THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH, SATURDAY, JULY Better Then b Vacetinn. Read the Mammoth Issue of The Pittsburg Dispabah OF To-Morrcw (Sunday), July 14, 1889. It will carry you on the wings of fancy to for eign lands, where yon may jostle Prince and Peasant, view Palaces and Cathedrals and roam through jungle and desert. It will take you to the boundaries of Old Neptune's do mains, where you can hear the breaking of billows on the rockbound shore, and feel the salt spray upon your cheek. It will bear you to the mountain resort, where the odor of the pine trees is borne to you on the breeze, and the songs of the birds mingle with the soft Toices of beautiful women. To-morrow's Dispatch will contain contri butions from the brightest writers of the age, and the articles will be beautifully illustrated by competent artists. Among its more im portant features will be Edgar Fawcett's in tensely interesting American romance, entitled :,A DEAD MAN'S VENGEANCE." E. Berry Wall, the Kins; of the Dudes, Describe the Troper Caper In Men's Dress. Shirley Dare talks of Platonic Friendships, and tells why men and women of the present day are not eager to marry. The other contributions aro fully up to the standard. The cable report is unexcelled, and CTerything of interest at home and abroad will be fully chronicled in its pages. A perusal of this issue will be as instructive, amusing and infinitely less expensive, if not Better Than s Vflcatinn. ESfABLISHED FEBRUARY 8, 1848. Vol.44, &!-Entered at Pittsburg l'ostofflce, Kocuibcrl4, 1837, off second-class matter. Business Office-- 97 and 99 Fifth Avenue. News Rooms and Publishing; House 75, 77 and 79 Diamond Street; Eastern Advertising Office, ltoom 43, Tribune Uulldinjr, JewYork. Average net circulation of the dally edition of TUEDisrATCUfortlx months ending June X, 1889; 29,492 Copies per Issue. Average net circulation of the Sunday edition of THE DIS1UTC1I for three months ending June 30, 1889, 52,660 Copies per issue. TERMS OF THE DISPATCH. rOSTAOE FREE IN THE UNITED STATES. DAILY Dispatch. One Year 8 09 Daily Dispatch, Per Quarter 2 00 Daily Dispatch. One Month 70 Daily Dispatch. Including Sunday, 1 year. 10 00 1JAILY DISPATCH Including Sunday, Sm'ths. 2 SO Daily Dispatch, including Sunday.l month to Sunday Dispatch, One Year 2 60 Weekly Dispatch, One Year 125 The Daily Dispatch Is delivered by carriers at 15 cents per week, or Including Sunday edition, at 20 cents per week. PITTSBURG, SATURDAY. JULY 13. 18881 ACTS OUTSIDE OF THE LAW. The dispute between the employers and workmen at the Homestead Steel "Works, while long delayed in the opening, has sud denly developed the worst and most threat ening phases of such disputes, short of tha actual riots such as this city experienced in 1877. The workmen, according to report, hare assumed a position of defying the law, by assaulting non-union men and prevent ing the Sheriffs deputies from performing their legal duties; while the employers are also reported to have adopted the usual ob noxious step of resorting to urmed men, sup plied by a detective agency, to guard their property. The latter step is one which is not to be approved. The county and State are re sponsible for the protection of property aDd the preservation of order. If they do not discharge that duty the public will have to pay for the incompetence of its government. We do not think that the preservation of order is likely to be properly maintained by the abandonment of constitutional authori ty and the resort to mercenary guards, brought from other parts of the country, whose acquaintance with the law is of the slightest and whose only care is to serve those who foot the bill. On the other hand, it is no less necessary to say that workmen who attack other work men, congregate to interfere with the ac tions of the employes, or try to prevent the officers of the law from guarding the mill, thus making a forcible seizure of the firm's property, are guilty of a most wanton viola tion of all law and order. The individual rights of rich and poor and the protection of the whole public are broken down when such acts are committed. Labor is its own worst enemy if it assume the attitude of maintaining its interests by mob law. It is certainly to be regretted that both sides have made such haste to resort to methods outside the law, in waging their dispute. For the grave consequence which may follow upon such acts, the public will be likely to hold both responsible. SHOOTING WIDE OF THE MASK. The partisan clamor about the adminis tration of the Pensions Bureau can amount to nothing, in so far as it is directed against Commissioner Tanner, until something be shown which has not yet been even charged. There has been a good deal said about the large increase of pensions, and criticism is free on the subject of rulings and ratings. But there is no pretense that the Commis sioner has in any case traveled outside of the law. His decisions are subject to review in the Interior Department. The statutes governing pensions are not hidden lore. If the rulings or ratings which result in an in crease of pensions were without authority, or not made in good faith, then the Commis sioner would be censurable; but candor com pels the observation that there is not even nn honest pretense that Commissioner Tan ner has in any instance transcended the functions of his office. As to some of the pension laws there may be a diversity of opinion. If in their appli cation they are found extravagant, it is en tirely in order to urge the rectification of whatever will not stand the test of scrutiny and experiment. But that is entirely a dif ferent matter from the criticism of the Com missioner, most of which is decidedly as stupid as it is malignant. Commissioner Tanner, himself a veteran of the war who Me Mmm. lost both feet by the bursting of a shell, and who has always been a conspicuous figure among the veterans, may naturally enough feel disposed to take a liberal view of what the. country owes to them. It would be strange, indeed, if he did not. That he feels so is certainly not a cause for re proach; nor can it by auy possibility reflect discredit on his administration so long as he Keeps within the law. There are thou sands who do not agree with Corporal Tan ner's views as to what Congress should enact, who will still recognize that there is neither fairness nor point in condemning Commissioner Tanner for carrying out those provisions which Congress has already- enacted. For these reasons the reports of censure of the Commissioner by the President or Sec retary Noble can safely be discredited. To censure an official for carrying out the law as he finds it would not only be an act of singular