ETBB ;- ? l2K?S5!3SH?rW'lJ??w,? -- -vy-iTC-J,"v . ;. ' -. . ; - - aTTss?. R? ?ff sl'HlBi!fijSlj' -r ' ''grSS'blPS "T l . . -a 5; . .- 2 -o - . -t . 4 -.. . THE PITTSBtTRG- DISPATCH, SUNDAY, AtJGTTST 4, 1880. fcJP.WMJ Wire BjgpMj. ESTABLISHED FEBRUARY 8, 1818. Vol.44, A'o.178. Entered at Pittsburg l'ostoace, November 14, 1SS7, at second-class matter. Business Offlce97 and 69 Fifth Avenue. News Rooms andPublishing House 75, 77 and 79 Diamond Street Eastern Advertising Office, lioom 45, Tribune Building, AcwYork. Average net circulation of the dally edition of 2111 DlSrATCH for six months ending July 31, 1889, 29,914 Copies per Issue. Average net circulation or the Sunday edition of TUB DISPATCH Tor three months ending July 31, 1SS9, 54,897 Copies per Issue. TERMS OF THE DISPATCH, rOBTAGE FltEE IN THE tTSITED 6TATES. Uailt DisrATcn, One Year ? 8 00 Daily DisrATCn, Per Quarter 8 00 Dailt Dufatcu. One Month 70 Daily UisrATCH. Including Sunday, lyear. 10 00 Daily Dispatch, Including Sunday, Jm'ths. 2 SO Daily Dispatch, Including Sunday, 1 month SO fcCKDAY Dispatch, One Year 2 SO Weekly Dispatch, One Year 1 25 The Daily Dispatch is delivered br carriers at 15 cents per week, or Including bunday edition, at a) cents per week. Voluntary contributors should Keep copies of nrticles. If compensation is desired the price expected miul lie named. TKe courtesy of re turning rejected manuscripts vHU be extended uhm stpmpsfor that purpose are enclosed, but the Editor of The Dispatch will under no circumstances be responsible for the care of un solicited manuscripts. POSTAGE All persons who mall Che Sunday Issue of The Dispatch to friends should bear in mind the fnct that tbe post u go thereon is Two (2) Cents. All donblo nod triple number copies of Tbe Dispatch require a 2-ccnt stamp to Insure prompt delivery. PITTSBURG. SUNDAY, AUG. i, 18S0. THE IHPOKTED LASOB CASE. The announcement that the investigation of the United Slates officials into the im portation of glass workers at Jeannettc, indicates the conclusion that the foreign workers must go back, is a new-test of the law against'imported contract labor. The view, probably, has much better foundation in reason than some of the grotesque decis ions, such as have put clergymen and musicians in the category of imported labor. Nevertheless the result in this case is not likely to produce a favorable impres sion ot the law. Whatever disputed points there may be, it is clear that the labor was seeded in this country, and that the author ized organization for that class of labor being otherwise unable to furnish it, brought it from abroad, where members of the affiliated organization were out of employ ment. So far from being a case where for eign labor is brought in to take the places of domestic workingmen, it is one where in ternational labor organization has performed the beneficial work of transferring labor to the place where it is wanted. When the law interferes with that work, it destroys the utility of international labor organiza tion and puts the acts of organized labor un der its condemnation. Set side by side with this the fact that the influx of cheap Italian, Polish and Hun garian labor is practically unchecked, and the inquiry becomes cogent whether the law is much more than a snare and a nui sance. A DISPUTED LIKE. The strained relations between the Na tional Campmectlng Association and the Kidgcview Park Association, offers an exam ple of the divergence of opinion as to what constitutes a violation of the Sabbath, which exists even among those who would all class themselves on the side of strict Sabbath observance. If one organization thinks it wrong to receive any money in connection with tbe campmeet ings on the Sabbath they are right in refusing to have any connection with such violations. On the other hand, those who think it right can, as they pro pose to do, exercise their liberty of con science and hold the campmeeting on an independent basis. One view carried to its logical conclusion ought to supply the re ligious instructors for Sunday services free of charge; and the others may find some difficulty in explaining why if Sunday trains are to be run, Sunday restaurants, Sunday drinking fountains and Sunday bootblacks may not be tolerated. The great difficulty is in telling where the line shall be drawn, and these religious organizations have only conquered that difficulty by agreeing to disagree. ONLY ONE SUBE "WAY. The statement that the counsel of young Flann has returned from New Orleans, where he made an unsuccessful attempt to have the Louisiana lottery return the funds vhicn the young man took from the Marine Sank, announces a foregone conclusion. The object in life of the Louisiana lottery being to get the money of the public with out giving a consideration for it, it seems necessary to remark that this end is not to be obtained by giving back the funds which the lottery speculators put in. In addition, there is little speculative precedent for such a course. We never heard that the New York Stock Exchange returned the money of the New York Marine Bank which "Ward and Fish played away; that the Chi cago board made good the losses of Harper's bank in Cincinnati, or that the Petroleum Exchange thought of reimbursing the Penn Bank's departed assets. The only sure way to get money back from lottery, as well as other speculations, is to take it back before you put it in. A VIOLATION OF PRINCIPLE. Beycnd the points of the coke strike which were referred to in yesterday's Dis patch, the fact that an agreement is al cady in fcrce between the coke workers and the firm to whose works the strike is so far confined, cannot be ignored as a vital factor in the dispute. The very basis for the vitality of all labor organization is involved in the maintenance of the wages agreements which the representatives of the workmen make with their emplovers. If employers cannot rely upon the observance of such contracts, every inducement to the latter interest for treating with the labor or ganizations is destroyed. The fact is practically undisputed that such an agreement was made with the Prick Coke Company, by the authorized representatives of the coke-workers, to run until the end of the year. "We understand that the employes at the Standard "Works refused to join the strike because they con sidered it their duty to themselves to re spect their contract That is the only view to take,' consistent with the responsibility and good faith of labor organizations. If the last agreement is not binding upon the men, of what avail or value will a new agreement be? Every interest of organized laborisinvolvedincarryingoutingoodfaith the obligations assumed by its authorized representatives. So long as the pending strike involves a violation of tbe fundamental principle of labor organization, the participants in it can 'hardly command the sympathy or support of tbe public. FL0URI6HHIO LIKE A BAY THEE. We are glad to see merchants and manu facturers taking such a lively interest in the coming Exposition, that some of those who at first were dilatory in applying for space now complain that thev cannot get enough. That shows a waking np of the slow ones. By and by it will clawn upon the dullest that Pittsburg's industrial and mercantile procession and progression, which this Ex position will at once inaugurate and illus trate, is a big affair and that it will pay everyone to show up in it Pittsburg is already an Exposition in it self. It is becoming every day more nota ble for its amazing strides. Old time visitors persons who have not been here for fonr, five or ten years are simply astounded at the growth. Chicago and Kansas City, and later St. Paul and Minneapolis, were thought mar vels ot progress, and without a peer in that particular, but the old-time smoky, and now smokeless, city