. THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH, SECOND PART. PITTSBTJRG-, SATURDAY, APRIL 5, 1890. : I Ir PAGES 9 TO 12. . 11 Excavation on Peters' Creek AIjoyc Pittsburg. MANY EVIDENCES OF FIBE. Paint, Beads, Copper and Traces of Human Beings. LITTLE KNOWN OP THE BUILDERS tTTKITTEjr TOB. THI DI6rATCH.l ESTERN Pennsyl vania is an attractive field for archeologists. The beautiful valleys of the Monongahela Allegheny and Ohio rivers were once in habited by a primitive race as numerous as the -whites who now possess the soil. On the Monongahela river the remains of 40 In- I dian villages may be traced between Pitts- m5?&'Yn: burgand Morgantown. wfZ. c Tie tills are dotted yr& here and there with graves and burial mounds. It is thought by some that there were two races of people the Indians and the Mound Builders, who had cad precedence of the whites in North America. Be that as it may. there are distinctive features observed in the remains discovered that warrant a belief, at least, of an earlier and a later period of prim itive occupation of certain sections of the country. The following account of the dis coveries of an exploring party may serve to throw additional light upon this interesting subject: The existence of a large prehistoric mound, located on Peters' creek, has been known for many years. Mr. Isaac Yohe, o w 0 i vorrtiW Appearance of the Mound. Jr., of Monongahela City, Pa., who takes a great interest in matters of this kind, ob tained permission from the owner of the property to open the mound, and on Tuesday, February 25. 1890, visited the spot for that purpose with a party made up, besides him self, of four stalwart workmen, accustomed to digging and shoveling, and the writer, who assisted in keeping an account of the progress and result of the work. THE OUTFIT KECESSARY. The exploring party provided themselves with picks, spades and shovels, a surveyor's compass, a 60-foot tape line, a chalk line and numerous wooden pins, a hatchet, shel lac varnish, paper, twine, an amateur photographing outfit, sketch paper -and note book. Peters creek enters the Monongahela river on the southern bank 20 miles above Pittsburg. It is an erratic stream about 20 feet wide at its normal stage, except where it passes over low ground, when it covers many acres of swampy land. On each side of the creek is level ground extending sev eral miles and reaching back to the hills by a gentle slope. On the up-river side of the small stream there are abundant traces of a large Indian village. Acres upon acres are thickly strewn with the shells of mussels, broken nottery, flint, and fragments of arrow beads, celts and stone axes. Many perfect imple ments have been gathered on this spot, and now occupy a place in the cabinets of col lectors. This was a favorite spot tor fishing and hunting. Portion of the flats were perhaps cultivated after the Indian manner, and Diagram Showing the Order in Which the Trenches Were Dug. corn and tobacco raised from the rich allu vial soil. The ravine and hills back from the river afforded natural retreats and shel ter from enemies. On the top of the first hills that rise above the bottom lands is a level tract, known all along the river as the Bench, but at this point it is much wider than elsewhere, em bracing a hundred acres or more. Through it runs a depression. SOME PECtTLIAB TACTS. It is an odd circumstance that the first field is covered with an unlimited quantity of small pieces of slaty stone, while the sec ond field is entirely free from stone of anv kind. The first field is also very thickly strewn with flint chips. A most beautiful flint drill was picked up and many perfect arrow heads. Near the center are the ruins 'of two boulder mounds. one of which was investigated by digging a trench thrugh it, but nothing was found save a few pieces of bone. On the other field no flint chips or arrow heads conld be discovered, but in the center was the large clay mound which had attracted the visiting party. No umonnt of specula tion brought any satisfactory explanation as to why this particular spot should have been selected for the site of a mound. The prop erty is owned by Messrs. L X. and S. P. Large, who at present live in California, but The Two Copper Plates. Scale About One to Turelve. i have left the farm in charge of Captain B. M. Blackburn, an elderly and intelligent gentleman, who took great interest in the enterprise in hand. He has lived in that neighborhood for 0 years, and stated that OPENING H mm CS&fcfcSC jjmm X w U I J the mound had never been disturbed, except as it had been plowed over season after season in an attempt to level it. Originally it was four feet higher than at present, but did not cover so much surlace. There arc no trees or stumps nearer than 300 or 400 yards. It is more than probable that the entire field has been free from tim ber growth for a long period, which may in part account for its selection as a location lor the mound. The party found the mound higher than a man's head, with a diameter of 80 feet. As intimated before, its dimen sions were originally quite different, litely about 8 or 10 feet in height and 40 feet or less in width. If there had ever been any so-called intrusive burials they were proba bly leveled away with the plow long ago, as no indications were to be discovered. EXACT 2IEASUKMEXTS MADE. Beginning the work of excavation, the north and south points were located by means of the compass. Pins were set at the four points and a line ran around, form ing an 80-foot square. The object of this was to faciliUte the exact location of possi ble finds in the mound by cross measure ments. A trench was marked off, east and I 1 Bear's TusK t Copper Sheath. S Folded Copper. west, four feet wide and three Icet from the center. The diagram, Fig , shows the plan of the various trenches. It was imme diately discovered that the clay was very loose and soft The workmen soon expressed the opinion that it was made ground, and in answer to a suggestion that its loose na ture indicated a recent date, they stated that made ground, no matter how long it continued at rest, never became as