cowardice, of which it may reason ably be assumed neither the President nor Secretary would seriously think, but it would inevitably prove a source of great future embarrassment. If there'ls anything wrong with the pension laws, it is Congress, not the Commissioner, or even the Presi dent, who must make the correction. THE JOHNSTOWN BELIEF EXPENDITDEES The expected criticism which broke out yesterday over a statement that $1,700,000 had been expended in the Johnstown relief work, seems to have been based upon a partial and not very perspicuous statement of the work. The further statements indi cate that this embraces all the relief of any sort that has been sent into the Conemaugh Valley, and that the expenditures which bare been made by the Belief Commission or its branches are but little over half that sum. This preserves the integrity of the expenditures,but indicates a rather weak at tempt, on the part of some one, to make a big showing. The remark attributed to a member of the commission that all they ask is a little patience certainly makes no unjust claim. The character of the members of that body warrants the public in believing that the money will be honestly applied to the pur poses for which it was contributed. The ex pectation may also reasonably include the making of full and detailed statements, at the proper time, showing how the money has been used and the relief applied. At the same time, the statement quoted from another member of the Commission that some of the bills sent in for supplies furnished "were outrageous," indicates that there are those who are ready to make a dis honest profit out of a public calamity. That those bills were cut down is satisfactory; but that such tendencies have been appar ent warrants the public in demanding that the contributions of charity shall not be per mitted to be made the objects of such unscru pulous money-seeking. The business character of the Commissi n is the best guar antee that it will shut off such schemes. The public sensitiveness to the possibility of both undue delay and undue carelessness in the expenditure of the relief iunds, is on the whole salutary. It indicates that the expenditures will be closely watched and that any divergence from the proper policy will be sharply corrected. But justice to those in charge of the work is no less nec essary; and some of the recent criticisms seem to have overlooked the importance of the latter quality. W0EN OUT BY THE SPOILS SYSTEM. Now the information is widely circulated that President Harrison is worn out physic ally, and his nervous system reduced to a wreck, by the strain to which he has been sub jected in receiving and adjusting the con tinuous and conflicting demands of office seekers as the reward for their services in the late campaign. Although the party or gans do not seem generally able to perceive it, this is more of the strongest practical evi dence against the system of distributing Government offices as a reward for political services. The President's physical prostration is due solely to the worry and labors required by the necessity of dividing the spoils so as to satisfy ten or twelve times as many office seekers as there are offices. Mr. Chauncey M. Depew has recently given testimony that the public business, which is supposed to be the main purpose of the Presidental office, is left undone because the President has not had time to consider questions of public policy during the rush tor the division of the spoils. Could there be any more complete evidence of the fail ure of a system of government for the wel fare of the public than the spectacle of the chief magistrate of a great nation unable to give his consideration to questions of public policy or to study the duties which arise out of his position as the executive of the laws, bnt worn down to a physical wreck by the never-ending and almost impossible task of distributing spoils among the hack politi cians? In contrast with this, what superiority would attach to a system which would select office holders solely on account of their ca pabilities? Such a plan would relieve the statesmen, who should give their exclusive attention to the duties of the Government, of deciding between the respective merits of petty place seekers. It should select ap pointees, first, by stated tests of intel lectual fitness, and afterward govern promo tions by the record of ability, integrity,and industry. That any such perfect system has yet been devised, can hardly he affirmed. But it is by no means certain that it can not be perfected when the nation gets ready to discard altogether the idea of making public office theplunderof political victory, and to practically enforce the idea that nothing but the good of the public service is to govern either appointments or removals. Object lessons on the spoils system are coming in rather abundantly just at the present time. LET THE LAW.SE BESPECTeD! The efforts which the Sheriff is making to preserve the peace and maintain legal rights at Homestead, should receive the support of every good citizen, and of the laboring men in particular. That official, as re quired by his duty, is using all his powers to keep order. If he succeeds, as he will with proper support, he will show the Heed lessness of resorting to hired detectives, and will keep the guardianship of the law where it belongs in the hands, of the proper legal authorities. The laboring men should keep these facts in mind. "When they interfere with the Sheriff's officers in discharge of their duty, they place themselves in antago nism to good order, and affoid the excuse for capital to employ Pinkerton guards. There should be no more resistance of the Sheriff at Homestead. The report that the Dakota wheat crop-is likely to prove short on account of droughts conveys the Consolation that that cause is not likely to prove injurious anywhere in this section of the country. A bepobt comes from the far Dakota Constitutional Convention that it Is con templating a new departure from govern ment by having only one legislative body and discarding the upper chamber or Sen ate as aristocratic and unpopular in its tendencies. It may be asked how a State Senate is more aristocratic than a State House of representatives; but in view of recent experience with ourJegislative bodies, it is not surprising that the innovating West should be in favor of cutting down the number of legislative bodies. Indeed, a little reflection upon the record of the last Congress and the recent Pennsylvania Leg islature would almost justify some inventor in political systems trying to solve the problem of self-government without any legislative branches at all. The workmen at Homestead should bear constantly in mind the