i8l :TBM'XT!TSB'UR& dispatch,. TOLY n V tW6e B$pfolj. ESTABLISHED FEBRUARY 8, 18. VoLK J'o. 147. -Entered t MUsburg rostofflce, Xortubtr 14. 1SS7, as second- lui nutter. Business Offlco 97 and DS Fifth Avenue. News Booms and Publishing House 75, 77 and 79 Diamond Street. Eastern Advertising Office, Koom , Tribune Bullllng, Sew York. Average net circulation of tbe dally edition of THI UlsraTCH for six months ending June 1, l&sa, 27,824 ' Copies per Issue. Average net circulation of the Sunday edition of ,TjW DjsrATCH for May, 1638, 47,468 ,- Coplea per Isaac. ' ' X TERMS OF TIIK DISPATCH. rosTxoi rssx in tux usitxd states. 1UII.Y DISFATCH. One Year f 8 00 lUiXT Dispatch, i'er Quarter Z 00 DAH.T IMsraTCH. One Month 70 IXiJVr DlirATCH. Including Sunday, lyear. 10 00 lUlLT DlEraTCILlnelndlng Sunday.Sm'tbs. 2 SO llAILT DISFATCH, Including Sunday.ltnoath M kUXOAT DISPATCH, One Year S 50 WazaxY Dispatch, One Year 1 3 .The Daily Dispatch Is dellrered by carrier at K eenti per week, or Including Sunday edition, at SO cents per week. P1TTSBURO. THURSDAY. JULY 4, 1883. A GSEAT NATION'S BIBTHDAT. To a nation which appreciates its liberty, iu resources, its history and its future so keenly and so constantly as ours, the anni - Tersary of its birth is a day that must bring tha liveliest and most pleasureable emo tions. During the other three hundred and sixty fpur days there is the rush and bustle of business. The million exciting incidents of constant, risible growth, occupy the mind so fully of themselves that there is little time or disposition for review of the na tional life. It might even be thought, from the intensity of political disputes and the hot discussion of questions of the hour, that at times there is cause to be out of conceit with the workings ot some of our institu tions. But no estimate would be more su perficial. The United States is the happi est, most enlightened, most prosperous and most promising nation that to-day exists, or that has ever existed. This is not the lan guage of buncombe, or spread-eagle rhetoric It is about as simple and modest a statement as can be made of a great and important fact. Every intelligent citizen of the coun try knows it to be true; and many intelli gent citizens of other and less favored coun tries are fully aware of it also. It is well that this feeling is part of the national life. No matter whether it is ex pressed in the explosion or fireworks as is the custom of our times; or iu verse or state ly oration as was 'more the habit of years past; or whether it be but the silent thought, the personal and quiet acknowledgment of each one to himself, it is well that the fourth of July should not pass without tes timony that the citizens of the Kepublio are deeply, earnestly proud of their heritage. The science of government seems easy where success end prosperity are the con spicuous results; but how much the form of government has to do with the welfare of the citizen can best be studied by eontrast- ing the state of things in Europe with that in the United States. It is not merely the grinding poverty iu which masses of people live and die there poverty which signifies conditions of life such as have no parallel here; but what is more painful yet, the virtual exclu sion of vast numbers from opportunities to betid themselves. Added to this, and largely the cause of it, is the humbugging show ot royalty and hereditary aristocracy, and of immense armies maintained at enor mous expense to keep the peace peace which might well be universal but for the personal and dynastic ambitions of royal - families and their courtiers, who depend wholly on force to sustain them alike against internal and external enemies. Every succeeding Fourth of July but adds another chapter to the proof of the wisdom of the founders of our republic. A cloud of sorrow because of recent great physical catastrophes, hangs over the Fourth which is ushered in this morning, but even these dreadful occurrences are not unat tended by features which serve in their way to show forth the magnificence ot the na tional character. The instantaneous and splendid sympathy and noble aid which the whole land extended but a few weeks ago to stricken Johnstown shows that the spirit of our people is as grand as their political destiny. A NEW DIPLOMATIC LIGHT. It is assuring to learn through the unoffi cial channel of a private letter from Hicks, of Wisconsin, that he is booming the diplo matic business in Peru. Hicks, it may be remembered, is the otherwise unknown citi zen who was appointed Minister to Peru on the strength of a Senatorial signature, which the Senator forgot all aboui until, upon pro testing against the appointment, he was con fronted with his own handwriting. But it seems that the adventitious Hicks, upon his own statement, is the right man for the place. He has been welcomed by President Caceres, who has asked him to dinner and done everything to make Hicks feel at home; and Hicks certifies that he has eaten the dinners and received the visits from the Peruvian President, in an enthusiastic manner, calculated to solidify the relations between the two American republics. So long as dinners are to be eaten, and other festivities partaking of the nature of a blow out, are to be gone into, Hicks is certain that he was born for diplomatic greatness. If it had not been for that unwitting Sena- tonal signature the country might have for ever remained in ignorance of Hicks' mar velous capacity for diplomatic feeds. BOOHS TBUST VALUES. The multiplicity of trade organizations, taking the form of trusts, is generally re garded as an indication that trade is pass ing under the rule or combination, and that this modernized form of monopoly is the latest development of commercial method. The purpose of the original trust to secure the enjoyment of exorbitant profits, by the suspension of competition, is without ques tion; but the adoption of the same form of organization in branches of business where it is impossible to smother competition, in dicates either that there is a great deal of ignorance and miscalculation as to the pos sibilities of the trust, or else that another motive is at the bottom of these organiza tions. The public evil of these organizations is generally regarded solely as bearing on the increased prices which they will attempt to levy upon the consumer. This is unques tionable, provided they are successful in their purpose of abolishing competition; but it is no less plain that a great many of the reported trusts will be utterly powerless to accomplish that end to more than the most temporary and transient degree. The rumored Pottery Trust, which has just re ceived notice throughout the newspapers of the country, is a case in point. If a com bination should be formed to control all the pottery factories in the country, and thus put up the prices so as to yield an excessive profit, it wonld not be a twelvemonth be fore a host of new factories would spring into existence. These factories would either have to be admitted to the trust, or else their competition would make prices lower than ever before; and the final result would be wider and more irrepressible competition than existed at the inception of the combi nation. It is hardly possible that the keen-sighted business men who are engaged in organiz ing these trusts all over this country, and in England as well, arc so blind that they can not see this point; but the fact is that there is another and more prompt profit from the organization of these combinations, which is probably the real purpose in their creation. That is the profit of passing off upon de luded investors the shares in the trusts at prices largely above their actual value. It is the same game as the negotiation of watered railway stocks, in a slightly altered form. The public has got the idea that everything in the shape of a trust is going to be enormously profitable; and therefore, it is concluded, investors will be ready to snap up trust certificates at almost any price which the organizers may choose to put upon them. So long as this delusion pre vails there is, therefore, an enormous and quick profit in buying up the factories of almost any industry