firm and solid as undisturbed ground. The ground thro wn out of the trench was principally clay, mixed with top or surface soil. This was the case all through the mound, especially in the deeper part of it. The first trench was dug down to the bot tom or original surface ot the ground which was hard and served as floor to work upon. The digging extended to the margin and demonstrated that little was to be expected from the outer jimits of the mound. The first 12 to 15 inches taken from the surface showed plainly traces ol fire. Some of the clay was reddened as if by heat, and mixed with ashes and charcoal, but not in any large quantities. A few old bits of stone were found also reddened. With this ex ception no stone of any kind was found. Going a little deeper almost every shovel ful of dirt thrown up contained small lumps of charcoal. It appeared as if mixed in the clay, and not the remains of fire in the mound itself. Every shovelful of dirt was carefully examined. Three feet 'from the surface a small irregular flake of worked flint was found. It was the only bit of flint of any description lound in the mound. A COVERING OP ASHES. The first discovery of special interest was a thin layer of white ashes. It was five feet from the surface, extended the whole length of the trench, and when the sides of the ex cavation were smoothed down with a shovel it appeared as a white line or stratum in the clay. Very probably the ashes had been 1Thc Small Meads. SOne of the Large Beads. SCap of the Ball of Paint. placed as a covering over the contents of the mound. As the excavating proceeded the dirt removed from the trench west of the centerbecame dark and rich looking. Ex pectations of a find were excited and ex treme care was exercised by taking the dirt away with the hands. A hard substance was come upon which proved to be a stone ar, followed bv two large stone celts or skinning knives. These implements were laying side by side as indicated in the figure. A couple of pieces of decayed bone were also found. At a point opposite the center a hand full oflarge shell beads, about'tbe size of turtle eggs, rolled out from the side, quite close to the bottom. This first trench re vealed nothing furthur, but there was abundant evidence of the main contents of the mound being near the center. The next trench would pass directly through the center, and work was at once begun on it, starting from the top and going down. It was of similar width as the first trench, but not so long. The same peculiar reddened clay, bits of charcoal and mixture of clay and top soil were met with as in the first cut. When the ash layer was reached, more beads were rolled out." Then a thin flat shell with bright spots of green and red upon it, was picked out. At the exact center of the mound the dirt was soft and oozy, and there rolled into the hands of one of the worfcmen a big roll of something about the size and shape of a roll of butter. It was red clay, or Indian paint, and qnite neavy ana uamp, out nrtn auu sona. TIEST FIND 0 COrPEE. The removal or the paint exposed to view a sharp edge of green material. Alongside of it was found" another roll of paint, in the top of which was a small, cone shaped stone partly embedded. Upon re moving the paint more large beads were fonnd, arranged in a row as it upon astring. The string was missing, however. Before removing the green looking plate its posi tion was carefully noted. It was copper. Strange to say there was nothing under it except the black looking -dirt already men tioned, containing a few fragments of bone. Bight close to it was one half of a lower hu man jaw, with teeth intact, the only solid portion of bone found. It was clearly evi dent that a skeleton or body had once lain there, but scarcely more was left of it than the dark line of black soil which marks the spot in a forest where a tree fell, decayed and moldered away, leaving only a hard, scrubby knot as the last of its substance to disappear. , The excavating was continued, and three small pieces of folded copperfound, followed by a handful of small disk-shaped beads of bone, curiously arranged about two large bear tusks, still attached to a fragment of the jaw bone, which held a couple of small teeth. A little further work disclosed another copper plate similar to the first, but smaller in size. Care was also exercised in its removal. It was Iving in a direction op posite to the first plate. Under it was found evidence of human remains, and close to it two more tusks, one of them sheathed in copper. A second copper shield was lound detached. A little distance from these things another stone celt was found. Additional trenches were dug on both sides of the center line, but no further finds made. The excavation or opening of the mound was considered thorough and com plete. It occupied a whole day's time. DESCRIPTION OF THE KELICS. The large copper plate was lying almost uvitu nuu wuiu, luuuuing wwaras me west, and the small plate almost cast and west, in clining towards the north. Ike skeletons or : bodies of such there were must have lain in the same direction, but crossing each other. The large plate is 16 inches long by 8 inches wide, and the small plate 14 inches longby 6 inches wide. They are both about an eighth of an inch thick, except at the ends where they are much thinner. The plates were doubtless hammered into shape as the surface is uneven and rough and pre sents many thin lamina. They contain neither holes or marks of any description. The stone ax is rnde in shape, grooved, has a sharp, cutting edge, and is considerably worn. It is not equal in size or finish to the thousands that are in the cabinets of collectors. Two of the celts are the regula tion size and shape, made of hard, green stone. One of them is slightly grooved and bears evidence of use. They are excellent specimens. The other celt is of brown slate, well developed, squared along the edges and back end. It is i4 inches long, 2 inches wide and less than $ an inch thick. It is certainly an unusually fine specimen. The large beads are 28 in number, worked out or the thick part of some very heavy shells. Holes