fact that, with ft se vere struggle before them, they have the right to resort to every lawful means to sus tain their cause; but the resort to violence and disorder, and the assault upon individ ual rights, will injure themselves more than anyone else. The bright New York Eveninq Sun casts its rays in the direction ot Editor Taylor, of Wisconsin, who has just been appointed Commissioner of Bailroads by President Harrison, making him appear in the light of "one more muzzled editor." It is worthy of suggestion, in this connection, that the appointment may not have been so power ful in muzzling this representative of the press, from the obvious fact that if there was any muzzling in connection with this favored editor, it probably tool: place as a condition a long way antecedent to the appointment. Allegheny county is now paying taxes because her working men, in an hour of desperation, saw fit to resort to mob law and riots. The result enables the peo ple of the county to tell the people of Homestead that defiance to law cannot be permitted by any portion of the com munity. IT is a rather remarkable assertion that is attributed to one of the attorneys of the ap plicants for retail liquor license, that the Supreme Court was affected by the an tipathy to saloons, and that, as "the senti ment has changed," the Supreme Court will decide the other way now. If unbridled and licentious newspapers should intimate that the Supreme Court gives decisions ac cording to sentiment rather than law, and is ready to flop around when pnblic sentiment changes, it might expect to get severely handled in its next suit far libel. Tejs moderate weather of yesterday per mits the hope that the ruling meteorological influences have undergone a change and will henceforth permit us to have weather in some other than the superlative degree. Although the peach crop predictors were a little late in getting in their work, they are following their usual custom by adopting a very gloomy tone at this stage of the season. This is areassuiing indication that the regular forces of nature are at work in producing the peach crop. If July was ushered in without intimations that there was going to be a decided scarcity of peaches, we should feel that something out of the usual order of events was at work in the peach district. Another American heiiessis announced as about to marry another English lord, and still another of our fair compatriots is to marry a descendant of Murat, the great French cavalry leader. The business of ex changing wealth for titles seems to be expe riencing the most positive boom among all the financial enterprises. Intelligence from Mr. Sullivan since the fight places ; beyond doubt that, hav ing vanquished his recent biped antagonist, his ambitious soul is now aspiring to per form the impossible task of conquering the liquor champion that has knocked him out so many times before. But his effort is in discreet. Mr. John Barleycorn is the cham pion who can always paralyze Mr. John L. Sullivan. PROMINENT PEOPLE PAfiAGEAPHED. Ms. Robert Gakrett is at Bar Harbor. Mr. Gladstone has a poor memory of faces. Russell B. Haerison was recently the guest of Lord Salisbury. Julian Hawthorne's five daughters bear the names Hildegarde, Gwendolen, Gladys, Beatrice and Imogen. Prtnce Bismarck and Count von Moltko have become honorary members of the commit tee for the institution of a Beethoven house at Bonn. Herr Joachim Is Honorary President of it. Queen Victoria is said to own the costliest china in the world. The china in tho Windsor and Buckingham palaces is worth more than a million of dollars. The Sevres desert set is val ued at 500, (XX). Mr. Gladstone has increased his allow ance of wine for dinner, rarely drinking, less than a pint of his favorite port now. He says that quantity affects him less than a half pint did a generation ago. Major S. S. Rockwood, Chief Clerk of the Agricultural Department, who has been visit ing bis family in Wisconsin for a month, re turned to Washington and resumed the dis charge of his duties yesterday. DUKJ3 George, of Mecklenburg-Strclitz, is at the head of a movement to celcJrate tho fif tieth anniversary of Anton Rubinstein's musi cal career. This interesting commemoration will occur at St. Petersburg on November 13 (old style) of the present year. Two American girls who will shortly wed titled foreigners aro Miss Gwendolen Caldwell, foundress of the Catholic University at Wash ington, and Miss Caroline Fitzgerald, of New York. The former will wed Prince Murat, tho latter Lord Edmund Fitzmaurice. Under the provisions of tho last appropri ation bill for the Agricultural Department, Prof. J. B. Dodge, statistician, lias been de tailed by Secretary Rusk to investigate the agricultural statistics of the States and Terri tories of the Rocky Mountain region. He will leave Washington for that purpose next week. The Duke Charles Theodore, of Bavaria, who mastered the subject of eyo diseases and their treatment in order that he might serve the poor, has returned home from a long sojourn at Meran, where he treated overl,000 cases,includ' ing nearly 200 In which operations were necessary, among patients of tho hVtmbler classes. His wife accompanied him and acted as nurse. Count Ladislas Plater, who recently died in Switzerland at the age of S3, was onse mercilessly ridiculed by Caroline Bauer. In her memoirs she speaks ot him as 'a sort of spoony youth, to whom his mamma was not very liberal as regards pocket money, and who himself evinced an uncommon talent for econ omy." Yet she afterward became his wife. The true inwardness of Hadje Hassein Gbooly Khan's rather undignified exit from this country comes to light In the statements of a friend of his in Washington. The fact is that Hadje is homesick. He is a married man and is anxious to return to' his family. Ho found in Washington a civilization to which he was not accustomed, and instead of sending for his wife and children, as be had at first intend ed, he began to lay schemes whereby he might gracefully return to his native land. He hit upon the very worst device possible to effect his ends. Or be Fired. Fro the Sew York World.) France has kindly granted 'permission to our Massachusetts riflemen to enter that country armed. We hope they won't leave there loaded. THE TOPICAL TALKEK. The Expirrsrator at Work Out of Season Some Theatrical rTotes. It Is rather amusing to find Messrs. Ginn & Co., publishers, of Boston, Issuing an edition of Thomas Hughes' "Tom Brown's Schooldays." adapted for the use of American schoolboys. The healtblost and best account of an English boy's life at a public school needs no sort of adaptation for American boys. There is not a line In "Tom Brown's Schooldays" to