"A ' f! J-55 THE PITTSBUBG DISPATC- FBLDAY, AUGUST 9K 1889, v " " WFmm9WMP - tt - - m ESfABLISHED FEBRUARY 8, 1818. 12 Vol.44, Jo. 161 Entered at Pltubnri? l'ostoffice. November 14, 1SS7, as second-class matter. Business Offlce97and99FifthAvenuo. -News Booms and Publishing House 75, 77 and 79 Diamond Street. Eastern Advertising Office, Boom 43, Tribune Building, New York. Average net circulation of the dally edition of nixUlSFATCiiforsix months ending July 31, 1SS3, as sworn to beiore Ci'y Controller, 29,914 Copies per issue. Average net circulation of the Sunday edition of Tint UisrATCll for three months ending July 31, 188Q, 54,897 Copies per Issue. TEIUIS OF THE DISPATCH. TOSTAOE FBEE 1 THE UNITED STATES. .JUily Dispatch, One Tear t 8 CO DAII.T Dispatch, Per Quarter 2 00 Dailt Dispatch, One Month 70 (Daily DisrATCH. Including Sunday, 1 year. 10 00 .JJAILY Disr-ATCH, Including bunday.Sm'ths. 3 SO .Daily Dispatch, Including fiunday.l month 90 fcuxDAT Disi'ATCir. One ear 2 50 1 E1CKLY DI6TATCH, One Year 125 Tub Daily Duvatcii Is delivered br carriers at -IS cents per w-ck, or Including Sunday edition, at SOcents per week. ( PITTSBURG. FRIDAY, AUG. 9. 1883. AH" TJSOEKT DUTY. The facts which are set forth in our local columns concerning the overcrowded condi--tion of the Dixmont Insane Asylum, does not reflect credit on our civilization. In the discharge of the public duty of caring for the insane it is not sufficient to provide ac commodations for 400 patients and then to jam nearly 700 together there. The addi tion which will give accommodations for 128 more can hardly be dignified with the name of relief, in view of the fact that the num ber already there will still be nearly 200 in .excess of the normal capacity. Such a state of affairs is not creditable to our State. It is little more than a travesty upon the proper discharge of the duty of caring for the insane. It certainly affords testimony to the good work of the Dixmont staff, that with this crowding the physical health of the patients remains remarkably good. But it is evident that with insane patients crowded two in a bed, the care and separation needed to give them a decent chance of recovery is impossible. It is an nrgent public duty to provide ample accom modations for all patients. At an era when millions are going into money-making projects it is not right that the few thousands required to give the in firm, wards of the public decent treatment, Jias not already been provided. THE SPAZ-EABY PE0BLEM. It was an accented theory in police circles under the old liquor laws that the city force had nothing to do with people who sold illegally, unless wink at them. Once in a while there was a vigorous raid on violators of the license restrictions, but the usual official attitude was one of masterly inactiv ity. This is kept up, more or less, toward the "speak-eaxies," else the blackmailing prosecutors could not reap such a harvest of ictims. The business of institnting prose cutions with a view to "settling" them for money is one which the courts of this coun ty have hitherto punished with great severity in the cases of convicted barrators. They will, doubtless, know how to deal with any new offenders brought before them. But the other side of the question is that the policy of inaction by the regu lar police authorities toward the "speak-easies" is untenable. As long as they are permitted to flourish, it is sure that there will be those to make a trade of bleeding them. So far as the phlebotomy affects merely the violators of the license law there will not be much sympathy for them; but the spectacle of one abuse flour ishing upon another suggests that the sim ple and most commendable procedure is to close up the places where it is necessary to drink in a soft, low voice. The parasitical offense of prosecutions of these places, con ducted in a whisper in magistrates' back rooms, and settled for an inducement, will then of necessity speedily disappear of them selves. WASHINGTON THE EIGHT PLACE. Chicago, -with characteristic "Western posh, offers a premium of 5250,000 to have the "World's Fair of '92, while 2few Tork lias not got beyond discussing a demand on the National Government for an appropria tion. Very soon the selection of a site will be involved hopelessly in the rival demands of cities East and "West, unless the simple plan is followed of having the fair at "Wash ington. "Where the National Capital is, there the fair should be. Besides, "Washing ton isplly as convenient for foreign exhib itors and for the people of the United States as any other point named. It is well adapt ed for a "show" city, the streets and spaces being ample and not overcrowded by trade. Also, "Washington could make the most interesting of all exhibits for a "World's Fair in the year of grace 1802. It could show Congress, if needs be, in special session making the laws for a great nation. Strang ers from the effete monarchies of the Old "World could then see for themselves the simple and unostentatious machinery by which the greatest of modern republics is run. "Washington is the right pot for the "World's Pair. PAPAL POSSIBILITIES. The idea that the Papal power is coming more closely into relation with Anglo Saxon politics, and that the next Pope must be a man who can speak and think in En glish, if the seat of the Papacy is not trans ferred to some English-speaking country, forms the basis cf a very interesting article in the Cotemporary Review, liberal extracts from which appear in this issue of The Dispatch. It is of significance whether regarded as a possible boom for Cardinal Manning, or as reflecting the idea which has generally been regarded as gasconade of a possible removal of the seat of the Pa pacy from Borne. The main obstacle to the latter project is the obvious fact that in any English-speaking country the Pope would have to be satisfied with as slight a meas ure of temporal power as he now has in Italy. TEUSTS AND PASTIES. A declaration is made by the Philadel phia American that the trusts are opposed to the purpose of the tariff, namely, the stimulation of competition among home in dustry, and that therefore, wherever a. trust; .is formed that has the benefit of a protective tariff, the duty should be removed. But , that eminently correct position is weakened, by the assertion of the same journal that it, draws a line ''between agreements .among producers to avoid out-throat competition and the organization of permanent trusts.'" If it is an evil to obstruct competition per manently, why is it not an evil to obstruct it temporarily?. .The Jactu-that .the trnstis but a form of organization to accomplish ends, which under favorable conditions, have been made just as offensive and dan gerous to the public without that form. The Standard Oil monopoly was formed and ruled with its greatest tyranny without a trust; the anthracite coal combination has never found it necessary to adopt the trust method; and the proposed salt combination, as well as the recent exploded copper syn dicate, deemed it possible to be offensive and grievous monopolies without adopting the trust device, which has been invented for the sake of making some of these mo nopolies permanent. Th: Philadelphia Press took a much more decided nud reasonable view of what is needed. It urged the State recent Con vention to adopt a resolution against "all trusts or combinations which seek to pro mote monopolies, suppress competition, limit or control production and enhance prices." The only trouble with the Prest' position is, that, as experience showed in the case of the anti-discrimination resolution, Pennsylvania platforms are not very bind ing on such subjects. It was just about as well that the Republican convention did waste valuable paper by making empty pro fessions on that head. OTJE HIVES INTERESTS. The purchase of a controlling interest in the Cincinnati and Pittsburg Packet Com pany indicates a gratifying tendency to in crease the Pittsburg interests in river trans portation. The drift of the past twenty years away