are neatly drilled through each one, but show indifferent workmanship, as the drill did not always meet in the center, the hole being worked from both ends. Most of them are in good condition, but a few are very much decayed. BEADS AND BEAK TUSKS. There are 60 of the smaller beads, disk shaped and neatly made. Three sets of beads were found, one with each copper plate. The bear tusks were, of course, worn as ornaments along with the beads, as the fragments of jaw bone attached have holes drilled through them. The curious copper shields found with the tusks have minute holes in two of the corners. Shaping them as they are was a marvelons piece of work in the hands of a man without modern tools. The three pieces of folded copper have their ends turned in as if fastened in that manner to some sort of fabric. The two lumps of red clay or paint jyeigh each about seven pounds. They have a slightly un even surface all around as if once enclosed in something that left its impression. The small cone-shaped stone iound imbedded in The Stone Axes and Celts. one of the lumps is of some very hard ma terial. Its surface is blistered as if having sustained a high degree of heat. It is to be remarked that in the mound no flint or pottery of any description was found, while on the adjoining field, and on the bottoms below these two things, so characteristic of Indian industry, may be found in quantities. Did Indians build the mound? M. P. Sciiooley. PROTECTING BEER KEGS. The Brewer' Association IDctcrmlned to Enforce the Lnvr-A Detective Employed to Prosecute Offenders Property Will Not be Destroyed Wltu Impnnily. The Property Committee of the Allegheny County Brewers' Association met yesterday in the Westinghouse building. Mr. Her man Straub acted as Chairman. Mr. Straub explained that the committee was appoint ed for the purpose of protecting the proper ty of brewers. Eecently a law was passed making it penal and entailing a fine of 550 for breaking beer kegs, and anyone caught at this work will be prosecuted. The Allegheny County Association has appointed a detective or agent with full power to act to see that this law is properly and rigidly enforced. The work of the committee yesterday was to give the agent fuller instructions. Mr. Straub said it was becoming quite common for people to re gard beer kegs as of no value, and frequently they are carelessly broken and diverted from their use. The business will have to stop. The committee has also reiterated their objections to the increase in duties on hops. They felt that the hop growers were manipu lating things to suit themselves. As for, the Stewart bill against beer adulterations, they want to see ale and porter added to the list. Mr. Straub stated that these two drinks were adulterated as much as beer. He declares that since the Allegheny brewers had increased the capacity of their plants, tbey were more determined than ever to give the people a pure article, and that the local beer is made out of hops, malt and water, these three ingredients and nothing more. Mr. Straub insists that much of the imported beer is highly seasoned and adulterated. Their trade has been injured slightly by the dishonest practices of others. " The committee was Very anxious to learn the outcome of the license question, and they expressed the hope that more privi- leges to sell would be sranted. As for the letter alleged to have been written by Secre tary Crowell, in which he admits money and influence was used to defeat the amend ment, Mr. Straub said he didn't believe there was a word of truth in the charges. He was interested in the campaign, and knew every transaction that was performed. He says that no money was expended except for legitimate purposes, and that no Senator or any other man was offered a bribe or ac cepted one. AN LNTALID BURNED TO DEATH Wiillo Attempting to Walk With a Lamp in Her Ilnnd. Patekson, If. J., April 4. Mrs. Carrie Young, aged 40 years, was found dead in her rooms on Northwest street, this city, this morning by a lad who called with a message. The woman had been ill for sev eral days, and was visited and cared for until a late hour last night by friends. When discovered her body was lying in the center of her room burned almost to a crisp. Beside it was a broken lamp. She had left her bed and attempted to walk with the lamp in her hand when, be ing overcome by weakness she fell and her clothing caught fire, and she fas slowly roasted to death. The floor was very little burned. Nobody discovered the blaze or even smelled the smoke. The woman's husband had deserted her and the charred remains were taken to the morgue. THE LAW WAS TOO LATE. Rhode Island's Supplementary Election to bo Under tho Old System. NEWPORT, B. L, April 4. The supple mentary election here to-morrow will be un der the old voting system, not under the new ballot law. Only last week the Legislature passed a law making the new ballot law ap ply to supplementary elections, and requir ing the city and town clerks to have ballots printed bearing a fac simile of their signa tures, A copy of the law was not received from the Secretary of State by the City Clerk un til this noon too late to have the ballots prepared. The parties, are therefore, print ing their own ballots as in former elections. Two representatives are to be voted for. Some Coal doing. The river was rising slightly yesterday. The John Moran and Percy Kelsy started down the river with 11 barges apiece. The W. W. O'Neil and Dick Fulton left Louis ville with 1,050.000 bushels. Handsome beaded capes, 1 50, 3 and up, at Es-aenbaum & Co.'s. L 5. THE ARABS' GAEDEN. A Spot Singularly Favored by Nature, Which Should Bank as the FLORIDA OP THE GREAT ORIENT. Parting Peeps at the Old City of Algiers, With a Description of ITS SEMI-BARBARI0 STREET SCENES CCOBRESPONDEXCB OP TBI! DISPATCH. Catania, Sicily, March 20. One does not require a week's time in Algeria, or to go, with his eyes open, more than 200 miles from the city of Algiers in any direction in the interior, to discover, aside from the human interest which is absorbing on every hand, and the scenic beauties and splendors which