TffTnrM -r Ttrjvnpcy ' 'ITTSBUKGr DISPATCH, -SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1889J ran the- p LIVEU CAMPAI6NING 'f The Costa Eicans Engaged ia an Amusing Political Contest. X J SOLDIERS SCATTER A PROCESSION, .'But Unarmed Paraders Laugh Heartllj at the Sight of Swords. ' THEPKESIDEKCX WORTH FIGHTING FOR 1 First Eate Salary, Kicelltnt LMiir, ana Plenty of Perquisites. - Politics in Costa Rica, according to latest ' advices, is at white heat. The followers of Bodriguczand Muere are making things quite lively. The issue of the campaign Is 'the school question, and some amusing j features have developed. iSriCIAL TELEGRAM TO THE DISPATCH. New Yobk, August 16. Information re ceived to-day irom San Jose. Costa Bica, dated August 4, is as follows: The Presi dental campaign goes on with many amus ing features. To-day, being the first Sun day of the month, was the day for the regu lar military roll call; that is, the roll call of the reserve force of young men from the country, all of which, in case of necessity, are subject to military duty. Early in the niornine, however, a large political pro cession came marching into the city to have a demonstration in favor ot Bodriguez, the Conservative candidate for the Presidency. Thisprocession of countrymen, all attired in their best dark Sunday clothing, and wearing alike the finest white Panama hats, presented a decorous and orderly appearance asrit passed in front of the cathedral and turned the corner of the square where the new Cuartel (or barracks) stands. Then, all of a sudden, those in the foremost ranks MADE A SUDDEN DASH to enter the Cuartel main door. They were instantly repulsed by the soldiers, and al most simultaneously with this act a platoon of police appeared through a side street and charged upon the crowd with drawn swords. It seerued as if trouble had been antici pated, and the police had been held in read iness. The .Rodriguez crowd, who were all unarmed, took to their heels and mr.de off like a lot of galloping colts. A curious phase was the humorous view with which they seemed to regard the police and their swords. If early eveiy one was laughing. Only one or two these obviously affected by liberal draughts of aguardiante imbibed before beginning the march were disposed to wrangle and cry, "Muere," the other can didate. One man had his hand badly cut, another . lot bis ear, eight were conveyed to the car eel (prison), including a gentleman related to someone high in authority. ALIi SORTS OF STORIES floated about. Some said that Rodriguez had been dealing out money in a princely way, and that his house was stacked with arms which he had bought and stored up for such an emergency. Others appre hended the crowd getting hold of blasting powder belonging to the railroad company. Others pooh-hoohed all this, and said it was only the Rodriguez men hurrahing for their candidate, as they had a perfect right to. Others still declared it high-handed work to cut off men's ears because they did not agree with you in politics. Acting President Esquind was off in Alajuela, attending a municipal junta, and calmly unconscious of it ail. Candidate Rodriguez was surrounded by a few of his staunchest friends, discussing the situation. The President of Costa Rica receives $18, 000 salary, f6,000 extra for state outlay, and the Government bears certain of his house hold expenses. It is A PEETTY GOOD OFFICE, without question. The real issue, it would seem, of the present contest is the question of the school system. Rodriguez, it is said, has pledged himself to place the Bishop of Costa Rica at the head of all the schools. This is a serious matter. It would be ut terly unjust to consider Bishop Thiel as the personification of bigotry. He is, on the contrary, a man of remarkable breadth and scholarly attainments. Costa Rica is in debted to him for literary work that could hardly have been done by any one else; as, for example, his encyclopedia of Indian languages, previous to the preparation of which he visited almost impenetrable settle ments in Talamanca and other almost wholly unexplored sections, and with great difficulty succeeded in training the confi dence ot the Indians and learning their lan guages. SHOULDN'T BE DISTURBED. Buton the other hand, the present school system of Costa Rica, which is a marvel of excellence in organization and a constant pride and honor to the countrv, should not be disturbed. Don Mauro Fernandez, to whom is due the credit of this perfect or ganization, is pre-eminently the man to con trol educational matters. Dispassionate and prejudiced minds regard the possibility of Don Mauro Fernandez ceasing to be at the head of educational matters as a veritable catastrophe. "The Bishop," they say, "has enough to do with ell tne churches and church matters." The Central American Union is again talked of as something more than probable. The tangle between Costa Rica and Nicara gua at the present moment, in the matter of canal, limits, territory, etc., would be effect ually and INSTANTANEOUSLY SETTLED. People who should know say that it was a mission closely connected with the possi ble immediate union that took Don Tobias Zaniza, Costa Rica's Minister of Public "Works, to Guatemala by the last, steamer. It the union be effected Guatemala will insist upon having the Capital, and Costa Rica, it it concedes that much, will not be satisfied unless permitted to supply the President General Don Bernardo Soto is talked of as the man. Don Mauro Fernan dez, wLo is decidedly one of the ablest men in Spanish America, would also have a large support. Don Ricardo Jimenez, who was President of the Central American Congress, held a few months ago, has a cer tain popularity among the Conservatives, no less than among the Liberals. He is the son oi Don Jesus Jimenez, who was Presi dent of Costa Rica in 1868-1872. BUT TWO HONEST ONES. Ex-President Jimenez is said to be one of the two only strictlv honest Presidents that is, the two who went out ol office as poor as they went into it. The other one is