from the predominance which Pittsburg once had on the Ohio has not been for the benefit of Pittsburg. Of course the perfection of railroading has made it necessary that it should in a great measure supplant the slower water routes. But for certain lines of traffic the- river transporta tion is far the cheapest, and in others it affords a valuable check on railroad rates. Under these circumstances it is good news that Pittsburg capital is to take holdof this steamboat line and is going to develop and extend its usefulness. Every Pittsburg interest will join The Dispatch in wish ing the reorganized packet line ample suc cess, and a liberal supply of such patronage as will not only assure it prosperity, but will reflect .the prosperity of Pittsburg's shipping interests. PLY THE KOP AND BBOOM. A suggestion is made that the city clean the streets leading to the Exposition grounds. That idea is timely. All the streets should be put in neat order before the visiting thousands come to seethe show, but particu larly those which lead to the Point. Pittsburg is so occupied with planning for new streets that the old ones remain a long distance behind the ideal of cleanli ness. In the bustle and hurry of business our home people, who have been long in ured to the mud and dust which make the order of things in the .suburbs, are by no means finical about dirty streets. But when the country cousins come to see the Exposition even the floors of the city should be swept and garnished for their reception. A THIN STOEY. A specimen of the flapdoodle with which it is attempted to feed the public, with re gard to trade movements and railway inter ests, is afforded by a dispatch sent the other day from Chicago, concerning the report that a big syndicate of foreign capitalists is going to buy up the entire surplus wheat crop of the Northwest, and ship it to Europe by the Duluth and Canadian Pacific routes. Be fore the American railroads find out what is going on. it is asserted, they will "lose this important source of revenue in consequence of the restrictions of the Inter-State Com merce law, which do not affect Canadian lines." The surplus wheat product of the section referred to is from 50,000,000 to 100,000,000 bushels. It is evident that if any syndi cate has a control of the neat little sum of from 560,000,080 to $120,000,000 required to take this surplus out of the country and to sell it in the European markets, its result will be to give the farmers of the Northwest a large price for their crops. No one can buy up such an amount of the product of any section with out sharply advancing prices. The gain to the country, therefore, in giving the farmers liberal prices for their wheat, will be almost unqualified, in the view that the interests of the common people are paramount to the interests of the corporations. As to the old and somewhat threadbare statement that the restrictions of the Inter State Commerce law do not affect Canadian lines, that is made out of the whole cloth. The Canadian lines which do business in the United States are just as much subject to the Inter-State Commerce law as the American lines are. This appears plainly from a reading of the law, and has been affirmed by the Inter-State Commerce Com mission. It is true that we have not heard of any very violent efforts to enforce that measure against any of the railroads; but the immunity of the Canadian lines from prosecution under the law is not more marked than the immunity of the American lines. Of course the story is one of the current trade roorbacks. No) syndicate has the money to .buy up the wheat crop, and the wheat will be taken out of the country by the railroad lines which afford the best and cheapest routes for shipment Ax example of the way in which hope springs eternal in the human breast is af forded by statements in esteemed cotempo raries, that Major Serpa Pinto's expedition up the Shire river, in Africa, is for the pur pose of opening up water communication, which is stated to be "already assured by the Nile for nearly the whole distance from Khartoum to the Zambesi." In view of the fact that two thousand out of the three thousand miles of water communication along the Nile is in the hands of our pleas ant lriends, the Soudanese, who make a practice of killing all traders who come into their country, the present assurance of water communication from JChartoum to the Zambesi does not seem very strong. Peof. Laxgston, one of the anti Mahope leaders in Virginia, says that "he shall accept in good faith the terms of the compromise between the Bepublican fac tions." It is also understood that he will accept in good faith the office offered to John M. Langston as a result of that compromise. A JiEMAEKABLE example of the very slight use that exists for consistency in pol itics is afforded by an editorial in our es teemed free-trade cotemporary, the Phila delphia .Record, which assures the sugar planters of Louisiana that they ,must stick to the Democratic party in order to preserve "the indirect protection of the duties onraw sugar." In the meantime other free-trade cotemporarjes, Hke the Louisville Courier Journal, are assuring -the country that the 0rjer cent4sug.ar, duiiejre.onJy revenue It is announced that the Shah of Periia, J by his conduct, -has "shocked 'the moral sense.of Paris." The-dtscoYery that Paris has a moral sense to be shocked is such a novelty that the Shah deserves the gratitude of civilization for disclosing -what otherwise the world would have been ignorant of. It is interesting to learn that notwith standing all the combinations of the anthra cite coal corporations the price of that fuel is steadily gajng down. The people of the East hare a fab; prospect of getting fnel at moderate prices until the cold "weather comes on, when the prices will be put up again, just when the poor buyers need coal. Another grist of street railway chart ers was ground out yesterday. The cor porators of the various lines will now have a chance to show the faith that is in them by putting up the money to build the roads, or to (.how the faith that is notln them by omitting to comedown' with theVcasb. Senatob Da-wes is quoted as saying upon his return from his trip to Alaska: "It isn't the Indians who 'want appropria tions and aid; it is the United States officials who recognize the needs of the country.'' It might also be added that the United States officials, who ask -for appropriations and aid, recognize the needs 'of the officials who will get the benefit of the expenditures. Conferences in the coke region afford the hope that the dispute will soon be satis factorily compromised. But doubtful things arc uncertain, the coke industry has amply proved that so far as the -wage: question is concerned, it .belongs in that unreliable category. It is announced that a man in New York, who .created a sensation -the other day by saying he was going to -marry Mary Ander son, was "promptly arrested and sent to the insane asylum." .But whether the wildness of the announcement or the manifest lack of sanity in the choice of a wife Was the rea sonor adjudging him insane, the amiable paragrapher omitted to state. The boom which is being-accorded to the discovery of the "elixir of life" is explained upon the ground that if successful it affords a practical means for infusing new life in .the Presidental candidacy of Messrs. Blaine and Shermanin 1892. The declaration of the Liverpool Cotton Exchange that it must have jute bagging on its cotton, indicates that the Bagging Trust has been getting in its fine work. Bnt the American cotton planters may be just ob stinate enough to declare that if -Liverpool will not take cotton that is pot up with cot ton bagging, it can go withont cotton until it comes to its senses. "When a single man with a shotgun can rob a whole railroad train out in "Wisconsin, there seems to be a necessity for .hernia measures tending to intuse a little sand iuto the trainmen and traveling public "TnE.Bepublican orators made a mistake in working the defalcation racket," says