8.ITior aaa nar*itm.July S.HSplHiffairs exists here* lan laborers em-dtfiey are an uglypaid tor severalbeen numerous, heir own number and a third was wpor. Thursday their quarter a la i and thoroughly to barn the placeelephoned to forF LIFE.m »88ti‘ttettve,]—Additional re-nify the destrno-ole cantons were f life Is heavy.ofl Time.tressed, and the gymaa here pro-i livery stable on out for a drive.ig that the policefor the rig, but until Thursday Louis Anderson ig to the stable, dlscomfitted, but09t, but evidencestending to show g a good time, It out that they had ack.RTZNO ZIFF.club.iltoher, Is playingLITTLE, BUT A FIREBUGSTARTLING CONFESSION OF ACOLORED ROY.He Tried: a Cbnrcu and a Livery Stable, ana la sn«pectea ofouter Line Acts-Likes toHlee the ariamea.Judge Sullivan had to elevate himself Thursday morning to peer over the edge of bis police court dock at pigmy John Hampton, a 9-years-old colored boy, weap^ ing and wailing, who was charged with thetearfblaxrlme of arson. Johnny is a stepson of a Mrs Hampton living on W. Fourth-st*i near West-st., and only a stone’s throwfrom the Antioch colored baptist church. Monday afternoon this church was discovered to be in flames, fortunately before they had secured muoh headway, and the evidence showed that the fire was of incendiary origin. Detective Thornton began work on the case and Wednesday had fixed the crime upon young Hampton, being accused of it, he boohcoad, butSadinltted his guilt and reiterated his admission in police court. He said that he crawled under the church floor, where scarcely a cat could venture and lighted a buach of excelsior that he took in with him. Much to the eurpriee of the detective the boy also admitted setting fire to Frick’s stable last spring, wbich burned completely down, and moreover, although he didn’t admit it, it is believed that he set fire to the Excelsior factory, Ha has a mania for seeing fires and hearing the apparatus of the fire department run, and these motives prompted his incendiarism, fie is not believed to be very bright. He was sent to the grand jury.CON 0M5 SSSIONAZ CO A3Little Jackets For Tall aHon.Washington, July [Spl.l—1men In congressional life evince ness for ebon coats of the sackLove and a piioio.Louisville. Julv 3.—! RnLl— Mrs. AnnaNext to Speaker Reed, the tallestof the house of repesentativesMansur, of Missouri, who is 6 feet in height and large in proportli predilection Is for a suit of the san cadet gray being his favorite i and the loose sack coat affords hii opportunity to use his arms ih ge ing when addressing the house, from the seat of Mr. Mansur ie Representative Barnes, of Georgia not only one of the tallest hat on heaviest men in the lower branch o tlonal legislature. Over his broad loose, lightweight black sackcoat i sent in his make-up, and the. side are generally weighted down wit papers. Representative Tillman, lt;Carolina, Is another big man who Back Coat, which he usually has I around his stalwart form. . Hen; Lodge, who expects to win b ses United states senate througlfhis 8 of the federal elections bill, Wears t! est coat of any public man at the In fact, it la BometimeB referred boy’s jacket, and on his tall frame Ecription Is not illjt applied. It that Col, Tom Bayne* who recently notoriety by declining a renomic hie Pittsburg constituents, appear! lie without a tweed suifci in a sack coat is a promlalt; tore. Big, jolly Charley B( the Rochester, N, Y„ district, whlt; the seat of the late Judge Kelley, sack coat all the year round, theoi tion being the weight of the i Lien. Ben Butterwoeth never app better advantage than when attfi pepper-and-salt suit topped off wi: coat, and in these warm days hinmiAf'tftd from thn Rnn- hv an :