Dr. Jose Maria Castro, whose daughter is the wife of Mr. Keith, the great railroad man ot the country. As to the fixing of the capital, should the union be effected, it will be a thousand pities if it is not placed in Costa Rica in stead of Gautemala. Anyone who knows both these divisions and can compare them impartially, would say so. Gautemala, with double the territory and four times ths population, is out of the world in compari son. Opposed to foreigners and foreien enterprises, jealous of the slightest inter ference, backward in thought and march, it more closely resembles certain portions of Mexico. Its northern neighbor, Costa Rica, easy ot access Jby both the Atlantic and Pacific coasts, in close communication with the United State, Europe and South Amer ica, is constantly adv-inciuir. To remove the seat of Government several hundred miles to the northwest, to a section far less accessible, would be unwisdom for all con cerned. Reducing Lumber Freight.' Ottawa, Ont., August 16. The Cana dian Atlantic Railway Company has noti fied the Chaudiere mill owners that com mencing on Monday next the rate on lum ber Irom Ottawa to New York will be 2 CO per 1,000 feet instead of (2 75, as at present OPF THE TRACK. Continued from First Page. rived in the city there was a crowd of sev eral thousand people, who had friends on board, gathered to meet it The injured were in two cars, the interiors of which re minded one of The Cur Hospital! of Johnstown. Cushions were pulled up from the seats and beds made from them. The floors of the cars were strewn with bed clothing, linen bandages, etc. The occupants, most of whom had gonethrough greater scrim mages and had been cut up many times worse, looked as if they had.never been used to it General Rowley was lifted by tender hands and placed on a cot, and every movement gave him pain. His head was swathed in cloths, and the blood had made little rivulets down his white vest and shirt front In addition to those mentioned among the injured, one lady had her dress cut from wrist to shoul der, another lost a small piece of her cheek, a third had her chin cut, and many others exhibited wounds that caused tbem much pain. It- was reported that one of the injured women had died on board the train while coming to Allegheny, and the corpse was taken off at Tarentum. Superintendent Kirtland wonld not corroborate this rumor. SOAKED AGTOES. ' j The Chinese Trnaedlans In New York Afraid ofBelnstlntrhered Notorious Hlch binders on Their Tracks The Celestials Terri bly Excited. rSrECTAI. TELEGRAM TO THE DISPATCH. 1 New York, August 16. The Chinese colony was thrown into a great state of ex citement a littie while ago by the rumor that the bloody San Francisco hiehbinders had decreed that every member of the Swin Tien Sue Royal Chinese Theater Com pany should perish by the hatchet This is the Chinese company which re cently played a two weeks' engagement at the Windsor Theater under the skilled management of Tom Lee and "Wong Chin Foo. Tom Lee said that he would write to his friends in San Francisco and find out about the matter. He was somewhat anxious, for both himself and Wong Chin Foo would be out ot pocket if the members of the theater company were killed. The story was ridiculed a good deal but an article in the San Francisco Chronicle of a recent date seems to lend it some basis of truth. The Chronicle gave an account of the way brutal murders which have occurred in Chinatown, San Francisco, of late as the result of the bitter feuds between the rival societies of highbinders or blackmailers, and said that Kong Wong, of 618 Sacramento street, there, had just received' letter from his .cousin, Tom, Lee, of New York, in quiring about the highbinder story. Kong Wong, so the Clironicle declared, wrote back to Tom Lee that the story was true and that Ches Ah Lung, alias Adam Quinn, a notorious highbinder, left San Francisco three weeks ago with a gang oi six blood thirsty pals for the purpose of Killing the four leading actors of the Royal Chinese Company. Cbee Ah Lung is said to be the most desperate Chinaman in this country. He has an enormous frame, muscles of iron, hands bigger than those of Sullivan and a neck like a bull. He is said to have butch ered scores of people, and the mention of his name makes peaceable Chinamen shudder. THAT DRESSMAKING TROUBLE. Tbe American Ladles Surprised That no Action Has Been Taken. IFrECIAI. TZLEOBAK TO THE DISrATCH. J New York, August 16. Mrs. A. L. Dorr, Miss Fannie Van Nostrand and Miss Nannie Marvin, the American ladies who were arrested and imprisoned in Mentone in May last on complaint oi a dress maker, arrived on the Saale this after noon. They went to Miss Marvin's home at 441 Henry street Brooklyn. They have not yet heard from their affidavits filed with the State Department in-Washington and with Minister Reed in Paris. They do not understand the delay. The ladies were traveling in Europe early in May. They ordered some garments from Mme. Gour rien, a dressmaker at Nice, to be delivered at a certain time. The dressmaker failed to deliver them on time and the ladies went to Mentone without them, That night they were arrested, at their hotel, taken to the station honse, forced into a cell and confined there for several hours. The charge is made that the French police were brutal in making the arrests. Mrs. Dorr is the widow of Horatio Dorr, who was for 25 years Secretary of the Atlantic Fire Insurance Company, of New York, and afterward head of the insur ance firm of H. & J. V. N. Dorr & Co. Miss Van Nostrand, who is a niece of Mrs. Dorr, is a daughter of the late John James Van Nostrand, one of Brooklyn's wealthy citizens. Miss Marvin is a grand daughter of the late Dr. George Marvin. HOPE FOB MRS. MAIMICK. A Consultation of the Authorities Which Is Believed to Bnve Ended Favorably. London, August 16. Home Secretary Matthews, Mr. Justice Stephens, tbe Lord Chancellor and medical experts, to-day held a conference at the Home Office with a view to arriving at a. decision in the Maybrick case. The conference