hurt any one. I cannot think of a better book to put in any boy's hands. No wonder Mr. Hughes exploits Messrs. Glnn & Co.'s efforts to get him to re-write the book to suit some alleged American tastes. In a letter to the London Timet Mr. Hughes says: "Messrs. Glnn & Co. expressed at the same time a wish that certain passages, which they did not specify, should be omitted or altered so that the book might be brought into accord with the moral atmosphere of America, espe cially in the matter of temperance. They also wished me to furnish materials for oi to write a short memoir of myself to be prefixed to tho book." Of course Mr. Hnghes declined both pro posals. But an expuigated and specially adapted edition of 'Tom Brown" has appeared with a memoir of Mr. Hughes, which that gentleman says is full of astonishing mis statements, one or two of which he cites. From tho cool shores of Lake Mahopac, New York, Mr. R. M. Gulick writes to me to say that he has secured for the coming season what be truly believes to be the strongest lino of attractions the Bijou bis ever been blessed with. It is a long list, containing such names of stars and companies and plays as "Little Lord Fauntleroy." "Paul Kauvar." Clara Mor ris, J. K. Emmet, J. M. Hill's "A Possible Case" Company, the Boston Ideals, Margaret Mather, "The United States Mail," by George Jenks, of this city; Kiralfy's new spectacular sensation, "Antiope," the McCaull Opera Company in "Clover" and other operas, the Casino Company in "The Brigands," "N ad jy" and other operas, and many others of. equal strength. Mr. Gulick puts at the head of his list almost the name ot Mrs. James GM Blaine, Jr.. and from a financial point of view I guess he is justified. Young Mrs. Blaine is likely to cre ate a sensation here, even if she should prove to be no actress. W. H. Crane has sensibly enough resolved to rehearse his company tor next season, not in New York, where it is difficult and ofttlmes Impossible to secure a theater whose stage is unoccupied at the necessary tlme,butin Boston where there are not so many companies eagerly striving to secure a few hours use daily during tho months of August and September of the various stage. Another advantage of the plan naturally is.that the climate of the more north erly city is more adapted to the strenuous work of rehearsing new plays during the dog days. Boston also. Is but an hour's journey from Cohasset, where Mr. Crane has for years pitched his summer tent, and where this summer he is enjoying himself on board his steam yacht. The company are called for rehearsal on August 19, and will be under the direction not only of Mr. Crane himself, but also of William Seymour, whose abilities as a stage manager are as well known hero as in Boston. Mr. Crane has been able to avail himself of Mr. Seymonr's services, owing to the kindness of Henry E. Abbey,the stage of whose new theater Seymonr Is to control. About a month later on, September 16, namely. Crane and his com pany will appear in one of the new plays with which be ia provided in Chicago, where his season begins. MATTERS METROPOLITAN. A Long Clipper Ship Race. tlJEW YORK ELT.IAC SPECIALS. 1 New York, July 12. Two fine half-clipper ships, the Baring Brothers and the Sterling, have begun a race from Sandy Hook to the Golden Gate. Both are loaded with full cargoes of merchandise. Each skipper was instructed to put his ship on her mettle. The voyage will last about 100 days. The Baring Brothers is a ship of 2,000 tons; the Sterling a ship of LG00 tons. Gcorso Law Flacked Once More. George Law, the wealthy club man and man-about-tuwn, is said to have been plucked again by the gang of sharpers who follow him around the country to fleece him whenever he gets drunk. Monday night he got drunk with the gang, and played faro at Phil Daly's place. When be finished playing he was told that he owed the bouse 30,000, which be paid. A Cotton Broker In Tronblc Axford Hicks, a cotton broker of Houston, Tex., was arrested this morning by a private detective at the instance of Edward J. Carrl gan, manager for Blaisdell & Co., of Chicopec. Mass. This firm bought large quantities of cotton, by sample, off Hicks some time ago. Hicks shipped the cotton and drew upon Blais dell & Co. for tne amouut of tho purchase money. They honored his drafts. When they examined and weighed the cotton they found it to be of an Inferior grade and of short weight. They lost about $8,000 in this way. Hicks made good to them about 2,700 of this amount, and now Blaisdell & Co. claim he has defrauded them to the extent of $5,413. Accident to a Freight Train. Eight freight cars broke away from an Erie train on the Cedar street hill in Paterson, N. J., to-day. They ran down the Incline to the sta tion, crashed into a snitch engine and tele scoped three passenger cars. Joseph Borden, fireman on the switch engine, was mortally injured. The wreck caught fire from the fur nace of the switch engine, and the cars were badly damaged before the fire department ex tinguished the flaucs. The accident was due to defective brakes on the freight cars. The damage to the railroad property is about jio,ooa Iler Recreant Lsver In Prison. Three weeks ago Richard Allen promised to marry Mrs. Jennie Woods, a widow of 27 years. For the ostensible purpose of furnishing a flat he borrowed f 1.400 of her. Instead of getting furniture with the money, however, ho got drunk with it, purchased several hundred dol lars' worth of clothes and jewelry for himself, and rolled Into the widow's quiet and respecta ble flat at 4 o'clock In the morning, beastly drunk. She had a policeman lock him up. and tho next day accused him in court of larceny. To-day Allen was sentenced to four years in prison. FADS IN PUIZE FIGHTING. The Heart BioTr AVI II be the Rage Daring tho Coming Season. From the New York Evening Sun.t The blow over the heart will be the rago during tbo coming season. Sullivan has set tho example In his recent uispute witn juiraiii. During the contest at Richbnrg, the big fellow got in at least six of his mule-kicks over Kil rain's cardiac territory, and thereby developed the constitutional ailment from which the Bal tlmorean Is said to hare suffered. Among the other fads in fighting introduced as specialties of recent times was the Mitchell stomach blow, with which he disposed of Mike Cleary. This was superseded ty the swinging right-hand jugular blow, a la Sullivan. This has bceu fol lowed by minor pugilists for the past three years with more or less success. Ana now look out for the heart blow. The delicate machinery of tho force pump will be sadly interfered with until the great I Am of pugilism conde scends to set up another mark in human anatomy as a target. Three