i GIGAMTIC ICEBERG. A Glacier Forty Miles long WMch ilores Sixty Feet ia a I)aj. PBESSI5G TOWARD THE OCEAH. Bnpe Masses Dropping From its Beetling, Bulged Front. JASPEE, CHALCEDONY AND P0EF1IBI The most notable of the glaciers in South eastern Alaska is the Muirnamed from 3Pro John JIuir, a geologist of some repu tation, since he gave the first uncolored de scription of it It is 40 miles long, andback on the land, in a basin of the mountains. Being reinforced by 15 tributaries coming down the glens from different points ot the compass, it swells to an icy sea 25 miles tn diameter. Thence it moves with resistless power, bearing roots and long lines of detritus on its billowy surface. Just before it reaches the bay it is compressed by two sentinel mountains into and is forced through a gorge one mile in width. Emerging irom this narrow gateway it mores on, at the rate of 40 to 60 feet a day, to the waters whence it originally came, buttressing the bay with a perpendicular wall 800 feet high, 300 feet of ultramarine crystals tipped with pnrest white being above the surface, and, being pushed be yond its support in the. underlying rocs, a battle begins between cohesion and gravity. The latter force always prevails, and vast masses break from the glacial torrent with the combined crash of falling walls and heavy thunder, a tumble into the bay with a 'dash and a shock that agitates the waters miles away, making navigation perilous to cralt of all sizes. The almost deafening roar made when these masses are rent away, the splashing baptism they re ceive in their fall and the leaping waters are lively witnesses to the birth of an ice berg, which henceforth, as an independent existence, goes on its mission of girding the shores, butting against its fellows and of Bearing navigators. A "WOIfDERFUI. APPAEIIIOS. "While the ship was resting unmoored near the front of this icy barrier, we were startled by the sudden appearance of a mass of dark crystal, vastly larger than our own ship, shooting up from the depths and tossing onr steamer as if it were an egg-shell. As the vessel careened the frightened passengers were sent whirling against her, over chairs, or prostrate upon the deck. This strange visitor had doubtless been broken off from the roots of the icy mountain, hundreds of ieet below the surface, and hence had unex pectedly appeared upon the scene. Had it struck the ship iairly nothing but a miracle could have saved us. Having recovered somewhat from our dumb amazement, about 20 of us were sent on shore in the captain's gig. Landing some distance below the ice wall, we climbed 70 feet up a lateral moraine, crawled shoe deep in wet gravel down into the valley of a glacier, mud-covered with shingle just deep enough to hide the creamy pools; slipped prostrate on the ice made treacher ous by a thin disguise of detritus, and J Darcea our suns ana cat oar saoes ou me sharp angular blocks of granite and basalt strewn for two miles in great profusion along our perilous route. Blocks of the finest marble hedged our pathway; trod upon chips of jasper and chalcedony, the product of different moun tains far up on the peninsula, and we passed two exquisitely beautiful boulders of veined porphyry, weighing 200 or 300 pounds each, rounded and polished by centuries of attri tion. They were of arVxmrple, streaked with quartz spotlessly white, very desirable specimens fpr a cabinet, or for out-of-door ornamentation. ox as- ICE XOXTSTJOS. rlfger more than an hour of plunging and sprawling, and of pulling each other out of gray mire, about half of ournumber reached the uncovered glacier,and at the first glance we felt that here we should stand with un covered heads, for we were in the presence of the marvelous manifestations of superhuman power in action, and looked with unveiled eyes upon the potent agencies by which much of this planet has been fashioned. Away in the distance was the white'lake fed by numerous frozen rivers, and these rivers were born of mountain snows 50 miles distant. The white-robed mountains themselves, cons in the past, were smoothed and grooved far up their flinty sides when this same glacier was threefold deeper and many times more ponderous and mightier than it is to-day. ( Stretched along the base of the mountains till they are only alice in the distance were the records of those gray old years in the form of moraines. 100 feet high, and appear ing like a range of hills. The larger portion of this crystal river, perhaps an eighth of a mile in width, is heaved into rounded hills and beetling precipices, quite resembling the sea in a storm; while the middle and much the wider part is splintered into countless spires and needles and pinnacles, 10, 20, 30 feet in . height, and of a beautiful ultra-marine at the base, shaded to a dead white at the summit. THE 6liciEB'S MABCH. In the onward march of theclacier these pinnacles are occasionally wrenched from their seats in the solid ice beneath thev nod, then totter, into a cloud of acicular crystals that sparkle like the frosted snow under a full moon of a winter's night,, only with more of color they are diamonds on the wing. Again the whole surface is riven by a thousand crevasses, alone the bottom of which streams of clear water find their way. often broken by waterfalls that plnnge further down intp the dark blue abysses out of sight. These chasms are frightrnl gaps to one peering down a hundred feet between their turquoise walls. A slip, a frail Al penstock, a feeble grasp of the guide's rope, and gravity would close the scene without further ceremony. The molecular structure of the glacier is continually changing, adjusting itself to the elevations ana aepressionsoi its rocty Deo, best American saUnes only lie, choice pat and hence there is an incessant clinklngandT trrn crackling, interrupted here and there by an explosion-fr " oer every inch of the snr- ,xacer The whole. i . weird and fitr&nffA in ieai ana souna- -in the voices that rise to the air from the azure depths fascinating because every step is perilousmajestic from its massiveness and awful because its march is irresistible. Consider what a force in wearing away mountains and glens an icy torrent must be, one mile wide. 800 feet deep, and in the middle flowing 60 feet a day; it goes grind ing and groaning and cracking in startling explosions, all mingled in a loud wail like that from the Titans imprisoned under Mount .Etna. Now let anyone in fancy frame for him self this picture: Snow-capped mountains in the background, two of them. Fair weather and Crillon, more than 