lasted four hours. Home Secretary Matthews and the experts assumed that- Mrs. Maybrick was not guilty, and acting upon this as sumption sifted every scrap of the testi mony given, especially that in. relation to the husband's craze for arsenic, which is of great weight and will, it is believed, turn the scale in the prisoner's favor. It is a noteworthy fact hat the Lord Chancellor is seldom consulted in such cases except when a reprieve is medi tated. The Press Association states that Home Secretary Matthews will recommend to the Queen the commutation of the death sen tence of Mrs. Maybrick to penal servitude for life, and that the commutation of sen tence will be announced afterthe Queen has given formal assent TERI PECULIAR ACCIDENT. A Revolver in a Trunk Explodes, Killing a Hotel Porter. Minneapolis, August 16. There was a fatal accident at the Hotel Lafayette, Lake Minnetonka, late this afternoon. William Kelly, the hotel porter, while handling a trunk belonging to Milton Tootle, oi St Joseph, Mo., let it drop rather heavily and a revolver in it was in some manner dis charged. The bullet passed through tbe trunk, entering Kelly's head. He died al most instantly. THE WORLD IN THE SODP. lea Pressmen Strike on Account of an Objec tlonnblo Foreman. tSriCIAI. TZLIO BA1C -TO THE DISrATCH. J New York, August 17. The pressmen on the World struck to-night, and the mat ter had not been settled when they should have gone to work. Business Manager Turner was absent, and Col. Cockerili could not satisfy the men. The trouble is with,the foreman, who is objectionable. Forest Fires in Oregon. Portland, Ore., August 16. Reports come from Washington county, Ore., of heavy forest fires. A great many people are engaged fighting the fire to save prop erty from destruction. Thus far no build ings are reported burned, though the fixes are reported to be spreading rapidly. HENRY NORMAN, kx?5 thetuddax and marvelcui growth Hong v'y NEW JERSEY JUSTICE. The Wife of a Preacher Living Near Camden is Arrested for CEDELLI BEATING A HOUHD GIRL The Woman is Rich and Influential, and Gets Off With a Fine of $10. HER NEIGHBORB SOT QUITE SATISFIED, is tbs Poor Child Is Left la tbe Custody of the Woman Who Beat Her. A singular case of New Jersey justice is reported from a suburb of Camden. A preacher's wife whips an adopted daughter until the blood runs down her leg, and is fined but $10 for cruelty. She is also al lowed to retain possession of the child. ISrECT.il. TILEGBJLX TO THS DISPATCH. 1 Philadelphia, August 16. Mrs. Thomas W. Wilkinson, of Westmont a suburb of Camden, bas been arrested and fined $10 fror cruelly beating 9-year-old Hattie Ottinger. an adopted child. The case has created considerable ex citement in the village, because of the prominence and wealth of the offender and the light punishment inflicted by Justice Cassidy, ot Camden. Every effort has been made to avoid publicity, and it is probable no action would have been taken had it not been for the intervention of 'Squire fowler, of Westmont In his office this afternoon Se told this tale: "The first I knew of the case was when the child, crying and weak from loss of blood, came to me. She said that the little son of Mrs. Wilkinson. had on Wednesday last promised to take her out riding, and, disappointing her, she went out for a short walk. scolded before -whipped. "While going along the pike a butcher named Street, who lived a few doors below her, came along in his wagon and driving in the direction of Haddonfield, but a couple of miles distant He asked herif she would like to ride that far with him. The child consented, and after transacting his business in Haddonfield he brought her home. She was met upon ber return by Mrs. Wilkin son, was scolded by her and then ordered upstairs. "When Mrs. Wilkinson got little Hattie in the room she locked the door and ordered her to strip. The child obeyed the com mand, and then for ten minutes Mrs. Wil kinson vigorously applied a carriage whip to her back. The child, writhing under the brutal blows of tbe whip, screamed for mercy, but the woman kept piling the blows on. The child screamed so loud that Mrs. Wilkinson's colored servant, Martha John son, who was at work in the cellar, heard her cries and thought SHE HAD BEEN BADLY HURT. "Alter the child finished her story I ex amined her and found she was in a fright ful condition, and the blood was still run ning down her leg and over her dress. I immediately sent word to her father in Ger mantown, but he not coming here, I in formed Secretary Abel Smith, of the Society to Protect Children from Cruelty, in Cam den. I didn't want to issue a warrant for Mrs. Wilkinson, because she was my neigh bor. "Mr. Smith investigated the case and -swore out a warrant for Mrs. Wilkinson's arrest before Justice Cassidy. She was taken to Justice Cassidy 's office, where she pleaded guilty to the charge. I was sub poenaed as a witness, but when I arrived at the Justice's office he told me that Mr. Smith and Mr. Charles Stevenson, counsel for the society, had agreed to fix up the case for $10, to which agreement the Justice consented. THE NEIGHBORS WILL TALK. "Mrs. Wilkinson paid tbe fine, but the laws of New Jersey make the fine in such a case $100 or an imprisonment of six months, or both. Ot course I hadn't any say in the matter, but thought it strange tliat Mr. Smith should allow Mrs. Wilkinson to still retain possession of the child, and to think that Justice Cassidy would impose such a small fine. Nothing since has been said of the case except the talk of the neighbors, who are vehement in their expressions against Mrs. Wilkinson. Her husband is a ood man and a sort of preacher, and I on't think he knew anything about the case, but she commands money, and the case is settled." The case has caused a bitter feeling against Mrs. Wilkinson, aud the fact that the child is still in her possession causes much talk. Mrs. Wilkinson lives in a very fine residence in Westmont SOAKED INTO MUKDERMG. Brownell Explains Why Be Killed Deputy United Stntes Collector