at from five to ten million dollars, capitalizing them at twenty or forty million dollars, and unloading the shares on the confiding public This is un doubtedly the sole purpose of such English enterprises as the Brewery Trust, and prob ably the salt combination; and there is little reason to doubt that the same idea is largely responsible for some of the Ameri can trusts which are already floating their certificates on the Ifew York Stock Ex change. Of course this phase of the matter does not modify the obnoxious and wholly dis honest character of the trust. Where they cannot make a legitimate profit by extor tion from the consumers, they propose to secure the same end by the delusion of in vestors and obtaining money under false pretenses. Either method is a violation of the equities of trade and finance, and results in concentrating fortunes in .he hands of thp unscrupulous few at the cost of the public. A SPLENDID INVESTMENT. The discussion as to the practicability and cost of a canal to connect the head waters of the Ohio with Lake Erie, which appears in our local columns, gives a clear idea of the importance of the project, and at the same time indicates the possibility of a surprisingly small cost. The statement that water transportation to the lakes could be secured at but little more than the cost of a railroad ior the same distance puts the case in a strong aspect. If a canal ot that sort can be built for anything like the figures given, there should be no delay in urging the project to a speedy realization. It would be satisfactory to have the United States Government build it; but if there is any difficulty about that, Pittsburg should be prompt to supply the comparatively small capital needed to se cure its great benefit A demonstration of this is afforded by our experience with the Pittsburg and Lake Erie road. About the amount stated as necessary to construct the canal was put into that railroad project, and within five years, besides the value of the stock as an investment, the road gave Pittsburg an increase of indnstry and values worth several times its cost. Yet the cheap ening of freights for Pittsburg's funda mental industries by the railroad wis about one-fourth what it would be by the canal. Such a waterway as is outlined in our local columns would make Pittsburg inde pendent of railroad combinations on coal, ore, coke and iron freights. Five cents per ton toll on the freights which Pittsburg alone could furnish would pay interest on the cost of the canal, and with that toll the cost of the freights could be cheapened one half. With such a benefit in view, it would seem plain that our industrial inter ests should lose no time in taking steps to secure its completion. POINTS FOB BEFOHM. Mr. Chauncey M. Depew rarely talks for publication without giving the newspapers a good many subjects for discussion. The discussion may not always be favorable to Mr. Depew's views, bnt the topics which he presents are invariably fresh and interest ing. An example of this sort is presented by his recent statement on behalf of the President, whom Mr. Depew took under his enlivening protection a week or two ago. After certifying to the harmony which ex ists between the President and Mr. Blaine which seems unnecessary since Mr. Joseph Manley got the Augusta postoffiec Mr. Depew proceeds to draw a picture of the effect of the rush after office which is very instrnctive. Four thousand applicants for ISO consulates are pointed out by Mr. De pew, and his belief is asserted that this pro portion will be maintained if not increased through all the departments. Consequent ly, " public business is at a stand-still." The testimony of Mr. Depew that the dis tribution of office on the principle of the spoils system results in keeping pub lic business at a stand-still after the admin istration has been in operation four months ought to suggest some very pertinent con clusions. It is a tolerably strong inference that a system which would distribute offices on an entirely different basis than the con sideration of political service would be very superior to the one now in force. Mr. De pew omits to draw this conclusion, but when he puts the premises for it so very percepti bly, he approaches very closely to the condi tion of the hated mugwump. But this is by no means all. Mr. Depew goes on to say that "the whole country seems to think that Cleveland removed and replaced all the officeholders and that vacancies can be made everywhere. The fact is that he removed only about one-third of the place holders." This is also an in teresting and important point, as bearing upon the relative sincerity of the two ad ministrations in their reform professions. We do not remember that Mr. Depew made any such statements with regard to the small proportion of removals by the Cleve land administration, during the campaign which resulted in Mr. Harrison's election. Of course Mr. Depew Is now making good the omission, with the intention of im proving his influence with the present ad ministration for the purpose of having Mr. Cleveland's example followed. The remark of the Providence Journal that "President Harrison has a Eoumania for every Sowden," indicates that the esteemed Journal has not yet mastered the personal aspect of Pennsylvania politics. It seems to have an idea that President Harrison is consoling that Democratic Con gressman, Mr. Sowden, of Allentown, who was suppressed by-PresIdsnt Cleveland for voting according to the interests'of hUon- stituents on the tariff, by appointing him to the Roumanian Mission. This credits Presi dent Harrison with an unwonted degree of liberality in appointing Democrats to diplo matic posts. The esteemed Journal fails to perceive the vital difference made by the introduction of an extra "n" in the name. There is a decisive distinction between Congressman Sowden and Mr. A. Louden Snowden, who has received the Roumanian appointment. Now that gubernatorial dignity has got on its ear over the question of the introduc tion of President Harrison at Woodstock, Mr. Henry C. Bowen may well feel that he has nothing further to ask for from this life, in the way of getting himself advertised. EnoDE Island is disgusted at the dis covery that the repeal o its prohibitory law will require an extra session of the Legislature to provide some regulation for the liquor traffic As that body has met twice already this year, Rhode Island can hardly be blamed for feeling that it is likely to have too much of a good thing. Perhaps the vote of Pennsylvania on pro hibition may be partially accounted for by the knowledge of the public that, by voting the way they did, they escaped the calamity of an cztra session of our Legislature. What the Governor of Mississippi is say ing to the Governors of Louisiana and Ala bama will be regarded by the pugilistic crowd as much less appropriate than the proverbial remarks that passed between the Governors of the two Carolina. Beceetaet Noble gives the administra tion a certificate of character by testifying that not a word of profanity has been heard at the Cabinet meetings since the administra tion was organized. We are glad to know that the Cabinet is so exemplary, but still the certificate is likely to create our special wonder, as to whether it did not require the prompt adjournment oi the Cabinet meet ing when it was learned that Montana had gone Democratic Yesterday was the kind of a day that is calculated to restore hnman belief in the benignity of nature If we can have such weather as that for the Fourth of July, the previous meteorological transgressions of 1883 can be given. Geneeal SHEEMA2 recently indulged in some sarcastic remarks to a Chicago reporter on the policy of Chicago in annexing all the outlaying agricultural districts. The consequence is that the Chi cago press is unanimously beginning to in timate that the General pursued an entirely unjustifiable course in whipping the South ern armies so thoroughly as he did. The railroads are doing a good business, and it they can break themselves of the bad habit of cutting each other's throats and laying it on the inter-State commerce law, there is no reason why they may sot do well this year. The