15,000 feet high, thick Set with glittering beaks and clear-cut as silhouettes on a dark sky; the great -glacier, child of Arctic snows, tur- retea and pinnacled and splintered into a thousand strange forms upon which Iris has flung the varied hues of amethyst and tur quoise and sapphire; huge masses riven "from the crystal river with a thunder ing roar, reeling and toppling into an amber sea, thickly dotted with new-born and vagrant icebergs; and all this scene ' glorified and transfigured by the setting sun. Looking upon this picture through the creative power of imagination one can readily conceive that the enraptured tourist, standing in the presence of the realities, would call that day spent with the Muir jlacier the day of all days he ever passed Jn gazing upon and listening to the wild won- jders of our planet ' But harkl That was not an explosion of , . vtheglacier's artillery; It was the echo of the i-f steamers wnisue ringing along the glen of the mountains, softened, indeed, by distance, as are the notes of the Alpine horn. In just one hour we must be .on the ship or be left without couch or food or fire in these wild and awful solitudes, 90 miles from the nearest habitation, and we made it in time, regardless of shoes or shine. Prof. Horace W. Briggs, in (he Sitka Matleen, LOCAL INTEHTI0HS. The List of Patents Issued to Flttshwi aad Vicinity. The following is the list of patents issued to Pittsburg, "Western Pennsylvania, Ohio and "West Virginia inventions, on Tuesday, May 28, as furnished by O.D. Levis, Patent Attorney, No. 131 Fifth avenue, Pittsbnrg: John 'W. Abrahams. Allegheny, sheet metal roofing; George W. Barns, FhUippL. W. Va,, brake lever; John 8. Bartlett, Akron, 0 direct acting engine: John Carmody. Osborn, O- swing; John P. Coleman, Swiss- vale, Pa., electrical signaling apparatus; Bently B. Oxe, Dritton, Pa screening ma chine; Isaac E. Cratg, Camden, O., die lor ham mering sheet metal; LockwoodS. Crane, Cleve land, O., surface blow-off; Isaac N. Davis. West Elizabeth, P& combined cooking stove and crate; Protenox It. Day, Cleveland. O., guide box: Boland F. Dulany, Waynesburg, Pa., holdback tor vehicles: William Dunbar, Larra bee. Pa., lumber trimmer; John Dowling, Wilkesbarre, Pa., water bit; Charles T. Gloekler, Pittsburp, Ta., meat rack: Adam Harter, Apple Creek. O., car coupler;; Charles H. Irwin, Wilmington, O., anger bit: William W. McCalllp, Columbus. O., fence riveting machine; Samuel T. Russell, Spring field, O., pump; Amos J. Schaff, Marion, Pa., plno joint; Albert SmltlLAllegheny City, Pa., electric converter box; Harry Semple, Steu benville. O., jars, eta; William Btubblebme, Bethlehem. Pa., Metallurgical furnace; Joseph H. Thomas, Alliance, O., floor bin and sifter; George Westlnghonse, Jr.. Pittsburg, system of electrical distribution; Gotleib wilkening, Dayton, 0M musical game wheel: James 8. Zerbe, Zanesrille, O., cotton seed separator; Ablza Wallace, Btroudsburg, Pa., bade of a comb, ' TO PAY EXPENSES. Bow the Wife of a Wit Proposed to Par for a Trip. Touth's Companion.) The wife of a wit has often as hard a time as the wife of a philosopher. It is an old story about the wife or Emerson enduring the sight of her husband breaking the teeth out of her back-comb, thinking, absent mindedly, that they were matches which he was presently to light; but it is quite a new story that bf a famous modern hu morist who really gets a great many of his best and funniest ideas from his wife. "We live from month to hand instead of from hand to mouth," said he, in telling the story. "Her mouth utters the words of nonsense, and my hand writes them down. Sometimes she rebels at my receiving the checks in payment of her jokes, though I promptly turn most of them over to her, and she wouldn't sign her own name to one of the jokes for a farm. "Well, one time I was going on a little Southern trip, and she took a notion she wanted to go along. "We had just been paying for a new carriage-house, and there wasn't enough ready money in the family exchequer to take us both. -" 'If you go I shall have to stay at home, said I, trying to reason with her. " 'No, "no," said she. 'I'll make jokes enough to pay all onr current expenses. I'll get up early every morning, and joke just as hard as I can for 15 or 20 minutes before breakfast SOFTER THAN EATING. 3Iore People Are Choked to Death, Than Are Killed on the Railways. , Chambers' Jonrnal.l In 1SS2 the Chairman of the London and Northwestern stated that there bad not been a single passenger killed on their line within the previous three years. Sir John Hawkshaw, speaking of safety on railways generally, said "that only one passenger was injured for every 4,000,000 of miles traveled; and on an average a person may travel 100,000 miles each year for 40 years and the chances are in favor of not receiv ing the slightest injury." Again, Sir E. "Watkin "maintained that railway travel ing was safer than eating, because it is a fact that more people choke themselves in England than are killed. on all the railways in the United Kingdom." A Palaco of Beautiful Furniture, ' You can imagine what six floors filled with all kinds of beautiful furniture, up holstered in different colored silks and plushes, would be like. But that is only imagination. Ton should satisfy your taste of love for the beautiful by calling upon us, and allowing ns to show you a palace of beauty in reality by taking you through our establishment. Each floor is a separate and distinct department, and to describe each separately would take a page ot this paper. So, call your wife's attention, take a'day off, and we will take pleasure in showing you all we speak of. M. SEIBEET & CO., Cor. Lacock and Hope sts., Allegheny, near railroad bridge. What the Public Idkes. "Whitmyre & Co. are meeting with an amount of success that daily increases in their efforts to legitimately introduce and advertise the "Iron Cfty Brand" of flour. The large amount now sold shows, beyond a doubt, that the best-selling brands carry their advertisement with their use. "Iron City Brand" has come to stay and the pub lic takes kindly to that class of goods which shows for itself what it is made of and how' a trial brings out its excellencies. Export Beer. Anheuser-Busch St. Louis, Budweiser aud Anhenser beers in quarts and pints. Liberal allowance for return of empties. Schlitz Milwaukee export beers; extra stout, extra pale and Pilsner; quarts, and pints. Allowance for return of empties. ScnuzTZ, Renziehatjses- & Co., 100 and 102 Market st, cor. First ays' A CABLE CAR HERO &Sf&2 ted sketch