo for self-supporting young women. It U not charitable Its aim la to give re spectable young women a home at a price A lot of hand mndo Torchon Inserting ! ! , MUCH BELOW COST 5c iKcrtl Inco In Ult widths , actual Iratuo EOC , UNDER COST AT 26c Deatlful Imitation cut glass pitcher , ilx tutu- blera to match and one tray , real value $1.25 , SPOT CASH PRICE , 79c C cups and saucers , C breakfast plates. 0 sauce plates. In best Iron Stone China , SPOT CASH PRICE. 83c Ono lot largo berry bowls , real value 3l > c , SPOT CASH PRICE , 19 Best nickel alarm clocks , SPOT CASH PRICE , 79c HOSIERY AND UN DERWEAR AT ACT UAL COST OR UN DER. Ladles' seamless fast black hose , UNDER COST AT 9c Ladles' line cotton hose , fast black , linen heel and too , actual 76c quality , UNDER COST AT 47c Ladles' spun silk hose , actual value $1.00 UNDER COST AT 50C Ladles' lisle thread vesta , ecru and whlto , regular 65c quality , SPOT CASH PRICE , 27c Ladles , spun Isllk vests , actual value $1.00. UNDER COST AT 47c Ladles' Egyptian llslo union suits. $1.50 qual ity.UNDKR UNDKR COST AT 98c JACKETS , CAPES , WAISTS , MACKIN TOSHES. WRAPPERS , SKIRTS , WAY 1IE- LOW ACTUAL COST. Only one garment tea a customer. Ladles' and misses' mackintoshes , with full military capo , actual value $3.00 , UNDER COST AT $1.75 Ladles' pretty wrap pers In pretty patterns , regular $1.25 , for 58c within their means. "If the prlco IB fixed low , that Is our own affair , " said Miss E. J. Evans , the superintendent nnd matron. The prices are within the roach of any salaried girl In Omaha. The terms vary from $3 to $4 per week. These are the terms fixed upon by the Women's Christian association. Such homos for girls are nothing new. One was opened In New York City over thirty- four years ago. No better recommendation can be given a girl In the older cities than to say she boards at the Young Women's Chris tian home. Those In charge are careful re garding the character of the appli cants , and the deportment of the Inmates must be within the bonds of pro priety. No boarding school rules are en forced the regulations nro those of any good and moderately Indulgent mother. The young women have a well furnished parlor at their disposal , and some of the first ladles In Omaha are visitors tlicro. Young men are not barred , and the doors are not closed until 10:30. : Upon special occasions they have been open later. The girls have a piano , and all the amusement of polite society Is encouraged. Dancing and card parties arc favorites. When any of the git Is wish they ore permitted to give a party or reception. This was dona several times last winter. Weddings have taken place from the home. The ceremony ca'ch time took place In the parlor , and the wedding breakfast was served in the dining room. Presence at religious exercises Is not en forced and no Interference with faith Is permitted. The sick are not sent to the hospital and are given the best of care. At present the homo holds twenty-one girls , and apparently they could not bo better satisfied. Their rooms are clean and nicely furnished. Those who wish separate rooms are provided with them. No girl Is expected to assist with the housework. JIIH.HIIOUS. Rov. Dr. C. A. Bartol of Boston , who celebrated his 81st birthday lust week , Is In excellent health. The International Missionary union will hold Its eleventh annual meeting at Clifton Springs , N. Y. , Juno 13-20. Fourteen Mormon missionaries from Utah left San Francisco on the 3d Inst. for Honolulu and the South Seas. It turns out that Bishop Tuttle ( Episco pal ) has not joined the Salvation army. The report arose from the fact that ho sent the organization $5 for Its rescue work. Mr. Thomas Spurgeott Is now settled In the Metropolitan Tabernacle as permanent successor to his father. Ho has been well received , and the great building continues to bo well filled with , perhaps , the largest congregation In London. The Diocesan Episcopal convention of Massachusetts that mot last week decided to relieve the labors of Dlahop Lnwruncc by adopting the system of-.archdeaconries that has worked so well In the diocese ot Now York. Rov. Charles Alan Smythlos , bishop of Zanzibar , whoso death la announced from London , was a graduate from Trinity cot- logo , Cambridge , In 1SC7. Ho was appointed missionary bishop of Africa In 1883 , and to his late position last year , Mrs. Van Cott , the well known Methodist revivalist , has been conducting her twelfth revival at Oahkosh , WIs , As n result of her work , there Is a strong congregation , largely made up ot converts made by this remarkable- preacher , and a $30,000' church building has just been dedicated. Mrs , Van Cott'a home Is at Catsktll , N. Y. The most absorbing questions connected with the approaching ordination ot Miss Rachael Frank , a young California ! ) woman , as a Hebrew rabbi , concern what she Is to be called and what robe aho will wear offi cially. As slio Is the first womn rabbi , there are no precedents by which to settle these matters , Charles M , Foulke of Washington Intends presenting to the Episcopal cathedral , which Is to be built In that city , twelve tapestries Illustrating the life ot Jesus. They are ot the fifteenth century and were secured by Mr. Foulko a tow years ago from a Roman palace , where they had hung