the Louisville Courier-Journal, with reference to the recent campaign iu that State. The result certainlydoes seem to show that such a little matter as a defalcation of half a mill ion dollars in the State Treasury, cannot make Kentucky Democrats waver from their political allegiance. PEOPLE OP EKOMIKENCE. The Queen will have a replica of her jnbilee portrait by Angell made for the Victoria Art Gallery at Melbourne. Miss Noba Pebby is in rather poor health at present. She js now visiting at West -Hertford, Mass., and will spend next month at Sharon. The latest about Channcey M. Depewis that he is tired of railroading, and intends to resign the Presidency of the New York Central 'Rail road for the purpose of devoting himself to politics. Oliver Wendell Holmes says thatin re viewing his life he finds that he has taken more interest in surgery than in poetry, bat he real izes that lus fame will rest upon the efforts of his pen, not ot his knife. Peof. WhaiamT. HABBis,the new United States Commissioner of Education, is President of the Concord School of Philosophy, having s' ccceded Bronson JUcott, but the position is now a good deal of a sinecure. John Cobbutt, of Philadelphia, has been elected one of the officers of the Photogra phers' Association of America, nowiioldlng 4ts tenth annual convention Jn Boston. He was the first man to make dry plates in this country. Ax old chum of Explorer Stanley's, now City Controller of Omaha, says that when they were both there 20 years ago Stanley was the readiest and most accomplished liar he ever knew. Stanley was then correspondent for severalEastern papers. The courtiers of the boy King of Servia have been trying, with some success, to set him against his mother. "You are a King now," ' they said to him, "and don't require to he gov erned by your mamma." To which the lad re plied, "Oh, yes; I'm a King, and can take care of myself." General Van Vliet, the oldest Brigadier General in the United States Army, now on the reared list; is on his way from Washington .to his home in New Jersey. He Is 71 years of age and has been 52 years in the service. He has a rnddy face, overflowing with good humor, and bushy gray hair, worn long. The last Harvard" College bulletin shows that our American colleges have counted some long lived men among their graduates. -Nathan Birdseye, a graduate of Yale, lived to be more than 103 years old; the Rev. John Sawyer, of Dartmouth, was also over 103 when he died; he received from his college the degree of D. D. at the ago of 102; Judge Timothy Farrar, of Har vard, lived to be over 101, and received the de gree of LL-.D. on..the completion of Ills -hundredth year. M. Chevreui, the French chemist, who recently died in bis one hundred and third year, bad also received a degree from Harvard College. DEATHS OP JLDAT. Genernl-IUnry Dupont. , Wilmington, Del., .August 8. General Henry Dupont, since 1350 head of the extensive gun powder manufacturing arm olji. J. Dupont, Do .N emonrs & Co., died earl j this morning. He was prostrated bran attack of heart failure aboat two months ago, from which he rallied temporarily, bnt grew worse again a few days Ago. Henry Du pont was the second son of iuenhere Irenee Du pont, the rounder of the works, and was born at Nemours, the lamlly residence on the Brandy wine, Augusts, IKS. Politically General Dupont was active and Influential M a Whig, and later as a ltepu oilcan. He was on the ltrpubllcan electo ral ticket in 187b, 1880, 18S4 and 1883, but would accept no more substantial political honors. He served In the bemlnoU war and was made Major General of the State mllltla earlv In the civil war. His wealth, including a large private estate, was estimated at 115,000,000. J. N. Anderson. J. N.Anderson, well know to the citizens of Pittsburg as a popular bontface, was found dead in his bed at his home In Braddock yesterday morning, having expired during the night un known to his son Kirk, who occupied a room with him. Formanv years, prior to i860, he conducted tl e old St.- Clair Hotel, which occupied the site mfthepreseut Hotel Anderson, with which he re placed the old structure In 1881 He was also largely Interested In other real estate, not only here, but In Ynunsrstown .and Bradi laoci k. FIT, proprie- .sons survive him George B., one of the ee .. one or th yii WllVl UiQ VCiJLUl AVWt, VUUICI A. QU US&Ub, of the firm of Wood, Anderson Co.: Josenh H, tors of the Central Hotel; Charles A. and Grant, and Kirk. The cause of his death was heart launre. Tbe'Nntlonnl Electrical Asaocintlon. Nlaoasa Falls, -August -8. The National Electrical Association to-day fixed Kansas City MJtbA place DnCTtroertine.-:and.a. new-Executive Committee was chosn. as follows: G. W. CIark,.Kana City: Ia-A. 'Beebe. Hotitji, Kan.rJ.Ai Corby,. Br, Joseb;iB.;F.vSunnejr, .CbicagprS. ,S, Leonard. '-Minneapolis; .'C dB. I ,faWanjrol6tanAgraA4lot8n.J. j SLANG AKD ITS 0RIG1X "How Some Popular Wards and l'hrasea Cams Into Being Pnt Expretsfom "Which Fonnd Favor When Boom, Chestnuts, Too This and Other Words "Started. This may be called in one sense the age of slang. 'Eut after all what is called slang is fre quently the giving of a new meaning to old words or the Invention of new words from old roots. The -slang of to-day becomes the ele gant language of to-morrow. It is interesting to note how many of the commonest words and even phrases which were once regarded as slangy ana inelegant became part of the polite language of the times. Words, like lives, bave a biography. Many words. Indeed, have histo ries which are histories of important person ages and events in the affairs of the world.1 This makes the history of a word often as in teresting and as valuable as that of indi viduals. ' ''.Dun" is a wofd now whose moaning is known to every one Who understands the En glish language. Too many wish they did not Inowit. Yet at the beginning of this century It was unknown as a verb. About that time a constable in England named John Dan became celebrated as a first-class collector of bad ac counts. When others wonld fail to collect a bad debt Dun would be sure to get itont of the debtor. So well known did this become that people from all the surrounding country sent him their accounts when they could not collect them. It 'soon passed into a current phrase that when a person owed money and did not pay when asked he would havo to be "Dunned." Hence it soon became common iu sueh cases to say "you will have to Dun so-and- so li you wisn to collect your money. - a Outsiders and Political Boomr. Until the nomination of Franklin Fieree for the Presidency the Word "outsider" Was un known. The Committee on Credentials came in to make its report and could not get into the hall because of the crowd of people who were not members of the convention. The Chairman of the convention asked if the Committee was 'ready to report and the Chairman ot the com mittee answered: ''es, Mr. Chairman; but the-committee is unable to get inside on ac count of the crowd and pressure of these out siders.' The newspaper reporters, ever ready to appreciate a good word or phrase, took Up the word and used It. Since then it has been a common word and we could not do without it. "Boom," in its new sense of meaning a popular clamor for a man. or for any question or move ment, is a recent Word being first used as such inlSSO. Grant was being run for a third term. This brought out a bitter opposition, even among Republicans. One paper said the move ment was like a boom across a swollen stream, taking in all that was worth having. A St. Louis paper took it up, and said the third term movement was properly called a boom, as it raked in every thins on the top of the muddy stream of politics, mostly trash and scum. This gave a new meaning to the word. Since then it has been in common use as such. now Chestnuts Came Into Being. 