Questions for the Doctor to Solve. from the Philadelphia Press. Tho latest success attributed to Dr. Brown Sequard is bis experiment with alkaloid mi crobes, ft deadly poison, obtained by con densing the watery vapor exhaled from the human lungs. Having, In addition to this, already discovered the elixir of life, there re main; but three other questions of the ages for the distinguished scientist to solve, namely: Peroeraal motion, the composition of the philosopher's stone, and who struck Billy Pat terson The Great Art f Modern Pugilism. From the Nrw York Herald. To kno bow to fight 75 rounds without getting hurt yourself or hurting your oppo nent. What a Fiiy. From the Chicago Tribune, t What a pjty the English sparrow is not as sensitive to xewspaper criticism as the Per sian Minister 1st THE COST OP E0IALTT. Something of a Birden to England Most of Them Bender no Service for the Money Fnld Them The British Mind Averse to Violent Cunnges. From the Louisville Courier-Journal, t No doubt the mass of loyal Britons are greatly disgusted at the resistance offered by Messrs. Labouchcre, Bradlaugh and others to the proposed nuptial settlements on Prince Al bert Victor and tho Princess Louise. When the usual forms have been complied with and the minority have had their opportunity to growl the grants will be made, if not with prac tical unanimity, at any rate by a decisive ma jority. Royalty is something of a burden, but John Bull has not made up his mind to do with out it; so ho must pay roundly for the luxury. A glance at the figures will show that the growlers have some cause for their discontent. Queen Victoria's children, grandchildren and great grandchildren have reached a total of 53, of whom 45 are still living. Of her children, Louise, wife of the MarquW of Lorne, is the only one that has not helped to swell the num ber of the grandchildren. All these descend ants have to be provided for, sooner or later, at public expense. The annual payroll at present is as follows: What They Get for Doing Nothing. The Queen, $1,925,000; Prince of Wales, $200, 000, with an additional sum of 350,000 to his wife; Victoria, widow of Frederick, late Em peror of Germany, $40,000; Duke of Edinburgh (Alfred), 1125,000; Princess Christian (Helena), $30,000; Princess Louise, $30,000; Duke of Con naught (Arthur), $125,000; Princess Beatrice, $.50,000; Duke of Cambridge, cousin of the Qoeen. 160,000; Duchess of Tecfc, another cousin, iwo.ouu; Duchess oi Albany, jwu,uuu; Duchess of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, the Queen's cousin, 815.000: total, $2,715,000. To this munificent sum it is now proposed to add $50,000 per annum for Albert Victor, oldest son or the Prince ot Wales, until his marriage, and $125,000 earlv thereafter: and $15,000 a year for the Princess Louise, daughter of the Prince of Wales, until her marriage, and a considera bly larger sum thereafter. It should be remembered that most of the recipients of this bounty render no public services whatever to earn the money paid them. The Queen herself Is no longer a ruler, except in name. George HI. was tho last King of Great Britain who seriously undertook to gov ern, and a pretty mess he made of it, as every body remembers. William IV. tried once to make a stand against the House of Commons by refusing his consent for the creation of new peers, in order to secure the passage of the re form bill through the House of Lords; but his ministers were resolute, and the mutterings of discontent from tho country intimidated the King, and he yielded a reluctant consent. Tho Queen Ha Saved 820,000,000. The time has passed when any British sov ereign dares to resist the wishes ot a Cabinet that has the confidence of the country, so that now the Queen is only a figure head. She maintains a court, indeed, and holds drawing rooms at which the votaries of fashion love to appear; but her executive duties are purely formal. Her salary, however, is paid with commendable regularity, and, being of a thrifty turn of mind, she has contrived to save some $20,000,000. Being thus in rather easy cir cumstances, she is blamed by some of her sub jects for not providing for her own family; but it has never been the custom in Great Britain, and a precedent of that kind would no doubt be rather embarrassing to Albert Edward when he comes to the throne, a3 he has not shown himself possessed of the frugal disposition of his mother. Why They Are Tolerated. How long the people of Great Britain will be content to support a grcatand growing army of deadheads, it is difficult to conjecture. Mr. Justin McCarthy discusses the subject in a re cent article, but is unable to discover any indi cations that the throne is soon to fall, though be does not doubt that royalty will bo abol ished at some time. The British mind is averse to violent changes. Were the throne to fall, it would not fall alone; the nobility would go with it, and a senate would have to be pro vided to succeed the hereditary House of Lords. The members of the latter House some times provoke the indignation of the country by opposition to proposed reforms; but being aware that their hereditary privileges exist only by the sufferance of the nation, they are Sure to yield when they see the people are thoroughly resolved. For this reason tbey, as well as the royal family, are tolerated by con servative people, who are afraid of the conse quences of a change. oun MAIL ruuca A Word In Favor of the Noble Red Man by One Who Has Studied Him. To the Editor of The Dispatch: Will you kindly permit me to draw your at tention to certain facts relative to the Chlri nahua Apache Indians, mentioned in your Washington dispatch of July 5, in order that your readers may better understand why the Indian Rights Association has been actively interested in the fate of this baud of Indians? It is true that Geronimo has been a most desperate cut-throat,-and that all of the Indians associated with him have been at one time or another en gaged in warfare with our troops, and in mur derous forays upon the frontier. But it is also true that a large number of this particular band of Indians, after tbey surrendered to General Crook In the Sierra Madre Mountains In 1883, have been employed as scouts and have rendered valuable services to the Government In connection with military operations in Ari zona. These scouts, some of whom were instru mental In securing the surrender of Geronimo himself, were placed on an equality with the hostile Indians and were confined as prisoners of war with them. They were originally con fined in Fort Marion, St. Augustine, Fia. Through the efforts of the Indian Rights Asso ciation the Injustice to which these men were subjected was made known through the