MS v . v & ' ,16y , - 3fwgwS VwWM WflTOWW- W"SIStwB .-SIIIBKf S-'-' W " " " HE PITTSBURG- ' A ! ! ! I I I . " '' ' " '" '"i T I M THE EDGE OF WAR. : Causes of tho Unsettled State of Affairs in tho South American fiepuhlic of Bolivia. PRESIDENT AKCE A MONEY-KIKG. He UnWushinjilj Boucht Himself Into Power and Maj Use His Private Fortune to Preserve It. gi. STORY OP AN ATTEMPT TO EILIi MM. fcs Erin of the Qainlne Industry Thrcu;b. Competition In India and Jan. tCOKEEEPOXDEN-CE OP THE DISPATCH.! La Paz, Bolivia, June 12. That the rumors of war in this alleged Bepnblic, which by this time must have reached the United States, are not without foundation, may be seen in the fact that all public mention of the revolutionary movement by Bolivian telegraph or newspaper has been rigorously suppressed and that most of the, available troops have been sent from La Paz to various points of danger. It is extremely difficult to get reliable information from either side, since it is the President's policy to preserve secrecy, and he has absolute control of the press and the wires; and also because the towns are long distances apart, with comparatively uninhabited stretches of deserts and mountains between. It is authoritatively stated that a large number of La Paz' most prominent citizens have secretly left to join the revolutionary forces, and that more than 2,000 volunteers have already come over from Peru, where President Arce is particularly un popular, owing to bis actions during the late war between Peru and Chili, at which time he was Bolivia's Minister in the latter country. It is asserted that Peruvians, not the Government, but private parties, will supply General Comacho, the revolutionary leader, with funds and arms to carry on the war, smuggling both over the border in re aote and unguarded places. CAUSES OF BISCOKTEST. The Bolivians have several causes for disaffection, the main one being that in spite of all protests the President keeps in bis Cabinet a most unpopular Jesuit, a sanctimonious, but crafty person who is de voted to his order, and therefore likely to subserve the public interests to its good. The country, too, leels very sore over the loss of its small strip of sea-coast which Chili now claims, "believing that Arce sold it to that Government for value received. Last week two unoffending Americans, mining engineers named Thompson and "Williams, were assassinated near the Boliv ian border by a company of Peruvians on their way to join the revolutionary army simply because the Americans refused to shout "Viva Comacho!" when commanded. The other day a Bolivian hardware mer chant ttas put into prison tor having sold a lot ot rifles to uuknown parties, presumably rebels. The schemes of the latter came to naught in one instance, &a follows: The Government has a lari;e amount of arms and ammunition stored at Oruro, where a con siderable garrison is maintained. Comacho wanted these to carry on the war, and his lriends bribed the commanding officers to come over to their bide. Among the latter, however, was a traitor of double dye who, having accepted the bribe and promised allegiance to the enemr and listened to all their plans, went to the President and sold his information lor more money, thereby causing the arrest and probable execution of his fellow officers, and rendering his own life of little account in the present disturbed state ot affairs. MOXEY rOWTB IN POLITICS. The President has one immense advantage over General Comacho, for while the lat ter is poor as a church mouse, depending for funds upon friends nearly as poor as him self, Arce possesses a very large fortune, the monthly dividend from his mines alone being sufficient to carry on the conflict to its bitter end, should the public treasury fail him. Comacho may be best described as a worn-out politician, whose "day" was long since supposed to be done in Bolivia; a chronic revolutionist, who has given the country more than one scare in time past A lamiliar figure on the streets of La Pax is President Arce a corpulent, dark-eyed, middle-aged gentleman, in plain black suit and tall t ilk hat, always attended bva bodv guardof lour or five gold-bedizened sol diers. He was not called to the executive chairbyagratelul country in acknowledg ment for services rendered in peace or war, but he seems to take pride in tde fact that he bnujrht his elevation by tne power of wealth. In his electioneering speeches he did cot hesitate to say: "This is a cam paign of money, and lor money alone. He Lo has the most money can pay most for votes, and will be likely to do most lor the people after his election." And he has done a good deal in the way of expending his private means for public works where his own interests were also involved; as, for example, the construction of roads in the direction of his mines, and in other parts of the country where he has property. AN ATTEMPTED ASSASSINATION. Sot longago a young man belonging toone of the leading families of the interior, was sent to La Paz for the express purposafof killing the President. Finding no other op portunity for accomplishing his mission, he obtained an invitation to a banquet that was about to be given at the palace; but before hand incautiously wrote to his backers de tailing the plan, saying that he should shoot the President in the course of the evening, ' and endeavor to escape in the confusion that would ensue. The letter was intercepted, as suspected correspondence is certain to be in this coun try, and fell into the hands of the intended victim. Nothing was said about it, how ever; the banquet came off according to programme; the young man, pale but reso lute, was there, revolver in pocket When the guests were seated around the table, waiting for the first course to appear, the President courteously sent a silver salver to the would-be murderer, on which lav his own open letter. ".Now," said Arce "in a cheerful voice, "is you opportunity to assas sinate me. Why don't you begin?" The yocng man, quite taken by surprise, stammered some inaudible excuse. "Ah, vou falter," said the President, in the same light tone. '"This is no place for cowards. Ton have two hours in which