'Chestnuts,'1 In reference to repeating stories which are old, is a new word, and not much can ,oe said in its favor, except that, being a word t&atisnot inelegant either in sound or origin, and expressing SO much in two syllables, it has probably come to Btay with us. Its origin is not positively known, and only two probable sources- are given. One is that some shrewd wit, seeing an analogy between the propensity ofaiokets become stale and fiat qnickly and 'the chestnut to become wormy in a few days, applied the word "chestnuts" to a joke when repeated too often and palmed oft as new on a company which bad beard it so frequently as to become bored. This may be its' origin, but I am inclined to attribute it to the other alleged source, to wit: That theatrical party, travel ing on a train, and trying to beguile the weary hours by reading and telling stories, bought a lot of chestnuts at a station to help pass the time. A member of the company proposed that they tell stories, and that whoever told a story which had been told recently should be pelted with chestnuts. A little bell in the party was to lie rung -whenever a stale joke was perpe trated as a signal that all were to fling a chest nut at the offender. This is said to be the origin both of the phrase and of the chestnut bell craze which raged over this entire country -four years ago. Dnvld Copperfleld Called a Dulsy. "Youare a daisy," is considered very slangy by those who use it indiscriminately; and, oftentimes, it is. Bnt, if used in the sense .in which its inventor, if I may so peak cf a word, CbailesDiekens, Intended It, it is a good and forcible word. In "David Cop perfleld" itis first used in the sense of calling a person a daisy in a way to express admiration, and, at the same time, to laugh at one's credul ity. Steerforth says to young Copperfleld: "David, my daisy, you are so innocent of the world. Let me call you my daisy, as it is so refreshing to find one in these corrupt days so innocent and unsophisticated. My dear Cop perfleld, the daisies of the field are not fresher than you." Hence, when conveying the idea that a person is artless and innocent amid a skeptical and scheming condition of society, to say "You are a daisy"-js not slang. Jit is f orci ble and elecant. The same passage gave us the other word, meaning the same thing though -sounding a little harsher, "fresh." We often hear the expression, "You're too fresh." This, too, was originally meant by Dickens to mean an mnocentjgnorance of the ways of t ho world. It was so used by Steerforth in reference to David Copperfleld. But when used to mean that a person is Impudent or forward; as is too frequently the case now, it becomes slang, as such a meaning is in reality senseless. Too Thin Not Slang. "Too thin" is a two-worded phrase heard in .all classes of society. By some it is used in a vulgar sense, and is -objectionable slang; by others it is used in the mannerwhich gave it to nsasagoodword. To say, when speaking of an action, "Oh, that is too thin," is vulgar Slang, because an action can not be thin. But to say, when a person makes a statement which is calculated to mislead, "Oh, that is too thin," js not slang. It was given currency by the Hon. Alexander H. Stephens, of Georgia, in the United States Congress in 167a Some member had made a reply to Mr. Stephens, and the latter bad bis chair -wheeled out in the aisle and said in that shrill, piping voice which always commanded silence: "Mr. Speaker, the gentleman's arguments are gratuitous asser tions made up of whole cloth. And cloth, sir, so gauzy and thin that it will not hold water. -It is entirely too thin, sir. Seeking; Brother Jonathan's Aid. '.'E ro th er Jonathan," as a namo for the United States, Is much older than this, and was given by Washington himself, though that Individual bad no idea of making a slang phrase for a name to Ills country at the time. Jonathan Trumbull, Governor of Connecticut, furnished -the struggling colonial army -with funds and supplies on many an occasion. One time tfte army was in soro distress and a consultation was hold. In the 'midst of it some one won dered wnat -would be done. TVaEhington an swered: -'Well, we'll iiave to put it off till we can see Brother Jonathan," as Governor Trum bull was called, "he will help us out, I guess." And be did, and gave his name to the country bis zeal and patriotism helped to save. An Invention of Prof. Tvndnll. Thus it is that words are made and phrases take on a new .meaning. In this manner the language progresses "by accretion, as it were. Such words as take new meanings from a .custom are usually from the common people; thatis.irom those who are not scholarly. It is in this way that old words drop out or take new meanings and lose their old ones and new words take their place. At first most of them are4lang. One of the best words we have is "agnosticism," yet its Inventor. Prof. John Tyndall. the great scientist, says that when be used it he bad no idea it would be used again, or that ho would be understood in using it. He could find no other, he says, to convey an idea of bis reliKious belief inanswer to some church men thathe tell whatuhe did believe. Hence ne invented "agnosticism," meaning "th nn. acnowable." It Is only about 15 years old. AN OPAI I1EAKT. (ViUanUle.) My lady baran opal heart; I cannot sing the changing hues. ' Ab me,. It mocks me and my art I 1'asslve. perforce, I bear the smart. And thus, for comfort of my muse, 'Aly lady has an opal heart, Oh 1 how I wish it were a wart tlponmyhand, that I could bruise "Whene'er It mocked me and my art I For half the time I mope apart The truth to see I can't refuse Mr lady has an opal heart. Bages and blisses through me dart As or J ponder her abuse. Ah me, ltmocksraeand my art! I wish I'd known it at the start, Ere Iliad .found a love to lose Jtvladr has an opal heart. Jli me, It mocks me and my art I - tnmcuA.i rpuzzLrrrcrTiiE doctoes; A Man-WhCut His Throat Is Fed Turouffb. nTubo and Recovers.1 AKLEUTO'WN, August 8. A remarkable re covery is that of Thomas Sweitzer, the young man who, four weeks ago, attempted-to com mit suicide by gashing bis wrists and cutting his throat. In order to procure a razortO do the work' he first broke open a barber shop, and. with razor in band, walked three blocks to the house of a friend, and, while standing on the curb at midnight, drew the keen weapon across nU throat, infllcting'a gash which lacen ated the larynx and sesopbagus. Falling in the cutter from weakness occasioned by loss ot blood,' be became-uncouscions and would soon have bled to death had not his moans attracted the attention of bis friend's mother, who aroused her son. Two physicians were sum moned and removed the young man to Ms mother's house, and, after stitching up the ugly wouna, naa him removed to the county hospital. The mother and young man were informed that be could not possibly live, but before a week: he showed sums of iinrjrove- Kment. began to eat, watted to live, and hi3 im provement lias Deen steady ever since. To-day be was permitted to leave the institu tion, and walked the streets of this city with his neck bandaged. He isi considerably ema ciated, but in a few weeks will be himself, the wounds being almost healed. The casepuzzles the doctors. Sweitzer is delighted. He says the loss of a child impelled him to commit the act. The hopelessness of the case atthe early start will be appreciated from the fact that for several days after he was given nourishment it gushed out of the nglygasn in his throat. A tube was then Inserted and from that day ha Improvement dates.' ,A' BIG DAKOTA DITCH. 