press of the country, and a temporary improvement in their condition was effected by their re moval to Mount Vernon barracks, Ala.; but this did not afford tbcm an opportunity for the cultivation of the soil and for support through their own independent efforts. Our society has pressed this Question uoon the Government in season and out of season, until recently, through the prompt and cordial action of the present Secretary of War, Cap tain John G. Bourke, of the Third Cavalry, and Prof. Painter, the Washington agent of tho Indian Rights Association, were sent to find some suitable place as a permanent home for these people. These gentlemen have made their report to the War Department, and it seems that the solution of the difficulty after more than two years of incessant effort has been arrived at. We are not sentimentalists in regard to In dians, but we believe. In view of the fact that large numbers of them have been reclaimed from savage to civilized life and induced to make their own living by honest labor, that it is only just and wise to present such an oppor tunity to these peonle. It is the opinion of such distinguished officers as Generals Crook and Miles that Indians, when offered a fair re ward as the fruit of their industry, when treated with strict justice, and in certain cases, when removed from old temptations, can be induced to behave themselves and to work like other people. Surely it is both just and economical to follow this plan with them rather than to keep them as Government paupers and vagabonds. Anyone who dispassionately examines the facts of this case cannot deny that a grave in justice, and one unworthy the po-srer and dig nity of the United States Government, was in flicted upon these Indians when tbey were first permitted to enter our military service and npon the completion of a successful campaign were punished along with those whom they had helped to conquer. Respectfully, Herbert Welsh, Cor. See. Indian Rights Association. Philadelphia, July il. THE CHAMPION ORATION. A Rnnl Old-Faakloned Faarth of July Sprend-Engle Speech.. m the Chicago Tribune.! They had an old-fashioned Fourth of July celebration at Monteagle, Tenn., and Dr. O. P. Fitzgerald, who was the orator of the day, let the eagle loose In the following manner: Boar high, proud bird of rreedom! No longer crippled by sectionalism, let both wings move with simultaneous beatings upon the air, not a feather soiled by political corruption, his flight widening until from his outstretched pinions, dipped In the fountain of freedom, the nations of the earth shall be sprinkled with the dews or lib erty! Let the star-spangled banner Boat In free dom from a million flagstaff: let the eagle-bird of liberty scream and flan It mighty wings. Let Young America shout with in the limits of the con stitution, the resolutions or 'BS-'SO. and the Fif teenth Amendment: let everybody do as be pleases to-day. Hurrah for liberty! Hurrah ror Amer ica, every Inch ot ltt Hurrah for Monteagle! Hurrah for the new eagle which Is the spread eagle, which, like the angel la Apocalyptic vision, flying in the midst of heaven, preache the clad gospel of liberty unto them that dwell on the earth, and to every nation and kindred, and tongue and people! Adjusting Matters. From the Philadelphia Press. Says Jonathan to Britain: "I will lick the chap who steals. It's gold that seals a bargain; You must bargain for my seals." THE STANDARD LAKD-GRABBING. The Big Oil Monopoly Tet Working for the OH - Producing Territory Employes Sfnstn't Operate After Joe Crnlg. The Standard OH Company ispatiently, per sistently and systematically continuing Its ef forts td"ausorb all tho oil-producing territory of Pennsylvania. Its two newest agencies to this end are the South Penn Oil Company and the North Penn Oil Company; the former designed to operate in what is known as the Southern Pennsylvania oil Holds, and the letter designed to work in the Northern Pennsylvania oil fields. The incorporators of these companies aro all well-known Standard mem, some of them of long standing. The principal office of the South Penn Oil Company is in Pittsburg, and tho active manager UN. F. Clark, whoa few months ago disposed of his extensive oil inter ests to the Standard for something like $250,000, his partner, J. E. Foster, receiving a like sura. Mr. Clark has been identified with the oil busi ness almost from the finding of petroleum along Oil creek, and his experience makes him one of the most valuable managers in the Standard's employ. Connected with tbo South Penn Oil Company under Mr. Clark are gentle men whose practical and theoretical knowledge of the oil-producing business is hardly second to his own. All receive liberal salaries and on each the condition is Imposed that he must not engage in the oil business for himself. Especi ally is he prohibited from leasing land and ac quiring producing property. The Old and tho New roller. This, of course, is merely a business-like pre caution to prevent employes becoming com petitors of the concern from which they draw salaries. A grocer who would impose on an employe the similar condition would not be a subject of criticism. Employes of oil firms, or of individual oil producers, and even of Standard oil corporations and companies, have hitherto been so tree to indulge side specula tions of their own In lands and leases and oil producing properties, that the prohibition now imposed will attract a great deal of attention. In tho past it has been the policy of the big con cern to bind to itself men whose enterprise was indicated in their individual ventures, but now the policy seems to have changed, and, accord ing to roport, will be applied to all depart ments. Of course it is well known that the Standard has always prohibited its employes from going into the business of refining or transporting.