to leave the country. It you are found at the end of that time, or any time thereafter while I am ct the head of affairs, you will be shot on sight." ETJIN OF THE CHINCONA TEADE. The production of chincona bark, or cascarilla, as it is here called, from which the alkaloid quinine is extracted, was for many years Bolivia's most important in dustry in the agricultural linp? hut Hnrino- the last four years it has proved unprofit-', aoiu, umus iu competition in Java and the British provinces in Southern Asia. That class of individuals known at Borne as "smart Alecks," are lound even in this out-of-the-way corner of creation On f . st8 ce,min Senor Bancroft, who was a lfe$1Le5Ty Pante-' o cascarilla a few years ago. w. nroinerous and presnmnW 1..1,.. -? - unlucky day the idea struck him ol sending a quantity of quina seed to his home Gov ernment mat 01 .Holland thereby getting himself into the papers and winning the gratitude of posterity. In uncalled-for generosity he sent a very large amount of seed, with minute directions lor its treat ment derived from his own experience, and the suggestion that experiments be made in Java. ',The remarkable success of chincona in that island led the British Government to .ea courage iu planting in India, and al- J ready the business is ruined everwhere by overproduction. Hr. Shucroft received a little gold medal from the Dutch King in acknowledgment of his enterprise; but at the same time he lost all his fortune by hav ing made valueless his own extensive cas carilla plantations. BOLIVIA AT A DISADVANTAGE. Bolivia can never compete with those countries that now take the lead in chincona production, because of her immense disad vantage in the matter of transportation. On the other hand, the bark produced in India and Java yields only two-thirds as much sulphate of" quinine as that grown in this part of the world. As an example of the rapid depreciation in the price of bark may be mentioned the Erickson plantation, which was valued at a million and a halt bolivianas five years ago, and is now offered for sale at less than a quarter of that amount, but cannot find a purchaser. Chincona, at this distance from the equa tor, will not grow at a greater elevation than 5,000 feet, nor lower than 3,000. The seeds, which are sown in beds, are so very small, lighter than the lightest thistle-down, that the least breeze wilj blow them away, necessitatine great care in the handling. When the plants are about one foot high they arc transplanted, five or six feet apart, to the sunny side of a mountain. It is as serted that virgin soil is absolutely neces sary, and that the addition of any vkind of fertilizer would be ruinous. Twice every year the earth between the tiees is slightly disturbed by the primitive plows of the country, and that is all the "'cultivation" they require. At the age of eight years the trees are ready to strip; or, if the owner is hard up, as is usually the case, a part of them may be utilized sooner and young plants put in their places. An 8-year-old tree yields from 12 to 15 pounds of bark, which in the present depressed state of trade is worth only about 75 cents. The trunk of the tree, after having been peeled, is entirely value less, not even good for firewood in a country where fuel is scarce. The cost of cutting, drying and packing the bark is about SI 00 per hundred weight. LICE THE GOLD BRICK FEATJD. There are no fewer than 21 varieties of the quina tree, some worthless, others ranging in the amount of quinine contained in the bark from one-half per cent to seven per cent. The buyer must know his business, for if not an exoert he is likely to be badly sold. The "gold brick" swindle has not been so often perpetrated in the United States as that of selling for cascarilla the worthless bark of some other tree. A well known dealer of La Fez, who ought fo have known what he was about. liter years ot ex perience, recently lost S1C0.C00 at one fell swoop on a shipload of bark supposed to be cascarilla, but' which, when arrived at. the English market, turned out to be a species of oak, good for nothing at all. The only way to test the bark is by tasting it That which gies ont a bitter taste immediately on being taken into the south will yield a comparatively small atoiount of quinine, while the best must he chewed before the quinine taste is apparent. Not an ounce of Bolivia's cascarilla ever went to the United States; it is all sent to Europe via the straits of Magellan. Not withstanding the vast number of quina trees in the country and the cheapness of the raw material, there is no spot on earth where quinine, as prepared in the form ot medicine is so expensive. Though the people require a great deal of it in cases of mountain fever, lerciana etc., none is made in Bolivia. When the bark that is grown here and ex ported for next door to nothing-gets back in the form of quinine, it becomes a "foreign product," has exorbitant duties to pay and sells accordingly. Whereas, in other lands it yields the druggist a profit of about 80 per cent, when retailed at a cent a grain, it sells in La Paz at the rate of ten cents per grain. If some enterprising Northerner would set up an establishment in this country lor ex tracting the alkaloid from the bark, his fortune would soon be made. Fannie B. Waed. OIL IK INDIA. Vast Deposit so Fare That It Can be Used In Lamp Crnde. Newcastle, Encland, chronicle. A discovery likely to largely assist in the development of the iron industry of India, to which attention was recently directed in this column, is that there are large deposits of petroleum in various parts of the Indian peninsula. In Upper Burmah, near Yen angyoung, oil wells have been worked for some time, and the product has become an article of commerce in the district. The existence of this deposit suggested the possi bility of there being others in the country, and a survey has disclosed the fact that such is the case. , At a recent meeting of the Chemical So ciety, Mr. Boverton Redwood explained what had been done in the matter, and from his statement it seems that productive de posits have been lound in both Upper and Lower Burmah including the Arakan