by JVuV in to-morroufc Dispatch of a brave JfiUsburg boy who spends his days ... aWK.f.y I.VC4. j Summer Pre Goo French Satines marked down to 25c aud 30c, bestxoods; large line tot select from; Aethue, Sohondelmteb & Co., 68 and 70 Ohio st, Allegheny. A Gold Mine. Histed, the famous young photographer, hasfound a gold mine in the photograph business. Everybody goes to him for fine photos. E. Histed, Popular Gallery, 41 Fifth ave. Dresa Good! Dress Goods! Immense bargains in embroidered robes, combination suits. French cashmeres, serges, henriettas, challis, mohairs and plaids, at H. J. Lynch's, 438 and 440 Market street Ladlem' Salt Parlor. Exclusive styles of India silk gowns and house robes. Just the things tor comfort and hot weather. Pabcels & Jokes, xhs 29 Fifth ave. Pateonize home industry and drink Frauenheim & Vilsack's Pittsburg beer. TXSSU Gseat "Western Gun "Works removed 706 Smithfield street to ''SllVEB bread. Lake" flour makes delicious ITS Mek's flannel shirts for dress, boating, fishing, etc James H. Aiken & Co., 100 Fifth ave. THE CAPTIVE MAIDEKK? an Indian camvaian in California. U etoauent- 3gmJS&ttZpW(5 compute tn to-morrofs Dbpatch. J lu described tn Joaquin Millcr't thrilling to- ', .- $HX A GEEATJNSIITIITM The Catholic University at Washing ton Will Throw Its Doors 0PEH TO STUDENTS IN N0VEMBIE, An Outline of What Directors and Faculty Hope to Accomplish. EETIEW OP THE PBOGEESS THUS FAR Philadelphia, May 31. Bishop Keane, the rector of the Catholic Univer sity of America, was in the city yesterday. The purpose of his visit was to confer with the Archbishop, who is one of the members of the Board of Directors, in regard to the comple tion of the last element of their work, the selection of a body of students for the uni versity, "With that object in view, Bishop Keane visited the seminary at Overbrook, on Tuesday night, aud discoursed to the seminarians upon the portion of the work that mainly concerns them, namely, the studies of the divinity department, which is to be opened next November. Speaking of the university yesterday, its progress thns far and what is proposed to be accomplished in connection with it, Bishop Keane said: "Quite a number bt the ablest young men in the seminary who haye completed their course and will be ordained this year will be sent to finish their studies in the univer sity. Similar results have attended the visits I have paid to several other semi naries of the country, and it is already evi dent that there will be as many students at the opening of the classes in November as the university will accommodate. This completes the "last of the work of prepara tion, and makes the success of the university an assured fact THE PBQFESSOES. "The corps of professors already brought together from the principal universities of Europe are men who hare been trained for many years in exactly this kind of work. One of our very first aims was to secure the scvices of tne celebrated Jesuit Jfatner Xiem- kuhl, who is one of the greatest professors of moral theologj in the whole world. "With this object I visited the Father General of the Jesuits, at Fiesole, Italy, and the Pope himself wrote a letter to the Father General, urging that the request of the university should be granted, but, to the great regret of both myself and General of the Jesuits, who would be glad to have one of their best men in so distinguished a position, Father Lem kuhl has been for a couple of years past ut terly incapacitated for the task of teaching, and, it is feared, can never again fill the chair of a professor. "Too much bralnwork has broken his health completely. The corps of professors are, therefore, thus far composed entirely of distinguished members of the secular clergy, though it is well known that the chairs of the university will be open to men of dis tinguished learning, no matter what maybe their position in the church, whether in the laity or clergy, whether religeuse or seculars. THE COUBSE OP STTTDT. "The course of study that.will be opened next November will comprise profound studies of dogmatic theology, of moral theology, of the philosophical controveries of the day, and of Biblical science, with special attention to training in English lit erature. These various branches will be de veloped by the addition of other professor ships in the same proportion as the advance of the studies and the accumulation of means will render these practicable. "It is calculated that within two years the faculty of philosophy and letters will be open not only for profounder studies for ecclesiastics, but also for lay graduates from the colleges of the country. Opportunity will then be given for acquiring the pro foundeit scholarship in metaphysical, theo logical, historical, scientific and social studies, and through that facnlty will nat urally develop the faculties of law and medi cine in the future. "The demands for admission to the studies ot the divinity department have al ready .surpassed the expectations of the Board ot Directors. They have calculated upon the admission of only 60 students for the first year, and alreadv applications have 'been made for more than two-thirds ot that number. All of these have already com pleted the ordinary seminaty course which fits them for ordination and the work of the practical ministry. FBOFOSED DISCIPLINE. "Several of them are young priests, who, after years of experience in the ministry, comeback to their studies in order to per fect themselves in one or another line of ecclesiastical learning, which will make their lives of greater utility to the church and to the people. Nearly all of these will reside at the university, but it is contem plated that many mav reside in the city of Washington, or in the adjacent neighbor hood, and attend the classes of the univer sity. The same policy will be pursued in regard to lay students. It is calculated that for tne nrst year or two alter tbeir j : .. -ii- ,-t :n . .iti.i. .. have them in the university colleges tinder . UK..i tmt m.i ,.nntUl irr -2 l..l :. .i-js.. .v 11...!... f xiaier uu iufcucirBbuuie9,wi4cii tueirmjlft ly characters have been better formed,! is expected that it will be freejorthem, ac cording to the advice of tbtfr parent and guardians, either to continue to live in the university or to havequarters outside of it In this the directors of the university will endeavor-to profit by the experience of the universities in Germany and the Catholic University of Louvain, adopting that mid dle course suggested by common sense and suited to the character of the youth of