- Those from the first were the fields in which its pecnliar monopolizing genius was displayed. The one other field of production of the crude article and dealing in oil lands has, as a rule, been open to employes as well as outsiders. Gntherlnc it All In. The Standard, having decided to gather the oil producing regions into the big trust, lays its prohibition on emplojes who would swell their income by private ventures in oil wells and oil territory. Its many superintendents and offi cials are or have been oil producers, but they willsoon find it to their in tercst to sell these prop erties to the Standard's land department, and if they value their salaries they will thereafter abstain from similar investments, for the pro hibition imposed on officers and employes of the land department will in time be extended, or perhaps is being extended at this moment, to all other divisions of the trust. Independ ent or "outside" oil producers are gradually being induced to dispose of their properties. Pressure in this direction has been going on for a long timo and is bearing fruit. In time it will be just as dangerous to his financial peace for a man to own a piece of oil producing prop erty as it has been for him to own au oil refinery or an independent pipe line. The late shut down movement in the oil fields has made it much easier for the Standard to carry out this policy. The gathering of the oil producers into a compact organization and their alliance with the Standard, from which they received an as sured profit on some millions of barrels of oil, has disarmed criticism from that quarter and largely sileuced opposition, professional and real. In the Pennsylvania oil fields the Stand ard is virtually supreme. One Competitor to Wipe Out. It has but one competitor of magnitude, familiarly known as "Joe" Craig, whose firm produces, transports and refines petroleum. It is said to be the hope of the Standard to cripple this firm by obtaining control of all the oil producing property from which tho firm obtains its supply, except, of course, the prop erty actually owned by it. Then when its wells play out, as wells do, it will be unable to secure oil to keep its pipe line and refinery business going, except on such terms ss the Standard people may see fit or feel safe to dictate. Un less the plans of the Standard fail, it will soon f have a grip on the oil business beside which its former oft-admired and oft-execrated grip will appear weak. In former times it controlled the business largely by a species of gambling that played man against man and one interest against another, and by the ability of the man agers to manipulate the oil market against equally greedy, but less clear-beaded, gam blers. Now it is rapidly progressing toward absolute ownership. Suipson. TKI-STATE TRIFLES. An enterprising Philadelphia bootblack has attracted a great deal of attention during the past week by this sign, which he puts on his operating chair, "Boots Blacked Yellow." He has a sort of mayonnaise dressing for russet shoes. A Philadelphia girl who was troubled with an envelope that wouldn't stick, took a wad of chewing gum from her mouth and sealed it with that. A Philadelphia conductor who got a day off to attend a funeral only restrained himself with difficulty from crowding the mourners at the cemetery, and once checked himself in the act of calling: "Please move up therein front." Producixg a finger-bowl with a great flour ish and accidentally giving it a silvery knock with his finger-nail, says a Philadelphia paper. Is the seashore waiter's latest tinkle for re minding his patients of the delicate subject of tips. A child of Henry Bossinger, of Granville Run, Mi film town. Par, while running about with bare feet a few days ago was bitten by a copperhead snake. A chicken was cut open and applied to the wound, and it drew out so much of the poison that a, cat which ate it while another was applied fell dead. The child cannot live. Air Easton, Pa., lad caught a lot of frogs, as be supposed, and took them home for his father to eat. The father was Indignant on finding they were toads, and when one of them splashed into a pitcher of lemonade he bad just made the son was driven out of doors for his misconduct. In Erie, Pa., night before last a young gen tleman calling upon a lady attempted to turn down the lamp, which was heating the parlor unnecessarily, when it exploded. He boldly flung it into the street, and escaped with badly burned hands. MRS.LENTZ,wifeof Rev. George Lentz, of Hamlin, Lebanon county. Pa., Is critically ill from a scratch on the knuckle by a kitten's claw. Coal gas from a Pottstown, Pa., brick kiln, being unable to rise, owing to the heavy atmos phere, has blighted flower yards, gardens and fruit trees in its vicinity. A State exchange, alluding to the prize fight, says: "We give an admirable account of the disgusting affair on our first page." A Colorado man named House wrote to the Johnstown Bureau of Information recently in quiring about his brother. He said he had a brother in the East somewhere named Hulbert, and he thought he bad noticed tho name of Hulbert House In the list of the .dead. He was informed that "Hulbert House" was the big hotel destroyed by the flood. One of the horrors of living on the Ohio is told by a gentleman of Reynoldsville: An Ohio river mosquito is osaiarge as a spring chicken. Baring the night They often pull the clothes from you and fly out of the window with them. I wouldn't mind that, but one bit me in Cincinnati last week and I have been in the house ever since. Indeed I may have to get my toot amputated yet. A Wonderful Railroading Fear. From the Baltimore American. A comet is probably the only motive power that can keep ft train running on time after it has been telescoped. CUE10US CONDENSATIONS. Cable cars are run at the rate of 14 miles an hour in parts of .Chicago. A small yellow dog of New York wa owned by 20 different urchins in three days. A large Newfoundland dog a day or two ago saved two Newark boys from drowning. A bad nickel, easily identified by cer tain marks, has worried the street car drivers of Rome, Ga., for two years. The name of a prominent San Francisco attorney is Coffee. Wheu asked to enter suit he invariably asks "on what grounds f" A Flint, Mich., girl named Clara Bnl lock, bos been arrested for bold and persistent glas3 smashing. She delights in going about nights and smashing windows. The new riflo tor the Russian army is not a magazino gun, but is a small caliber breech loader, capable of penetrating at 6,000 feet three one-inch boards two feet apart. A Salem, Ore., newspaper recently printed the following personal: "If John Jones, who 20 years ago deserted his wife and babe,' will return, said babe will lick the stuffin' oat of him." That sincere and amiable end-of-the-world crank, the Rev. Mr. Baxter, of England, has revised the date for the great smashup. He now declares that it will occur on the 11th of April. 189L On the birthday of a "Western editor who was fond of writing extremely long arti cles, he received an anonymous gift of a can ot condensed milk, with the words "Verb, sap." scratched on it. A fine young trotting colt belonging to, John Deaver, of Paris, Ky stuck its head through a hole in the barn and threw its feet from under itself, deliberately committing suicide. He was valued at $500. A dispatch from Georgia reports that workmen, whilo opening a road ud the side of Pigeon Mountain, found beneath a large flat rock an iron not contalng $2,000 in specie. Tbe supposition is that the money was hidden during war times. The largest body of fresh water on the globe is Lake Superior. It is 400 miles long. 1GU miles wide at Its greatest breadth, and has an area of 32,000 qnare miles. Its mean depth is said to be 200 feet, and Its greatest about 800 fathoms. Its surface is 635 feet above tbe sea. -The largest library is the Bibliothequa National, in Paris, founded by Louis XIV. It contains 1,490,000 volumes. 