is not a whit to the rear in its recent expansion. Kowhere is more en ergy shown in seizing opportunities for de velopment, Pittsburg is the coming great city of the interior in population and busi ness. It is well to know it THE PEESIDEHTS VACATION. If there was any one man in the land to whom circumstances should have made a vacation particularly enjoyable this year it was President Harrison.' To encounter since March thousands of eager applicants for office; to be sensible of the fact that nearly all of them honestly and intensely believed they had strong claims upon his administration, and to be obliged to disap point nine out of every ten, was a state of things which might well make the Presi dent sigh for a lodge at Deer Park, or any inaccessible wilderness. So again, if there is any happening, short of actual illness, which iscalculated to destroy the beneficial effects of a vacation, it is that of the renewed solicitation of the office-hunters which has set in since the President's re turn to "Washington. The President will have the sympathy of all honest folk in the pressure which besets him, and which simi larly troubled his predecessors during the first year of each term. There is no help tor the worry, if the idea is to be religiously kept up that each change of President is an invitation to all who would like office, to file their petitions. Nothing short of a new miracle of loaves and fishes would meet the case. Meanwhile it is manifest that the Presi dents ol the United States earn well their salary, if only in respect alone to the labor of trying to make a satisfactory distribution of the patronage. As the' country grows and as the complications of party politics become more numerous and pressing, so grow the irksomeness and the weariness of this task, which has to be discharged quad rennially, before the legislative business of the country comes on. NOT THE FIRST NEED. It is not calculated to stimulate respect for the originality and inventiveness of the people who were steering New York toward the desired port of the international exhibi tion of 1892, to find that the leading, if not the sole, idea of he way to insure success for that exposition is to build a tower which shall surpass in height the Eiffel tower at the Paris Exposition. In other words, the New York idea, so far, is merely to copy and enlarge upon the Parisian achievement But the fact is that even the Parisian idea is not an original one. Visitors to our Cen tennial Exposition of 1876 will remember' St George's tower, as the probable start of the idea of a lofty structure to afford visi tors to the Exposition the amusement of getting up at a high elevation and looking off. The Parisians have simply taken that idea, and enlarged and amplified it to its utmost degree. Even in the exaggerated form it contains nothing of the real instruc tion and information which we take to be the legitimate purpose .of an international industrial exposition. It is simply one of the show novelties of the affair. For fea tures of that kind in our exposition of 1892 American inventiveness should provide something original. Beyond that, even if a new Eiffel tower were necessarily the main feature of the New York show, it would not be tbe first thing for the New Yorkers to look after. If they can pile up a subscription fund for the expenses of the exposition to something approximating the height of the Eiffel tower, it will have a much more vital rela tion to the success of the affair than the drawing of plans for towering material structures. A HYPNOTIZED PUBLIC. A Chicago co temporary produces an ingenious theory to account for the success practiced in the Plunkett-"Worthington case, of inducing a large number of confid ing women to marry that clever and un scrupulous scoundrel. The explanation is hypnotism. It is impossible for our co temporary to believe that such a bald and arrant humbug could have been successfully practiced unless the victims had been placed under the hypnotic influences which compel the subject to do and believe what ever the operator prescribes for them. The theory is valuable not only as ex plaining this case, but as throwing light on the success of a large number of far greater and more wholesale swindles. It is not more singular that a scoundrel whose ras cality takes the supererogatory form of marrying a large number of apparently superfluous wives, should carry on his deceptions successfully, than that those who systematically and notoriously pursue the business of passing off upon investor merely jlat values, in the form of railway and trust stocks should meet with a more 'gigantic and wholesale success. The ex planation of the readiness of people to be deceived applies in one case as well as another. The old proverb populut vult decipi only states the fact; but the reason behind the fact why people are so willing to be deceived has never been explained until now. It is hypnotism. The successful humbuggers have devised some wholesale method of hypnotizing some hundreds of thousands of people at once. So they are able to put victims by wholesale under the hypnotic influences and make them believe whatever tbey choose. Either we will have to take this novel if toot comforting theory, or else we will have to fall back upon the old and rather pessi mistic idea concerning the overproduction of fools. South Dakota is now reported to have already contracted a debt which exceeds the constitutional limits proposed for the State debt The new State seems to be rivaling the acts of an exceedingly fresh poker player, who goes the whole limit blind be fore tbe first deal is made. No pleasanter duty falls to The Dis patch than that of chronicling the success of the brainy and energetio men who make tbe columns of this Journal so interesting to the public every day through the week. The.latest case in point is that of Mr. Bob ert Simpson, the excellent special cor respondent of The Dispatch at Har risburg last winter, who goes to morrow to take charge as manager ot the Oil City Derrick. Mr. Simpson in returning as manager to the paper in which he started years ago as office boy, takes with him a thorough experience in newspaper making, which, will make the Derrick a more interesting and valuable paper than ever heretofore. Both in enter prise and judgment he is one of the most promising journalists of Pennsylvania. "We wish him success. The complaints of the people who cannot get all the space they want for exhibits in the Exposition, constitute a strong sermon on the wisdom of being early with your appli cations for space and liberal in subscriptions to the fund for making the building ade quate to all demands. "One of the sharpest and most un scrupulous bosses" In Boston thinks that bis party will not have much chance to carry that town under the new Australian election system, where there is "no ballot distribution, where nobody can hustle any body up to the polls', where every man votes according to his conscience, behind a desk where nobody can see him," All of which is so much in the nature of a boom for the Australian ballot system that we may be permitted to express a polite in credulity as to whether any sharp and un scrupulous boss ever permitted himself, to be betrayed into stating it . As the only thing which can galvanize life into the corpse of Boulangism is the action of the French Government itself, it is to be hoped that the Bepublic will hence forward have the discretion to leave the doughty General in the hole which, he has dug for himself. "Hundreds of papers all over the coun try are now taking grounds in favor of the New York Exposition of 1892," says the es teemed New York Sun. True; and tbe support of outside papers will be strength ened by the way in which New York has suDpressed the member of the Inauguration