Islands in Assam, in the Panjab, and in Beloochistan. In Arakan the most product ive fields are those of Batnri and the East ern Baranga Islands, in both 01 which local ities petroleum of a very high quality . in some cases sufficiently pure to be capable of being burned in ordinary lamps in its crude state has been obtained. At Khatan, in Beloochistan, five wells have been drilled, and each one is capable of furnishing a supply of 50,000 barrels a year. The Arakan oil is the best from the point of view of the kerosene manufacturer; but on the other hand the Tenangyoung oil yields a larger percentage of paraffine. Al ready arrangements have been entered into with the Northwestern Railway for supply ing petroleum to be used on the Sind-Pislim section of that line as liquid fuel. BEFOEMS OF MOBHONISM. A Society at Salt Lake Ciiv to Di-conrngo Polysnmy Tho Decline. "The Mormon element in Salt Lake City and vicinity." savs Pror. H. M. Mayo, in the SL Louis Globe-Democrat, "is now in the minority, and they no longer have even a hand in the government of the community in which they once ruled supreme. The municipal government and the control of the schools have passed into the hands of the Gentiles, and the presence and power of the Mormons are felt only to a limited extent The churches still retain much of their former grandeur, and their mode of conducting religious exercises and maintaining the churches unchanged, bnt many of their former social customs are dis appearing. "They no longer dare to live openly in polygamy. The laws on this point are well enforced. A wealthy and in fluential Mormon leader has "ust served a six months' term in the penitentiary for polygamv. They are becoming more en lightened, and even the Church is, to some extent, discouraging polygamy. There is a society of young Mormon ladies mantained in the city in which a distintive feature is a pledge not to marry a polygamist" ESCAPING A MAD BOO. ' The Animal Incllnea to Straight lAaet, bnt Will Follow ir One Flees. "If people were only taught half so much about the way to avoid mad dogs as they are about sunstrote, said Officer Mulvihill the other day, "we would not often hear of a case of hydrophobia. A good thing to know is that a mad dog never turns aside from the course he is running to bite any body. So if one is right in the path of a rabid animal he can get out of all danger bv jumping to one side and out of the path ot the dog. Hut if it is absolutely impossi ble to get out of the way, the man or woman should stand perfectly still and face the dcg. He will turn aside then himselfyhnd run in a different direction, while il thper son in front of him screams and runs Away, as nine out often will do, the dog will over take and bite the victim. Of course it re quirts courage to stand still ana face a raoi,a dog, terrible as mis animal always loots, but the result snows mat tne real danger lies in taking flignu I U ELI PERKINS' JOKES. Deliberate Character of the English Police Illustrated. BEECHER AND BOB ISGEESOLL. Stories Told by Eminent DIvine3 at the Ex pense of Baptists. ' DK. TALHAGE'S PITTSBURG LECTDEE rCOBBESPONDENCE OP TUB DISPATCH. London, July IL John Bull does every thing deliberately. He thinks before he acts, while the 'Frenchman acts and then thinks. This habit of slow deliberation saves the police much trouble. To illustrate the wisdom of deliberation on the part of the English police: To-day a large 200-ponnd Yankee sailor, loaded with fiery Scotch whUky, got into a Piccadilly stage and insisted on riding for nothing. Expostulation did no good, so the coductor called to a policeman to put him out "So you won't pay your fare?" said 'the policeman, looking at the belligerent Yan kee from head to foot "No, I'll die first. They should have given me a transfer." "But I am obliged to put you out if you don't pay your fare," said the policeman, rolling up his sleeves. "You jes' try it," said the sailor, with glaring eyes. The policeman took another look at Jon athan, thought a moment and then quietly banded the conductor 5 cents. "I guess that Is the easiest way to adjust this case," he said, as he went whistling along his way. The unilorm of the London police is very A Pair of London's Final. formidable. It is the uniform of a New York hose company and a Prussian sol dier. MAJOR FOND ON BEECHEE. Major Pond, when over here securing Stinley and Dr. McEenzie for lecture tours in America, told us some good stories about' Beecher "One day," said the Major, "we were talking about Ingersoll, when Beecher re marked, solemnly: "Yes, Pond, Bobert In gersoll is eloquent very eloquent" "Do you think his works and saying will live?" lasted. "Yes, he will go lowt with Voltaire and Thomas Paine, and 1 should like to write his epitaph it the great agnostic would for give me for it" "What would you write?" "Simply this line," said Beecher, smil ing: ROBERT BURKS. Beecher's parable of the Baptist, con tinned the Major, was as follows: "One night," said Beecher, "I had a sweet dream and floated away to heaven. Heaven was very beautiful with angels and pearly gates and crowds of happy Christians. There were Presbyterians and Methodists in happy communion, and Episcopalians singing hymns with Campbellites all so happy, but I could not see a Baptist I looked all around, but not one in sight. Finally I saw St Pete'r floating along on a cherubim, and asked him about onr misssng brethren." "It makes me sad," I said, "to see no Baptists here." "O, we have Baptists here plenty of them," said St. Peter, "bnt they are off on a leave of absence to-day. They' vejust gone over to that cistern all by themselves to hold close communion." DE. PAEKEE'S BAPTIST STOET. Dr. Parker, who had a call to fill Beech er's pulpit in Brooklyn, is a strong believer in the doctrine that baptism means sprink ling and not immersion, and delights in telling this story on the immersionists as much as Beecher delighted in telling his storv on the close communists: "One of my parishioners,,' said the Doc tor, "came to me and told me that he dreamed that a Baptist friend of bis died and went to heaven." "Well, what did he see there?" I asked. "He saw St