Weller. Jacksonville, Fla., August 16. United States Marshal Mizell received a dispatch to-day from tbe Acting Attorney General at, Washington stating that the Department of Justice would use every effort to capture and punish Brownell, the murderer oi Deputy Collector Weller, and authorizing the offer of a reward for the ap prehension of the fugitive. This was un necessary, however, lor Brownell surren dered last night to Sheriff Brown, of Holmes county. Upon surrendering himself to the Sheriff last night, Brownell said that he did not know what he was doing when be fired the fatal shot He said he had been suddenly roused from his slumbers at nicht br a mob of men who did not explain their business with him. He thought thev intended to murder him and he ran to save bis life. Then he was shot and was so badly scared that he did not grasp the situation, so he fired in return. If he had known they were officers he would not have resisted. Officers McLeod and Turvin say they are confident that Brownell resisted under mis apprehension as to the real condition of afiairs. He was not told the nature of their mission to his house. Brownell is locked up. Publio sentiment is against the offi cers for bungling, which resulted in the death of one good man and probably the ruin of two happy families. ., The Treasury Department has ordered Special Agent Chipman from Atlanta to make a full investigation of the case. He left here for Westville to-night A FIKST-CLASS POINT. A Hotel Whose Only Recommendation Was be HIsli Prices Charstd. Detroit Free Press. I A Detroit drummer who lately made a trip into Indiana, put up in a hotel at a small town one night to find the fare the very poorest the beds tbe worst he ever saw, aim the bouse run in such a way as to amaze him. After a breakfast which he scaroely tasted, he entered the office and said to the landlord: "What kind oi a caravansary do you call this?" "A first-class hotel, sir." "You must be crazyl Show me one single first-class point about it" "The price, sir. Ton have had supper, lodging, and breakfast Three dollars, if you please, and if you want to ride down in the 'bus that will be a quarter more." An Explosion at u. Rehearsal. ISriCIAI. TXLXOBAH TO Tint DtsrA.TCH.1 Boston, August 16. During a rehearsal at the Grand Opera House at midnight a supe named James Deneby exploded a lot of gun cotton which he was holding. His arms were terribly bnrned, and one of the actors, named Henry L Myers, received frizbtful injuries about the head. Thelat- js' sftjarles are Terr serious. A CATHOLIC TRIBUNAL To be Established In "th United States to Decide Religions Qaestlons Car- s dlnnl Gibbous and Archbishops Bran and Con-lean Will Compose' It. Philadelphia, August 16. The ap pointment of a high ecclesiastical tribunal by the Pope for the Roman Catholio Church in the United States is beliered to have besn already consummated. The information obtained is to the effect that the tribunal or court shall have referred to it all cazes in which tbe church in the United States is concerned, adjudication and that the tribunal consists of Cardinal Gibbons, of Baltimore, Archbishop Byan, of Philadelphia, and Archbishop Corrigan, of New York. A prominent priest of the Archdiocese, who did not desire his name used, when questioned on tha matter, said: That such a court has been constituted by Rome and consists of His Eminence Cardinal Gibbons, Archbishop Ryan and Archbishop Corrigan 1 do not think theie is any doubt. Where any ot these three are interested in a case, then tbe senior Archbishop next takes his place that is, tbe next senior in point of appointment. The object of the tribunal is to relieve Rome of the burden of hearing appeals from this country. Rome wants to get rid of these on account of her inability really to bear the ronltl tnde of cases that press from all quar ters. Reasons for tbis are tbe great distance between us, tbe difficulty that is experienced in brintring witnesses and of secur ing proper evidence, and the delay cansed in adjusting cases. I am pretty sure of the in formation 1 received that the members of the court have been appointed -and are organizing. It must be nearly three months since the matter was absolutely decided upon. The court will not interfere with tbe present courts established in tbe country for the trial of cases, further than that, instead of an appeal Doing made directly from the Metropolitan to Rome, it will be from the Metropolitan to this new ecclesiastical tribu nal. "Will the decisions of the new court be final?" was asked. "I am inclined to believe that Some will never shut off an appeal to her. I do not see how she can. I think tbe hope is that decisions will be so conspicuously just that no one will be tempted to complain of it MISSING FOR 22 IEAKS. A Man Who Wandered Away In an Epileptic Fit Has Jast Returned. israelii, tklxobam to the dispatch. l Ltons, N. Y., August 16. The case of William Pelcher, who 22 years ago left his home mysteriously, and who was never beard of until bis sudden reap pearance a few days ago, is an absorbing topic of discussion in this locality. Pelcher lived in Palmyra with his wife and family, and in 1862 en listed as a private in a Wayne county regi ment Three years later he was honorably discharged. While in the service he contracted epilepsy, to which can be traced all his subsequent actions. In the summer of 1866 he disap peared as completely as though the earth had swallowed him. aud all efforts to obtain ttraces of his whereabouts proved futile. ms lamiiy mourned mm as dead and nis wife applied for a widow's pension, which was not granted, however. In the mean time Mrs. Pelcher and one son moved to Lyons, where they have since lived. A few days ago an aged man called to see the .family, and the surprise of Mrs. Pelcher can be imagined when she discovered that he was her long lost husband, whom she had mourned as dead. Pelcher, when questioned as to his whereabouts could give no satisfactory ex planation, but said that he had wandered away in one of his epileptic