America. In fact, iu the preparation of the laws and constitution of the university these two objects have constantly .been borne in mind by the directors first, to have around the students such safeguards of faith and morals as will make them good Christians, and second, to give to them all that liberty which is naturally connected with the idea of an American. "Since landing three -weeks ago I have been engaged in visiting the seminaries of the country and the bishops who have students in them. I will continue this course of visitation of the various semi naries up to the beginning of the summer vacations toward the end of Jane. FUNDS AND ENDOWMENT. "While pursuing my quest for students I will continue the work of soliciting contri butions toward the full endowment of the university. Sufficient funds have already been received to endow the divinity faculty in its present stage of development, but more funds will be required for the addi tional divinity chain called for by tbe com plete development of divinity studies, and then still larger snms for the endowment of the professorships in the subsequent facul ties, and for the erection of the academic structures and the dormitory buildings which will be needed for them. "The total amount for construction and endowment thus far received is 800.000. of which f500,000 will be devoted to endow ments of professorships. The endowment of free scholarship is a most important object, to which the liberality of the Catholics of the country Is now invited. This has for its oblect the support of students endowed with talents, but not possessed of pecuniary means. The sum .of $6,000 will form a capi tal, the income of which will support a stu dent lorever. 'Several bequests have alreadv been made to the university for the founda tion of scholarships, and it is trusted that as the wore becomes more widely appreciated similar legacies will become more and more common. "Another feature of endowment will be fellowships, for the support' or graduates of lives to learned pursuits without the obli- Batjnof labor for their support, a necessity whwa has hindered so many brilliant minds iff V -w g: PICTSBIIRG- DISPJlTOI from tmrnime tiM bieher ktelleetua flights to which Previdsoee scorned to oeli them. The ram of 30,000. properly in vested, will srive the support of a fellow of the university in perpetuity. None of these has as yet been established, but when the demand for then will eome it is confidently expected that the supply will also be found at hand. A DISXCTCXIVB FEATTSE. 'In comparison with the other initi rations of higher learning throughout the country, the divinity studies of the Catholic Univer sity will be the specially distinctive feature. The clearly defined and positive character of the divinity teaching that will be there imparted will enable the university to rival the great "seats of learning in the Old World, and to stand simply above comparison with other institutions of the country. Owing to the intimate connection between theological and philosophical studies, it is expected that in the philosophical department the studies will be broader and deeper and more posi tive and definite than in any other institu tion in America. "It is likewise contemplated to make the school of biblical studies in the university the principal institution of the kind in the country. As to merely scientific studies, it is is not contemplated to put tne university into competition with the scientific and polytechnic schools of the country. For practical purposes of that sort tha institu tions already existing will probably be left in their present acknowledged snperiorty, It is in those matters which concern scholar ship, properly so-called, that the Catholic University will aim at taking the lead. As a bulwark of the Christian faith, it hopes to stand among the very first institutions of the land." AP0ST0FFICE1HQOIBT. Postmaster General Wanamaker Appoints n Commission for New York. Washington, May 31. Postmaster General Wanamaker to-day appointed a commission to investigate and report upon the condition and needs of the New York City Postoffice. This commission is the re sult of a conference recently held between Postmaster Van Cott and the officials of the Postoffice Departmentand is composed of the following named: James N. Tyner, assistant "attorney gen eral for the Postoffice Department; W. P. Edgerton, division inspector railway mail service at Philadelphia; General H. S. Hnidekoper, ex-postmaster at Philadelphia; Henry H. Mullen, assistant, postmaster at Cincinnati; Samuel Smith, assistant post master at Brooklyn; John T. Metcalf, chief clerk of the money order system, Washing ton; Nebina Moses, chief of the registry di vision, third assistant postmaster general's omce; Ji. -t. Bpangier, inspector oi tne iree delivery system. WALT WHITMAN IK NEED. The Good Gray Poet Quietly Celebrates His Seventieth Birthday. Camdek, N. J., May 31. Walt Whit man celebrated the seventieth anniversary of his birth -to-day. A dinner in honor of the day was served in Morgan's Hall. The poet was nnable to attend, but not less than 200 of his friends and admirers graced the occasion. The committee having the dinner in charge announced that "Walt Whitman is now so well recognized as a poet that sueh an occasion for doing him honor, and at the same time conferring a substantial benefit upon him, is likely to be eagerly seized by those who know his merits and his needs." This means that the poet who has many friends, both in America and Europe, needs help in his rapidly declining years and needs it no w. For considerably over a year the old gentleman has been confined to his room and bed, but always 'has a kind wel come for all who call, and1 they are not few. To all such he appears happy and resigned in spite of his infirmities. Only hopeful, cheery words escape him-,andthus he awaits the coming oi the final messenger. PUSHING HIS POLICr, Secretary Tracy HnstHngf to Completion the Vessels Be hue Bntlt. Washington. May 31. SecretaryTracy is vigorously pursuing his policy, declared at the beginning of his administration, of pushing to rapid completion the vessels now under construction or authorized to be built The Puritan was recently taken to New York to be completed, and orders have now been issued to make ready the Amphitrite another uncompleted double-turreted moni-' tor lying at the Harlan & Hollingsworth shipyards at Wilmington, Del., to be towed to Leagne Island. . , The Amphitrite will be completed at that navy yard, greatly to the disappointment of the Virginia