Centennial Committee, who tried to run things in the inception of the "World's Pair project If New York will squelch its Four Hundred, its politicians and its real estate speculators, the country will be with it, all the while. It would certainly be good policy for the Pittsburg railroads to give Pittsburg coal as good a chance in freights as Hocking Val ley coal gets. Nothing is ever lost by feed ing, instead of killingrthe interests which furnish traffic and profits. The St Louis Globe-Democrat says: "Either Judge Cooley or Judge Gresham, as a successor to the late Stanley Matthews, would be highly satisfactory to the coun try." The statement is undoubtedly cor rect, but Judge Gresham had the misfor tune to be an opposing candidate to the present President, and Judge Cccley is more than suspected of being a hated Mug wump. All of which combine to fix the public eye upon Partner Miller as the com ing man. The reported Ballet Girl Trust in En gland is capable of being regarded with a good deal of toleration when we reflect that the first purpose aud object of the trust is to restrict the supply. The rumors of political deals which have been clouding the atmosphere for the past few days will now have to give way to the equally reliable stories about the number of fish the junior Senator will catch on his yachting trip. "Whether the fishing excur sion in Allegheny politics or that in East ern waters .will be most successful remains for the future to disclose. The record of a private divorce rail roaded through the Legislature of Delaware goes to show that there are pettier qualities in Delaware than its smallness. As General Benjamin F. Butler is cruising in Canadian waters, an esteemed cotemporary -proposes that Canada can re taliate for the Behring Sea seizure by cap turing General Butler. If the Dominion should get our Ben Butler on its hands, it would bs severely punished for all the un kind things it has done toward the United States. The Dora Steplein case bids fair to de velop into a revised and feminine edition of the Charlie Boss mystery. It is to be hoped that the announcement that Sullivan's friends have any amount of money ready to put up for-his benefit in his trial, affords a more accurate estimate of tbe ideas of the pugilistic circle with re gard to the administration of justice than it does with regard to the purity of the Southern courts. PEOPLE OP PROMINENCE. Bexatob Sherman's favorite game is back gammon, at which he is an expert Edwin Booth has sent to the ladles inter ested in raising a circulating library laBelalr, Harford county. Mi, his check for $300. The best baseball player In Congress is Rep resentative Ben Butterworth, of Ohio. He fre quently plajs In amateur games at nil home. Owe of tbe richest men In Boston is Na thaniel Thayer, whose estate amounts to $15. 000,000. He is a young man of fine ability and the best of habits. Joaquci Milxxb is described as "a slender, sparely built man well along In years, with long, yellowish white hair that lays on his shoulders in curls." Me. Samuel, Jones, the "revivalist" was recently offered 6,000 a year and a fine church to preach In at Minneapolis. He replied: "Do you take hie for a fool? I'm getting 923,000 a year now!" Robert Bubss Wilson, the rising Ken tucky poet began writing verses at an early age, and Is now 37 years old, and not 20, as has been recently stated. His first volume of poems will soon be published, with tbe title of "Life and Love." Brandeb Mathews married one of Lydla Thompson's dashing blondes, which was tbe beginning of bis interest in the drama. He Is a great lover of the French drama, placing Mollere above Shakespeare in knowledge of tbe actor's art Henbt Irving, is the most scholarly look ing of all living actors. He is as much inferior to Booth as au actor, as he is superior to him as a manager and master of stage-craft. ,Tbe chief fault of Irrlng's acting Is too little nature and too much art " Rev. Dr. Gunsabxtjs, of Chicago, created a sensation by walking through the groves of Bay View, Mich tbe "Western Chautauqua resort with a dear in his mouth. The ladies of the W. C. T. U holding a meeting there, at once passed resolution prohibiting smoking on the grounds. (, 5aiiraglla "ftlTiilllhi jfei Iteli jrftBfiiii?. r'riillV'vri&tajm THE OLD-TIME TAVERNS. LToatelrlea and Landlord! of Pittsburg Half . a Century Ago, When Primitive Price Killed Distinguished Guests. In the olden time the popular title for what are now by general courtesy called hotels was taverns. There are Pittsburgers now living whose memories go back to the time when hotels had no existence in this city. There were, however, amultltude of taverns, and al most as many in number three-score years ago as now. The first of tbe old-time taverns to put on hotel airs was the St Charles, at first called tbe Pittsburg Hotel, and following close was tbe Exchange, where the Hotel Anderson now stands. A half century ago the St Charles was the place where distinguished travelers were lodged at the rate of II a day. wnen the Monongahela House started up as a more aristocratic institution in the year 18U and charged tl SO per day, it was the general opinion of the boys of that period that none but the very wealthy, or foreign dukes and marquises could afford to "put up" at such a hotel. Henry Clay and Barnum with Jenny LInd might offer-to stop at a house where $1 60 a day was charged, and one boy who gazed alar oft at the distinguished guests -seated on the Monongahela House balcony, wondered If there should ever come a time when he would be able to register at such a grand place. . During tho era of taverns Wood street was the popular place for these institutions. Long before theMonongahela was spanned by abridge there was located on the southwest corner of Wood and Water streets a tavern kept by one William Graham, famous in its day as the Ferry House, and largely patronized by Wash ington county farmers. On tbe same side of Wood, on the corner of First avenue, Den nis Murphy furnished entertainment for man and beast in tbe early years of the century. Where tbe St Charles Hotel now stands, originally stood the residence of John Wllkins, a brother of the Judge, who was so prominent in the Jacks onlan reign. It is now well onto three-quarters of a century since the Wllkins residence was converted into a hotel. On the northeast corner of Fourth avenue and Wood street was another famous tavern In the (rood old days known as tbe Green Tree House, kept by William Morrow, father-in-law to James Crossan. Coming up to Diamond alley, on the corner were tbe cyclone struck last winter, was a tavern with the slim of the silver cross keys, kept by Sturgeon. The sta blln g yards extended along Spencer's alley to Fifth avenue. On the corner above, where the First National Bank now stands, was another famous tavern with the sign of tbe golden cross keys,keptsuccessirelybyWilliamMcCuIlongh, Benjamin Darlington and Benjamin Weaver. There Lafayette was entertained in 1824, and there, in the yards extending along Fifth ave nue, where the Central Bank and the Schmertz building now stands, the old-time circuses fur nished fun for the boys of the period. On the corner where the Eisner & Phillips building is was another famous tavern, with a rattlesnake on the sign. This was tbe Golden Lamb House. Still another Wood street tavern stood on the northeast corner of Virgin alley, and was kept by a famous landlord of the early days, known as Killy Moon Stuart It was in front of this tavern that Henry Clay was hung in effigy after the alleged bargain and sale which gave the Presidency to John Quincy Adams. The effigy business stirred the wrath ot this old Whig city to the utmost On the corner of Sixth avenue and Wood, on the site of tbe Bank of Commerce, Captain J. C. Butler played the host in the old