Peter at the gate, and be yond him, through a doorway surrounded with glaring lights, and smelling of brim stone, was the devil." "What do you want?" asked St Peter. "I want to "come an," replied the immer sionist. "Well, whe are you?" "I'm a Baptist minister." "A Baptistl" repeated St. Peter, a little puzzled. "A Baptist, eh? Well, what do you Baptists do? We didn't have any Bap tists in my time when I was Pope." "Whv we baptize people." "Baptize 'em, do you? What in?" "Whv, water." "What, all over?" "Yes, clear under." "But suppose it's cold?" "Whv, down they go right through the ice." The devil happened to overhear the word ice, and came forward, rubbing nis hands in great glee. " Y nai U1U yuu oajr auuu. its. ..o oaivvu, smiling. "Why, we baptize people through the ice." "But suppose it's 40 below zero?" "Down they go, all covered with icicles." "That'll do," interrupted the devil, "vou just take my place; you've got something worse than href" THE PITTSBUBtfEBS ON TALMAGE. The PitUburgers in Europe are telling a good story on our Talmage. It is akin to the baptism of the unknown Arab tramp in the Jordan and as shrewd as Talmage's Mars Hill sermon which was -dictated to a steno grapher in Brooklyn. It seems the Pitts burgers had the great preacher engaged to lecture. The night came and a full bouse, bnt no Talmage came. In fact, he missed the train, but before the audience was dis missed came a telegram from the lecturer saying: "Cannot come, owing to, the loss of a Brother." This stilled the audience and satisfied the committee. A lew weeks alter ward a gen tleman called on the great divine to condole with him abont his great loss. "What great loss do you refer to ?" asked Mr. Talmage, a little puzzled. "Why, your brother, who recently died?" "Oh, inr brotherl" repeated the Mars .Hill preacher. "Well yes, he is dead. He died W years ago." Eli Peekins. DISPATCH, C0I21SI0U- OF EAETH AKD M00H. A Cntnalropho tho Old Aatronomera Pre dlcird, bat Tbnt Cnn Nerer Occnr. Sen Castle, Eng. Chronicle. 1 It is an undoubted fact that the moon is and has been for acres aonroachint; closer to the earth, though whether by a fraction of an inch or a fraction of yard ma century 1 am not prepared to demonstrate. This phe nomenon is fully proved by a comparison of the Babylonian eclipses with those recorded by the Arabian astronomers, and, further, by comparing the latter with those of mod ern times. A period, however, will arrive when this falling toward the earth will cease, and when the Queen of Night will start and go back to her former position. All this, no doubt, is very mysterious and complex, and had it not been tor tho giant intellects of Laplace and Lagrange, we might yet be calculating how long, at its va rious rates of progression toward the earth, onr satellite would take to reach that body, and tne probable results of such an event. J.ne limit to the moon's acceleration and conse quent approach to our planet was discov ered to be due to the decrease and subse quent disappearance in the eccentricity of the earth's orbit Then the question naturally suggests itself as to how near the moon will be to us when the limit is reached. As I have intimated, this will be settled in-about 500,000 years,by which period the moon's mean motion will indicate that she is between GOO and 701) of her diameters in advance of the position she would have occupied had no change been in progress. We may, I think, take it for granted that the arrangements of the solar system are stable; and that the perturba tions in the moon's mean motion are not in definitely progressive, but periodical, albeit extending over countless ages, reaching a limit, as they perhaps have done before,and then resuming their old character. DEIUK AND LONGEVITY. Tho Beit Iiunrnnce Companies Draw tho Lino nt Glnmes With McnU. St, Louis Globe-Democrat. J The best class of life insurance companies prefer not to take risks on drinking men, and some of them absolutely decline to issue policies to men who habitually use al coholic or malt liquors in the form of drams. Every applicant is required to state whether, he uses stimulants, and in what manner and quantity. No objection is raised against the man who uses wine or beer in moderation at his meals, for physiologists generally teach that liquor and food, when taken together, are mutually helpful, or more properly that al cohol is least injurious when used with food, but when a man is in the habit of taking even two or three drinks of liquor every day at other times than with his'food, the best companies will decline to issue him a policy, considering it only a question of time when the habit will grow so as to necessitate an increase in the quantity con sumed. While not absolute prohibitionists, the companies draw the line at the glass of wine or beer at meal time. SUPPING BEITS. Paradoxical Tlionsb it Mnj Seem, Grenie Will Stop tho Trouble. "Until a few days ago," said an engineer in one of the city planing mills yesterday, "I was always greatly annoyed while on duty by the constant slipping .oil of the belts from the pulleys. I have now, however, found a remedy for this evil. It is to apply grease to the belt in moderation. Tallow seems to answer the purpose best Hold a piece gently against the working side of the belt while it is running. The tallow should be moved from edge to edge'Vhile the belt is mabiny 'hr e or four revolutions. Too much grease will make the belt slip more than before." A BOTAL BETROTHAL. 