industrious efforts of some of our Chicago cotemporaries to represent that the wages of Pittsburg ironworkers are being cut down, and that the Pittsburg Belief Committee is stealing the supplies for the Johnstown people, which Chicago did not send, may be taken as proof presumptive that expansion of area does not produce a proportionate largeness of mind. Cokcebts in the parks form a summer night feature which will add greatly to the attractions of Allegheny, and which will do the same for Pittsburg when Pittsburg gets some parks. A CLOUD-bubst at Peoria, 111., last week, is reported to have ruined many thousands ot gallons of milk. From the character of Pcori a product the presumption is that the water made the milk too rich. Peoria's fame as a whisky center is calcu lated to create the opinion there that if water gets into anything it will ruin it. The action of the trnsteesof the Polytech nic Institute, reported elsewhere, indicates that the new institute will soon materialize into an actual and gratifying fact. Mb. Henry George and the Socialists seem to be having pleasant time in Lon don. He tells the Socialists that all the re sults they aim at can be achieved more speedily by the 'single tax idea; and the Socialists cheer the announcement in a manner which indicates that they are as trustful as Mr. George is sanguine. The people in the streets of London seem to have entertained a pardonable doubt as to whether the Shah or Salisbury was most de serving of their jeers. The sporting columns seem to be unani mously of the opinion that Sullivan Sand Kilrain are not going to fight with their us ual offensive weapons, namely, their tongues. But before being very confident it may be wise to wait till the returns are all in. PB0MINEKT PEOPLE PARAGRAPHED. CABDiXAl Ne-voian has been spending some time at Malvern, In promising health. Me. Goschen Is the only leading member of the British GoTermnent who is not also a mem ber of the Cobden Club, and it is said that he Is about to join it. Gkneuai. J. W. Binoi-eton. once s leader of the Illinois Democrats, has retired alto gether from politics, and spends most of his time among his books. A fixe crayon portrait of the Key. Dr. 8. K. Smith, author of "My Country. 'tis or Thee," has beon placed in the library of Colby Univer sity. He was for many years a trustee ot that Institution. Mrs. M. TnonESES-, Henrik Ibsen's talented mother-in-law, has recently celebrated her seventieth birthday. Telegrams and gifts of flowers from all parts poured in upon the old lady, whose Action is very popular in Bweden and Norway, and who was first introduced into the world of letters by the p"Bet Bjornson. The London Star says that Miss Mary An derson is gradually recovering her health, but she is living almost incog. In the outskirts of Hampstcad. It was always a favorite suburb of hers. Even when her headquarters were in Brompton she would drive up and spend all the summer afternoon on the heath, which had the samo attraction for her that it used to have 'for Charles Dickens. She has collected by this time quite a museum ot theatrical curiosities. The trophy she most values is a dagger given her by Lady Martfn, which was always used by the donor when she played Juliet. So It was passed direct to Mary Anderson from Helen Faucitwith all the associations of a great Chlcngo'a Bicycle Craze. From the' Chicago News.: The bicycle craze has filled the boulevards of this city with a confused jumble of spidery legs and skeleton machines for devouring distance. Apparently 99 persons out of every 100 habit ually ride bicycles. The 100th person rides a tricycle. Not only does every one ride those noiseless contrivances, but every one rides them at great speed. These Horrid Torrid Days. From the I'hlladelphlm Inquirer." Variations in the weatherTnowadays are lim ited to a single letter. When it Isn't torrid its horrid. THE TOPICAL TALKEB. A Lnrgc.Slzrd Small Mm-A Theatrical Injustice Mr. Klgby'a Be. The flood ot May and June destroyed or gravely damaged -no less than 15 bridges In Dauphin county, this State, and It was business connected with the rebuilding ot those bridges that brought George W. Cnnkle, the Demo cratic County Commissioner of Dauphin, r to this city day before yesterday. He was accom panied by bis Republican colleague, and all yesterday spent many hours in -negotiations with the Pittsburg bridge building firms. All .the new county bridges will be of iron, and Pittsburg will have a chance to bid for allot them. An unusual "demand for iron bridges Is one of the results of the flood that is not harm ful to Pittsburg. Mr. vunkle Is not a large man physically; in fact his best friends would confess that ,ho is only a medium weight, but all the same be cots a large figure in Harrlsburg politics, and en joys the distinction of having won the Connty ,Oommlssionership by a handsome majority on the Democratic ticket in a Republican county. Mr. Cunklc's suocess maybe attributecTuin part, to the power of the press, for Mr. Cunkle has the reputation of being the best pressman in Harrlsburg. He has been pressman in most of the Harrlsburg netrspaper offices and still Is in charge ot The Telegram! pressroom. He is a Dleasant and large-hearted man, and the Democrats of Dauphin ought to keep such a good representative In office as long as they can. There Is a disposition again this summer among the New York dramatic critics to make nasty flings at Margaret Mather, the tra gedienne. The usually fair Chat Nolr is the latest to abuse Manager Hill's cast-off protege. Says tho paper with a French nime: The healthy part of dramatic management can be found In the results attained by the two American actresses, Margaret Mather and Jullat, Marlowe. The former was "managed" for nearly fire years before she was put on the stage. Her reception was bought for her. The decline of patronage was steady. The woman was not a great actress. In Marlowe's case we find the order of things precisely reversed. She began as an unknown. In Boston she opened with less than 860 In the house. At the end ot the first week the box office reported nightly receipts of over 31,200. This speaks well for critical and popular opinion. The only success of utter incompetency that our stage has had in recent years has been that of Mrs. Langtry. It Is not true that Margaret Mather played to less profitable business last season thau she had previously enjoyed under the astute man agement of Mr. H11L because the public sud denly bad a rush of discernment and resolved that she was not a great actress, but simply because her company was Inferior, she carried no scenery and was otherwise handicapped by incompetent management In Pittsburg Miss Mather is as popular as ever, and all she needs to draw crowded bouses again is generous and shrewd management. Her rating is high in Pittsburg. Miss Minnie Maddern has not had any too much prosperity on the road ot late years, owing to bad management, awful support and general lack of means, besides personal bad judgment on her own part as. to her own abili ties. Yet nobody would dare to say that Miss Maddern is not a genius. Properly managed she would be recognizedastbe greatest actress, in a certain well-defined field, America has to day. V CiiARX-ffCE Bigby, who was staff artist of The Dispatch a year or two ago, seems to have reached a congenial atmosphere in the artistic department of Puck. Mr. Rigby had such an evident and egregious bent toward ex travagant caricature that it was sheer waste of time for him to depict the world about him seriously. fl Mr. Rigby's cartoons in the Graphic, of New York, have Increased his reputation, but he plainly had not reached his proper plane until the doors of Puck opened to him. It seems likely that he will rival in the most eccentric forms ot caricature that rampagious ridiculer ot persons and things, Zimmerman, whose pencil now serves Mr. Arkell's Judge. Puck has rather needed a little more pictorial fun of the broader sort of late than its excellent staff of artists have supplied. Mr. Bigby can be re lied on to fill the bill. HEW TORE SEWS K0TES. Amid a Sbonl of Whales. WIW YORK BUREAU EriCIALS. New York.