days. In the course of days, as the city lengthened its cords. Wood street was too far downtown for all the tavern business, and the old Dr. Bedford mansIon,on Liberty and Seventh streets, where Myers' packing house now stands, was con verted into a hotel. Over this Sol Lightcap presided Tor a season, and in after years gave his name to the Yellow Tavern at the Two-Mile Run.v The Spread Eagle, where the Seventh Avenue now stands, presided over by John McMasters first, and afterward by his son, will be remembered by those who would hardly be willing to call themselves old. Into the yards of the Spread Eagle, along in the forties, the Conestoga wagons, drawn by belled horses, filed in continuous streams, and there was one boy who wondered In those young glad years, where all the stuff in those wagons could find customers. An old timer tells of a hard winter when tbe wagon trains were blocked up in the Allegheny Mountains for a week or more, and when the blockade was finally broken there was a con tinuous line of wagons from the canal, now Eleventh street to the top of the Garrison Hill, coming into the city at one time. The Spread Eagle yards were not a circumstance to the needs of that occasion. One more old time Pittsburg tavern deserves mention that at the Two Mile Run. which still stands. Probably very few of those who travel by the Lawrenceville cable cars ever notice the old brick building somo 15 feet below the grade, cornering on Penn avenue at Thirty-third street There is probably Pittsburg's oldest tav ern. It was built abouttbebeginningof the cen tury by Alexander Hill, one of our prominent citizens in the early days of the city. When built the house was a few feet above the grade ot the Philadelphia pike (now Penn avenue) and in front was a yard gently sloping to the Two Mile run. From its wide porches there was littlo to In terrupt the view across the fields and meadows that extended to the little town around Fort Pitt whose eastern boundary at that day was Eleventh street At this hotel, known in later years as the Yellow Tavern, the Pittsburg Blues were ban queted on their return from the War of 1812. It was kept successively by Hill, Lightcap and General Larimer, whose names will be fa miliar to all old Pittsburgers. J. H. Young. A MOONSHINER'S WORD IS GOOD. Two Asree to Surrender Freedom and Keep the Pro mil e. Memphis, August 8. At the April term of the United States Court J. B. Sanders and J. W. Wood, of Hardin county, were convicted of illicit distilling and sentenced to 30 days' im prisonment They represented to tbe Court that the sole dependence of their families was the little crop tbey bad at home, and begged leave to return and work it out of the grass, piomlslng to return and take their medicine at whatever time might beset Tbe Court re leased them on their own recognizance, nam ing August 1, as the day for their return. To day before noon the two men reported to tbe United States Marshal and went cheerfully to iail. "Why didn't you keep vour freedom when you bad ltT" one of them was asked. The mountaineer looked at the questioner steadily for a moment and replied: "How could weT Didn't we give our word as we'd come backf That settled It" One (lunae of the Trouble From the Washington Post We want it to be distinctly understood that we are not one of those real mean old things that believe woman is at the bottom ot every earthly tronble, but we must admit that the demand for sealskin sacques has had moroor less to do with the disturbance about Behrings oea. DEATHS OP A DAI. Commodore Filzhnsh. (SPECIAL TELICKJLM TO TOE DISPATChA PnlLADELrniA, August 1 Commodore lriti hngh. seventh ranking Commodore of the United States Navy, died soon after midnight lastnUtht at the Naval Hospital. Commodore Kltzbugh came to the hospital as a patient from the New London station about two months ago, and under went an operation for removing a cancer. Al though he improved at first and was able to go abont his room, he gradually grew weak again and all hope of his recovery was abandoned. Commodore Fltzhugh has been.a familiar figure In naval circles of Philadelphia for many years. Tie was at one time commandant of Leairne liland navy yard and also at one time was inchareeof mis iN.tu( .uijj wi, uvuic, M.A.IUHCU at ljeairue Island. Tho most prominent public doty that brought him to the attention of 1'hlladrlphlans was his work as President of the two trial boards or tbe gunboat Yorktown when that vessel was tested at sea last February, it was probably his last trip at sea and although it was only a trlnofa few hours, the bitter cold storm probably had a bad effect on his ailment. lie was sent to .New London after be made hU final report to Secretary Tracy. Commodore Kltihugh was about 03 years of age and bad always been a bachelor, lie was a quiet, almost taeitnrn man, but -wonderfully fascinating when at ease. He bad seen considerable service In Chlnaand was well read, always courtl) and as modest as any schoolboy, lie was one ofUia mo.t popolar officers of the naTT. lie always felt that hehad reached the highest naval honor that could come to Mm, "and during the trial ofthe Yorktown said that he badprobably reached the Umlt of -his advancement. HlsirreAteit rtlr hMv-v w.. advancement. to have some si United States. to have some share & making the new navr ofthe A SESoITlTE JDE0E, SUICIDES. A Lawyer Remark Troubles Him So Much Thnt He Shoots Himself. McConnellsvilxe, O., August 3. James Benjamin was a well disposed and well-to-do farmer, who lived about five miles west of this place, near Pennsville. On the 20th of July he was a juror In a sheep case trial in tbe neigh borhood, Involving about $15. The jury ren dered a verdict for the plaidtlff, but the Justice allowed a new trial on the ground that certain Jurymen, ot whom Benjamin was one, were not competent to serve. The defendant's lawyer had subsequently made the remark that some of the jurymen had perjured themselves and were fit candidates for the penitentiary. This remark, coupled with the granting of the new trial, which Benjamin considered a reflection on his integrity, so preyed on his mind that it was his all-absorbing topic of conversation. Ho brooded over it day and night until his mind became unbalanced and he thought him self constantly pursued by officers. This morn ing before daylight he arose, unknown to his wife, took his shotgun from the accustomed place, went to the wood-shed, and shot himself through the forehead, completely braining himself. He was about 56 years old, In com fortable circumstances, and leaves a wife and seven children. The event has made a pro found impression throughout the neighbor hood. WALLACE IB WILLING. He Will Accept tbe Democratic Nomination for Governor. Huntingdon, August 3. Ex-Senator H. J. McAteer, of Alexandria, recently bad a talk with ex-Senator Wallace on Democratic poll tics and the attitude of the latter towards tbe Democratic nomination for Governor. During the conversation Mr. Wallace expressed a willingness to make the fight if he should be the party choice. McAteer told him frankly that It would be folly for any man to accept the nomination unless harmony existed, the spirit of faction was buried and the old Randall and Wallace feud forgotten. To this Wallace fully and cheerfully assented, and said that the dif ferences between himself and Mr. Randall had been greatly exaggerated by the Republican press. Senator McAteer believes that Wallace is the most available man who could be nomi nated, and that his ability as a lawyer and a statesman and his public record would tell in the contest. "His Interests in our State," said Mr. Mc Ateer, "are 'so varied that they reach almost every class of people. The coal mines in which ne is interested give employment to over a thousand men, and no strikes occur in