1 A Project for a Waterwny 'From Bismarck to St. Pan I. Grand "obks, Dak., August 8. Influen tial citizens- of 'Fargo, Bismarck and Grand Forks have, developed a remarkable canal schema The idea is to construct a canal from the Missouri river at Bismarck, LKBfeet above the level of the1 sea, to Lake Traverse and Big Stone Lake, '900 feet above the level of the sea. It will rnn through a section in North and Sonth Dakota tkat is in great need of irriga tion. If desirable lateral canals can be con structed by the various counties, hundreds of thousands of acres of arid land can be re claimed while the cultivated land would be wonderfully enhanced In value. The fall of the canal will be sufficient to Veep up a steady current when properly protected by locks and dams. At the lakes dams and locks can be easily constructed so that part of the water will be Iforced into Lake Traverse and part into Big Stone Lake. The water from Lake Traverse flows northward in the Bed river of the North! A few locks placed at the proper points aloni the route toward Winnipeg would retain sufficient water during the entire season to make snip of navigation. The water from Big Stone Late flows southward through the Minnesota rlter to the MisiislppL By proper dams and locks this stream could be made navigable. J This canal woulqmake an easy water course to St Paul and Minneapolis, and for that mat ter clear to the Gulf of Mexico if a f sir million dollars were expenled. it would also tend to rednce freight rates on wheat for export and on imported raw miterial. The coal mines of Western Dakota wuld also be easy of access. The canal, it Is estimated, would cost H 000,000. HOTEL FOR BELDAL PAET1E8. A House to be Eref led for the Exclusive Use of Honeymoon Couples. From the London Figaro, j I am awaiting farther particulars of that Honeymooners' HoteVwhich, according to a circumstantial correspondent, is to be built on the South Devonshire coast for the special and. f possible, sole use of newly married couples on their wedding trips. 'That the surroundings of the establishment are; to be made as idyllic and fairylike as possible need scarcely be said. Bomantic arbors in shady corners, gushing streamlets, secluded sylvan nooks are to be provided ad lib , while, with the aid of science, every night will be a moonlight one and every day one of seeming bngnt and warm sunshine. The prospectus is even said to bint at the pres ence of mechanical nightingales, which, thanks to persistent winding up, will warble on every Suitable tree. The decoration!, artistic and otherwise, of the hotel are, of course, to be all in character, though I must adinit that "I question whether the proposed transformation of the ordinary weakkneed bottit waiters and the somewhat too substantial clambermalds of the provinces into attendant Oanymedes and Hebes, as artistic in theirtposes as they are classical in their attire? wills-eally be an advisable step to iaxe. xub laying on oi -cconan narps ana otber mysurlons music m every apartment is another dettil open to criticism. But there is nothing like actual experience, after all, and I shall be curitus to hear more about the Honey mooners' Hotel when it has been opened for business for i few-weeks. WEDDSD 0FHEE DEATHBED. A Tonne Cpuplo Who Had Quarreled Hocinclled, bat Too- Late, rSmCCIAL VZ.BQBAH TO THX DISPATCH. 1 "WrLKESBJUtEE, August 8,At ll o'clock last night Miss Majgie Knhl. of this city, lying, it is believed, on ler beathbed with typhoid fever, was united in marriage to Wm. Griffiths, a young man, ls of this city. Miss Kuhl is a young womaiot about 20 years, and for some time past has been engaged to Griffiths. A short time an they had a quarrel and Griffiths left the city. 1 Only a few days alter Miss Kuhl was taken sick, and her illness soon developed into typhoid! fover. Yesterday it became evident that leg- chances of Tecovery were- very slight. When she was informed of this she ex pressed the wish to see Griffiths before she died. One of per friends went to Scranton, where he was. ,t work, and brought him to the dtv. Her lover w s taken to her bedside and an affecting interview took place. To prove his devotion to be he proposed marriage thee and there. Alderr. an Marshall, of the Sixth ward, was sent for. a id united them in the presence of a number off riends. Miss Kuhl's condition to-day shows n improvement; and little hope of her recover! entertained. A MIDSUMMER MAEKIAGE. Mis Emma I cully and D. Robertson Join '' InndsTor Lire. Miss Emma ( ertrudo- Scully-was married to Mr. Dandrldge Robertson last night at her station. Bev. Father Devlin home in Msrioi nerformedthe :eremonv. Miss Scully is the daughter of John D. Scully, Cashier of Ihe First National Bank. The honse was most beautifully decorated with flowers ana green plants. Over 100 guests were present when the cere mony was performed. A supper was served in the best style of the Duquesne, after which the happy couple departed on an Eastern bridal tour Only a fey weeks since another daughter of Mr-Scully is married. Tbo muslq tor the occasion was furnished by Gernert AGuenther'sOrchestra. A Warn!? to the Ambitious. From the AlbaVy Journal.1 All persons Iwho "want the earth," either with or wl thoutjthe proverbial wire fence.sh ould consider the fan that has overtaken the am bitious dervishes of the upper Nile. THAT "iTOSDEEPDL EWXIE. Philadslp: Inquirer: Dr. Brown-Se truard's elixir wi discovered too late to save the Greenback Chicago Herald: A turtle dated 1771'bas -turned np on the Massachusetts coast. The turtle, instead of the lamb and. tho guinea pig, might b used, perhaps, for compounding the elixir of lite. Chicago Inter-Ocean: Some future Don nelly will loubtless discover cryptogrammatlc evidence tiat Dr. Brown-Sequard was not tbe original discoverer of the "elixir of life;" that, in fact, the Secret of the rejuvenating art was known to thi ballet girls many years before the venerable Sequard was bom. New YoBicWn- The silliest humbng of the day is, probably, tbe rejuvenating elixir which Dr. Hammond is sr'dtobe administer-' ing to broken dlwn old chaps In Washington. Is it fraud? Is li lunacy! Who knows? Boston G:o6l In tbe midst ot tho dog-day season, when news is dull, this unexpected re vival of the speculations of the alchemists Is certainly rather Entertaining. Chester JTem: If Dr. Brown-Sequard's elixir of life should fill tho bill, ft will be rough on the undertakers. Still they may eke out a miserable existence as long as ice cream and bad whisky are fashionable luxuries. Chicago Times: When what we now know as whisky was Urst distilled the chemist pro nounced it the water of 4 life. It has instead proved Its'clf the bane of many a man's exist ence, mercKcJ to hlai only when It cuts him off from a life which became a daily horror. Brown-Sequard's fluid win have its run, and a OteappoIajedtHrt a credulous World wilt stand. HAT FEYEE SUFFERERS. Peculiar Symptoms of n Slranie Mnlady A Change or Climate the Best Remedy The Queer Xflsct the DIseaso Has Upon Same People. Hay fever, rose edd, peach cold and their kinds are only slightly varying manifestations of the one widely spread and most torturing disease the asthma, which by some authorities Is thought to be entirely a nervous affection and by others to be due to organic disease of the heart- lungs or bronchial, tubes. Botb views would seem. to. be correct, for there are undoubtedly instances of purely spasmodic asthma and others which- are complicated with organic affections, but in both the peculiar dis tress of asthma seems owing to some yet undis covered idiosynciacy of the nervous sytem, rendering it susceptible to influences not at all injurious to the normally constituted. In a few of-the more fortunate cases of hay fever and its congeners he symptoms are merely those of a violent cold in the head, accom panied by intense and. ceaseless itching of eyes, ears, nose, lips, chin and palate; but gen- ciuijr tuis sort oz sunering uau enougn, though endurable is supplemented at night by the hundredfold worse affliction of asthma. Whether "purely nervous" or nor, the suffer I tig is the same. Onewho has ever experienced a paroxysm of asthma does not need to be told that his agonies are. real and intense: or one "who has ever examined a person so suffering." says Dr. Salter in bis work on asthma, "needs no stronger proof than to see the immense array of muscle that on the emergency be come accessory to the toil of the asthmatic in his struggle tor breath, and may guess at the extremity of the suffering that necessitates such immense labor," Symptoms of lbs OInlad?. While the paroxysm lasts, at each Inspiration barely enough air to snstaln'life gains admit tance to the lungs j and after the paroxysm which may last from one to six or even more hours the sufferer Is oppressed by an inex pressible languor and fatigue. 