people, whoiave been endeav oring to have the worlr done at Norfolk to make good the loss o&the Puritan. THE nciiES ALL OCT. ncj doai Board of Tradr Official Quotation Taken Frotn All bat Members. CHlCAGOjtfay 31. In accordance with previons announcement, official quotations of the Boird of Trade will be cut off to-morrow from about 600 correspondents who are non-nrembers of the board. Arrangements havebeen made in most Instances by com minion merchants to keep their customers informed of market changes and an in- : TK? 0,1?raf he-re wUI be pnt oa ''the floor to handle the business. Emploves of the Gold and Stock Tele graph Company were sent ouf this afternoon to remove all the tickers from the offices of persons and corporations not members of tbe board. THREE TIMES LICENSED. Tne Coveted Document Twice Destroyed, Bat tbe Third One Worked. Ibonton, O., May 31. Last June a mar riage license was issued to William Mc Comas and Miranda J. Ellis. May 10 a second license was issued to the same par ties, and to-day the would-be groom again applied for and received the license to wed the long-expectant bride. On both former occasions the twain fell, out destroyed the license and declared the wedding off. - . . . . . SUFFOCATED BY GAS. A Man and Bis Wifo Fonnd Dead In Bed la n Clabboase. Baltimore, May 31. Joseph D, Grant, aged 36 years, and wife, Sophie Grant, aged 30 years, both colored, were suffocated by gas yesterday in the new clubhouse of the Jefferson Democratic Association, No. 839 North Entaw street Grant and his wife had been engaged as servants. They went to bed Wednesday night about 9:30 o clock. On opening the door of the room the gas was found so dense that it was overpower ing. It is not known whether the gas was blown out or improperly turned off. H0BBBN PARIS, its magnificent bou levards, touara anil jarks are described by Benry JHaynie in an MlUfirtucu unme i v-7iurrvur L'iSA'AXUU. BELIEVE IN THEIE BADGE. Why Tito Brother Charged Willi Murder Thlnlc They Wilt be Acquitted. Portsmouth, O., May 31. The Nickels brothers, whq were captured in the hills back of Buena Vista, and who are charged with murder in the first degree, are members of the Brothers of Liberty and Justice, a sort of White Cap. organization in Adams county. They wear tbe badge of the order, and say that its members Will aid them in gaining freedom., Sheriff Yeager has taken every precau tion to prevent tools being passed to them. A GREAT STORY, WSS& interest to early CaMfornia pioneers, xcriitenby Joaauin Miller, entitled "For Fortu-eiaM Dayt," will be published complete in to-fnor-rout Dispatch. i-LV wmmssmmK ..-."tfrt6Sf" -.7 "-ii '- - 'iS r ' S&tW&AY, JBN!-wV? tDOCTOM ENGLAND The Steps That Must be Taken to i . Become an Esiabli&ed X. D, PLENTY OF MONEY IS NEEDED To Procure the Long Coarse of Prelimi nary Preparation. IIABS OF HABB W0K AEE EEQOIEED The London Saturday Etview says that probably those who' choose medicine as a profession are the most sanguine of the human race. Thelreasons that dictate their choice are generallysentimeotaL There is a certain glamor which, in the opinion of the adolescent, attaches' to the name of medical student. There is the supposed, freedom from cares., As the old student's song says: How gallantly and merrily the student's days begin, No cares hath he, but on tbe spree ho gaily spends his tin; No creditors oppress him, and his governor is kind, ' His letters haven't .yet commenced to fail to raise the wind. In fact, the beau-ideal medical student, the medical student of novels, is simply an idle careless spendthrift How very far Mr. Bobert Sawyer and Mr. Ben Allen are from the real medical student of to-day it is ueedless to insist. The two or three years' lounging in Loudon or Edinburgh, followed by a .sharp "grind" with a medical tutor and a single examination, which, in their day, at once put the ignorant tyro in the ranks of the qualified, U now replaced by a curriculum of from ' four to eight years. During that time the medical student is harassed by continual examinations, official and non-omciai. xne average curriculum bf the general practitioner may be taken at Z years; and, unless he be exceptionally industrious during that period, he has to maintain himself at an expense of at least 160 a year. The cost, then, of a medical practitioner's qualifications maybe taken thus: Sii years' maintenance at 150. 825 Hospital fees for lecture and practice 100 Minimum fees for examination 20 935 as expensive BEannairo. Roughly speaking, the medical student does not become a qualified practitioner at all until he has expended 1.000. generally much more. It will probably be granted that a medical man will not succeed in earn ing bread and cheese unless he is provided with an average share of brains and a more than average amount of tact We wonld ask whether there is any trade, business or profession where, five and a half years hav ing been expended, and 1,000 having been paid awav, the result is so very small? For now the fully qualified medical man, as an assistant, is in a position to earn from 75 to 100 a year. This is the successful man, the man who "passes." The minimum of study is four vears. If the' aspirant for medical honors has been apprenticed to a medical man, one year ot that apprenticeship is allowed to count toward the four, aud three years only have to be spent at a hospital. But the ten dency of the present day is to doaway with apprenticeship. And, as a rule, the medi cal student commences his career by pass ing some preliminary examination, and then entering at once upon his hospital studies. The result is that, on his becom ing qualified, the young doctor finds him self Ignorant of the minor details of his pro fession; and, as a rule, though crammed full of theories, he has never even seen a case of smallpox. The old system of apprenticeship obviafed this; the tyro often was disgusted with the drudgery of his new profession, which he had the opportunity ot seeing in its least attrac tive form; and he was able to abandon it gracefully, on the ground of distaste, and before tne pockets of his friends had severely suffered. In the present -day, as seen through the rose-colored spectacles of the medical student at tbe outset of bis hospital career, the glamor of the profession we can use no. other term Is strong upon him. His teachers, men of mark in the profession, drive up in their well appointed broughams; and the Btudent forgets that these are not the rank and file, but the giants, of medi cine. A PARAGON NEEDED. There are no less than 20 examining boards from which the student may choose his qualification. The London University, which heads the list, unless he be man of talent and industry, may be said to be prac tically closed to him.