300,000 pamphlets, 173,000 manuscripts, 300,000 maps and charts and 150,000 coins and medals. The collection of engravings exceeds 1,300,000, contained in some 10,000 volumes. The aggregate wheat acreage this year Is the largest since 1SS4, and that of spring wheat alone is greater than it was in that year. There is some reason still to hope that tho Yield, too. this year will bo as heavy as that ot 1884513.000,000 bushels which was the largest wheat crop ever grown in this country. "Jake" Morris, janitorof the City Hall, New Orleans indulged in a prolonged laugh the other night over the predicament Into which a friend had got. Next morning he was fonnd dead In his room. The theory advanced is that his death was caused by palpitation of the heart, brought on by the unmoderato laughing. Important discoveries have been made by the Italians on the site of Adulis, in Africa, where, in the sixth century, the monk Cosmas Indicopleustes found the Marmor Adulitanum, which records the conquests ot Ptolemy Euergetes. So far the columns of somo publio building and a number of ancient coins havo been brought to light. At Stillwater last week the 5-year-old daughter of John Carl, of Oak Park, fell into a barrel of rain water and was drowned. There was only one foot of water in the barrel, and it is believed tbe girl had been reaching over the edge of the barrel trying trying to dip ont water with a tin cup, and fell in and was unable to give an alarm or extricate herself. Mary Burns, one of the few survivors of the Pemberton (Mass.) mill disaster in 1SG0. in which she was injured, died Sunday at her res idence In Lawrence. Mass., aged 61 years. When the mill fell her father and two brothers were working there, and were buried in tho rums, but were rescued before the fire oc curred, which burned upward of 100 of tbe im prisoned operatives. This is the way a Detroit paper pub lishes tbe finding of a dead body in the river: Somebody tied some chunks of boiler iron about somebody else's neck and threw him into the Saginaw river. Just when it happened or wuo it was noooay Knows, dui euD-.ianno Biver Reynolds has fished up tbe skeleton. To make sure of the victim, it seems that a pile driver was planted through him. According to Nature the Russian Acad emy of Sciences offers a prize of $2,500 for the best Inquiry Into the nature and effects of tho poison which develops In cured fish. The ob jects of competitors must be: (1) "To deter mine, by means of exact experiments, tha physical and chemical nature of the poison which develops in fish; (2) to study, by exper iments on animals, its action upon the heart, the circulation of the blood, the organs of di gestion and tbe nervous system; (3) to deter mine the rapidity of its absorption by the di gestive organs, and (4) to study and describe tbe characteristics which may serve to dis tinguish contaminated fish from such as are not contaminated." The fifth and sixth ques tions relate to the means of preserving flh from the development of the poison, and to tbe question of counter-poisons and the medi cal treatment of poisoned persons. The com petition Is open to all. The memoirs must bo sent in,' either In manuscript or printed, beforo January 1, 1893, and may be written in any one of tbe following languages: Russian, Latin, French, English, German. MEANT TO BE FUNNY. "Style," says a writer on literary tonics, "means everything." "Yes," said Ullson, whoso wire Is a devotee to taihlon, "It means everything man's got." Wathington Critic. "Our'greatest glory is not in never falling, but rising every time we fall," said Confucius. but that was long ago. Nowadays most men seem to find their greatest glory la tripping, other people, up. Eomeroille Journal. HARD LTJCK. Said Kilrain, in the words of Hood, When Sully laid him low, I've met with many a breeze before. Hut never such a blow." Philadelphia Prett. Oh, That He Were a Mouse. Mrs. Jason What a poor-spirited creature you are, Jehel. t wish you would be either a man or a mouse. Mr. Jason I wish I was a mouse. I'd make you climb the bedpost In a minute. Terre Haute Ex preet. A Sagacious Dog. Yes, my Caro is a thoroughly sensible creature. Every night ha fetches me ray sausage from the pork butcher's, and If a strange dog offers to take It from btm what do you think he does? Why, he gobbles It up himself. Fliegende Blatter. A Controlling Feature. Brown The fa clal features plainly Indicate character and dlspo- sltlon. In selecting your wife were you governed; by her chin? Jones No. but I have been ever since we mar rled. Lawrence American. The Rev. Mr. "Wilgus I am pained to see your paper deotlng so much attention So thli brutal prize light. Brother Slfterce. Editor Sheeree-lt is possible that youhave failed, to read my naif-column editorial condemning the' whole affair In unmeasured terms. Terr MautS, Exprett. Hi's Spreading Garments. English tour ist (to passenger In omnibus) Heg pahdon, bu yo are sitting on my-my trousers. Passenger, sitting next to him (indignantly)- Sir! English tourist Beg pahdon, bnt I am speaking to the gentleman on the otberslde of you. Chicago TrtSune. He Did the Best He Could Why do yon poison yourself with that vile stufff asked the Prohibitionist of the tramp. "Cause it's the best 1 kin afford. You don't expect a poor workln' man to be a-blowln' hlsself again champagne cocktails, do ye!" Terre liautu Exprtet. His Revision. Snnday School Teacher" Now. Johnny Cumso, It is your turn. Beclto your verse, please. Johnny (reciting) A certain man went down from Jerusalem to Jericho and fell among thorns, and the thorns sprang up and choked him. "Did you learn that verse out of the Bible, Johnnyf "Nome. Pop taught It to me." Huntty Weekly. Delays Are Dangerous. Mrs. Da Ille John, my dressmaker arrived to-day, and I must have the materials to-morrow. Mr, Dn llle Eh? What? You said you had written to her not to come until next month. Mrs. Uu llle Yes, 1 did. but she never got the letter. Mr. Da llle (clasping his hand to his pocket book) Woman! This Is a plot a vile plot! I J you had rtially wanted her to stay away you would have handed that letter, to the postman yourself! you wouldn't havs given It tame to mail.-A't for Weekly. .- strsft- BBaQBasflBaHBBBEHjiSP oWib1Ibbbbbb1bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbM9' MfCBVSC'aSBtBSSSBIVQBvSJBJSSJBBBSSSSSSS- A07