'Vjcen Victoria, to Wed Frinco Adolf Ton Schnnmbnre-llpp Illnstrated;Sews or the World. On the occasion of her visit to England, Her Majesty, the Empress Frederick of Germany, Princess Boyal of Great Britain, was accompanied by her two unmarried daughters, Princess Victoria and Princess Margaret of Prussia, and by a German Prince, who is to be congratulated on his having been recently accepted as the future husband of the first of these two vountr ladies. Prince AdolfWilliam Victor of Schaumburg-Lippe is this fortunate man. His Serene Highness was born on July 20, 1859, the sixth and youngest of the chil dren of the reigning Prince of Schaumburg-Lippe, and holds a commission in the Princess Ptcforfa of Prussia and Germany, Second Daughter of the Late German Emperor Frederick. Prussian army. Her Royal Highness, Princess Erederica Amelia Wilhelmina Victoria, who is second daughter and fourth child of the late German Emperor Freder ick, King Frederick III. of Prussia, and of the Empress Victoria, Princess Royal of Great Britain, was born at Potsdam, April 12, I860. ' Tne act of betrothal, which in Germany is a lormal and legal ceremony, took place on June 17 at the Boyal Palace at Potsdam, where it was proclaimed by the Emperor William IL, brother of the affianced Prin cess, to the whole Court assembled in the Hall of Bronze. It was followed by a luncheon, at which was present the Emperor and the Empress his ConSOrt. the EmnrPSI TtVurlorinlr his mother, Princesses Victoria and Prince Adolf Von Schaumbufg-Lippe, Margaret, Prince Adolf of, Schaumburg Lippe, Prince Rupert of Eavaria, the Other Royal Princes and Princesses, General Von Caprivl, Chancellor of the-German Empire, and other persons of rank. 2he Emperor drank the health of his sister and her future husband, wishing them all happiness. SUNDAY, JOLT 20, TRIFLES IS YaMETY. Over Six Thousand Foreign Decoctions Shipped to America. SOME GOOD, SOUEBAD.SOJIE AWFUL. Nearly All Take Out the Cobwebs and Bring Quick Answers. DRINKS FOE CASI IRON STOMACHS fwarrrEN fob the dispatch. At this time of the year when at least 8000 immigrants increase onr population every week, it may be of interest to iknow what the newcomers bring over with them besides their muscle, work-power and intel ligence. For these strangers of to-day are voters in the next decade and representa tives 20 years hence. As nearly all are adults and a large majority males, their political influence is far greater than that of an equal number of the native population. Of the hundred thousand natives, who'make up a people of a third rate city hardly one fifth are voters. Of a hundred thousand immigrants seven-tenths are potential elect ors. ' It will be a cause of dismay to the aver age Prohibitionist, therefore, to learn that more than 95 per cent Of this,foreign influx drink, love drinking and have been brought up to believe that malt liquors and wines are necessary to human health and happi ness. It may occcasion greater surprise to know that at least 50 per cent have never heard of the doctrine of total abstinence, and that when the same is proclaimed to them they regard it either as a mild form of insanity or a religious dogma closely akin to heathenism. STICK TO THEIB FIRST LOVE. So strong are these habits of their native lands that while nearly all onr immigrants do in Rome as the Romans do, and become users of the brewings and strong liquors of the United States, all of them keeo'up a sneaking fondness for the stimulants with which they are first acquainted. The result is a huge importation of all sorts of queer and outlandish stimulants from every part of the globe as well as the erection of estab lishments in the New. World, which turn out skillful imitations of the imported arti cles. In nearly every American city to-day are places where the brewing, fermenting and distilling practiced in every part of the globe can be witnessed by the Sight-seers and the student. In every port of entry from New York to San Francisco can be found samples of not hundreds, but thou sands, of foreign alcoholic beverages. Few Americans have any idea of the variety and wealth of this field. Uncle Sam runs to extremes. To-day he calls for bourbon, ale and claret; to-morrow he wants only rye, beer and champagne. The aver age wine card of hotel, restaurant and saloon alike seldom has more than 100 en tries. Yet in the literature upon the sub ject, and more especially in the official records of the Custom House, there are more than 6,000 different brands of legally recog nized intoxicants. It would be impossible in the limits of a newspaper article to give an extended account ot these quenchers of thirst. A brief resume of a few may, how ever, be of interest to the reader. SHINES FEOJI MEXICO. Our next door neighbor, Mexico, sends us a limited quantity of pulque and mescal. The former is a sweetish sour beer resembling milk and water in appearance, which is made from a cactus similar to the flowering aloe of our hot houses. There is nothing pleasant about it at the first taste. The Mexicans say that one must drink it 20 tinies.before he appreciates it. From the pulqne, mescal, is distilled. It is a rank and corrosive liquor, alongside of which Jersey lightning is as soft as cream. It is popular with the Indians and half-breeds, who employ it apparently as a substitute for suicide. The native aguadiente of Mex ico rarely crosses the Rio Grand?. It is a coarse and poorly rectified whisky. Central and South America produce a large number of intoxicants, each of which is from time to time bronght into the United States. Some are horrible to nostril and palate alike. Of these a representative fluid is casasha or white sugar cane rum. It bears the same relation to Jamaica and Santa Cruz that the poorest Irish potheen or potato spiri s does to rye or bourbon. Large amounts of casasha are made illicitly by negrn farm hands and retailed at ridiculous prices. In the interior of Porto Rico, Jamaica and Brazil it can be purchased at anywhere from 1 to 3 cents a glassful. And no little class, mark you, but a good old fashioned tumbler holding over a half pint LIQUORS FBOM THE TROPICS. Far different from this mephitic compound are the liquors and cordials made in the Latin-American countries from the count less leaves, barks, flowers and fruits of the tropics. Amone the more notable are those whose bases are the banana, pineapple.lime, lemon, orange, chocolate, cocoanut, date, tamarind, hg, lily and lemon verbena. To increase the variety, the makers will com bine two or more flavors to produce a novel flavor. This now and then will be half L as, 1U1 OJk- . , anaiia and orange. Nearly all, however, are utterly strange and all are delicious. Generally they are a trifle too sweet for the masculine taste, containing so much sugar as to be cloying. But for women and invalids, or for a