1 he muscles of the chest, sides, back and abdomen are as sore and aching as if the victim had been toiling at the washtub or digging ditches. while bis whole system is far more exhausted.' To find out what are the exciting causes for these parox ysms would seem to he a simple matter says a New York, World writer, but so far no more has been ascertained than that there are places where there is comparative or entireimmunity; but no one place is alike good for alt Many persons escape the attacks of hay fever by go ing to Bethlehem, in the White Mountains, but many others have found themselves still worse oil there, though at Nantucket they en tirely escape the attacks. Some find freedom only on tre pleasant slopes of the Western Con nectlcusbills, while to others there is no safety out of New York City, and still others are obliged to take a sea voyage. It was long ago settled that tho name of hay fever was a mis take, for while the odor of new-mown hay, or of blossoming grass, may or may not be present at the time of tho first appearance of the trouble, many cases of precisely the same char acter appear earlier in the season and are called rose colds, ana others Uter aro named peach colds and autumn asthma, and others again coverthe time of all these, beginning in June and continuinguntll the first hard frost, or un til settled cold weather has come. By a special perversity that which, comes earliest usually stays latest. Sources of the Trouble. Some patients can name the day of themonth when it is duo and arrange their affairs accord ingly, knowing that on. such a day they must cease from the usual haunts of men and be, to ail useful intents and purposes, as it they were not until after another date, which they can also fix with certainty. With many the dates vary with the seasons as they are cold or hot, wet or dry. Some have connected their annual period of suffering with the blossoming of the Roman rag weed, but this seems to be no more than one of the many immediately exciting causes, any one or two of which will affect some patients, though they may not be offen sive to otheis. The smell of old cheese, of am monia, of naptha, of benzine, of cayenne pep ir, of dry hay, or straw dust; the dost raised I Bleeping, or that of an audience hall when set iu motion by feet passing in and out: the perfume of tube roses, or cape jasmine, or the odor of ailanthus blossoms, are some ot these exciting causes. Animal odors are peculiarly iiaDie to proance attacKs even in localities where the subject is otherwise well. A severe attack has been known to last two or three days with a person who bad never had one be fore or since by attending an agricultural fair where he had been appointed one of the judges of cattle. This gentleman stated that, though very fond of. domestic animals, and owning many of them, he had always avoided visiting them where many were Inclosed together, be cause he felt a "tightness of -breathr" but be had never bad asthma before nor thought otit. No Care for Asthma. All these sources of trouble are the moro singular because though the different odors are plainly and sometimes disagreeably offensive to others they are rarely perceptible to the hay fever patient. In his case tbe catarrhal visita tion Is such that the organs of taste and smell are for the time being blunted or paralyzed. He feels tbe effect, bnt is often otherwise un aware of the- existence in his vicinity of the cause ot his trouble. The point of greatest im portance is as to the cure. And so far as now known there is absolutely none, nave change of place, either for hay fever or any other form of asthma. Where shall the patient go? Ex perienceindividual experience alone will tell. The writer knows of a gentleman who bad summer asthma in bis own honse. but in that of his mother, directly across a narrow street, was quite free. But in general the change should be complete, from sea te mount ain or from mountain to sea. The best advice to the asthmatic would bo to continue travel' ing with persistency until he finds a favorable locality; then let him pitch his tent and remain in spite of all temptation t move. Inconven ient as this remedy must often be. it is no wonder if the patient and his friends rebel, but tney would notaosou tneyreanzea tne lasting consequences of permitting the: annual repeti tion of their suffering. When Children Ar Afflicted. If It were only death that is certain there would not be so much to fear, but when the young are attacked there is a lifetime of inex pressible misery in prospect. Children often suffer terribly and do not complain. They take their sufferings as something inevitable, and. fade away while their elders are thinking: "Poor things! They suffer, but they will out grow IK Asthmatics live forever:" Let no parent or other relative or guardian think that there is any enre in medicine for the victim of asthma. There are a number ot palliatives and-thankful shoum we be for that hut, medi cine basno cure. Any hontst physician, of any school, will confess this. The palliatives are good. Anything that will shorten theasthmat ic'a ai-onv bv ever so little should be sedulous v employeu, butthe only cure is change otlocaU- -I ty, ana wnatever tne saennce n. snouia ne made. The attacks which in early Ufo may be of but short duration, taking- bnt three or four weeks out of tbe year, often lengthen thelrterm with each advancing year uatil tbe periods of immunity become shorter than those of suffering. If the cnlld.is to. have anyreal good of his future life he must not be allowed to contract tbe habit of astbmaticsuf fenng. When change of place U impossible tho sufferer must resort to palHatiTes, for any thing that gives even a temporary relief is less Injurious to the constitution than ire tbeastb matic's sufferings; but it should always be re mnmhftred that anvthinff of sufficient uower to A control the disease is strong enough to produce after effects oi a decided or very ppssioiy.nurf. ful character. A Vovr Palliatives, A sufficient dose given when the premonitory symptoms manifest themselves is jf more pres ent good effect and less after ill enter than to wait later 'and then have to reheat the dose three or more times. Some of thp most help ful remedies are to be smoked, but to draw the smoke from cigarette, cigar or pips requires an exertion of lung power which Is tfo great for the asthmatic Forhlsuse therdare tin tubes rising about five inches from a base something like an inverted shallow teacup. By placing on a flat plate the proper dose of tie powder, set tingfire to itand putting the mbe over the sputtering mass, the tube will act as a chimney and draw the smoke upward so mat tbe patient bas only to apply his mouth to tie upper end of the tube and receive the smoka without effort. If one cannot readily eet one of these tubes an inverted funnel will do nearfcr aswelL An open wood Are in the room is of great advan tage, drying the air and cansintf itjto circulate freely. But notwithstanding .f 1 care and with all tbe known palliatives, thcretis no cure but change of place. Ahead or (be President. From the Philadelphia Ledger.! i As Senator Quay is off onaflshlngcruise.he can hide his. blushes under tun tan when he finds himself in front of President Harrison In the Republican platform oi grateful Penn sylvania. Iraoeenl Simplicity. From the Atchison Globe. 