are unexpected and surprising, that here the French have found a new empire whose possibilities as a garden spot for en joyment and material development surpass all ordinary calculation. The native interior population and their strange manners and customs have been well and fully described. But I have seen presented no references to those things on which the future of any conn try( must depend. In what respect mav France be vastly benefited by its Algerian possession at such stupendous original cost of life and treasure? is the constant query of the earnest reader and earnest observer. The answer is everywhere given in such stu pendous proofs of rich rewards, that the vis itor is constantly forced away from the con templation of the native people, customs and archaeology, to the liveliest, most exciting speculations upon commercial and agricul tural possibilities under the new and en lightened regime. As to climate, one is reminded constantly of the vast variety accessible in Mexico. Every possible degree of heat or cold can be definitely secured during nine months of the year. It is only a question of one's location within tropical valley, far-reaching table land, mountain side plateau, or crisp and ireezing neignt. so, too, every form of veg etation known to torrid, temperate or frigid zone is here discoverable by the botanist. Within an area of ten square miles one may see, in midwinter months, prodigious Jac queminots, jonquils, Marchael Neil roses and mignonette shrubs as large as the most luxuriant American locust; eucalyptus trees, cacti, hedges of pomegranate, orange and lemon, interspersed with lordly roses; pear, apple and other northern fruit trees; wild olive and oarob trees; evergreens, oaks and cedars as astonishing in girth and height as the tremendous redwoods of Cali fornia and Washington; and, at last, set like beds of emerald against the white cameos of mouQtain snows, vast and untrod den forests of noble pine. A FKUITrUL REGION. Trafficable and always profitable products of the soil, but 25 hours distance by steamer from European entrepots, are cultivable in Algeria in an equal proportion and variety. As Cuba and Florida are now in a degree, and in time will become comprehensively, the "truck" gardens ot American cities, so Algeria is already largely, and will eventu- nil. . nannma 1,1 a 4I.A li.,l Cmlln T.I.kJ. ofT Cornwall to London, the supply garden of Europe. Algiers is but 25 hours distance from Cadiz, Barcelona, Marseilles, Borne and Venice, 48 hours from Madrid and Paris, and but 80 hours the same time as Jack sonville, Fin., is from New York and Chi cago from Vienna, Berlin and London. Any morning you may enter the market in the Place de la Lyre or in Place de Chartres, in Algiers, and the exhibition of eggs, pota toes, peas, beans, asparagus, mushrooms, ar tichokes, cauliflower, lettnee, and all known northern and tropical vegetables; roses and branches of buds, blooms and blossoms, such as all Cuba cannot surpass; and apples, plums, pears, cherries, dates, figs, bananas, tamarinds, pomegranates, melons and every Known ueucions iruu oi every lana ana clime; is something your eyes can never elsewhere behold. And yet all this is but a hint of what another quarter century of French husbandry in Algiers will be able to disclose. In general, fruits, cereals and other agri cultural products for necessary consumption and profitable export are vastly more varied in number, and average a higher grade of excellence and perfection, than in any other known land. In ancient times the Barbary States were an overflowing granary for old Borne. For more than a thousand year: Al gerian soil has rested fallow, only scratched and prodded here and there by the primitive plow of the crooked olive-tree root. To-day, every acre of Algeria's 150,000 square miles is stored with the riches of these thousand years of recuperation and strength. France, then, has found what is practically a new America 25 hours from home, wherein she may remove the overplus power of her splendid' industrial activities; with the added advantage of a soil and clime canable of incalculably diversified employment. ITS CHOICE PRODUCTS. Even the date, that precious almost manna of the Arab, the feet of whose tree are in "the water aqd its branches in the flames of heaven," is transforming the northern edge of Sahara into a garden, through French irrigation. Two crops of potatoes are an nually yielded. Beetroot for sugar manu facture is already successfully cultivated. The fig is everywhere, forms an immense food supply when fresh, is exported for spirits distillation, and no American need be told of its universal foreign consumption when cured. Nearly all the guava jellies, which come by way of France, are made from the Algerian fruit. Algerian bananas and oranges of" the most delicious flavor, are now rivaling in the European markets the same truit from the Azores, Canaries and the West Indies. Wheat, barley, rye and corn as fine as produced anywhere in America, and already to a yield of nearly 400,000,000 bushels, are grown. Cotton is still in an experiments! status; but speci mens of extraordinary yield and texture are secured. The vast tobaeco plantations of Mascara and elsewhere are now producing a leaf the equal if not the superior of the most prized product of the sunny valleys behind Havana. But more than all this, if you have loitered in the noblest vinevards of France, Spain and Italy, you will And that those of Algeria now surpass the most splendid plantations either of those countries ever knew. Years ago the French savant, M. Dejernon, commissioned by his Government to study and report the subject, said: "The vine will become the fortune of the country. It can produce an infinite variety of vines, suited to every constitution and to every caprice of taste." The promise is already fulfilled, though grape-growing and wine making are yet in their infancy. What all the travelers and poets have written upon the vineyards of Southern Europe within the past two centuries, will be true before the close of the present century in this wondrous land where the swallows home