fits and had traveled from place to place, doing odd jobs for a living. He had ' made the circuit of the globe, be said, but his re membrance of the places he had visited was very defective. On Thursday Pelcher visited the Soldiers and Sailors' En campment at Soder's Point to renew his acanaintance with his old comrades in arms and while there was seized with a fit and almost exDired. He was taken to ths hnmn of his son in Palmyra aud lies there at pres ent in a critical condition. DESERTED BY HIS PEOPLE. From 40,000 to 60,000 Colored Folks Leaving North Cnrolina and Cheatham. ISPrCTAI. TZXXOBAMTO TUX DISPATCH.! New Yore, August'l6.H. P. Cheat ham, the colored' Congressman' from North Carolina, has returned here after a two weeks' visit to his home, where he went to make an effort to stop the emigration movement of his people in that State. He is feeling very much discouraged over his efforts, and says that from 40,000 to 60,000 col ored people will leave the State this fall. The majority of these will po from the eastern portion of the State, and many of them from his own district He says that when tbe movement shall have spent itself the Slate will be overwhelmingly Democratic, and even the Second district, the one he represents, will pass out of the hands ot tbe Bepublicans. Senator Quay, he says, tried hard to carry the State for Harrison, and the administration has been filling the offices there with picked men indorsed by the National Committee. This emigration movement was unex pected and unprovided for, and the Presi dent will attempt to devise some plan to check it Cheatham says that his people are not leaving the State for political reasons so much as for the purpose of-bettering their condition. The State is a poor one, the crops tbis year are a failure, and wages are low. BILL ENGLISH'S SURPRISE. Tllden's Exlrnrneonce Nearly Rendered the Hoosler Millionaire Speechless. En gene Field in Chicago Newi.l A current paragraph conveys the informa tion that "Samuel J. Tilden was something of a bookman and a good deal of a dandy." The latter part of the proposition may be debatable, but there can be no doubt that Mr. Tilden was somewhat of a bookman in fact, he was an industrious and intelli gent collector. He had many, many books, and separately and collectively they iudi cated that their owner was a man of exten sive information and nice taste. Tilden had no specialty as a book-lover; his mania took him in every direction and into every field. So his library at tbe time of his death was perhaps the most valuable private miscel laneous library in tbe countrv. Admiring handsome bindings and having abundant means to gratify that taste his books were beautifully clothed. When old Bill English first visited Grey stone, and was shown into the library, he was appalled by the elegance of that place. "I like books, ' said he, "and I've got a set ot cyclopedia's at home that I'm thinking of having bound up. Now, bow much does it cost to have a book fixed np in this style?" He had cast upon a Bedlord;it was a rich, full calf, with simple gilt tooling. "That is a book I have had many years," sain Mr. Tilden. "It is very plain but sub stantial. As I recollect, I paid aboutvJ25 for the binding." "Gosh!" cried Mr. English, and he dropped the volume as if it had been a hot potato. An Enormous Stralcer, Kennebec Journal. Not long ago a farmer was in Portland with a companion. Presently- they' saw a young man with a lawn tennis racquet, and as soon as he was out of.hearlng he said to his friend, "John, I drink no milk in tbis town. "Why?" asked the other. Don't you see that strainer? Gosb, it's big enough to let a cat-bird through!" HMIY HATMff 'fifira5& row's Dispatch aJluitcll Harrison's ascent of the Eiffel Tower at Paris,- HONORS TO CARLISLE. The Late Speaker of the House Ten dered an Ovation in Mexico. HE MAKES A TERI HAPPY SPEECH, Hoping That Mexico-Hay Continue to Pros per and Grow Greater. I THE T 170 REPUBLICS MUST BE FBIENDLI And a Continuance cf Present Commercial Relations is Desirable. Hon. John G. Carlisle, late Speaker of the House of Congress, is receiving high honors in Mexico. He assures Mexican officials of the high regard in which they and their country are held in the "United States, and is in turn complimented by the Mexicans, who bo nor him as a prominent citizen of ba Republic. ! SPECIAL TXIXORAX TO THS DISPATCH.1 City of Mexico, August 16. The recep tion given in honor of Hon. John G. Carlisle Jby the Joint Permanent Committee of Con gress at the Chamber of Deputies last night has again demonstrated the friendly feel ings of Mexico for the TJ nited States. At 8 o'clock Mr. Carlisle was met by the commit tee and was escorted through the brilliantly illuminated chamber to President Diaz. Mr. Carlisle spoke for bait an hour. Among other things he said: "As a citizen of the United States, speaKing what I be lieve to be the sentiment of my countrymen in all parts of the Union, I sincerely hope that Mexico may continue to prosper aud grow until the -highest aspirations of her most patriotic citizens are fully realized. Certainly we can bave no interest in ob structing your progress. On the contrary, our own prosperity mx.li BE GREATLY PROMOTED by the rapid and continuous growth and development of your country, and we will rejoice with you in the success of every en terprise that increases your wealth or power. "It there are any among you who think that the United States desires to deprive you of any part of your territory, by pur chase or otherwise, they are entirely mis taken. While there may be individuals here and there who forprivate reasons wish to see the jurisdiction of the United States ex tended over some parts of your territory, there is no publio sentiment to sustain them, and no disposition whatever on the part of the Government to encourage their projects. We do not want your territory, but we do want your trade and your friend ship. We want to see the CLOSEST COMMERCIAL RELATIONS established and maintained between these two great North American