- I'f he elect to attempt to obtain his qualification here, he must be prepared to expend more money than the .sum stated, and tti occupy more than the average of five and a half years in ob taining his diplomas; he must be able, too, to pay special 'tutors, to attend special classes; and he must, above all, be provided with an amount of brains that would have secured snecess, cceteris paribus, in any pro fession. He must not only be an enthusiast and a worker, to pass the jealously-guarded portals at Burlington House, but be must also be a highly educated man. . In a less degree the membership of the College of Physicians is also unattainable. It is almost prohibitive to the poor man of talent; for to practice as a pure physician, the yonng doctor must be able to maintain himself for say at least 16 years. As a rule, the average general practitioner contents himself with the membership of the College of Surgeons and the license ot the Apothe caries' Company (though this latter qualifi cation is yearly becoming less popular); or he obtains the license of the Boyal College of Physicians, which is a qualification In. both medicine and surgery, and eminently respectable. Then, if he be desirous of the title of doctor, and he be neither wealthy J -h, fof Why? Because PEARLINE takes the drudgery right out of house-cleaning do' the work better quicker and with less labor than anything known. Saves the w of the wear by doing away with the rubbing. Cleans furniture paint carpets, out taking them up pictures glass-r-marble bath tubs everything sjiothi' coarse, nothing too fine for .... r . 1 tJT 1 if a iair tnai. nousc-meaniHg iime win jass so sin SUSOect ltS Oresence, ?',"r J- W! -,. '-. - 'V . 14589. nor Isaroed, he can be dabbed M.D. (btlsg qualified msn) by a'stort raidesw a4'a iairly moderate examination" at one of tie Scotch universities, or he oan obtain a foreign degree. Having then become legally qualified man, the practitioner, having apeat 1,000, or mere usually 2,060, is prepared to seriously attempt to gain his living., His choice lies between: An assistancy to another practitioner A surfeoaey in t&e army or navy or merchant service An ap pointment in some institution or hospital A dispensary Buying a practice Buying a partnership Waiting for practice Emi grating, HIS EABLT OAEEEE. With the first choice the young prac titioner closes, If he be a wise man; for he has tbe opportunity of acquiring, under the apspices of Another, that necessary expe rience of the maladies of everyday life of which in his hospital career he may have seen nothing. True, his salary is small 75 and board, or 100 outdoor. But with out this initiation into the arcana of prac tice he can never succeed as a general prac titioner., Here he has to learn the preju dices ot tha British public. He has to try to bow to these prejudices, ifpossible, with out losing his seir-respect. He has to learn when to treat a patient, when to administer a judicious placebo.- He has, in fine, to: master the drudgery of the profession and its sordid details. And now comes the turning-point in the career of tho young practitioner. Will he remain a professional man, or will he become a tradesman in disguise? All depends on, the influence of his employer. Avounr man may devote himself with enthusiasm to his profession in the intervals of the uncon genial occupations of dispensing medicines and keeping the books. The treatment of the poor and the care of the club patients1 that may fall to his share may be carried on by him with wisdom and integrity, or it may be slurred over, in a perfunctory man ner. He may devote his whole attention to the earning oi half-crowns for his employer, and he may neglect his parochial and club patients in the spirit of a very Bumble. His choice of an assistancy is in any case a wise one; he earns his bread and gains experience. Or he may choose the medical service cf the army, navy, or merchant marine. In the two former cases he sees the world and risks his life in war-time. After an ex amination, in either case he become entitled to pay at' tbe rate of from 8s to 10s a day, and there are opportunities in after life; it is a career, and he has a certain social posi tion. He may confidently look forward to half-pay, or a pension which will keep him as a lrugal bachelor. OTHEE PATHS OPEN TO SOME, If the young practitioner can support himself, and has talents of a high order and a great capacity for work, especially tutorial work, he may "hang on" at his hospital, or at a provincial one, in the hope of filling some vacancy, first in the teaching, after ward on the medical or surgical staff. But his course supposes the possession of talent money and indomitable industry. If the young practitioner has not distinguished himself during his hospital studies, or has no friend at court, this line of life is hardly open to him. For he may "hang on," holding numerous honorary appointments, till he has expended his means in vain, and he finds himself reluctantly compelled, with his last remaining 1,000, to join the crowded ranks ot tne general practitioners. As to poor-law appointments, there are first the workhouses and .dispensaries; the salaries are from 80 to 100 a year. For these appointments there are usually from 30 to 200 candidates and nepotism rules the roost It is generally known beforehand who will win; and the nominally .open ap- S ointment is usually transferred' much as vings are in the church namely, by pur chase or arrangement Or tbe Guardians take turns to elect, and the man without local interest has no chance. There are a few, a very few, prises in this branch of the profession. Marylebone is worth 500 a year; Shore ditch, 300; Greenwich, 250, with resi den6e and rations. If a man is fond of the hard work of his profession, and is content to remain all his life an ill-paid enthusiast, he can seek these appointments. The next class are the parochial appointments; they are worth from 12 to 50 a year, the prac titioner having to find drugs. These ill paid positions are either held by very needy men or are merely looked on bv country practitioners as a means of" keeping off op position. ONE, PEATUBE. In, tact, they go towards paying the salary of the dispensing assistant, who often does all the work. As a rule, these appointments are held by es tablished practitioners, who look upon them in the same light as "clubs" namely, as "feeders" to a practice. "Kubbish recom mends rubbish," and "Paupers send you paupers," are well-known sayings among practitioners of medicine, but it is not so in fact The poor, and particularly the provi dent poor, are the advertisements of their medical men. whether for sood or for evil. It is the poor who draw attention to kind Dr. A. or rough and drunken Dr. B. And the poor, as a rule, call a spade a spade, and do not stint praise or blame. Waiting for practice is only adopted by the man of property: while the man who emigrates had better have kept his 1,000 or 2,000 to start with in the colony of his choice in another sphere than that of a med ical man, and thus nave saved also his five or more years of hospital work. But, if the intending emigrant is fond of heavy out door work, he need not cross the seas. Let him buy a country practice, and he will learn what hard work is. The Usual Exception. Nebraska State Journal. 