Deneath a genial winter sun. A parting peep at Algiers was taken in the old Arab quarter of the city. One ceases to wonder over the rhapsodies of artists'upon this bit of Moresaue holding itself sturdily ngainBt all inroads of modern progress. Its outlines still very clearly de fine those of the ancient city. Sown here harborward are the grand boulevards, plazas, palaces and shops of the new Paris the French have made. The two great gen eral markets, the fish market of the port, and two stately mosques occupy a line of common ground upon which all nationali ties seem to meet. A BEM ARK ABLE LABYRINTH. From this line, as a broad base of nearly a mile in length, converging gradually as you ascend to the Kasbah, or ancient citadel, rises and narrows the old Arab quarters, a dense mass of Moorish structures from 100 to 1,000 years old. No one ever gave, no one can ever give, an adequate de scription of this almost trackless labyrinth. Nothing exists in Europe or America to which it can be likened. I have attempted its exploration on 18 different occasions. On each but one I was rescued and conveyed back to recognizable precincts and location only after an excellent exhibition of panto mime and coin. There is but one street, or way, which starts at somewhere and finally reaches anywhere. This is the Bue de la Kasbah. This at one time led from the quays to the pirates' stronghold on the heights. What is left of it rises a step in every two yards, and 500 crumbling stone steps still remain. To the right and left of this there are, I am told, upward of 400 dis tinct streets, thoroughfares, courts, alleys and lanes. No two are at right angles. Every curve or sinuosity imaginable is de scribed. Is is a maze of shadowy burrows where flit and'loiter swarthy beings sheeted in ghostly white. In not a half dozen of these old AraD streets can one catch a glimpse of more than a tiny blue thread of sky above. The widest streets are not up ward of 12 leet in width; the average one does not exceed eight; and in very many one can touch the opposite walls with out- stretcned hands. The habitations of rich and poor are joined. None are detached. In nearly every street and passage the sec ond, third and sometimes a fourth story of the structures each extend beyond the lower one, giving effects like those in the Dutch city lanes in Amsterdam. The street side of each succeeding story is propped from the lower one bv huge timbers at acute an gles; and in these dove and swallow cotes are hung. The streets are stone, the walls are stone; the props and all exposed timbers are whitewashed to resemble stone, and the effect is something like wandering in a tun nel of dazzling white, whose vaulted sides are ornamented by strange and uncouth architectural flonture, and through the truncated pointed arch of which twilight way there is seen but the slenderest line of sky. STBANO STREET SCENES. One will see stranger things within thesj streets than their quaint architecture. Tn ' shops are all nearly tiny niches in the walls. The Moorish merchant enters his black lit tle den through a trap-door; lowers the shut ter which falls, often in steps, to the street; ana sits in the center ot his possessions, which are all within reach, voiceless and grave the day long, like a forsaken Punch in a pantomime. Every manner of shop is just like his. In some, workmen are em broidering the white burnous, utilizing their great toes for holding tight the disengaged thread. In others greasy fritters are fried in a solemn and stately manner while one waits. Some display ostrich eggs and native ornaments. Here and there is a seller of herbs and vegetables. Again white-robed and bearded men are surround ed by crates of charcoal and tiny bundles of fagots. In others almost priceless oriental draper ies arc packed and bunched around a mer chant who smokes and dreams as if no thoughtof traffic ever entered his head. The ancient and venerable letter and scroll writer has his niche, or chair at archway side, and waits with that stoic patience only an Indian or a Moslem can command, to in dite epistle or trace sacred passage from the Koran upon egg shell, or on ribbon forsome devoutone's amulet. Shoemakerssquatcross legged, sewing and hammering upon sandals and slippers only. Bread sellers crouch against walls and doorways. Groups of swarthy Kabyles with their copper ewers are ever before the gurgling ionntains. Veiled women wriggle and mince to and from market or khonba. Stately Arabs ap pear and disappear, their flowinc robes shut ting out the vistas of the narrow streets. SEMI-BABBAKIC LIFE. Cloth venders higgle-haggle at the cracks of massive doors barely ajar. Funeral cor teges pass on the run for the dead Moslem arrives in paradise that much more speedily. Girls with dough-covered boards ready for the bakeries are as fleet as the funerals. Tiny donkeys loaded with street garbage force you against the walls. Other donkeys with panniers packed with truits, orange blossoms and roses, fill the shadowy ways with the attars of sunny Algerian valleys. The same weird, wild scenes ot semi-barbaric life that were here 1,000 years ago are here to-day, every day, all day, and will remain. And if you wander these ghostly ways at night, all is still, shadowful, silent. You see the white, silent walls about you. You know that white, silent forms whisk past you. And away up there through in finite space you see the white, silent stars looking down. It holds, fascinates, enthralls. One is bound with almost inseparable fetters of in terest to it; but when you have put the "white dove upon the hillside" behind you, something like a breath of relief comes, as it did to me yesterday, when I stepped foot on Sicilian shores,even it above the white walls and domes of thrise razed Catania loom the dark and forbidding outlines of hideous, fearful and ever-destroying JEtna. Edgar L. Wakeman. HAS ITS HANDS FULL. Tho Councils Auditing Committee's Great Tnsk First Formal Work of tho Kind The Hew Council Meeting Next Mon dayThe Treasurer and His Bond. The Auditing Committee of Conncils con tinued its work, yesterday, of examining the City