-July 4 The schooner O. M. Marrett, which arrived in port from Cuba to day, narrowly escaped being, wrecked upon a shoal ot whales last Monday. When the cap tain went on deek early iu the morning, he says, the water around the ship was filled with dark spots and lashed Into foam, as if breaking upon a reef. The .schooner had run into an immense shoal of whales, which were moving southward. He repeatedly struck the big fish with such force that her whole bull shook and articles In the officers rooms were thrown to tho floor. She got ont of the shoal shortly before S o'clock In the afternoon. The whales must have passed close along the shore of Long Island. The presence ot so many whales so far south is the result of the breaiting up of ice in the North Atlantic. The numerous icebergs seen lately by Incoming steamships Indicate that a great change in the Ice fields around the North Pole is occurring this season. linen Are Someirhat Combnutlble. While lighting the gas to-day in the Palais Royal, a fashionable millinery store. Bertha Abels, a young shop girl, dropped a burning bit of paper into a mass of laces. In a minute everything near the girl was ablaze. She was too frightened to run. Her screams sum moned the bookkeeper to her aid just as her skirts began, to burn. He wrapped a blanket around her andehouted to the other employes to run for their lives. The building was event ually cleared of SO girls and 20 men without accident. Miss Abel, waslonly slightly burned. Firemen extinguished the flames after an hour of hard work. Loss. 25,000. Scalped by the Machinery. Mary Muldowney. in the employ of the Cen tral Carpet Manufactory, at Plalnfield, bad her hair torn completely from her head by a belt and shaft near which she was worklngto-day, and the hair came ont by the roots and large pieces of tha scalp were wrenched off with It, She is in a critical condition. Depew Not In a Story-Telling Mood. Chauncey M. Depew, with bis wife, young son and several servants, sailed on tne steam ship Adriatic for Liverpool this moraine A score or more of his friends were at the dock to give Mrs, Depew flowers and to hear Dr. Depew tell a farewell story. But Dr. Depew was not in a story-telling mood. He. looked tired and worried. He will visit London and Paris, will pass August at the Exposition and return early in September. DEATHS OP A DAT. William M. Lyon. In the person of William M. Lyon, who sudden ly exnlred at S o'clock resterdar mornln? in thn Slononeahela Home, death has taken away one of the oldest and best known Iron manufacturers In Western Pennsylvania. The deceased waa 89 years of ace, and up to the hour of his death be had always enjoyed good health, and his sndden demise was a great surprise to the many friends of Mr. Lyon. William M. Lyon was born in Harrlsburg In 1809. His father" was John Lyon and his .mother was a daughter of the late Hon. William McClay. The family came from Tyrone. The young man was called to Flttsburg by his father In 1833 to take charge of the Sllgo Boiling MUI, which was then owned by Lyon, Schorb & Co. Mr. Lyon succeeded his father In the firm, and he afterward owned the entire plant. InlSSS Mr. Lyon purchased the old Monongahela Iloose, and he at once established his residence and lived there ever since. In IMS, after the fire, the present hnlldlng was erected by Mr. Lyon. In 1874 he-sold the hotel to J. McD. Crouen, Charles J. Clark and A. H. Miller. In 1S75 be retired from actlre business altogether, by disposing of the rolling mill to Colonel Wm. rhllllps andi Alexander Nlmick. There have been very few business Interests In l'ltubnrg during the last 50 years with which Mr. Lyon waa not more or leu identified. He waa one of the organ Iters of the Allegheny Valley ltaliroad Company, lie helped to start no tha Safe Deposit Hank, and he waa a large stockholder and a director in that institution from its organization nntll Ma ueath. Be waa also one of the original promoters of the l'UUburg and Lake Erie Ballroad. As a result of fortunate speculations Mr. Lyon became very wealthy, bnt during the panic of ISTt he lost heavily, but after a few years he re covered from that misfortune, and at the time of his deith be waa still considered to be worth about (1,000,000. He owned about 1.000 acres of -valuable iron ore land In Center county. tie was nercr maxnefi. out ue leares Tovtr brothers and one sister. Jasaea B. Lyon. Ueorge W. Lyon, 8. Stewart Lyon, Thomas i Lyon and Mrs. Jane L. Aycrs. IHTENT1KG AN ALPHABET. The Hard Taak Successfully Performed by n Hair-Breed Cherokee Indian A Ve,ry Renarknbls Feat Under the Circum stance. From the Iioolsvllle Courler-Jodrnal.l One ot the most remarkable achievements of the uncnltivated'hnmaa mind was the inven tion ot a syllabic alphabet for the use of his people by Sequoah. alias George Guess, a half breed Cherokee Indian. S equoah was bora in Georgia, probably about the year 1770, though some authorities fix his birth seven years earlier. He never knew his father, grew np a perfect savage and distinguished himself in war and the chase, until a swelling knee ren dered him In capable ot active pursuits and confined him to his cabin. He knew no language except Cherokee, and, of course, was wholly illiterate. Eequoah's attention seems to have been first attracted to literary matters by a circumstance which ocenrred whllo he was a warrior. His tribe captured a letter" from the whites, and made repeated effcrts to decipher it, but, ot course, were not successful. Some discussion arose about the "talking leaf," astbe Indians styled any specimen of writing; and the ques tion arose whether it was an invention of man or the gift of God. All the Indians, except Sequoah, maintained the latter position, while be espoused the former. He was, however, un able to convince them tbat he was right. They believed tbat the "talking leaf was a gift from the Great Spirit to the white man alone, and cited as proof a legend that had long been cur rent in their tribe. An Interesting Legend. According to this legend the Great Spirit created We-Ha-Ye, the Indian, and gave him a book; afterward he made Yo-We-Na-Go, the white man, and presented him with a bow and arrow. The elder brother was not prompt In devoting himself to the book, but seems rather io nave treated it as doors are treated oy ami schoolboys of all races; and so negligently did he keep It that bis younger brother found means of stealing it from him. The Indian was then compelled to content himself with the bow and arrow, and to gain his living by the chase. From this the Cherokees argued that the Indian had forever forfeited the use cf letters. This reasoning did not convince 8equoah. He denounced his fellow Cherokees as fools and stoutly maintained that be himself could write, and tried to provo it by scrawling char acters upon a rock. His claims were treated with derision. Nothing daunted, be set to work to invent characters for all the sounds in the Cherokee language. At the beginning be made the mistake of attempting to invent a character for each word; and it Is no small tribute to his perseverance that he invented and recorded over 5,000 characters. It grad ually became evident to blm that this system would not work, owing to the great nnmber of characters required, and upon much reflection he hit upon the idea ot dividing words into syllables, and Inventing a character for each syllable. In the prosecution ot this work Sequoah found himself embarrassed by tha want of an accurate ear. To remedy this he engaged bis daughter In the work, and from her derived very valuable assistance. He availed himself of many Ingenious methods tn make complete his collection of the sounds of the language. He went to hear speeches by members ot his tribe, and whenever a sonnd occurred for which he had no character he at once supplied the deficiency. Two Terr Difficult Tasks. An English spelling book having accidentally fallen into his hands, he used the English let ters, as far as they wonld go, to denote Chero kee syllables. The other characters be Invented himself, about the year 1821, or, as others say, 1826, he had his system complete. His char acters numbered 80. Having completed his alphabet, his next task was to get it adopted