his reg ion unless they are forced from other sections. The Republicans will, of course, select their best man, and I know of no one more worthy on our sido than William A. Wallace." TO E0SC0E C0NKLING. A Monument In Foreit Hill Cemetery The Design by His Wife. ISriCLU. TXLXGUAM TO TUX DISPATCH. Utica. August 3, A monument has been erected in the Forest Hill Cemetery, in this city, to the memory of Roscoe Conkling. It stands in the Conkling family plot a few yards north of the monument of Horatio Seymour. The monument has two unpolished bases, a polished die, with four graceful columns, and a massive pyramidal cup, cut in tbe rough. On the front die is tbe inscription: "Roscoe Conk ling, born October 30, 1829. Died April 16, 1888." On the reverse side Is tbe name: "Ros coe Conkling." The base is 8 feet 1 inch in length, 5 feet 1 inch in width and I foot 4 inches high. The second base is 6 feet 11 inches long, i feet 11 inches wide and 1 foot 6 inches high. The die is 8 feet 2 inches long. 8 feet 2 Inches wide and 1 foot 10 inches high. The cap Is 7 feet ( inches in length, 4 feet 6 inches in width am1 2 feet 8 inches high. Over all, tbe height of tbe monu ument Is 7 feet 4 Inches, tbe width 5 feet 1 inch and tbe length 8 feet 1 inch. The material thronghout is Quincy granite, and the design was worked out In the yards of Huehes & Evans, in this city. ' The design was selected by Mrs. Conkling. CCDLDNT KEMEMBER HARRYING, Bnt a Young Lady Claims tho Alan as Her Hatband. Hudson, N. Y August 3. Eugene Elser, of this place, and Miss Nora L. Roberts, of Pitts field, Mass., visited New Lebanon last Sunday, and the young lady says that they were married by the Rev. Mr. Hills at bis church. She was so confident that toe ceremony was legal that she bad a notice of the marriage inserted in a Pittstleld paper. The reading of this notice, Mr. Elser says, was his first intimation that he was Miss Rob erts' husband. He said, however, that he might be married to the young woman before long. He also admitted that he went away with Miss Roberts last Sunday, but failed to recall the fact that they were married. PRETTIBAD RUNS AWAI After a Quarrel With on Indian Playmate Named Prettygood. Wabash, Ind.. August 3. Oscar Prettybad, a muscular young Sioux Indian, who is belnc educated by the Government at White's In dian Manual Labor Institute, near this city, ran away from the institution last night, and started for his Western home. He was cap tured at Peru to-day and returned. Prettybad bad a quarrel with Moses Toobold, another Indian lad, which led to his hasty departure. Prettybad is one of the best behaved Indian lads In tho institute. Pnt It Up. at Auction. From the Cleveland Plalndealer.j A good way to settle the location of the 1892 world's fair will be for Congress to re ceive" bids. The city which shall come the nearest to gauaranteelng the expenses without asking for a Federal appropriation ought to be designated. If the strife should become so spirited that a bonus would be offered so much the better. The Risk the President Rods. from the Chicago Hews. If the President doesn't stop his foolhardy habit of putting to sea in Government vessels there is likely to be an Indiana statesman found drowned one ot these days. Perhaps he has learned wisdom of late, however, for his trip to Bar Harbor will be made partly by rail and partly by a passenger boat A Qnlet Campaign. From the Altoona Times. 1 Tne candidates of all tbe parties seem pros trated so by tbe hot wave that they cannot mako enough noise to indicate their where baouts. Chicago Smartness, i From the Toledo Made. 1 An enterprising Chicago tblcf has just stolen a coalyard. The proverbial redhot stove would not be safe in Chicago. THR06TS AT TRUSTS. Minneapolis Journal: An orange' trust Is among the recently organized monopolies. Of course it will squeeze the market and absorb all the juice. Chicago Herald: A trust on sweet pota toes has been organized, and pretty soon tbe "students of markets" will get up a trust in the food for thought AltA California: A patent-leather trust Is organized. If this thing keep on tbero will be a sole-leather trust to kick all the rest of tbe trusts out of tbe country. Philadelphia Telegraph: There seems to be a turn in the tide in the trust business. The big salt syndicate had to throw up thp sponge, and now a pretentious German sugar scheme has collapsed. There is every indication that this great combination business has been con siderably overdone. Philadelphia Ledger: Salt won't save either the salt trust itself or the sugar trust or any other of tbe tribe, unless such, and such only, as are founded on fair, honorable, equita ble principles of trade. No trust founded on tbe "crushing-out" policy or "freezlng-out" policy can livoln this country. St. Louis Globe-Democrat: With the col lapse in the salt "combine" there will be a "let up" in the Industry of forming trusts In this country for the time being. If this busi ness were kept up for a year or two longer the United States would be "plastered over" as badly with trusts as England is. American Economist: The fact that trusts exist and flourish under free trade even more than under protection, and the further fact that tbey have been organized in this country more largely for the manufacture and sale of products not affected by the tariff than for those which are affected by it compel the con clusion that trusts are independent ot tariff legislation. It follows that the abolition of protective duties to hinder them would only inflict irreparable disaster upon our labor and. industries without accomplishing the end proposed. sf - . i 5fcr?4r2tt-?a. ' X GROWTH OF GREAT CITIES. Statistic! Tbnt Shew a Bapld Increase of Population and en TJnequnled Accumula tion of Wealth. jrom the Iron Age.J There is clustered In and around tbe port of New York a population of over 3,000.000. In 1880 Manhattan Island contained 1,200,000 resi dents. This year's directory estimates the, population of the city, including the annexed clstrict, at l,7C0,O0O. A more conservative esti mate would be 1,600,000. Brooklyn has grown very rapidly, and contains now a population of over 800,000. In Jersey City and Hoboken, in 1880, there wero 150,000 souls: there is now probably a population of 255,000. Yonkers rests on the edge ot this city with over 20.000 population. These figures aggregate 2,550.000. and to tbis total might be added tbe suburban population on Long Island, Stateu Island, Westchester and Rockland counties and in the near districts of new Jersey. .Newark, which is really an ad- Innct of New York, claims a population of 75,000. Paterson contains about 78,000 resi dents, and Elizabeth over 30,000. The estimate of 3,000,000 for the city and its environs, there fore, does not appear unreasonable. In 1892 it Is probable that the total will be nearer 3,600, 000. Tbe Great Cities of the Fntnre. These statistics are of Interest now in view of the agitation or the World's Fair project It begins to look very much as if notwithstanding London's enormous lead in the race the next generation would see on and around Manhat tan Island the greatest mass of population known in the history of the world. It is already second only to the wonderful city on the Thames. After dealing with such stupendous and matchless figures it seems of lit tle consequence that an informal census taken by the directory canvassers shows tho popula tion of St. Paul. Minn., to be 193,217, a gain of 151,774 since 1880. When it Is considered, how ever, that Minneapolis, tbe municipal limits of which city join those ot St. Paul, has made an equally rapid growth, now claiming 235,000, and that tbe census next year will probably show an aggregate population of 430,000, where there were less than 90,000 persons living ten years before, this instance