pousse-cafe, sherbet or punch they are simply invaluable. They have the further advantage of being quite inexpensive. From Europe comes an inexhaustible stream of odd drinks. In Hamburg and Bremen are a score of manufacturers whose sole business is adulterating or rather imi tating every known stimulant, whose valne allows a fair profit upon the work. Cham pagne, Cognac and Otard, Madeira, Chateau Lafitte, Steinburger Cabinet and Clos Vougest are so skillfully imitated as to de ceive anyone not an expert Besidesthis, there ib another branch'of their villainous profession which consists in manulacturing the drugs and chemicals wherewith dis honest dealers and hotel keepers can trans mute raw spirit Into a four-star brandy or the thinnest California vintage into a world famous wine of the Rhine or Moselle. POISONS FROM ACROSS THE SEA. While the trade is.prohibited so far as borne consumption is concerned, the com mercial policy of the Government gives it full .swing to the rest of the world. As a result huge invoices of bogus wines and strong liquors, essential oils and flavorinc ethers are continually being forwarded from Emperor William's Tyre and Sidon to every port of entry in the United States. The business done in this line with Yankee land already exceeds $5UU,uuu annually and is still on the increase. Our Scandinavian citizens keep, alive the love and pleasures of home by Bbporting red caraway liquor, Norwegian beer, Danish corn whisky and Swedish punch. The first is a curious combination of alcohol, water, caraway seed, rose leaves and anise. It tastes something like Kuemmel, but is harsher, more puncent and penetrating. It is an acquired taste on the part of those who like it; as I never yet saw a person who tried it the first time who did not express a strong desire to kill tho man who gave it to him; the beers ot Norseland are remarkably good. They seem to be classified with shavings of fir, spruce and larch, as they have a sug gestion, if not a prcceptible subflavor of the pine forests about them. Thev are clear, sparkling and apparently have body enough to serve as liquid food. Of the Danish corn whisky the less said the better. It reeks with fusel oil, and emits a vanor that will give a stranger the headache, in a few min utes. Swedish punch is just as good as the corn juice is bad. It is a mild, sweet and royally odorous mixture of anack. sugar, lemon, orange and other equally delightful flavors. It has been popular with the Scandinavian for nearly two centuries, and deserves the esteem in which it is held. AS BAD AS RAW ALCOHOL. Russia sends us Vodka orVodky. The 1890. importation is 'utterly gratuitous, as any body can enjoy the stuff who will drink the impure or deadly spirit used in alcohol lamps. To Muscovites it maybe a good thng in the depths of winter, but in this country its use is unpardonable. Besides the ex quisite wines whieh have made that land famous, Hungary sends us Slivovitsch, or Magyar plnm brandy. It is made from a particular variety of that fruit, which Is found only in certain parts of the Austrian empire, and though strong and fiery to the last degree, is not so very disagreeable to the tongue, ' Asia Minor is a steady customer at the American custom houses. Although it has sent a small army of Greeks, Armen ians, Syrians and half breeds to these shores, it takes them into no account when it ships us alcoholic goods. These are pro duced almost exclusively for the use of those who once dwelt in the Slavonic lands, but are now true-blue citizens of the New World. For centuries this trade has en dured, one year rising high in prosperity and another falling into the abyss of bankruptcy. At rare intervals the wines and liquors of the Holy Land are sent over in the "bottles" referred to in the Scriptures, tough skins, which in turn are carefully boxed; but the Gentile cask and glass bottle have driven the sheepskin and goatskin vessels out of the market. The "wet goods" of Judea and its neighboring territory are Jerusalem wine, Jerusalem brandy, honey wine and passover wine. Judging from samples at the custom house the Oriental is a poor band at viniculture. If things were no better 18 centnries ago it is hard to understand bow St Paul could recommend a little wine for the stomach's sake, but very easy to realize how hideously druck Noah must have been if he used a similar intoxicant- The wine is thick, muddy and coarse, very like the homemade vintages of old New England housewives. It has a rich bouquet and a flavor suggestive of Tokay and Muscatel. The brandy is no better than the wine. It is made from plums and prunes, and is dis tilled and rectified in a way that seems to increase the normal impurities of raw spirit It is above proof and seams the mouth and throat as.it is swallowed. TVINES MADE OF HONEY. The honev wine and passover wine are apparently varieties ot the same kind of liquor. The rabbis claim that, they are produced by fermenting honey of 'one flavor and sweetening the resulting wine with honey of a different flavor. If the claim is truth ful there is no fear of the bee ever becoming the rival of the grape. Of the many honey wines and passover wines which come through the custom house, everyone is flat, syrupy and, to put it mildly, unpalata ble. An immense array of curious stimulants comes from the far East, China, Japan and Java. The Orientals have never learned to make effervescent beverages, but, outside of iuis, snow as muen anout lermenting and distilling as we Western barbarians. In some respects they have gone further and utilized almost every vegetable from which a potable fluid could be procured. A par allel would exist if we made whishy-from rice, buckwheat and oats or wine from cantaloupes, watermelou and pumpkin. There is sogreat a variety to these Eastern liquors that the Government classifies them ronghly into wines, strong liquors, cordials and medicines. Of these four classes the representatives I have sampled are all well made. None are bad in any regard, and very tew are extraordi narily attractive. They average about 20 per cent higher in quality and palatability above, the average contents of a first-class American bar. The