Controller's sinking fund invest ments. The whole committee consists of both Conncil Presidents and the Chairman of the Finance Committee, but as W. A. Magee is out of the city, Messrs. H. P. Ford and George Holliday conducted the examination, which will not' be concluded before this afternoon. The work is very laborious, and necessitates a rigid inspection of over 51,871,000 worth of investments to the credit of the sinking fund. This is the first time the accounts of the City Control ler have been formally audited. Councils will meet at 10 o'clock Monday morning, to swear in tho newly elected Counciimen, and again at 12 o'clock, to swear in the Mayor, Treasurer and Control ler, and to nrirniur.t Councils bv electing ofcssrs. President Ford, in Select Council, and Holliday in the Common branch have no opposition to re-election. The Controller's bond, $10,000, was ap proved by the Auditing Committee and several other members of the Finance Com mittee yesterday. The new Mayor's bond in the same amount has not yet been filed. An act of Legislature gives the City Treasurer until the first Monday in June to file his bond, $100,000. The business of the Treasurer's office, being heaviest at this time than any other in the year it would be almost an impossibility for a Treasurer to turn over the office to a successor, and for this reason the expiration ot the Treasurer's term was fixed in June, when the business of the office is very light and the transfer could easily be made. Major Denniston will not hie his bonds until the time re quired by this act. PATHER STKADB'S SUCCESSOR Selected, nnd Expected to Arrive Here In Few Days. The American province of the Order of the Holy Gnost has appointed a Superior, a successor to the late Father Straub, who was the founder of the order in this country. The new Superior is the Very Bey. John OsUr, who is at present Superior of the college and monastery of the Order of the . Holy Ghost on the Island of St. Pierre, near Newfoundland. Father Oster was born near Strasburg, Germany, in 1846. He has already left Newfoundland for his new field, and is ex pected to arrive in Pittsburg next week. It has not yet been decided whether the new provincial will take up his seat at the Pittsburg Catholic College or at the St. Joseph's Monastery, near Conway, Ark., which place he will visit shortly after his arrival here, but it is supposed that he will remain here permanently. SHE HAD HER WAT. A Woman Who Wouldn't be Shipped Out of Pittsburg by the City, UNLESS SHE WANTED TO GO. Very Discouraging- Experience of City Officials Yesterday. CHIEF JuLLIOT BECOMES DISGUSTED The woman whom M. J. Dean, the Super intendent of the Anti-Cruelty Society, re moved with her four children to the Central station Thursday afternoon distinguished her self again yesterday afternoon. She refused point blank to be sent to her home at Spring Hill, Lawrence county. Jler husband, as stated in yesterday's Dispatcii, is at pres ent under" hospital treatment for a severe at tack of pneumonia. The family has only been in the city for six months, and during that time has been leading avery precarious existence. The police Officials listened with a sympathetic ear tq her tale of priva tion and sickness and promised to aid her in returning to her home in Law rence county. To that end they solic ited the attention of Chief Elliot, of the Department of Charities, and Examiner George Hoffman called at the station house and heard Mrs. Sullivan's story. She told him that she had no further object in staying in Pittsbnrg, her husband being well cared for, and would be glad to get back to her old home. Mr. Hoffman at once procured tickets for herself and children over the Pittsburg and Lake Erie Bailroad. They were to leave at 2 o'clock yesterday afternoon, and the patrol wagon was called to transport the party to the depot. WOULD DO AS SHE PLEASED. Everything was quiet until the depot was reached. Messenger Pearson, of the Depart ment of Charities, who accompanied the family, stated on his return that as soon as Mrs. Sullivan stepped out of the patrol wagon she defiantly declared that now no one had any further authority over her, and that she would do as she pleased. One of her acts was to refuse to board the train for Spring Hill. Messenger Pearson and the wagon men endeavored to persuade her to get on the tram and suc ceeded in getting her as far as the ladies' waiting room, but there she made another determined stand, and said that she would go no further. Mrs. Sullivan raised the pitch of her voice to a very shrill tone. Abont the same time she was approached by a couple of ladies, who asked her what was the trouble. They were apparently under the impression that she was being wronged in some way, an idea that was instantly ab sorbed by Mrs. Sullivan, who accepted the ladies' sympathetic offices as the signal to weep and moan in a very loud tone. In a twinkling the party was surrounded by a crowd of at least 200 persons, who supposed that something tragic was taking place. Messenger Pearson was disgusted and angry. He asked the depot attaches to assist him in getting the party on the train, which they declined to do. He then wanted the policemen to take them back to the Central station, but they replied that their duty ended with delivering the woman and chil dren into his hands. Finally, as the train was moving out of the depot, Mrs. Sullivan concluded that she would go, but when told that she wonld have to take a later train, she declared once more that she would not go at all now. couldn't be moved. All Mr. Pearson's eloquence failed to alter her resolntion, and he retired from any lurthej attempts, leaving Mrs. Sullivan do as she wished.