of the rapid Increase of the urban population of the United States be comes qnite as remarkable as that which is going on in the metropolitan district. Rapid Increase of Population. The twin cities of Minnesota hare reached In a few decades the point attained by New York In two centuries. What they will do in the future can only be conjectured, but it is cer tain that there will be many centers of popula tion in the interior ot the United States larger than all but a very few of the historic cities of Europe. This is not merely a result of the rapid growth of population in the coun try as a whole. It means an accumula tion of wealth and a development of diversified Industries unrivaled in any other part of the world. Great cities are numerous, in propor tion to the rural population, only where wealth abounds and civilization is most advanced. Russia has fewer and England more than any other country of Europe. Africa has scarcely any, but Australia an amazing number for a region so sparsely populated. Great cities bring their burdens and perils. In them vice festers and poverty abounds, but, nevertheless, they are tbe focal points of the energies work, lng for the advancement of mankind, and where they flourish and multiply progress is sure to center. SUING FOR A SHIP'S VALUE. Heavy Damages Claimed by Cleveland and Detroit Teasel Owners. Detroit, August 3, Suit for damages to the amount of 176,791 45 was begun in the United States District Court here yesterday by Harvey H. Brown, Fayette Brown and C.J. Sheffield, of Cleveland, and E. M. Peck, of De troit owners of the steamship C. J. Sheffield against a Cleveland company owning the steamship North Star, which sunk the Shef field on the route between South Chicago and Two Harbors, Minn. There was a heavy fog at the time of the ac cident, but Captain Christopher C. Allen, of the Sheffield, claims that the whistle was blown regularly. He was signalled by the North Star, Captain William Thorn, which seewed to be passing on tbe port side. Either through the blowing of wrong signals or the misinterpreta tion of signals a collision resulted. The Shef. field was sunk in 600 feet of water. The North Star was not damaged. The complainants as sert that the collision was tho result of negli gence, ucskilfulness and carelessness on the part of persons navigating the North Star. A CANAL IN A BAD WAT. The Chesapeake and Ohio Nearly Ruined r Telltles the Cause. Baltimore, August 3. The fate of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal now seems inev itable. Tbe efforts of tbe present management to float $300,000 repair bonds have thus far been Ineffectual, and unless measures are soon taken to repair the canal it must go into the hands of a receiver. The directors held a meet ing to-day, but nothing was done. uapiiausts wno are wining to put tneirmoney Into a scheme to repair and operate the canal refuse to have anything to do with it unless the managemen t retires and it is taken entirely out of politics. Meanwhile hundreds of families at Wllliamsport and other points along the canal wbo made their living by the waterway are destitute. A GIRL'S HAIR STOLEN. A Remarkable Case of Highway Bobbery In Daylight In Pottsvllle. POTTSVILI.B. August 3. This morning Clara Roeder,.of Schuylkill Haven, an employe of Thompson's Btocking Factory, became too ill to work and was excused at9 o'clock. While on her way home, walking through tbe alley between Spring Garden and St. Peter's streets. she was seized by two Italians. She at once called for help, but tbe rascals cut her hair off ana fled. They were pursued, bnt were not captured at last account They had evidently been lying in wait for her for tbe purpose of stealing ber bair, which reached below her waist and was of a beautiful golden color. A Problem for a Jury. From the Detroit Free Press.! Only three members of a jury recently Im paneled at Anderson, 8. C, knew the name of tbe Governor of tbe State. It would take a wise jury in West Virginia to turn out as many men equally well informed. Reciprocity In Tessel-Selzlng. From the Detroit Free Press. 1 The Canadians now know bow it is them selves when a fellow's vessel is seized on a charge of violating the law. Perhaps they thought they bad a monopoly of that business. Two Kinds of Texas Weather. From the Baa Antonio Eiprcss.l One hundred and eight in tbe shado at Dallas; ten degrees above freezing point at San Antonio. Texas Is a big State. TEl-STATE TRIFLES. A headless ghost is the nocturnal specter that affrights the night operator at a telegraph tower near Mapleton, Pa. AbootSO years ago, goes the tradition, a drover was beheaded at that point and robbed of a large sum of money. And now be revisits this mundane sphere to scare innocent people. The centennial anniversary of the formation of Alleghany county, Md.. will be celebrated at Cumberland on September 23, 21 and 25. Hebe's a sad editorial wall of sore experi ence from the Orrville (O.) Crescent: "It's a pity an editor can't fall over a board pile at a ball game without everybody laughing at htm." AN Allegheny township (Cambria county) farmer can discount Devoe or Venncr on weather predibtlons. He is the owner of a rooster that struts out in front of his house every morning and crows, and the direction be faces is a snre indication of tbe weather. If the rooster turns his tail to tbe west andfaces the east it is certain to be A fine day, while if he faces tbe west it is certain to be wet A Greensbubo paper says: A certain man residing on Laurel Hill and a man whose rep utation for truth is good reports having seen eight young fawns at the same place and at the same time. William Kxlnek, of Mercer, has goose berries which weigh three-fourths of an ounce each, and Says they will grow to be an ounce in weight when tho bushes are older. They aro an English variety and he is ordering a number of the plants for other parties. Soke time In May last Jesse Shallcross, who has an ice-making plant In Coatesville, froze 16 shad In cakes of Ice as an experiment A few days ago the cakes were cracked open andtthe shad cooked. They "ate Beautifully." At the Pottstown postofflce day before yes terday the lady assistant found a lire turtle waddling around among tho rnaOs. KEW YORK NEWS K0TES. More Trouble en Account of the Fisat. INEW YORK BCEEAD SPICXAXS. J NkwYoek. August a Edward J. Burgess, prize fighter, and his wife slept at police head quarters' last night because they stole 11.000 worth of diamonds from Mrs. Burgess' sister. Mrs. Louise Hum, last January. Burgess and his wife were penniless last winter, when Mrs. Hurtt began to shelter and feed them. They remained with her long enough to get all the clothes tbey needed, and then ran off West one night with all ber jewelry. Mrs. Hurtt told the police. Tbe first information about tbe ab sconding couple came from Rlchburg; Miss., where Burgess had attended the Sullivan-Kll-rain fight, The next news was that he was training nimselt near Detroit under contract to fight He and his wife were arrested there ana brought to New York. There is a. sad ro mance and much misery for two families at tbe bottom of the trouble that has culminated in the prize' fighter's arrest The sisters, Nettie and Louise, were daughters of the Rev. Frank Wegg; a respected clergyman ot Yonkers. Nettie married the prize fighter. Louise Frank D. Hurtt the millionaire, of the Pond's Extract Company. Mr. Hurtt took her to Europe on an extended wedding tour. She came back with him a wreck, a victim of the opium habit After years of rain remonstrance and patient suffering bo began divorce proceedings last year, and they separated, Mr. Hurtt allowing her a princely income. A Novel Civil Service Reform Move. Herbert Welsh, ot tbe Indian Rights Asso ciation, is asking prominent men throughout the country to contribute