republics, so that by an easy interchange of products they may increase the comforts of their people and contribute to the prosperity of each other. It is commerce mainly that unites the republics of the different nations and keeps tne peace ot tbe world, and these two re publics, separated in part by a small stream and in part only by an invisible line, can not afford to maintain artificial barriers and prevent their citizens from enjoying that trade and intercourse with each other whicl are essential to the preservation of friendly relations. "If our neighbor sells us at a fair price what we want to purchase, and buys from us at a fair price what we want to sell, it is not probable that we will quarrel with him upon trivial grounds. But whatever our commercial relations may be in the future, it is to be earnestly hoped that the friendly feelings now happily existing between the people of the two countries may always con tinue." A COMPLIMENTARY REPLY. Mr. Seroyo Deana, President oi the joint permanent committee of Congress, replied in Spanish. He complimented the United States highly, and said to Mr. Carlisle: "Tbe permanent committee, in the recess of the legislative chamberpot this Bepublic, congratulates itself upon re ceiving vou, upon hearing from the lips of a statesman so prominent in the grand fatherland of Washington the favorable opinions that do justice to Mexico. May our relations of friendship and commerce continue to be close and cordial, and may your stay in this land be as pleasant to yourself, and leave lasting and satisfactory impressions in your mind." A BOH AN GIBL AND HEB BOLL. A Touching Scene Broocbt to Light ia the Ancient Italian City. Youths'' Companion. In May last the workmen who are digging the foundation for the new law courts in Borne, discovered a sarcophagus buried 30 feet below the surface. Immediately tbe telephone called to the spot the members of the Archaeological Commission, scientific and literary men, who watch with jealous care all the excavations made in the Eternal City. Under their direction it was care fully raised and opened. Within lay the skeleton of a young girl, with the remains of tbe linen in which she had beenWrapped, some brown leaves from tbe myrtle wreath with which, emblemtio of her youth, she had been crowned in death, a On her hands were four rings, of which one was the double betrothal ring of plain gold, and another with Filetns, the name of her betrothed, engraved upon it A large and most exquisite amethyst brooch, in Etruscan setting of the finest work, carved amber pins, and a gold necklet with white small pendants were lying about But what is most strange, as being almost unique, was a doll of oak wood, beautifully carved, the joints articulated so that legs and arms and hands move on sockets, the hands and teet daintily cut with small and delicate nails. The leatures and tbe hair were carved out in the most minute and careful way, the hair waving low on the forehead, and being bound with a,fillet On the outside of the sarcophagus was sculptured her name, Tryphacna Creperia, and a touching scene, doubtless faithfully representing her parting with her parents. She is lying on a low bed, and striving to raise herself on her left arm to speak to her heart-broken father, who stands leaning on her bedstead, his head bowed with grief, while her mother sits on the bed, her head covered, weeping. It seems but yesterday, so natural is the scene, and yet it was nearly 18 centuries ago that these stricken parents laid so tenderly away their dearly-loved daughter, with her ornaments and her doll. BUM'S WEATHER GOD. A Deity That Presided Over a Kingdom Now la a Private Museum. Washington Post.! Among the curiosities treasured by Dr. Francis O. St. Clair, Chief of the Consular division, is a Siamese idol. The figure is of brass, of fine workmanship and gilded. It stands about a foot high, is the attire of a priest with a triple crown on its head and a like ornament suspended over it in the air. This deity was tbe god of weather, pre siding over the fortunes of Slam until a few years ago, when a consular officer of a foreign Government stole into the temple that protected him at -Bangkok, took the idol that had from time immemorial re ceived the homage of the natives, and hastened from the town to his ship lying in the harbor, weighing anchor, and sailed way. GAS AND OfiOOKERY. The Two la Active motion Make at Terr Bad Combination One Person Killed aad 30 Injored by an Explo ' slon at tbe Metropolis. New York-, August 16. At 8 o'clock this eveningan explosion of gas in a crockery store at the corner of Grand and Clinton streets drove the contents of the store through the plate glass windows into the street, and shook the neighbor hood. One man was killed, another probably fatally injured, and about 30 per sons wounded. "'Immediately after the ex plosion a volume of flame poured out into the street, throngh.which men, women and children ran screamjng, with blood gushing from cuts and gasbSK. Morris Jacobs, aged 17, bled to death almost instantly. He was passing the place wHen huge pieces of plate glass, flying before tbe ter rible force behind them, tore his right side and back so that flesh and clothing hung from him in chunks. Two men dragged his body away from tbe flames, and ran for an ambulance. Jacobs' agony was short, for he died almost immediately" Jacob Seigel, covered with blood, rushed frantically about He had been made in sane, and fought a policeman desperately until he became exhausted. He was taken to Bellevue with a fractured skull. The neighborhood is densely populated, and many were upon the streets. The store was closed at 7 o'clock, one light being left burning. Just before tbe explosion a policeman, attracted by the smell of gas, stopped to locate the source. His actions caused the collection of a small crowd of curious people, and it was thus that the injured became so numerous. The officer reached up with his club, pushed open the light and steeped on. He had just got out of range when the gas