liquors are not so strong as onr hard liquors, nor, according to people who have used them in the East, as injurious to the system. This long list ot intoxicants passes through the custom house, leaving samples in the appraiser's office and in the labora tory of the Government's chemist, and then passes to the people of the United States who come from the lands in which they are manufactured. The variety as well as the quantitv ot the importations increase every year. When the ceaseless influx of foreign ers is taken into consideration it may well be asked how much and how many of these outlandish drinks will be passing the cus toms a hundred years hence. William E. S. Faxes. SALTMAKING DT VACUO. A Now Procnn That Effecta a Great Saving In Coal, and Is Better Betide. Mr. Alfred E. Fletcher, Chief Inspector of Alkali and Chemical Works of England, in bis recently published report, devotes a considerable amount of space to a descrip tion of the method of manufacturing salt in vacuo introduced by Dr. Sigismund Pick, of Szczakowa, Austria. Not only is it more economic, but if is a first step toward breaking down the ancient system so waste ful of heat, and so productive of black smoke and acid gases. Dr. Pick's appa ratus is made in three duplicate sections, each consisting of four main parts the boiling chamber, the heating chamber, the collecting chamber and the' filtering cham ber. The steam used enters the heating chamber of the first section and there heats the brine, and the steam given off from that brine enters the steam chamber of the sec ond section and heats the brine there. The same process is repeated in the third sec tion, but the steam generated in the latter section is drawn off by the means of a vacu um pump condenser. By the new process a saving of 17 hundred weight per ton of coal is said to be effected, where waste or exhanst steam is not avail able, but where it is the economy is still greater. In addition the process being automatic, no skilled labor is required to carry it on, while the salt produced is finer ingrain and of greater density But the most important feature ot the new method in the eyes of the alkali works inspector is the absence of deleterious gases. VON M0LTKE AND BEEE. He and Herr -"Bismarck Don't Agree on German;! National Beverage. Count von Moltke, says a Berlin corre spondent, in reply to an inquiry as to whether he had made a statement attributed to him, that beer was the greatest enemy of the Germans, has given the following re ply: "I can ' never have made such a state ment On the contrary, I wish a good, cheap, light beer for our people could be supplied. I myself abstain altogether from al cohol. I do not consider it neces sary or helpful) except, perhaps, after fatiguing work, when the principal thing is to revive one's strength at once. Certainly, one of the greatest enemies of Germany is the misuse of alcohol. A healthy man needs no snch stimulant, and to give it to children, which is often done, is absolutely wicked. I should like to see tea and coffee and light beer cheaper than they are, and brandy a good deal dearer. TOP 20013 FOR BELLES. A Spnnlih Custom That Traveled Jo Franco and Then to America. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Among the latest of fads recently intro duced in this city is the wearing of top boots by society oelles. The idea originated in Spain, from whence it readily spread? to France. Of course its adoption by the French at once brought it into prominence, and it is now considered the proper thing for driving in phaetons and other carriages where ladies are supposed to occupy high seats. The boots are very light in weight, some having heels and others low, either kind being allowable. Patent leather seems to be preferable, but a great many pairs are made out of morocco with kid tops. The tops of the latter are highly ornamented with de signs in colored silks. Of course nothing but the softest kind of leather is used in the manufacture of these booti Can Such Thins Bel Commercial Advertiser.! The Prohibitionists of Cape May are much exercised over the fact that the Presi dent runs a mosquito bar in his new cot tage. - THE LATEST GOSSIP. One of Chief Justice Fuller's Daugh ters to Wed a Westerner, AUGUST JESSUP'S TITLED BRIDE. SackTille-Weat's Daughter Married Without Changing Eer Name. A FDTDKB FOB I0UNG JIM BLAINE ICOERKSPOSPSSCI 07 THI DISPATCH. I Washington, July 19. A large num ber of onr society ladies are still in Wash ington. Some of these are Congressmen's wives who help their husbands in their Congressional work. Other leading Wash ington women prefer the comforts of their homes here to the stuffy rooms at the sea shore, and there is as mnch visiting and gossiping done just now as In midwinter. In the rounds of winter calls,, when one sees a hundred women a day, there is no chance for confidences, and the spring and summer are the best times to get information. One of the latest bits is the engagement of Miss Mildred Fuller to Mr. H. A. Wal-' lace, of Tacoma. Miss Fuller is a'beauti ful girl. She has luxuriant blonde hair, and her figure is as well rounded as that of the Venus de Medici. Her style, however. i3 more that of Juno, and one of her best points is the poise of her head, which, by the way, is much like that of her father. She has a complexion of creamy white, and she shows much taste in dressing. Mr. Wallace is one of the most promising law yers of the new State of Washington. He met Miss Fnller while he was visiting here last winter as the guest. of Senator Cock rell. Mrs. Cockrell gave a tea in his honor and Miss Fuller was one of the pretty aris tocrats who attended id Mr. Wallace, I am told, fell in love at first sicht. and the aroma ot the tea was mixed with' the elixir of love. THE CHIEF JUSTICE 'WILL BDILD. I understand that the Chjef Justice will build a house in Washington, and that the big mansion of Senator Van Wvck will bo acain for rent The Chief Justice has bonght a lot on Bhode Island avenue be tween Thirteenth and Fourteenth, and his mansion will probably be a big one. Each one of his girls is bound to have her own bedroom in it, and this gives him a demand