by his tribe. This was a work of much diffi culty. He sent his daughter out of bearing, wrote down a passage and read itto the braves, then called the girl back and had her read it to them again. They wondered, but doubted still. Then he persuaded the tribe to select some of the brightest ot their boys to learn the new art, and to this they at last agreed. When the time for examination arrived the pupils passed the ordeal In triumph, and the Cherokees were at last convinced tbat the lalkine leaf Is not the exclusive property of the white man. Sequoah then became the principal of the Indian schools, and was held in great honor until his death, which occurred in Mexico in August, 1813. This alphabet was cast into a font of type and is -still in use. When we consider that the art ofwritine has usually been attributed to the geds, as being something beyond the reach of finite In telligence, we cannot but admit 'that the life work of Sequoah was a most extraordinary one. It Is true he bad the first suggestion from his knowledge- that the 'talking leaf existed among the whites, but his methods were his own, and he wrought out the great problem without other assistance than that obtained -from his daughter. -Wuile his invention had long Deen anticipated, bis work must ever stand as a monument of the capability of the human intellect when united with unbending resolution and tireless perseverance. CAMPBELL HAS A R1TAL. Either Kline or Hard as the Candidate of the Free Trade Element. CixyshASTD, July 3. A movement was started here to-day, the object of which is to force Congressman James E. Campbell out of the race for the Democratic Gubernatorial nomination. Virgil P. Kline. Esq., of this city, is the man who will be expected to lead the light; A meeting attended by a score or more ot prominent Democrats was held to start the Kline boom. Among those in attendance were Hon. M. A. Foran, Judge John C. Hutchins, Jndjre E. J. Blandln, Arnold Green, Esq., E. M. Heisley and United Btates Commissioner A J. Williams. There was also a liberal repre sentation of the Free Trade Club of Cleve land. . The availability of Campbell, Neal and the other Democrats who have been mentioned for the place was freely discussed, and the merits cf Mr. Kline sou. forth. The object of the Cleveland Democrats Is to get a man who will correctly represent the Democratic tariff idea, and Mr. Kline is said to be such a man. He Is a pronounced revenue reformer.and was hearti ly in sympathy with the tariff ideas ot Grorer Cleveland. He Is an able lawyer, and is un trammeled by factional quarrels. It was open ly asserted that Campbell Is Bnce's mata, and Mr. Foran declared emphatically tbat 'there must be no mixing of the Senatorial question with the Gubernatorial fight. It is believed here tbat Charley Baker will get the compli mentary support of Hamilton connty. and that Kline can be counted as Cincinnati's second choice. ' , It was decided that a united effort must be made to secure for Mr. Kline the solid support of the Northern Ohio delegation to the Bute Convention, and to use every effort to secure bis nomination. Mr. Kline has consented to permit the nse ot his name, and from this time on the fight for the Northern Ohio candidate .will be an ainrresslve one. It is also said that It is not Improbable tbat an effort will be made to Induce Frank Hurd to accept the nomina tion if these means of beating Campbell fail. TRI-STATE TRIFLES. Five years ago Thomas, son of Edwin Yea ger, of Allentown, Pa swallowed a cherry stone, which lodged in his lung, and was treat ed for consumption by local doctors. In Phil adelphia on Friday a doctor removed the stone from the boy's nose, whither it had made its way from the lungs, A Philadelphia drugstore's best tooth pow der customer has falsa teeth. In an Arch street, Philadelphia, car the other day a deaf and dnmb lady who was given a seat by a modest blonde gentleman made him crimson with confusion by her gesticula tions of thanks. The wblte-tailed blackbird that has been missing for several seasons has reappeared at Exton, Pa. Henry Whitney, who had a piece of his skull an Inch and a half square knocked oft by a, train two months ago, has left the Erie Alms-' house Hospital. His case Is a remarkable one, as the brain was exposed through the terrible hole in his skull, but it is now closed over without any trephining treatment. He re members nothing at all of the accident or of his hospital experience. While a young lady was picking cherries at Mr.James Vandetender's place in Danvilie,Pa., a couple of days since the limb of the tree on which she stood gave an ominous crack, and but for her ready wit in jumping on a neigh boring roof she would have been badly wound ed, It not killed. PascnaU Thorobury, a fanner of East Go shen, Chester county, Pa was,mowing grass on Baturday, when his machine collided with a huge snapper,. Ho stopped the team at once and laid the stunned snapper aside till quitting time to have a supper off It. v When he went back for It later he found it had flapped away. A new species of bird has appeared In the vi cinity of York, Fa. It has a white cap. a red breast and a long tail. It ests-voraciously of locusts, and even the heads ot wheat and buckle berry stalks. IMP0ETED, GLASSWOKKERS.' Important Papers Wow nt Boston to be Ex amined at Washington The' Maxim Gun Absent Officials Eclipse Ob- Special Teleeram tc The Dispatch. Washington, July 3. It is expected that within a day or two the papers In the case of the importation of foreign glassblowers under contract at Pittsburg will be returned from Boston, where they have been lent to aid the Investigation of the matter by the customs authorities of that city. They will then be passed upon in the Miscellaneous Division of the Treasury Department and referred to As sistant Secretary Tichenor for final' examina tion and decision. The department takes con siderable interest in the case, as Jt is a charge tbat a prominent worklngman has been en gaged in the importation of worklngmen con trary to law, and it the accused be found guilty it is evident his punishment will not be miti gated by the fact that be Is a laboring man. SOO Shot In One Mlnntr. A board of naval officers have almost com pleted their report upon the wonderful Maxim gun, which was tested at the Annapolis prov ing sround a few days ago. and there is almost no doubt that the report will be entirely fav orable, and tbat it will recommend the adoption ofthecun. Two ot the guns were tested, one ot the 45 caliber and the other a one pounder. The former fired easily at the rate of SOO shots a minute, and the latter 300 a minute. After the first shot, the action of the gun is entirely automatic, even to a continual shower bath for the cooling ot the barrel, and the gunner may go away and leave the weapon to do Its deadly work, without oversight from him. Tho Administration Vacates The White House Is now deserted by all ex cept the clerks and servants, and will be re lieved of the presence of office seekers at least for several days to come. There was a great rattline of trunks and shouting ot expressmen this morning until the summer goods of the President's household were got away for the train. Mrs. Harrison went the round of sev eral of the fashionable shops, and then, with the remnant ot her family, accompanied by Secretary Halford, took the train for Deer Park. The hick ot popular curiosity was in striking contrast to the first departure of Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland for Deer Park, when they avoided the correspondents and embarked In Swampoodle amid the cheering of several hun dred hoodlums. The administration is now mainly conspicuous for Its absence. The Presi dent, Blaine, Wanamaker, Noble and Clarkson are absent, and the remainder are escaping work as much as passible, The President is expected to return Monday, but he will leave again the last of the week for Deer Park. - To Observe the Eclipse. A conference was held between Commodore Walker. Captain Pbythian and Prof. Hall, of the Naval Observatory, and Prof. Simon Newcomh, Superintendent ot the "National Almanac" at which It was decided that the ex pedition to view the total eclipse shall starf aoout the 1st ot October on the new cruiser Baltimore, to be commanded by Captain Schhjy. There will be two parties. One will be headed by Prof. Todd, of Amherst; the other by Joseph Rogers, of Washington, ex pert in solar photography, these cbiefs to choose their subordinates. The Secretary of State will set permission from the Portugese Government to land at St. Paul de Loanda, on the west coast of Africa.