ignited and the air. was filled with death dealing fragments of glass and crockery. People poured out ot the adjoining tene ments and added their wailing to the shrieks of the wounded and the roar of the flames. WOMEN A8 DETECTITES. Watchful Females Who Perform Police Datr In New fork. New Yorfc Star.I The female HawkshawS of the metropolis are distributed in a variety of fields. Some are in the Custom House, keeping their eyes open for fair smugglers who bring over jewels and finery without the formality of paying tribute to Uncle Sam; others are in the various private detective agencies, like Pinkerton's and Fuller's, and others,again, are in the great drygoods stores keeping the valuable stocks from the depredatory fin gers of clever shoplifters. A few are "semi detached" and do, occasional jobs for the police, working at other times at some regu lar occupation for a livelihood. One of the smartest women detectives in town is employed in an extensive drygoods establishment. She is a blonde of fine presence and with a pair of eyes as sharp as a flash of lightning. She walks about the store, mingling with tbe shoppers, and making purchases like the rest When she suspects anyone she moves up alongside. Then her knowledge ot human nature comes into service. Taking up a piece of dry goods she asks all about it of the clerk or saleswoman, and when she has the latter's attention diverted for the moment from the suspected shopper, she turns her own back to her and exclaims: "Ob, isn't it lovely!" meanwhile rustling the goods about all over the counter. This is the thief's opportunity. A mo ment's pause, and then the detective wheels around and clutching the suspected shopper by the arm, asks: "What do you think of it, madam?" If -the latter has indeed alien into the trap, she is discovered on the in stant and marched off to the office and thence to tbe Tenth precinct station house. II innocent, nobody is hurt, and the lady fancies she has simply encountered a rather eccentric shopper, who is asking foolish questions when she might decide for herself. THE BEST CANTASSEES. Way Eastern Men Succeed Better Than Westerners as Traveling Agents. An Employer In the Globe Democrat. I employ scores of men in my business, and they are constantly 'changing. I am obliged to select them from the applicants who come to me, the brightest and most alert of them, and I bave reduced my rules of selection to a system. "Where were vou in business last?" I" always ask, and then the answer prejudices me. If the man has been working in a small Western town, he's no good, and I don't want him. Ten to one he's got into lazy and reckless habits and doesn't care a "snap for small profits. I can't do anything with a man who doesn't know that a dollar is made of 100 cents. If the man tells me he has been work ing in a large Western city, I'm bet ter satisfied, but still this class doesn't suit me. Their ideas are too large, and they're too independent for their own good. Their address is not insinuating, they are likely to be above their work, and they are fonder of talking to the people they visit on busi ness than they are of canvassing. The clever young man who has been brought up in a small Eastern town makes a good canvasser, but the best of them all is the man who' has drifted about from busi ness to business in a large Eastern city like New York or Boston. They've got enough knowledge of the world to make every edge cut in canvassing, and they are plausible enough to sell a clock to a jeweler. Tbey can make $5 while the Western man is ringing the doorbell. A FB0F0SAL COOLLY KECEITED. Tbe Typewriter Girl Took Down the Words ns Her Lover Spoke Tbem. Washington Capital.! There is in Washington a young type writer whose good looks and charming man ners justify tbe sentiments which her em ployer feels toward her. He is in the habit oi dictating his correspondence, while her expert fingers transfix the words as he utters them. The other morning he concluded to end the uncertainty which had come into existence by asking ner to marry nlm. bne was engaged on some copying when he ap proached her .and poured out his sentiments, and notwithstanding the warmth of his pleadings kept richt ahead with the clickety, click click ot the instrument. In fact she paid so little attention to him that he be came discouraged and left the room, in tending to speak to her when her mind was iree irom uer uuues. xe went to msiuncu, and on his return sat down to sign a lot ot papers that lay on his desk. There was a large pile, and he went through it mechanic ally, until he struck a sheet near the bot tom. Jumping to his feet, he simply ex claimed: "Well, I'll be blowedl" The cold, glaring typewritten letter read: SUSS SUSIE Maybe you'll think I'm an old Jackass, but I ain't. I mean business. I know don't haupen td be very pretty, but I'd be good to' a lamiiy. I was thinking tbat maybe you'd learn to like me if you'd go to cburch with me and Eire the minister a few min utes' employment. And this ain't to save any salary "either. It's because I want you (or yonr . Bay. you ain't listening, are you? Well, I'll come In later, when you ain't so busy. CHAMPAGNE AND BEANS. ' A 15-Cent Dinner Wasbed Down With S3 73 Worth of Wine. St. Louis Republic. The Man About Townjbeard a rather re markable order given at a downtown restau rant not long since. "Waiter," said the' customer, "bring me a dish of pork and beans, and be sure they are hot, and a bottle of yellow label." The waiter's eyes bulged out, but he obeyed the mandate, and the man sat there contentedly eating his pork and beans and sipping bi's champagne. His check was fnrt3 DO, 15 cents for, the Boston luxnry and $3 75 for tbe champagne, and he paid it without a word to the cashier, and walked out picking his teeth in a seem ingly self-satisfied mood. T 11717 !1?fVBCll7 ft famout summer JjAsVli fjAUJsVtiCf retort tor wealth and fathton are detorieei in (o-morroio'sDsBPATCH byKamera, WHISKY SATED THEM. It Proves to be a Tory Beliable Anti dote for Snake Bites. QUITE A CHAPTER OP ACCIDENTS. One Farmer Killed by a Ball and Another Attacked bj Bees. THREE TALES OF TENOMOCS EEPTILE3V The Victims Will All Kecoier Beanie ef the EfteetiN Treitment. The vicinity or MIddletown, N. 7., hag been the scene of a number of peculiar ac cidents. A. man has been gored to death by a bull, a farmer and his team badly stung by bees, and three persons bitten by snakes. The latter were saved by prompt doses of whisky. rSFZCUX. TELIOrtAM TO Tint DISrATCH. 