1 Customer You sell cracked eggs at half price, do you not? Clerk Yes'm, we always make a 0 per cent reduction on cracked goods. Anything else to-day? Customer Yes, you may give me a dol lar's worth of cracked wheat, and here's your 50 cents. v TTTTTllW STDEVn?!? contributes to the LULL t All OiJCiilliMl columns of to-mor-rote Dispatch an interesting letter from Ha vana, descriptive of the palatial homes in Cuba. House Cleaning PEARLINE. -You'll appreciate this lact best o; i i Mt v JSvMtr V.o man flb-n Manufacture d only J- .' S . I . " !' - " A POLITIOAJ, HflHT. Tap Struggle to Enforce tbe Saaday Law at Vt. Wayne CoBsell Reduce lbe Mayor's Salary From 84,68 ta 82,5W-Se Test Cases WW be v. Made. Ft WAysk, Xay 3L 3fce vigaww policy adopted by Mayor Harding- la en forcing the Sunday Jaw and the 11. o'clock saloon law has commenced to bear political fruit. The.Councll, which Js almost solidly5 Democratic, met test night for the parpoee ofiixinjr salaries for the ensuing year. The Mayor's salary, heretofore, has been $1,700. together with numberless fees, making the total revenue derived from tbe office about 4,000. The Council last ,night fixed his salary at $2,800, but took away all fees, which hereafter must be paid into tbe city treasury. Tbe fees of policemen and police officers were also made payable into the treasury. The Druggists1 Association has split upon the rock of Sunday closing, and part of bem will next Sunday defy the Mayor's orderj and will keep open house all day. The Mayor says that all persons vio lating his order regarding drug stores must suffer the consequences, but that, other persons fol lowing their usual avocations on the Sab hath will not be molested. This dictatorial proceeding on the part of the Mayor is not much relished, and it is not unlikely that test cases will be made next Sunday. Since the Mayor included in his proclama tion all drinkintr places within two miles of the city, the Centlivre brewery, a pleasure resort just outside the city limits, has been, closed each Sunday- Theorewery is situated on the St. Joe river, only a few rods above what is known as the Budisill dam. Several hundred boats are owned by the brewery, and are liberally patronized by pleasure-seekers from the city, on week days as well as Sundays. Some time since the Centlivres built a street-car line from the brewery to the cen ter of the city. This line the Citizens' Street Bailway Company is, and has been, quite anxious to buy, but the Centlivres refuse to sell except at a figure twice the actual value of the property. It so hap pens, however, that John H. Bass, the Pres ident of the street railway company, is also President of a company which owns the Budisill dam and contingent water privileges. Accordingly, the water has been let out of the dam, and in consequence Messrs. Centlivre's boats are left high and dry, and a very profitable source of revenue has been cut off, besides reducing their street car line to a non-paying basis. Should the brewery folks consent to sell their rail road at a reasonable figure, the water in the dam will speedily rise to its usual level. TWO CIGARS A DAY. FIsmrei by Iac-wliton Scholars en an Inter eitlnsr Question of Economy. Lewliton Jcnrnal.i In the interest of economy and to incul cate the idea of prudence, Superintendent Stuart, of the city schools, gave the Gram mar school pnpils in Lewiston, recently, the following question: "Suppose each pupil in each room should save 10 cents a day, depositing the amount every six months for ten years, what would be the accumulated sum in ten years, also what would be the accumulated sum in 50 years?" The answer has been sent in and the re sult shows a sum more than enough to buy one-half the cityof Lewiston. The figures are: Amount in ten years, each pupil (18 25 semi-annually), t490 80; amount (each pupil), in 50 years, $11,082 93. The Grammar school wonld save in ten years $246,(501 14, and in CO years $5,574, 708 76! Taking the number of pupils attending public schools according to the census of 1888, the ten-year amount wonld be $1,337, 756 64, and in 50 years would be $30,234, 205 76. According to the censns of 1888, the pu pils between 4 and 21 would save in ten years $3,325,266 78, and in 60 years $75,153. 280 52. Only two cigars a day! HE MISSED I0TS OP PON. A Hooiler Uvea 94 Years and Never Used Tobacco or Alcohol. Gkeensbubg, Ind;, May 31. Mr. Ira Grover died yesterday at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Martha Stevans, after a short Illness, aged 94. He never nsed tobacco in any form or alcoholic liquors, and has enjoyed excellent health during his loner life. About five years ago he had a most diffi cult operation performed on his eyes, some thins very unusual for one of his age, and since that time he has been able tortad without glasses. AN INTERESTING ETENT. The President's .Granddaughter Christened by Her Great- Grandfather. WashiNQIOK, May 31. The President's granddaughter, Mary Lodge McKee, was christened this afternoon at the White House, by her great-grandfather, the Bev. Br. Scott, in-the presence of the family, the members of the .Cabinet and General and Mrs. Williams. Mr. and Mrs. McKee will start for home to-morrow. Afflicted With Mnmps. EiPLrsr, O., May 31. Several hundred cases of mumps are now prevalent in Rip ley and vicinity, and the number is being daily augmented, so far as to become epi demic, in fact. THE CAPTIVE MAIDM,?S an Indian campaign in California, is eloquent ly described in Joaquin Milter's thrilling ro mance, "for Jforsy-exgni jjays,- puunsnci complete in tp-morrovfs Disfach. 