SLOOO to a very curious object Mr. Welsh is a rabid Civil Service reformer, and he wishes every clergy man in the United States to preach about Civil Service reform next Thanksgiving Day. There fore, he purposes to send documents on Civil Service reform and Instructions to preach about tbem to every one of about 20,000 min isters in the United States. He is taislng the 1,000 to pay tbe expenses ot printing and mail ing. His plan has already received the moral and material support of Rev. Drs. Howard Crosby, James McCosb, Francis L. Patton, George P. Fisher, Robert Collyer, H. B. Whipple, Phillips Brooks, Morgan Dir, Lyman Abbott H. L. Wayland, W. E. McLaren, Henry Van Dyke and R. S. Mac Arthur; also by George William Curtis, Carl Schurz. Richard H.Dana, Charles J. Bonaparte, Lucius B. Swift and Wayne MacVeagh. Yagnries of a Young Lunatic Frank Russell, 27 years old, is about the craziest man wbo has turned up here for sev eral years. A policeman found him acting strangely in Central Park last night Russell said that he was a celebrated journalist who was going to marry Mary Anderson, and that be had gone to the park to select a team of camels which he proposed to hitch to a car riage for tbe purpose of driving tbe fair Mary to Boston on their wedding tour. In court this morning be said he would give the Judge the entire turnout on his return from the trip. He was committed for examination. Crazed by Cigarette Smoking. "Made Insane by smoking cigarettes," was the verdict of Police Justice Duffy, this morn ing, in the case of Max Casserly, 29 years old. The young prisoner was found wandering along the Bowery early this morning. He was unable to tell even his own name. His brother explained In court that excessive cigarette smoking bad caused this loss of memory. He said that Max became mentally Incapable ot doing his work as a bookkeeper, six months ago, when he was smoking two packages of cigarettes a day. Since then he bad gradually increased his quota to three packages. He was committed for medical examination. Edison Goes Abroad Incog. Thomas- A. Edison, the inventor, and his wife sailed for Havre to-day, on the steamship La Bourgogne. They were accompanied by Bishop Llttlejobn and his wife, of Brooklyn. Mr. Edison will remain abroad three months. Ho will pass several weeks at the Paris Expo sition, in which he has atiout 5100,000 worth of electrical apparatus. He will also visit Berlin, Vienna, Geneva and Amsterdam. He will not visit England, he says, because be does not like the English. The object of Mr. Edison's trip is to benefit his health, which has been injured by bis almost constant labor in the Orange laboratory. To avoid publicity, be registered in the nams of Samuel Insull, his private sec retary, at the ofllces of the steamship com pany. A Clever Boy Swindler. A clever little rascal, about 14 years old, and who is described as innocent looking, dressed in dark jacket short trousers, and a straw hat, bas been swindling Wllllamsburgh gro cers. He goes to a grocery and orders a small quantity of goods to be sent together with the change for a 5 or $10 note, to some address, ex plaining that his mother was afraid to trust him with so "much money. If a small boy is sent to deliver the goods, the young confidence operator meets the boy at the door, takes tho change from him, and sends him inside with tbe goods. He then disappears, and the errand boy finds that tbe people in tbe house have not ordered tbe goods. On Friday night this boy called at the grocery of Charles E. Timm. Mr. Timm was away and tbe boy ordered a bag of flour and asked the boy who was to deliver it to bring change for a S10 note, so that his mother could pay him. He walked with the errand boy as far as Weisenberg's saloon, and he asked him to wait a moment and be would get tbe $10. He went into the saloon, and in a mo ment returned with a 110 note. Tbe errand boy gave up his change and was told to deliver the flour at 222Alnsloy street No one there had ordered the flour, and when the boy re turned to the store, Mr. Timm discovered that tbe SlO-note was Confederate money. Traveling Under False Colors. Best A Co., of 60 and 62 West Twenty-third street are being very much annoyed by an impostor who is traveling through tbe West representing that he Is an agent for Best & Cck, and getting advances of money wherever be can. Many complaints have come from places In Ohio. At present the man is working Michigan. Effect! of an Alternating Current. Michael F. Fitzpatrick, a young lineman in the employ of the United States Illuminating Company, was engaged to-day In repairing a wire on tbe pole at the southeast corner of Stanton street and the Bowery. He accident ally sat upon another wire, transmitting an alternating current and was instantly made unconscious from the shock. His grip bad closed on one of the arms of the poles, and he stuck there, and he swung backward upon the network of wires, which prevented him from falling to tbe ground. Fitzpatrick became conscious in a moment but found that he could not stir hand or foot and shouted feebly for assistance. Several ot his associates were working near by, and tbey ran to his rescue. They were compelled to lower him from his lofty perch by means of ropes. An ambulance was called, and be was removed to Governeur Hospital. After remaining an hour In the hospital he left and returned to his post He was still very weak, and said that be had suffered excruciating internal pains. A horse that' John Coleman was driving was knocked down to-day by a fallen electric light wire in Greenwich street near Beach. Wondering and Not Sanr. George Guggenheim, tbe Assistant Superin tendent of tbe Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, of 71 Broadway, Williamsburg, wbo disappeared from his home, S&a Marion street Brooklyn, last Saturday morning, was found by bis son on Friday night wandering near bis home. He looked wretched, and at first did not recognize bis son. A phy sician wbo examined him said his mind was affected, and that he bad symptoms of typhoid fever. In a disconnected way Gug genheim said that he bad been to Reading and to Philadelphia. His clothing was damp and .dirty. His pockets were cut and all the valua bles be was known to bave in bis possession were gone. Tbe waistcoat pocket in which he carried his watch Was torn out This evening Mrs. Guggenheim said: "My husband tells me that be remembers starting from the office to come home after some ac counts which,' he bad forgotten; that it began to rain, and be went into a storeond bought a felt bat Tbe next thing be remem bers was getting off a train In Philadelphla,and tbe next wss flnaing himself in Reading. Occa sionally, he says, he would bare lucid spells, and then would start for home, losing himself, however, In the next few minutes. Now that he is home, he often starts up and says: "Oh, pieaselet me go; I must go home - CURIOUS COBDEHSATI0K8. . The town of Lee, Me., has neither law. yer, doctor nor minister. A visitor at Santa Cruz tried to swim iu the surf. A wave was carrying him out to sea when three girls rescued him. He presented each with a silk dress. Several of the large land owners of Scotland bare Imported a number of reindeer from Norway and turned them out in tbe hope that they may become acclimated and increase. A lady pedestrians' club is a novelty at Paw Paw, Mich. When at work they carry canes, ornamented with yellow bows. Each member is bound by an oath as solemn as can be to report ready for a dozen-mile jaunt each Wednesday and Saturnay morning. In Nevada electricity runs the very deep mines and bas increased production 25 percent The men who work at 8.100 feet deep live about two years, notwithstanding the fact tbey work only about two hours per day. Tbey get mora pay than eight-hour men. They work 15 minutes