1 Every girl believes that when, she gets mar ried her hutiHsBg wfil tell Bar what they do at METROPOLITAN- HUBXUK& A Batllo for Her Hand and Heart. Vint Tone BUBXAU 8FKCLU.S.!' NiwVoex, August a Michael' Young and Eddie Moran. young mechanics- who live on Staten Island, have. loved, the same- girl for ilUlUVa IsnwjM. AUC1 UAigiiOU oDTClsU-tVUJjta edly asked her to settle their rivalry by choos ing between them. She refused to interfere. A few weeks ago Young and Moran agreed to decide in the prize ring who should have the girL Each punched the bag, ate eggs and took a spin on the seashore dally. This training brought Moran's weight down to ISO pounds. Young weighed two pounds more. They-met in the presence of some 50 friends and acquaint ances near New Brighton this morning. They fought seven long rounds, in which both showed less science than gameness. In the first four rounds Young put in some telling blows, and looked as If he were going to win the girl, bnt Moran began to pick up after that. In the last round, while Young was thoughtlessly wiping off the blood which was streaming from his nose, Moran, with true prize fighters' instincts, dealt him a terrible blow under the left ear and knocked him flat on his back. The referee gave Moran tho fight and 200 which the spec tators had subscribed for the winner. Moran expects to marry the girl next October. Tbe Ocean Record Again Broken. A cablegram from Southampton to the mari time exchange to-day announced that the Hamburg steamship Columbia passed the Lizard at 3:30 this morning and came into harbor eight hours later. This breaks the record. The Columbia cleared Sandy Hook at 9.50. The ship's correct time is, therefore, 6 days, 20 hours. 49 minutes and S6 seconds. Tbe time of her maiden voyage, till to-day, tbe best on record was S days, 21 hours and ZTminutes. Has Left tbe stage Forever. Comely Alice Hood, daughter of the sarsa parilla millionaire and the Oberon of Augustin Daly's "Midsummer Night's Dream." is mar ried. Miss Hood's friends believed that the young lady was busy making her arrangements to go to Europe, where, according to a pro gramme she had mapped out, she was to study for a year and then rejoin Mr. Daly's organiza tion. Miss Hood's contemplated trip will never be made. She has given up the stage forever, she says, for the rich young man from Wash ington whose name she has just taken. Miss Hood bad never been upon the stage until she became a member of. Daly's company two sea sons ago. She did very good work as Ofteron in "A Midsummer Night's DreamJ' She ac companied Mr. Daly's company to. London, ana was seen at the close of the season just ended in several ot the subscription revivals. Conld Not bee the Polar. Mrs. Elizabeth Bethon, charged with bigamy, told the story of her married life in a Brooklyn police court this morning. At the age of 16 she married John Bethon. He lived happily with her one year, ami then ran away to Kan sas City with another woman, leaving her with a little boy and no money. Peter Kircbner, whom she married three years later, lived with her nine years. Then he, too, ran away with another woman. In the meantime tho number of her children had increased to four. Six years ago she became Mrs. John Scneibel. Both of her former husbands were still alive, and had married again. A few weeks ago Mr. and Mrs. Scheibel quarreled, and after a fistic com bat, Mrs. Scheibel threatened to run away. Scheibel replied that if she left him without a housekeeper he would have her arrested for bigamy. She disregarded the threat, and he was as eood as his word. On being assed by the Justice if she was not aware that bigamy was a crime, she said: "No; if my husbands run away and get married again, I can't see whyl can't ao so too. She was remanded. A Jcnlons Husband's Revenue. There was a private pleasure party of a hun dred or more people at Ozone Park, near Rock away Beach, to-day. The gayest man in the party was Frank L. Husbands, togged ontm duck trousers, navy blue vest, cream colored sash, flannel shirty cardinal necktie and white linen bat, a splendid contrast to a rainbow. Mr. Husbands is a society dude, with a wide spread reputation as a masher ot married women. One of the young women with whom he flirted was Mrs. Charles H. Lewis, of Wood haven. There was some scandal about the affair; ana Mr. Lewis and bis wife separated.' While the pleasure party waited for the last train homer last night Mr. Lewis joined the crowd.-At sight of his enemy Mr. Lewis be came enraged; He caught Mr. Husbands by the throat, and proceeded to batter his face. Mr. Husbands cried "Murder." The ladles ran screaming away. The men stood aghast Not a person attempted to restrain Mr. Lewis. His righthanders did terrific execution on Mn Husbands' face. He made no show at fighting back. Mr. Lewis drew blood with every blow. He threw his victim down and jumped on him and kicKed him, then fell upon him and ham mered his face with both- flsta. It was as brutal a beating as one man ever gave another. Mr. Husbands' spotless clothing was begrimed with blood and dirt, and this mwrjlngthe ground where the scrap occurred was crimson with blood. It will be sometime before Mr, Husbands will figure in society again. Mr. Lewis was at work as usual to-day. Tbe Law Too Much Disregarded. From the Philadelobla Press.; The riotous proceedings in the coke region. oucht to be stopped, and pnnishment meted out to the offenders. The strikers have a per fect right to refuse to work, but-the forcible interference with others and the destruction of property is intolerable. There is altogether too much of this disregard of law in this coun try for the country's. good. TBI-STATB TRIFLES. The Tyrone HeraHS taxes the credulity ot its readers with the following story: The otber day some railroad men on the mountain near Tyrone noticed a- large snake with a mouse in its mouth. As the snake crawled along the ob servers, thought, it looked like a rattlesnake, but saw thatithad no rattles. The mea con cluded to follow the reptile and see what it would do with its prey, and after while they saw it reach its nest whets several little snakes were in waiting. The oldtsnako tore the mouse into small morsels which, it fed to the little ones, and while they were busily eating, it gathered, up Its rattles and put them In their place on its tail. It was then evident that the old- snake bad given its rattles to the young snakes- for playthings while it had gone in search of food. Samuel Bubb writes to the Winiamsport Gajeto say that he has slain a 33-foot serpent in Mosquito Valley. GBZX3SBUBG), says the Argus, bas several residents who. although residing here all their lives, have never ridden in a railway car. never smoked, chewed or drank, never have been in side a church, never exercised the right ot suf frage, never read, a newspaper, nor, to their credit be it said, have they ever been guilty of the crime of baseball playing or uf witnessing the demoralizing game. And. yet they are a law abiding class and possess the love and af fectionate regard of all who- know them. Two ten-foot blacksnakes were killed at Sawmill Run,LIgonier township, Westmorelan d county, recently, by Candas Mersnon and George Zeltncr. A lad by tho name of John Devan. while picking "huckleberries" near Uniontown a few days ago, was treed by a rattlesnake, which colled Itself at the foot of the tree and content, edly awaited the boy's descent. His outcries attracted some persons to the spot, and the reptile was killed. A fresh young bride from Ohio having heard tbatenmphor fumes would htnish flies, put on her kitchen range a tot of supposed lumps of camphor. They melted and spread out, and all tb flies for squares away came swarming to them. The despairing bndo con sulted an experienced matron next door, who discovered that tho supposed camphor was rock candy. D avxd Caxpbiix, a pnddler of Lancaster, has a ferret farm, and sells a good many ot the animals to persona who want them to kill rats. A PEACOCK wandered into the house of John Ecks In Ohio county. W., Va the other day, and be is wondering where It came from, as he deelares to bis certain knowledge nobody iiTiBfcwiMOs tMsafiHof hUBoawhadaoata baa, -- - CURI0DS" CONDENSATIOflS. Utah- has a colony composed ot natives of the Hawaiian tth1. Under the new Scheffer law in Minne apolis, which malrrq drnnkenness a crime, a L woman was the first to be sentenced to jail. They are trying to acclimatize the Con necticut oysters at several places on tbe coast of Sweden. So far they