ever since they were made. Among the public bequests by the will ot Charles Scott of Washington. D , C. , are $10.000 to the American Building fund of the Protestant EpUcopal church of Now York ; $5,000 to the P ( . John's Protestant Episcopal church of Waterbury ; $5,000 to Novelty diuhctsa cat- Ins , retail prlcn $1.00 , UNDER COST AT 60c Elegint bl/ick crystal bongallnc , actual value $1.26 , UNDER C08T AT 59c Wash silks , best quality , actual value 7So. 7So.UNDER UNDER COST AT 37ic China silks , printed and plain , goods worth up to 7Sc. CASH PRICE AT 29c 20 per cent discount off Infants' muslin and cambric wear. Dost 15o ginghams UNDER COST AT 8c 40o French Ratines UNDER COST AT 25c 20c ginghams at UNDER COST AT lOc 25c English scrgdor , UNDER COST AT I5c An elegant line of hand made Torchon lac.'s. UNDER COST AT 5c Smyrna and Japan ese rugs , regular $6.00 and $6.00 , UNDER COST AT $1,98 All our $2.50 Wilton carpets UNDER COST AT $1.60 All our 35c mattings , l\ \ UNDER COST AT j * I6c Chcnlllo curtains , all colors , actual value $5.00. UNDER COST AT $1.68 pair All curtain Swiss , which sold up to COo | 4 per yard. vj UNDER COST AT A 25c 20c sllkollnes I UNDER COST AT j - IOC ; ! Fine casslmero suits , SPOT 'CASH AT $1.98 The king ( of shirt waists , laundered , act ual value $1.00 , COST PRICE AT 75c Black Bourdon In- sortings , 1 to 2 Inches wide , actual value 20o to 50c , SPOT CASH AT ! Oto25c Trinity $5.000 to Protestant the Watetbury Episcopal hospital. church , and Boston Is mildly agitated over the dis covery In that city of two pictures alleged to have tradition been painted by St. Luke , whom assumes to have been The subjects nn artist. and are respectively the Savior III.s mother , and roslnous are executed In a wax pigment on a sort of cloth. mummy Rov. Sam Bettls , cowboy evangelist , thus sums up the results of his recent at Bay City , Mich. : "I had over revival 3,000 , con- voralons , 1,266 old topers $802 was raised for signed the pledge , expenses , $500 clear for Sam , nnd 6,000 people were fed free " meals. He .Is satisfied. The local Bay City clergymen of denounced his ods. sensational meth Abd-ur-Rahman , the Emir of Afghanistan has sent an , extremely valuable copy of the Koran to the holy city of Ismtn-Ruza , In Persia , according to foreign papers. It In Is a casket of gold and silver , whoso ings carv are said to bo of great buatity. book The , which Is valued at $125,000 placed In the mosque with , was monies. appropriate cero- A man named Winks the bishop of recently denounced Manchester , England , for ac cepting a princely Income while so better many men were starving. The bishop haa just made the following "You answer to him : taunt mo with the Income. amount of my Perhaps It may astonish bo made you to acquainted with the following facfs I live as : plainly ns any working man , nnd I believe that I work harder and moro hours than nine out of ten I working men , and yet am compelled , by the uxpensoH Incident to my ofllco , to spend 1,000 than a year moro my official Income. " .Iod- < > Wiixvm'i * I'rovort ) * . Detroit Free Press : What a polltlshan ain't tollln ' wood make a statesman squirm. There's too much Ipglslatln for pollltlcka and not enuff for blznoss. Coxcy U only a sprout , but the weed Iz growln , and the rest of us hadn't bettor bo settln on the fonso thlnkfn It ain't. Ef wo want to purpotuate the republlck , we hav got to do sumthln else but holler for the Forth ttv July and the Amcrlkln eagol. The pceplo Is purty much like powder ; all they ncad to cxpload Is for sumboddy to tech em off. The biggest dcrn fool In the whole polltl- kcl foeld kin find sum follerera. Annurky Iff the wust tlrant.uv cm all. The demand for oflls holders newer ex- seeds the supply. The closer you git to most statesmen , ( ho smaller they git. What wo want In pollltlcks IB moro Star Spangled Banner and less $ } $ . Si root C/'iiri mill I'lron. Whenever thcro Is a flro on or near Broad way , says the New York Sun , the Houston street power IIOUHO of the cable road la noti fied , and the red wagon goes clattering up lo the Bcvno of trouble , making us much noise as a water tower , The men on the red wagon usually find a cahlu blockade when they arrive , because the firemen have had to lay their hose across the afreet. That U why the red wagon came. Tim men toke out tall Iron atanchloni from the wagon and set them up on each side of the car tracks , They stand In the slmpo of on Inverted V , with a pulley at the apex. Hopes are passed around the heavy hose , and these are then lifted by moans of the pulley high enough above the tracks to allow the cublu car.i to pass along underneath. The Dog' * Name. Senator McLaurln was trying a case before - fore the circuit court In Kankln county , Mississippi , just before hla election to the senate , about a month ago. There wan a negro and u dog Involved. "What IB thu dog good for , undo ? " asked Mr. McLaurln. "Will ho catch coons ? " "Never hcarn 'or his catchln * nuthln , " replied the darkey. "Ain't no 'count at all. Ho Jos lays aroun' do house , he does , an * oata an' sleeps , Ain't wuf shucks. Dat > what makes us call 'Im what we do. " "What do you call him ? " "Lawyer. " The lloatonlann are uald to have played to an average ot $10,000 per week during the Boiton season.