1 MiDDLETOVfir, N. Y., August 16. Near Black lake, Sullivan county, Smith Schoonmaker, an aged farmer and keeper of a large hotel for summer boarders on the shores of the lake, was killed by a vicious bull. The animal was known to be ugly and as a check on its ferocity its horns had been, tipped with brass buttons. It attacked Mr. Schoonmaker as he was crossing the field in which it was kept, add after knock ing him down banged and bruised him with its horns and hoofs so severely as to causa his death soon after he had been rescued. Honeybees have a singular and intense aversion to the odors exhaled by a sweating horse, as James Owens, farmer and apiarist of Cannonsville, Delaware county, has good reason to know. The other morning he started his mowing machine behind a $500 team in a meadow adjoining his apiary. The horses went around the field twice un molested by the bees. THE THIRD BOUND. But when the team had got well heated up and were passing the hives on the third round the bees attacked and stung the horses at first in small numbers and afterward in enormous and angry swarms. The horses became frantic with pain and terror. Mr. Owens set at work to detach them from the machine, when countless numbers 'of the an gry insects attacked him. By a supreme effort he escaped with his horses ont of the range of insect enemies. Mr. Owens came near dying of the bees' stings and lost one of the horses. Mr. George Hovey, of New York, rented the Schultz House, at Leurenkill, Ulster county, for the occupancy of his family during a few weeks of their summer vaca tion. The house had for some time been tenantless. One day Mrs. Hovey went into the cellar after some vegetables lor dinner.. As she stooped to pick up the vegetables a rattlesnake stuck its fangs into one of her fingers with such force that she had soma difficulty in shaking the reptile off. A. cool-headed .member of the honse imme diately applied a ligature to her wrist, bathed the wound with ammonia, adminis tered liberal doses of whisky, and sent for a doctor. Mrs. Hovey is recovering. Tbe snake seems to have crawled out of the cellar and escaped. ANOTHER SNAKE STOST. Lewis Thompson lives near Oae Bidgs station, on the New York and Susquehanna Bailroad. He was walking in his garden on Sunday afternoon, wearing slippers on his feet Suddenlvhe came upon a big cop per head snake. On the rash impulse of the moment he jumped upon the snake, in tending to crush and kill it He landed on the back of the snake, but his slippered feet failed to barm it. The reptile raised its head and twice sunk its fangs deep into his unprotected ankle. Heroic doses of whisky were given him at once, and as soon as pos sible a physician was summoned. His feet and legs swelled to nearly double the natural size and turned of a mottled black color. He will get well. His neighbors hunted up the snake and killed it. Not far from the scene of the last incident at Swartzwood lives Farmer Philip Black ford, who has a 10-year-old daughter named Norma. The little girl was playing in the barn tbe other day, when she stepped upon a bunch of hay, under cover of which lurked a good-sized rattlesnake. The first intima tion that the girl had of the snake's pres ence was when it struck its fangs into the calf of her leg. Here again the readiest and now almost universal antidote, whisky, was promptly resorted to until medical treat ment could be had. The girl's body and limbs swelled prodigiously, her eyes became bloodshot and her skin took on" the horrid spotted appearance which indicates poison ing by rattlesnake venom. She is conval escing. Lightning Killed Him In si Tree. Haoerstown, August 16. Frank Stevenson, colored, aged 17 years, a resi dent of Williamsport, was overtaken by a storm and took refuge yesterday evening in a hollow tree along the Conococheague. Lightning struck the tree, and young Stevenson was instantly killed. His life less body was found this morning standing upright in the tree. An inquest was held and a verdict returned in accordance with. ' the facts. THE WEATHER. For Weetern Penn- tyltania, light local thousers, followed by variable winds; slightly warmer, southwesterly winds. For West Vir ginia, fair, slightly warmer; variable winds, shifting to south erly. PrrrsBUBO, August 18, 18S9. The United States Signal Service officer la this city lumisnes tne iouowms: awro VSssyiffM' If Tune. Ttier. Inar. Siooa. ar Sl Mesntemp St H.-o x 72 Maximum temp.... 76 lKDr.x - Minimum temp..-.. Sl 1:00 r.M 71 Kanze. .......... .... W 3:00 r.M Precipitation. CO SKr. h 63 Hirer at tr. x.. 3.9 feet, a rise ot 0.3 feet In Zi boors. River Dispatches, israelii, tzxxorams to tiii DisrATcn.1 Wabsxit River 5-10 of one foot and falling. Weather clear and coot MoBOAirrowTf Blver S feet 8 inches and stationary. Weather fair. Thermometer 78 at 4 v. h. BRowirsviixr River 4 feet 11 inches and rising. Weatherclear. Thermometer 9 at 7 P.M. Tbe Amateurs Return. Lee Cavitt and William Snyder, two local amateur scullers, who took part in the recent Pullman regatta, returned home yesterday. Tbey are members of tbe Columbia Club, and expect that their club will have a four-oared crew next year. Lee states tbat the roneb water ruined bis chances in the final heat of tbe junior sculls. The Drya-oods Market. New Yobk, August 18. The drygoods mar ket was without change. There was some im provement in the demand for woolen under wear, and there was considerable activity in clothing woolens. FL01A, FAIIY OF FL0WEES, is a prttty little legend written for to-morrow Dmfatck by Ernest B. Ettortchs, s V'-ws, tLi ,4tii . ,