1 ' 1 - 1 oothly the men folks by JAMES PYLE, New "i m SERIES OF RESOLD Another Link in the Chain of Loral GIVEN BY TWO WITNESSES, "Yes," said Mr. Loftus, 'put it down veryplainly.jastasltell you, for every body that knows me knows in what bad shape I was, that I had to quit work I was a molder by trade that the doctors ' advised light outdoor work, that-X. fol lowed that nntll I was taken to ray bed, and that my people all thought I had con-. sumption." JlziV The gentleman talking W3S MrSJoha Loltns, dealer in groceries on Higjjpe and living at2To. 25 of the same streetHa is well known in that- neighborh55?ai well as among steel and iron workssiag- whora, before his health failed hlssT a fellow craftsman. "That is why I am in the groceryiBWt ness now," Mr. Loftus continued. "Thasr. felt that I could never do active work agaiSJtA when I finally broke down,I about madeap my mind it was for good. 'i- "jTou must remember it didn't come oa all at once. I had dizzy spells, and dark spots floating before my eyes, especially when I would stoop over. There would - be headaches a dull pain across my forehead over my eyes. My nosa wouldget stopped up, first one nostril and . then the other. There would be ringing and buzzing sounds in my ears.' The trouble in my head, while it was annoying, didn't worry me very much. "But by and by I noticed, I was contin ually hawking and hemming. A dry kind of a cough fastened itself on me, and do what I would I could not get rid of it. I was continually sick at my stomach. After eating there ;would be distress and nausea. What I ..would eat would seem a rest like a Ioa'-there. I Mr. John Loflus, !S Sigh Street. would go to the table feeling as it I had a good appetite, and when I would sit down I could hardly eat anything: Food did not seem to have the proper taste. Sometimes the very smell of food would make me sick. I couldn't eat, and yet I was always hnnery. "Breathing became difficult. Sometimes it would be accompanied with a wheezing sound. When I would lie down I wonld choke all up and I would have to sit up In order to get any air into my lungs. Tbe slightest effort or exer tion would put me all ont of breath. "My nights wonld be restless. The coughing and the pains In the chest and hard breathing kept me awafte, and I would eet up In tha morning miserable. Sharp pains would cateh me in tbe chest, running through to the shoulder-blades. "I lost steadily in weight and strength, and it was no wonder people tboughtl had consump tion. Sometimes I wonld have a hot, feverish, spell and then chills, and my body andlimba would feel as cold as ice. Palpitation of tho. heart was frequent. It would beat fast, and this wonld be followed by slow and unsteady beating: I was despondent about myself, ana Indeed didn't look to ever eet any better. . 4 My brother-in-law readme from thepap an account of a case like mine that had be i ft treated andcured by Drs. Copelasd 4 Blair. He urged me to go and see them, and finally I went. I fonnd their charges reasonable, and while they would hold oat no promises tome, i made up my mind that they could help me, if anybody could. "Well, I placed myself under their cars and Improved steadily from the start. I gained in welsh r. My head became clear, breathing easy. The coach and the pains in the chest pxssed away. I got a hearty appetite, slept well and pained gradually, but surely. I feel like another man now, am able to wort, ana I am very thankful for my restoration. This Is what Drs. Copelandi Blair have, dons for me, and I am gratef nl for it, and very clad to giro my statement of it for publication." FOLLOWING HIS SISTER. Fimllv History tn ihe Case Ciusad Some of the Fear. Mr. Morris Meany, living at 2908 Mul bury street, in conversation with the writer, said: "It had extended so far that I had little strength or ambition left. How did it begin? Well, I can hardly say. It was my head in the first place. My nostrils would stop up; first one, then the other. Sometimes they would discharge. There would be adullpainfnmyforeheadrmy eyes would get dim and watery. "My throat gave me no epd of trouble. I would be constantly hawking and hemming to clear it of the mucus and phlegm. It would feel raw and inflamed, and my voice would get husky. "I could see that I was getting weaker and thinner every day. I worked as long as I could, but my strength gave out en tirely at last, and I had to give up. An ugly hacking cough got hold of me". Sharp pains would take me in the chest, running through my shoulder blades. "Jly nights were the worst I couldn't sleep. 1 had to be continually raisin? to clear my throat The matter that would drop down would almostchoke me. Some thing wonld seem to stick there that I could not get up or down. I congbed and congbed, and could get no rest from sheer coughing "Night sweats cams on and weakened nts terribly. When I wow? get np in the morning I would feel weak and lek and miserable. For a half hour I wonld do nothing but couch and raise, and I wonld be so weakthatlcouldbardly Mr. Meany. -ress myseii. 3 "Sometimes, when I would be lying down, my heart would beat bard and fast, palpitate for a few moments, and then It wonld neat alow and Irregular, and there would be a sensation of falntness and dizziness. Sharp pains wonld seize me in the region ot the heart. I was get ting very pale and thin. My friends all told me that I bad lung trouble. 1 had lost a sister from a similar disease, and I was very de spondent and low SDlrited about myself. I had tried almost everything without getting any help. "Well, it was In this condition that twent to Drs. Copeland and Blair at 66 Sixth avenue. I found their charges were not exorbitant; that they were within my means. Tbey didn't prom Iso anythinc. but I felt sure they understood my case, and I placed myself under their care." 'In tbe second week I commenced to feel, better, and from that on I steadily grew strong er and better. Tbe cough, the night sweats and the pains in my chest disappeared, mj head and throat became clear and wen. In tne third week I was able to go to work ajrain. In three weeks 1 gained over four pounds la flesh. I am worklnr re?nlarlv now. I feel strong and well, as If I bad taken a new lease on life. DOCTORS r TTl'j'il Ara located permanently at 66 SIXTH AVF jWbere they treat with success i? umce hours) to 11 a. atr J'.'-K. (Sunday Included). as Speclalttes-CATAR EASES ot tho EYF LUNGS. and. JSTlli inm NiRVIn '.Wliili V'ff Mi '? Awfl-'" fSGl'l til :M JC7S I 1 - -, ' 1 i i-.. .. " .-' sl '. ' irf ;"siA.?jMr ..1 HHtsiw BBBPBMpjsBsJSBBB fipW IHilsflsH.fliiHiisssssssHilissssH -