-and the two sta tions will be near Maxima, on tbeTuanza river. The center of totality will strike the coast about 100 miles south ot St. Paul do Loanda. Wanamnker'a 300 Heads a Daj. Postmaster General Wanamaker has come to the front in a new role. He is at present act ing as the Lord High Executioner of the post office department. General Clarkson, who has been working the ax on the necks of the fourth-class postmasters with great rapidity for seven or eight hours a day since March last, is absent for a few days. He has gone on a yachting party down the Potomac. It was generally supposed that while he was gone, the work of beheadinc the fourth-class postmas ters would be suspended. Not so, however. Mr. Wanamaker was disinclined to let the good work be interfered with. He has therefore assumed charge of the cleaver himself, and heads are falllnc into the basket at the rate of 300 a day. Two hundred and fifty was the average nnmber that General Clarkson could dispose of in one day. and he will probably learn with regret tbat his chief can beat him at his own game. THE PERUYIAN NITRATE KING. Once He Was a Poor Englishman but Now He Is Worth 810,000,000. New Yoke, July 3. There Is. now at the Victoria Hotel a boiler riveter who left bis native country, England, 23 years ago with a few pounds in his pocket to seek his fortune in South America. He Is now worth ?10,000, 000, and within the last few months he bas ac quired literally potentialities of wealth beyond the dreams of avarice. His name is John Thomas North. He Is commonly called Colonel North. He Is the honorary Colonel of the Volunteer Engineers of the Tower Hamlets. He is also known in England as the "Peruvian Nitrate King." Colonel and Mrs. North have the rooms occu pied bv Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland .when they boarded at the Victoria, and their friends have the surrounding rooms on the same floor. Colonel North is a large man of about 15, of florid complexion and auburn accessories. He hadn't much to say of his trip when a re porter called, and Dr. Russell, at his request, did the talking. The famous correspondent, who looks a little like Prince Bismarck, no longer writes f or tbe Timet, having been pnt on Its pension list. He is part proprietor ot and editor of tbefrmy and Aavy (fazette. He accompanied Colonel North's party. If not exactly as a historiographer, at any rate with the intention ot writing about the parts of Chill he visited. There was yellow fever at Rio when the Gallcla arrived there, so Colonel North and bis friends were quarantined on reachins Montevideo. On their arrival In Chill, the first place they visited was Coronel, where Colonel North owns 30 square miles of coal and iron lands, which apparently will richly reward their developer. In order to bring them nearer a market Colonel North is buildtne a railway along tbeHlo Bio to Concep tion, which is to be opened in the autumn. After inspecting this railway. Colonel North and his party went to Santiago. There Colonel North made an offer to President Balmaceda for concessions oi tne remainder of tbe nitrate deposits in Tarrapaca. the province which Chill wrested from Peru In their recent war. Al though Colonel North has made 2,000.000 out of the concessions he already had, he got what he asked for, despite Balmaceda' s policy to have ChlH'develop her natural resources. Of course the Colonel Is to pay a handsome sum for the privileges be thus obtained. A week was spent In Santiago and then tbe party set out for Tarrapaca. On tbe way it stopped at Huasca, where Colonel North nsed to work as a boiler riveter. Iquique and Pisa aua, towns on the coast built on sand banks, to which water as well as provisions have to be brought, were next visited. They were but hamlets before tbe nitrate deposits were de veloped, and now the first contains over 20,000 inhabitants and the second halt as many. Colonel North's only competitor in the nitrate business is the 'famous oenora Conslno, tbe richest woman In Chill, who is now Urine in Pari PENSION BUREAU EULES. Secretary Noble Writes a Little Letter to Commissioner Tanner. Wasotnotox. July 3. Secretary Noble has addressed a letter to Hon. James Tanner, Com missioner of Pensions, In which be calls tbe at tention of 'that osucer to the following regula tion, applicable to tbe Pension Bureau Order No. 108, January 'A 1885: "Owing to the pressure brought to bear from all quarters to take casds ont of their recular rder, and as at thislate date poverty and hard ship from further delay can be alleged of al most every applicant alike; therefore cases will be taken out of their order only when such cause therefor is shown to the Commissioner in writing as would satisfy the other worthytclaim ants whose claims precede tbem, should they know the facts, that such action is proper. Hereafter no case will be advanced tbat Is not clearly within this rule." The letter of tbe Secretary centlnnes: 3t!s hereby further ordered tbat this rule be ex tended so as to embrace cases, only where the applicant is In very great destitution or at the Eoint of death. This regulation will not only e strictly enforced, but attorneys, agents or others persisting In applications contrary to its language and spirit will be disbarred from Eractlce before the department. Yoa will ave this made public" Easily Pleased. From the Philadelphia Press. 1 Fashionable people at the seashore are more than ordinarily indifferent to the cbcracterand extent of their bathing suits this year. In a wordjllttlo or nothing Is good enough for them, THAT LICENSE C0U1T. Editorial Opinions of the Philadelphia Papers a the Manifesto lisaed bv the Jadgea A General Review of the Case. The Licens eCourtmetyesterdayandmsdean order directing that wholesale licenses shall Issue to all brewers and bottlers who have made applications, and have not withdrawn them, the Clerk ot tbe Court to pass npoa the sufficiency of the securities offered. This is the result of the decision of the Supreme Court in the Pros pect Brewery case, and will doubtless be re graded as rather extraordinary action. The License Court accompanies its order, however, with a statement in which it argues that it has nothing else to do under the ruling of tbe high er court, and It shows considerable feeling, pro voked by tbe tone and temper displayed all the way through the Supreme Court deliverance, which has already been pretty freely criticised. The License Court accepts tbe superiorautbori ty of the other court, of course, but without be ing convinced that it Is right. It was probably never intended by the Supreme Courtin taking the position It did tbat licenses shonld be given to people not of good moral character, convicts and common drunkards who for years have led the most abandoned lives. Yet this Is tbe in terpretation put upon tbat decision which was substantially that licenses should be granted where no remonstrances as to the moral character of the applicants bad been tiled. We believe the License Court bas taken an unnecessarily extreme view of tbe matter, and tbe suspicion will be aroused that It has been influenced to it by tbe unnecessary severity of the language used by tbe Supreme Court. It has been allthe way through a most remarkable proceeding, tho temper of the higher court havlns apparently been aroused by the almost despotic exercise of authority by tbe License Court. Tbe result will not be to render liquor selling more free, as it in no way affects the re tailers. The restrictions are not so essential about tbe wholesalers. The order made by the License Court yesterday, however, must have a tendency to make the act concerning wholesale licenses odious. It will compel material chauges In that law when another Legislature can get at it. If tbat