havo done very well. Susanville, Nev., boasts a citizen who has been Bunstruck, struck by lightning, frozen until be lost consciousness, and yet is as "hearty as ever." A gooseberry bush, growing out of the side of a maple tree, 23 feet from the ground, wasa big siebt seen in Johnsbury, Vt., when a tree was felled in the Court House yard the other day. Captain Charles D. Grant, of the schooner Lizzie May, recently brought into Portland tbe largest swordfish taken on the coast or maine this season. After being dressed it tipped, the scales at 500 pounds. A trumpet producing its musical note by the vibration of a circular steel membrane by means of electricity has been invented by Captain Zlnang; of the Thirtieth Infantry, in garrison atDomfront, Orne, France. Justice Lockwood, of Los Angeles, went in swimming asCatalina Island last Sunday. A colony of sharks came in sight and drova every one to the shore. The justice found an old saber and managed to kill twoman eaters. A Milton (Pa.) paper says that on the day of the Sullivan-Kilraln fight the wife of William Follmer, of Shakespeare, presented him with twin boys, of six and eight pounds, which the father named Jacob Kilrain and John Sullivan respectively. Mr. E. "W. Smitb, one of the- substan tial citizens of Toledo, declares that he went out on tbe lake in quest or sport, and in the space of about 15 minutes drew from their na tive element no less than ft! of the flnnv tribe that turned, the scales at from 1 to Co pounds. Smoke extends from California to Western Kansas, a distance of 1.000 miles. At first the smoke partially shut off the rays of the sun. making the air cooler, but now it adds to the already high temperature. It is supposed, to be caused by the mountain fires in Montana. The first settlements- iu Arizona and California were founded by Eusebio Francisco Kino, a Jesuit, who was an explorer In those regions as early as 1650. He founded the flrst settlementin Arizona on the Gila river In 1670, and in 1697 founded the flrst settlement in Cali fornia. Honey bees, that come from nobody knows where, are makingllfe miserable around Reno, Nev. They invade dwellings, and have forced several families to vacate portions ot their homes. One man has killed 12 swarms this season, butthe bees seem to be as numer ous as ever. A. M. Snow, a farmer near Athens. 42 years ago discovered a land terrapin on bis farm which bore on its under surface the carved legend "A. H 1771." He has manv times since run across the same creature, and. recently again found it. being- able to certainly identify it by the initials and date given. Two colored men named Young" and Garrett have indnced 911 colored men to locate upon Government land In Oklahoma, taking 160 acres each, or I,760 acres in all. They have laid out a town site near the center of the col ony. The name ot tbe town is LincosB, located on the north bank of the Cimanon river, and is destined to be the county seat, as they have Ave townships and are in the majority ten to one. A. party of campers at Moosic Lake, near Carbondale. had beard of. a bear- In, tbeir vicinity, but didn't credit the story. But when they saw the bear coming directly toward them the other evening there-was a commo tion. Lewis Compton. the crack marksman of the party, seized his rifle, and when the animal reared upon its haunches, sent a boiler into its body that put an end to- Bruin's career in short order. An interesting- innovation in the method of catching cod has ju3t been made by the French fishermen, coasting off Newfoundland. They catch large periwinkles, remove their shells, and use the creatures for bait. The cod, it is said, bave bitten eagerly at the new bait; and the owners of the French vessels have caught fish so fast that they were able to sail for France in the flrst week of July. Instead of in October as usual. In England the whelk has long been used for the same purpose. The schooner Fannie Chase, owned by Lewis, Chase A Wnitten.of Portland, Me sailed into port tbe other day with something unusual In its cargo. Just outside the bftvurS the lookout saw a peculiar suhew acting in. the water, and hauled it on board u get- a better viewot it. Then It was seen that the prize was a lump of ambergris. It filled two thirds of a barrel, and is worth 325,000. The owners of the vessel will take half the prisa and the crew, numhenng 15, will divide the other half. Thibet is the only known country on earth not open to missions. It bas an area of 750,000 square miles. The greatest length from east to west is L500 miles, and the population isestimated aC8.000.00a It is tbe stronghold of Buddhism. Lhassa, the capital, is the "Rome" of the Buddhists, and tbo Dalai Lama is tbe BnddhistPopp. He is supreme in botb tem poral and spiritual things. One monastery has about6.000 Buddhist priests, and there are about 60,000 In tbe country. Thibet is virgin soli for missions. The country is tributary to China. K A. remarkable and very disastrous plague to siocs is now raging in .uaviess coun tyidiana. During the past few weeks a num ber 6' farmers m various parts of that county bave tost some of their finest horses-Aqin- vestigatlon as to the cause or the strange OG-J currences bcoucht to litrht wnat seems an Ina credulous state 6TaIIlir.trnt has proved an ab-' solute fact. It was found that ticks are actually killing horses, which- tbe pests attack in great swarms, and suck tbe blood from the animal , until it is- helpless and is relieved, of its suffer- ings by death. Examinations show that the I pest eat their way through the bide into the flesh. It is thought the ticks were brought by the Texas ponies, which have been sold here in large numbers in the past few months. The ticks attack cows, butdo not seem, to have the same effect as on horses. CLIPPED BITS OF WIT. Mrs. Shaw has struck the public in tbe same way as a bullet by whistling through the air. Baltimore American. She What's the matter? Ton look flushed. He-I'm hot. Jmt got my Ice bill 1H.fe. Ethel Oh, I saw such a sweet match safe this afternoon. George "What shape was It in? "U was In the shape of a marriage certificate." Jason The papers say that the leaders or the prohibition, party are undecided what course to take. Mr. Jason It will he a water course, most likely. rerre Haute Erpreis. A Mere Trifle. "That was a serious acci dent," remarked Mrs. Bawnso, looking up from the paper: "Policeman McNab attacked by a furious steer and thrown into the air." Not very serious," replied Bawnso, "It was. merely the toss of a copper.1 'Puck. TO A FLIHT. He loves yon, but his chance is slim, Poor fellow, howsoe'erhewoo. You don't expect to marry him. Though he expects to marry von. -Jot Tork hvtning Bun No Love Games. "Mr. Dash may be very fine player, but I do not Intend to askhim to my lawn tennis parties." 'Why, what Is there against hln?" "Oh! he pays too much attention to the guns and too little to the girls." Time. A Comprehensive Order. Mr. Hyde (of Hyda & Tallow, Chicago) Waiter, I want a din ner. Walter -n ill ze gentlemen baf table d'hote, or a la carter Mr. Hyde Bring me a little of both, and have 'em put lots of gravy on il.fuct. Summer Suits in Chicago. First Chicago woman Have you seen Mrs. Fowler's new sum mer suit? Second Chicago woman No; what Is It? First Chicago woman Principally allegations against her husband. She hopes to get tho divorce in ten days. Judge. At a College Examination. "And now, sir, let us see whether you know more about physical science than about the other susjeets you barestudled. What are the properties or heat!" "One of its properties Is to cause expansion." "Correct; give me an Illustration." "Ob, that's easy enough. In summer, the sun, being hotter, causes the da js to lengthen, sir." Judat. ACHBSTSTTX. "When you tell an old man a jokelet, And laugh yourself, "Hot hoi" , While, be merely snickers a little. It fills you soul with woe As the octogenarian mutters, "inat's very good, you know. jsm it isn't ire way I nearo: ll I ' VurtaRy yesrs ago," 1 ' S -w XrJ Se ! jars JSaC Ma t vA-cR :m.