- She said that she would go back to her sister's house on Etna street. where she was when arrested by Superin tendent Dean, and the last Mr. Pearson saw ol her she was plodding along Smithfield street in the mud and rain, with her chil dren at hereels. When the charities' messenger returned to the office he was warm and tired, and his finely polished shoes were splashed with mud. He explained the result of his errand to Chief Elliot, who brought his clenched fist down on a desk, and declared that Mrs. Sullivan should re ceive no further aid from that office. "She does not belong here," said he, "and is strictly not entitled to the aid we did ex tend to her, but if she refuses to go to her home, and intends to become a charge on Pittsburg, I will apply for an order of re moval from the courts, and send her away by force. This practice of other counties that have no poorhonses or any way of car ing for their people is getting altogether too prevalent. Why, it is a fact that it requires more care and work on our part to prevent undeserving outside persons from imposing upon us than to attend to those legitimately entitled to relief." ABANDONED HER CHILDBEN. Mrs. Sullivan, after hearing the officer of the Department of Charities, went to the West Penn Hospital where her husband was lying.and throwing the infanton the bed he side its father, lelt both the children and her husband, and was seen wandering around her old place on Etna street, and was said by the neighbors to have acted very strangely. The wretched husband, although scarcely able to walk, got from his hospital bed and took the children to No. 90 Pike street, where he left them and they are now being cared for until taken care of by Superintend ent Dean. The latter want in search of Mrs. Sullivan, but, although she had been seen by several people in the neighborhood at different times, he could not find her, and said that he would not be surprised to hear that she had made away with herself. The woman, if found, and the children will be sent to the Lake Erie depot in charge of the city police, who were refused admission yesterday because they had not the tickets, and the family will be sent to the Women's Home, near New Castle.Lawrence county, the authorities of which, Chief Elliot thinks, ought to be responsible for their care and safety. ANXIOUS TO GET THE BEST. Mr. Scott Describes Mr. Carnegie's Views on the Library Matter. Mr. James B. Scott was asked yesterday to state more particularly the situation as to the Carnegie Library in Pittsburg. From the interview it was learned it was Mr. Car negie's suggestion and desire that a full op portunity be given for public discussion and expression on the general matter of his enterprise, and any and all details pertaining thereto, including par ticularly the important factor of site. He thought a few weeks at the beginning could be most advantageously emphyed inuch consideration, and wonld not prove a waste ot time, but emphatically the reverse. When it is evident that no propriety exists for continqing time lor public discussion, the commislon will settle down to business. It is manifest, continued Mr. Scott, that plans for buildings cannot be selected until a site is secured, as "designs suitable for one location might be very unsuitable for an other. The seeming delay is not the result of negligence or oversight, but is in accord ance with the foregoing suggestions. When the active work is taken up. it will move with proper celerity. Mr. Carnegie is very much interested in the question of site for the main building, and is very desirous that the conclusion of the commis sion may carry with it the commendation of the general public. A Tower Oat of Flamb. The electric light tower at the corner of North avenue and Federal street was pulled Ai.f nt nlnmn vailo.rtnir Kw ..... .f .. I vu v jhuuu ji.Diuaj uj naut ui nwa men who were trying to straighten a guy rope. The tower appears to be dangerous and must come down. FROM TUMPLE BAIt-ILLUSTBATED Br THE DIS PATCH. "He is a bad actor," said the manager of the strolling company of players where Jovan made his first appearance, and so said the first violin of the orchestra of the little country town theater where Jovan tried his luck the second time. The violinist was an old man and had a great deal of experience, so that was discouraging; worse still, the audience said the same thing, and worse even than that was to come, for one day something inside Jovan said it too. "He is a bad actor," so said the part of Jovan that did not go on the stage, the part of him that stood with the manager at the wiegs of the theater, that watched him fiom the orchestra, that sat in the front rows with the audience, the part which looked at him from outside, which shook its head when he cauie before the footlights, which waited for him at the door and walked home with him through the empty streets when the play was over. There was Jovan the player, and there was Jovan the critic, and then there was Jovan himself Jovan the nature-made, the nature-bred, who hated the critic and spoiled the player, Jovan the man, strong and unruly, self-assertlug and tenacious; Jovan who would be himself when he ought to be somebody else, who, when the player changed his coat and went before the audience, followed him close and would not be left behind. "One must change not one's dress only, but one's body and one's soul also, if one would be an actor," said the violinist, and that Jovan would not do. When Jovan was in love, he played like a lover, wlien he had a wicked mood he played like a villain, when he was good he plaved like a saint, and it did not do at all. Jovan lived, or rather wandered about the world with his mother; she bad Eastern blood in her. and it was from'her he had got his name "Jovan." The Germans turned it into Johann. His father had been a rich English merchant, a trader in the East, sue cessiul, unscrupulous, cold-hearted and luxurious; for the rest the story was an old one it was hrst written in the book of Gen esis and Jovan and his mother were driven iorth as Hagar and Ishmael of old, with this difference, that Jovan was of age, and that no angel appeared to succor them in their jonrneying. Jovan and Hagar were poor and they were vagrants, but tbey got on well enough to be happy. The "little mother" was an actress by birth and a mimic of some skill, and when Jovan failed she succeeded enough to keep body and soul together, though more she could not accomplish. As for Jovan, there was no counting on him. Sometimes for days he would bury himself in