provision of the law which enables objections tobe heard by evidence, Setltion, remonstrance or counsel means that runkards, convicts and people of bad char acter cannot be refused a wholesale license except on a written remonstrance filed, then it will have to be made plainer. It seems pretty plain now. but there is certainly something wrons witu it J.ne inquirer, A Very Unmaal Come. Tho Judges ot tho License Court have taken the very unusual coarse of entering what may be called a protest against tbe recent decision of the Supreme Court overruling their Inter pretation of the wholesale liquor act. No one can doubt that these Judges conscientiously endeavored to do right, and that where they erred it was through an honest desire to serve the public welfare. The sense of this and the feeling that tbey have been undeservedly re buked, must be the justification for this extra ordinary proceeding. But if the License Judges felt compelled by their self-respect to defend their course, that same self-respect should have forbidden tbe petulant order to their clerk to issue wholesale licenses to every body who has applied, without regard to dharacter or habits. To say tbat the decision of the Supreme Court requires this is to put upon it a forced construction that is neither logical nor sensible, and that presents tbe Judges In tbe attitude ot cbildrsn who "won't play any more." They are required by the letter of the statute and by its authorized interpretation to Issue licenses to citizens of tbe United States ot temperate habits and good moral character, and to none others. Their duty to inquire into these qualifications was expressly affirmed. The confusion that has arisen between two dis tinct acts is mainly due to their own practice. As long as this construction was not overruled it was accepted without question; but now tbat tbe law has been clearly defined any further disputation is mostunbecomlng. If the License Judges have hitherto administered the law, as tbey understood it, with conscientious care and in an endeavor to do right and justice, it is none the less their duty to do so still. They promote respect neither for the law nor for themselves when they petulantly refuse to per form their functions because they think they have been badly treated. 27te Times. A Sober nnd Admirable Defense. The reply of the License Court Judges to the strictures of the Snpreme Court on their Inter pretationand manner of enforcing the whole sale license law is a sober and admirable de fense of their action and an able exposition of tbe law. They do not admit that they read tbe provisions of tbe retail act into the wholesale act as the Snpreme Court assumes, but base their action on the much more tenable ground that the general practice throughout tbe State under tbe wholesale law as It stood prior to 1887, a practice sanctioned by many decisions of tbe Supreme Court, gave them a discretion In granting wholesale licenses having regard to the moral fitness of the applicant as well as his citizenship and habits of temperance. The existing wholesale laws In force in 1887 certainly required the Court to take cogni zance of those three things and ln-wlthholdinc licenses because tbey deemed the applicants morally unfit to receive them, their action was not without authority of law. even though tbe Supremo Court disapproves and overrules their conclusions. The Pren. Good FIghtera to be Admired. The Judges ot the License Court are quite right in characterizing their published com ment'upon the decision of the Supreme Court in tbe Prospect Brewery case as an. unusual course. But none the less will their fellow townsmen be pleased af. their action, for tbe American citizen loves a good fighter, and finds no fault with the small boy who resents some times deserved chastisement by kicking and biting his chastizer. Perhaps the proper se quence to the ruling oi tne supreme court was the order tbat every wholesale license asked for should be granted, though it looks a little bit "previous." The evils of unsatisfactory laws can be, and must be, corrected by legislative action, and not by the extra-judicial discretion of any court. The trouble with the youngmen through whose hands the applications for liquor licenses must pass haiUpparently been that, excited by praise which they well deserved for their Integrity and courage, tbey fancied tbey were themselves the law Instead of Its ministers. Just now they are very ancry at their elders in years and judgment, and think it their duty to show tbe people just what iniquities will be Sosslble under the decision of tbe Supreme ourt. Perhaps under tbe sting of phrases they don't like tbey may realize that soma of tbe harsh criticism they have put on persons with less chance than themselves to hit back has also hurt. The service of the four J cages constituting the License Court has been of great benefit to the city. That Is a fact which cannot be too much paraded. It is, however, never to be accepted as safe doctrine that the law itself may bo ignored for even the public benefit. It was as a question of law that tbe A'orth American took issue with the zeal of these Judges, and upon a question of law it is scarcely probable that outside ot their own number anyone will be found, except in the partisanship ot friendship, to hold tbe Judg ment of the Supreme Court of the State im paired by the dissenting views ot these juniors. The North American. TOO OLD TO LEAKN. I am sumtbla ofavet'ran, Justs turnla' eighty year, A man that's bale and hearty and a stranger tew all fear; But I've beerd some news this morntn' that has made my old head spin. And I'm coin' to ease my conshuns If I never ni&B: aff'ln. I've lived my four score years of life, and never 'till to-day Waa I taken for a Jackass or an lgn'rant kind o' Jay. Tew be stuffed with such darned nonsense 'bout them crawlln' bugs and worms That's a killin' human beln's with their micro scopic germs. They say there's "microbes" all around hnn tin' for their prey; There's nothln' pure tew eat or drink or no safe place to stay. There's "mlaemy" in the dew fall and "malary" k In the sunt k Tain' safe to be outdoors at noon or when the day is done. There's "baetery" Inthewaterand "trlcheeney" In the meat. "Ameeby" In the atmosfee'r, '"calory" la the heat; There's "corpussels and pigments" In a human beln's blood. And every other kind of thing exlstln' sense the flood. Terbaeker's lull of nlckerteen," whatever that maybe. And your throat will all get puckered with the "tannin" la tbe teat Tbe butter's "olly-margareen, " it never saw a cow. And things Is gettin' wus and was from what they bejust now. Them bugs Is all about ss. Jest a waltln' for a chance Tew navigate oar vitals and tew 'naw us off like plants. There's men that spends allfeMme huntln' worms jest like a goose. And tackln' latin names to 'em and lcttln' on 'em loose. Now, 1 don't believe seeh nonsense, and don't In tend to try; If things has come taw such a pass I'm satisfied to die. I'll go h'ang me In the sutlar, for I won't be seen a fool . , AS tew wait until I'm pittned by a annykially- ,cool, Xrtv tort AvtniJta- ut. CUKIOUS iqOBDIKSATiOXa.' There were 1,266 persons who died fros violence la New York dnrfng tbe year ending." with June. John Moore, of Indiana, declared him self guilty of robbery, paid a constable 52 to arrest him. and then hired a carriage for J3 to take them to tbe county jail. -Mr. B. B. Wilkes and A. S. WIIHmb son, ot Emanuel county, Georgia, a few days ago.saw a rattlesnake abont six feet long swim from one side to tbe other of the Altamaha river, which is a distance of more than ball a mile, without resting. He seemed to be com pletely exhausted when he reached the bank. One of the funniest things that has hapv pened in Greenville. Tenn., for some time was the shooting of a negro the other night by a poltcemas. Tbe cop blazed away at tbe man and shot him in the elbow.tbe ball glanoingand striking the negro in tbe cheek. As be spit ths . ball out, he said: "Look heab, white man, you quit dat shoottu' at me; f us' thing yuh knows yuh gwlnter brake some 'speetable pusson'i winder glass." H. P. Braziel caught a genuine flying fish in Sterrett's