and rest 15. Mr. Charles Newman, of Albany, went out on Raquette Lake on Friday afternoon of last week and caught with a rod and reel, 35 pounds of black bass. Tbe next day he caught S3 pounds. On Monday he caught a lake trout weighing 15 pounds. It measured 32 Inches in length and IVKi inches around belly or breast A remarkable instance ot long-continued service in the employment of a single concern is furnished in the case of Smith B. Freeman, who died recently on Staten Island at the age ot 82 years, after having been con tinuously employed by tbe Staten Island dye ing establishment since its organization in 1819, a period of 70 years. The "nickel-in-the-slot" idea has been applied in England to electrio lamps intended for use In omnibuses, street cars and railway cars. You put a penny in the slot of such a lamp, press a knob, and out streams the light. By clockwork machinery at the end ot half an hour the light Is extinguished and can be ig nited again only with a penny taper. Lightkeeper Elliott, of Gasparilla Isle, Fla., found a 160-pound bombshell on the island the other day, and proceeded to open it with a chisel. When be succeeded and saw that It was filled with perfectly good powder his hair fairly stood on end. One spark ot fire from tbe chisel as he chipped tbe shell would have necessitated the appointment of anew light house keeper. William Chandler, of Waynesboro, Ga says that be saw a party of 12 men, living at and around old Ringgold, go fishing, each one carrying with him fishing tackle In the shape ofa sledge hammer. They would striku the ledges ot rock covered in the water, and the strong concussion from the heavy blows would stun the fish, and enable the fishermen to gather them in. For several years past learned, or ap parently learned, arguments bare appeared in Western newspapers to tbe effect that the level of the grea; lakes is lowering and that a period of low water Is beginning. These theories have been upset tbe past month by a rise of tbe level of tbe lakes and the passage over shallow S laces of large vessels conveying big cargoes. 'ne propeller, the Corsica, bas just passed through the lakes carrying the heaviest cargo ever shipped on a lake vessel. A gallant young disciple of Blackstone at EUavllle, Ga., finding business in the legal profession rather dull at this season, and hav ing a wife and baby to provide for, laid away his law books, closed his office, doffed his stand ing collar, congress gaiters and court house clothes, hauled on his seediest garments, seized a trowel, and sallied forth to earn bread by the sweat of his brow until the law business picked up. He had gotten a job of brick laying, and earned over 5100 before his friends missed him out of town. 4 Mr. J. L. Grant, of Wapping, Conn., calls public attention to his pigs. There aro half a dozen of them and they know mbre than all the rest of the pigs In Connecticut Mr. Grant was not avare how smart bis pigs were until, having noticed that one of his cows gave less milk than she was wont to do, he investi gated the mystey. He found that the pigs were milking tbe cow regularly. They were only eight weeks old. but tbey are long enougr by standing on their hind legs to milk the cow, which is short quite handily. The cow does not mind it Slowly the great falls of the Niagara river are changing in shape, through the eat ing away ot the shale rock which underlies tho bard rock that forms the bed of tbe rapids. It Is almost a misnomer now to speak ofthe Cana dian portion of the great cataract as the "Horseshoe Falls," and within a week this des ignation has become more than ever misplace, in consequence of the fall of a large seetionol. the bed rock in the very center of tbe -falls.' So much rock fell that an eddy below tbe falls near the Canadian side of the river has been narrowed more than half, and the little steamer Maid of tbe Mist bas less difficulty than before in running into tbe curve of the falls. Fourteen years ago Joseph Buchtel saw a little fellow knocked down by a horse draw ing a street car in which be was riding In Port land, Ore. Tbe driver's bead was turned, and Buchtel, grabbing the reins with one hand, wheeled the horse away from the child, and with the, other grasped him just as tbe wheel was about to crush him. The father, W. C Johnson, was profuse in thanks, and the affair was apparently forgotten. The child grew.and on his 18th birthday Mr. Buchtel was Invited to Mr. Johnson's office, where be found the fam ily assembled. The boy made a neat speech, and banded bis surprised rescuer a gold-headed cane, inscribed "From W. Carey Johnson. Juno 27.1889. In memory of a brave deed, 1875. .1 owe you my boy's life." The acknowledgment was a little slow in coming; but it got the: just the same. The Texas and Pacific Company sank bored well some years ago near Eagle Flat si tion, Ala- in order to obtain artesian wale; The well was abandoned when it had bee: bored 800 feet hut the tubing Is still intact it For 12 hours each day a furious gust of air rushes into the tubing, and the next 12 hours an equally strong gust rushes out A local theory of the phenomenon Is as follows: "The well must penetrate into some large subter ranean cavern wbichlcontalns a large body of water, this water having connection, by an underground passage, with tbe Gulf of Mexico or the Pacific ocean. If this be true. It Is very plain that the suction and escaping of the air is caused by tbe ebbing and flowing of tbe tide. As the tide ebbs down In this cavern a vacuum is made underground, which is filled by the air rushing in through this well, and, conversely, when tbe tide comes up, the air is forced out through the same opening. The air while In this cavern mav become mixed with various gases, but not magnetized, as has been sup posed." FUN AND PHILOSOPHY. "Now, sir, who was present when the prlsonerboxed your ears?" . 'Iwas, sir." San iYaneiseo Wasp. "Yes, I am the victim of a maiden's sighs." said a young man who married a ISO pound beauty. Kearney Enterprise. The clayeaters are never satisfied with any hotel fare, no matter how good It Is. They wjnt the earth. Jteie Orleans Picayune. She I wouldn't marry you for 520,000. ne But I have 0.000. Bhe-O, well, that's different Terre Haute r. press. When a strand of feminine hair gets en tangled In a masculine scarf-pin. It does not re quire a very heavy step la an adjoining room to make two hearts beat as SO. Chicago Journal. Ohio is a fine State, but the people ain't half as careful as they ought to be about the com pany they keep. We see It stated that an Ohio maahasjust taken the smallpox from a pig. Jfao Xork Morning Press As Near as They Came. Bessie I think tbe Jahlmers are dreadfully shoddy. They're rich, but I'm sure the family has no pedigree. Jennie No; but tbe old man's last horses have. Kexo Xort Juttntng Sun. Too Late. Brown I wouldn't have had you say that In the minister's presence for (10, you young rascal. Little Johnnie If you'd given me the tenner, dad, 1 wouldn't have said It. A'eto York Evening Sun. Blazer-coated youth on hind platform ot Arch street ear to another with bine straw hat You told a lady friend of mine that my name was mud. Spirited response I did not. I said your name would be Schuylkill water to me hereafter. PAtf adelphia Record. Couldn't Blame Him. She Isn't this rather sudden, Mr. Pontonby? Wouldn't It be better to postpone your proposal until we are bet ter acquainted? Ponsoaby I don't know about that. All the other girls said they might bave accepted me If they hadn't known me so welt Sew lork i'n ing Suu. Wife (meeting her husband at the door) Ob, Charles, I bave been frightened out of my wits, for Husband Yes, dear. I know; but I was unfor tunate enough not to find It out until after par marriage. Tbey haven't spoken for awcek,-csfJiy S ttrgrui, I