his books, books he would starve to buy; then they would be thrown aside, forgotten, and he would pass days and nights with wild companions, till he wearied of them too, and fonnd some other pleasure or in terest to usurp dominion over him. He could like but one thing at a time, he avowed. "You cannot hate and you cannot love, no, not for one month together, my Jovan," said his mother. "Not lor one month, no, nor for one week. Do not trust him, child, do not trust him." Jbvau was sitting in the window of the poor little room where last they had pitched their tent; he was then, it might be, 22 years of agejthe Servian woman was some 17 years older, but still the beauty of her youth clung to her, as loath to quit one who had "loved it so well." A'girl, hardly more than a child in years, leaned against the frame work ot the dusty window panes. She was so close to Jovan that her hair, falling loose to her waist, touched his shoulder; he took a handful of the soft yellow threads, and slipped them round and through his fingers, and smiling back at his mother he drew the girl nearer. "Let her go, let her go, Jovan," said the Servian woman, searching their faces with keen, kind eyes. ''. '' c Bw. ' Mt lu, cwuucu Jovan, with his laugh (which was the only beautiful thing about him). "Who keeps her?" "res, let her go. Jet her go," echoed "He does not love you, child. Do not give him your heart." said the mother, who was like Hagar, and knew what men were; but she laughed back at Jovan, even while she warned the child. "He does not love you," repeated Jovan, mimicking her tone. "No, he does not love yon. Do not lova him. He is good for nothing; he pays yes terday's debts with to-morrow's wages; he is a spendthrift, a bankrupt in the coin which is stamped with a heart on one side, and a branch of bitter herb on the other. Do not love him. He does not love you." He lilted the long twist of waving hair he had unbound from his hand and touched it with his lips. The girl suddenly moved; wrenching the freed hair from his hold, she crouched on the ground beside him; she laid her arms across bis knees, and then hid her face in her hands. He touched her bent head gently, friendlily. "But she loves me, my sweet white heart," he said softly. It was nothing new that she, little pale Lise, should love him. Children had a way of loving him, and women had, too; they loved him not as women love their lovers, but as dogs love their masters, as winter starved birJ3 the hand that succors and shelters them. Jovan knew it knew that it was not at a lover that Lise (and others also) loved him. He knew that Lise was happy when his hand touched hers, when his voice was within her hearing, when his eyes rested on her: what did it matter? for he knew too that her instinct of trust was a true instinct; he would not harm her, not by word or look, and if she gave him more than he could return, she would never miss his care, his pity. When Jovan broke a woman's heart, it would not be by unkind ness. Lise was dying. He had picked her up, half-starved, wholly forlorn, in the road ways ofa great city. She was not the first foundling, child, beast or bird, whom he had brought home to be sheltered, caressed, played with, thought over, and when there was no more to be done, forgotten; Lise was one of many such foundlings. Lise was an episode all Jovan's life was made up of episodes; hers was soon over a grave, narrow and short, in the poor people's cem etery, was soon its only record. Jovan was playingaclown'sparttbenightartershedied; he was hissed off the boards, and the mana ger dismissed him. Jovan was a bad actor. "But he has a heart," his mother said proudly, and she took an engagement her self and played an old woman's part at the theater, and they lived as best they might on her earnings. It was that year that Jovan had made a friend, a doctor, who had been kind to Lise when she died. Gotthold, that was his name, was a student, an enthusiast in his own science, a would-be discoverer. He was older than Jovan, and had a wife and a 5-year-old baby. Jovan was friends with the baby as well as with the father. Gott hold lent him books, he tancrht him many things, took him to lectures, to the hospitals and into the hospital "theater," where the chief actor does nothing, and no other acting is allowed. Jovan studied these things with passion; it was a new world to him a country of dis ease, and sickness, and death. He bad, said Gotthold. a genius for science, only he was a genius who had missed his road. Jovan grew day by day more absorbed, more am bitions, and more unhappy. "These things are real," he would say "this is life, snbstance, not shadow, the act ual, not the phantasm." But Hagar shook her head when he talked so, deriding the mimicry of life which had been bis art and hers. "It is the shadow which rule men's hearts and souls," she would reply. "The feigned death on thestace, not the dead body in the hospital ward, stirs the heart of the world. They who read the police report without pity will weep bitter tears over the romance before the footlights." Hagar knew life if she knew little else.. "There is a flaw in your mind, little mother." Jovan only mocked and kissed her when she spoke earnestly to him. The two go well together, mocking and kissingl So the weeks wore away, and a cloud set tled on Jovan's brow. "Curse the life!" he said bitterly one night; "my mind is a forge; it can only turn out tools for other men to use." "Your father used the tools other men made and then he threw them away, that was worse." Hagar told him. In those days she learned that Gotthold had made a great discovery in science, and had wonthe highest prize that fame could accord him; then she guessed what had be fallen Jovan, that he had forged the tool and his friend had used it; but of it, or of his friend who had cheated and defrauded him, he said no word. Only he studied his friend's studies no more; be studied his friend instead. "I want to act a thief's part," he told her. "Then you had better steal," she answered. "Jovan, you are no actor; once you were a mimic like me, now you are not even that, 1 'A i I i