creek, near 8eynburs Point, Fix This was unlike any flying fish which has ever been written about, In that it bad two . perfectly formed bird-like wings in addition to ' fins, also four legs resembling those of a large spider. Tbe wings were beautifully tinted bka , the prisms ot a rainbow, and when drawn out of the water with an ordinary hook and Una the bird-fish flew to a height of soma six or eight feet. As an example of the spirit which ani mates tbe German army, and which donbles Its force. Prince Kraft Hohenlohe tells a fine story. At the battle of Cbateandun a battory found Itself without ammunition under a , heavy fire. What was to be doner The officer commanding ordered the gunners to take their places on the limbers and sing the "Wacbt am Rhine," "in order." as Prince Kraft says, "that they might pass the time agreeably while wait- lng for fresh cartridges." Another unbreakable substitute for glass, a French invention, consists in immers ing wire in a heated state. In a thin paste formed of soluble glass, gelatine and glycer ine, or glucose, in proportions varying accord ing to the use for which the material is de signed. When nearly dry, tbe sheets are dipped in a concentrated solution of cbrome alum or bichromate of potash. Any desired coloring matter may be incorporated with tbe gelatine, and copal or other protective varnish applied to the surface. A New York dealer in sporting goods has Invented a now tent for the nse of hunters and those who camp out. It is called an "um brella tent," and, as Its name indicates, folds up after the style of a parachute. The tent Is about seven feet high and of sufficient width to accommodate two persons. It is made of can vas, bine and white in color, and its covering falls to tbe ground in wide folds, that may be spread out far enough to allow a good-sized man to lay down under it. When folded np it has the appearance of one of the large sun shades tbat used to be so familiar on top of the Broadway stages. Tbe tents are becoming; quite popular, on account of their neatness and being so easy to handle. A peculiar accident occurred the other afternoon to a St. Paul youth named Eph Wells. Wells and another lad proceeded to a lake near the city early in the morning on a fishing excursion, and angled duringthe entire forenoon without getting a bite. Wells was fishing without a rod, and bad the business end of his line adorned with a large frog, the other end being wrapped round bis linger. Sud denly a large fish seized the bait and made such a determined rush therewith as to cause the strain on tbe line to cnt the young fisherman's finger almost to the bone. Surgical aid was ob tained, and it was at first tboueht that the member would hare to be amputated. Opera tion bas been deferred, however, and It is now hoped that the finger may be saved without resorting to amputation. Fiye Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., men who went forth on a 24-hour fishing trip, took the following provisions: One dozen cucumbers, 5 pounds flour. 1 dozen bread, A dozen lemons, 5 pounds granulated sugar, 5 pounds pork. Scans corned beef. 6 cans tongue. 3 pounds green tea, 3 pounds Java coffee, 3 cans milk, 4 cans feaches, 4 cans apricots,! box pepper, sack salt, can pineapple, 8 pounds roll bacon, 5 pounds tomatoes, 4 pounds cheese. 1 bqttIeWorcester shire sauce. 1 bushel potatoes, I bottle catsup, 1 bottle chow chow, 1 bottle pickles, box matches, K pound candles. 1 gallon oil, 10 pounds pail lard, 22 pounds of butter, 5 pounds ginger snaps. 2 pounds soda biscuit, K gallon vinegar, 0 cans corn. 6 bars soap, 2 dozen cookies, 1 bottle mustard, 2 dozen eggs, S pounds onions. Id pounds ham. several bottles of (brand not mentioned). An Italian in Boston, who had sta tioned nlmselt close by tha entrance to tbe circus grounds, that he might more easlly'dis pose ot tbe fruits which he had to sell, became so interested in the appearance ot two Turks who escaped from the grounds, and had been strolling about, tbat he forgot all about the wagon load of bananas which were beside him, until he tnmed suddenly and observed a horse attached to an express wagon calmly eating from tbe stock of bananas as if tbey had been placed there for his especial benefit. The spectacle ot a horse eating bananas was so amusing tn the bystanders that they didn't call tbe owner's attention to it, but when the Italian who owned the fruit, and the Hiber nian who drove the horse, began to argue with each other, there waa more excitement than was heard inside the circus tent; A London paper prints the following interesting Item: According to a communica tion recently addressed by the eminent scient ist, M. Brown-Seqnard, to tbe French Academy of Medicine, it appears tbat be bas prepared a concoction warranted to inf use fresh doses of vital energy Into constitutions shattered by age or illness. As yet, for there Is no public record ot its trial as a recuperative and revitalizing agent, all that can be said Is that it is intrinsic ally compounded of revolting materials. Tbe physiologist, it is stated, cuts out certain pans of living animals, such as guinea pigs, and the pieces of quivering flesh, pounded together by the pestal and mortar of pharmaceutical com merce, are made Into a kind of a paste with water. Tbe essence of this compound is then injected under the skin of the patient with a syringe similar to tbat employed by the votaries of morphine. It is needless to say tbat the resniu of M. Brown-Sequard's experiments are -awaited with eagerness by elderly Fausts. FENNY HEN'S FANCIES, x On & dead pull, being nut in harness, one of Iiarnnm's elephants lately drew a load weighing over four tons. If a coal dealer had him he could be made to draw six tons of coal. De troit Irttfrut. Kentuckian Sir, I come of heroic stock. My lather, grandfather and great-grandfatter art 'died with thtlr boots on. Octogenarian hangman, at the other end of the bar Fact, sir, Ihung'em. myself Philadelphia In-juirtr. Didn't Want the Earth. Subscriber at ths telephone Hello, Central! Central-Hallo! Bubserlber Give me the First National Bank. , Central-Anjthtagclse?-PAfbirfDAa Pre. THI BIO HEAD. !-" - These spreeing mortals often find In painting objects red; Tbey often come out way behind Because they got a head. Philadelphia Prttt. Strange Sounds in the Adirondack!. Miss Boston Papa, I find our Professor of I"a thology very Interesting. Mr. Boston Our what? Miss Boston Our professor of Pathology our ' guide yoa know. Aieio York Sun. He Knew That Before. Husband "Well, - . my dear, what did the magnetic physician say to ". you? Wife He sars I am a sick woman, and that my . nerrons system Is not In equilibrium. Ha says I am too positive. Busbaud Humph 1 I could have told you that and saved a couple of dollars. Sea lork tnw ' ' Practical Cooking School. Young Hus band So yon want a cook. I thou iht you at- -tended cooking school before I married you? ." , Young Wife So I did, but we studied only ornamental cooking. 1 know nothing about ' breads or meats or the eomm on courses, but 1 can f make a lovely tint of cake frosting, and know how .. to arrange an exquisite, bouquet for the dinner s. ' table. Omaha Worla. : -' "Kow, grandpa," said a little Chicago, lL year-old, as she entered her grandfather's study.'.ir "If yoa are not oo busy we'll play .sebool '" awhile." .-i JjJ- "All right, my child," said the professor - good-humoredly, "1 am ready. Where are your ' '. booksT" That Is for you to say, "said the' little one' severely. "I'm going to be the teacher." - - , Tbe professor collapsed. Chicago Tribune, , ""Ssis liove and Economy. "Laura," said thoL joung lady's mother' not unkindly. 'It seemst", that Viin 1H tha Mttnmad r,lh.li,w 1-. .- -" u Wt. . J..W . . b - - M-... . . evening." "It was solely for economy, mamma,"' answered the maiden. ' "There la no nse trying to beat the gas com-, es", pany, my daughter. I have noticed that tbe shut- "?' ting offof the gaa is always followed by acorre- A spoBdlnglncreaseofprcssure." ' v j Well, that lessens the waist; doesa.'t'Mt mamma, dear!" replied the artless glrUAnd her food parent could find no more to say. Ttrrg Uavt Exprttt, , -sr""Ut.t "-ft.. s , Vi Sj waca8