of nine chambers as a starter. It is true that Miss Pauline is married, but Miss Mary Fuller, who is abroad studying music, will nrobiblr be home by the time the house is completed, and the son of the Chief Justice, although he is Dut a iaa 01 iu, de sires his own quarters. The marriage ot Mr. Jessup to an Earl's daughter brings to mind several interesting things besides the fact that the bridegroom's wealth is supposed to offset the bride's title. As a rule international marriages are based upon the bride's money and the bride groom's title, the rich American girl and the titled foreigner, she of course acquiring a title and equal social distinction. But when an American millionaire goes abroad and wins a titled wife, she cannot confer upon him her title. She may be Countess This or Lady That, but he remains Mr. John Jones or Mr. Brown. The Countess would precede her American husband, not as in this country by the courtesy giving a woman precedent, but because ot her title. ME. JESSUP'S BEIDE. Mr. Jessup's wife comes from a long line of Earls, her father, the Earl of Strathmore and Einghorne, being the thirteenth in the line of Earls, but the family lineage going back to the feudal Barons of Fortevint in 1371, when there was royal blood by the marriage of Sir John Lyon and Lady Jane Stuart, the daughter 6f King Bobert IL, who gave them Glamis Castle, in North Britain, ever since the country seat of the family. To the old Quaker families in f Philadelphia it is something of a fairytale that Augustus Jessup, the son of a Quaker, should marrv an Earl's daughter, and to read that the "bridegroom settled $150,000 on the bride." Mr, Jessup, as the old Quakers know, is the nephew of Mrs. Blo'omheid Moore, who has been a promi nent figure iu London literary circles dur ing recent years. Mr. Bloomfield Moore and his brother-in-law, the elder Mr. Jes sup, amassed fortunes in the paper business for publishing bouses, among them the Copperthwaites, publishers and booksellers. The three families were at the time close friends, and among the most prosperous business firms of Philadelphia. Mr. Moore died after a brief illness, leav ing a large fortune to his widow. Mr. Cop perthwaite failed, but paid all his indebted ness, bnt left his family poor. His daugh ters were highly educated and accomplished women. Two of them came to Washington and obtained positions in the Government service. One of the two now receives the highest salary paid to perhaps six women in the service. Fate bad this worldly destiny in store for the Quaker sisters a more worldly destiny for Mrs. Bloomfield More, once a Quakeress, now the fashion-. able society leader and the Quaker ooy, Augustus Jessup, who the other day mar ried this Earl's daughter. THE SACK.VILLE-TVEST "WEDDING. Another wedding more especially inter esting to Washington people is that of Miss Victoria Sackville-West, the oldest daugh ter of the former British Minister, a beau tiful young woman, who, as hostess at the British Legation, made many friends now interested in her marriage. It is well known that Miss West married her first cousin, Edward Lionel Sackville-West, her father's godson, and who will succeed to her father's title and the Knole estate, to which the Minister fell heir by the death of an elder brother just before he left Wash ington. Many pleasant things about the wedding have come back in letters to friends who de clare the bride must have looked "lovely" in Mr gown of white satin, orange blossoms and diamonds. The ceremony was in Koole ChapeJ, where -1 years ago the bridegroom had been christened, and some rare old Brussels lace then on his christening robe, was now the drapery on his bride's gown. The bride had many gifts of diamonds tiara, necklace, brooch and pendent from her father; round brooch of diamonds, a pin of sapphires and diamonds, rings and dia mond bangles trom the groom. The bridal pair are spending their honeymoon on the Uontinent. unnousiy tne orioe is now Airs. Lionel Sackville-West, the name of her father. WALTER DAHKOSCn'S BEIDE. News of another bride, Margarett Blaine, is that Mr. and Mrs. Damrosch are staying quietly in Dresden. "They will return home about the 1st of September, and join the bride's family at Bar Harbor, where all are likely to pass the autumn. It was not until the "Fourth" that the Blaine house on Lafayette Square, took on a "gone away" look, the family leaving the night before for the Maine coast. Secretary Blaine will take out a brief outing and will retnrn to remain until the adjournment of Congress. James Bjaine, Jr., will keep his father company. I saw Jimmy Blaine in the Congressional library tho other day. He wore a white flannel suit, and as he sat at one of the read ing' tables he looked cool and indifferent. Baek of his seeming indifference, however, I see a settled look which has deepened since his brother Walker's deatb; and he evi dently feels the responsibility incumbent upon him as his father's representative. He was appointed Clerk to the House Commit tee on Foreign Affairs ajhort time ago, and he attends, I am told, strictlv to his duties. It may be that the story of his life will be the same as that of Thomas F. Bayard's. When Bayard was a young fellow his brother James A. Bayard was set aside by the family us their future statesman, and they decided that Tom should be a mer chant They sent him to Philadelphia, but while he was acting as counter-jumper his brother James died and Senator Bayard then recalled Tom and put him to studying 15 law. Toung Jim Blaine has, it is true, been rather wild, but he is still away down in his twenties and he has the Blaine brains behind his Blaine like face. THE FINEST IN WASHINGTON. I saw Mrs Representative Hitt out driv ing to-day. She is one of the handsomest women in Congressional circles, and one whose toilets, whether for the house or street, are as striking as they are becoming. During the season the "Hilt turnout," in cluding horsey carriage and livery, is one of the finest in Washington. Just now Mrs. Hitt uses a pretty single surrey tha box of light colored wood. Mrs. Hitt has no need to economize. She was an heiress before her marriage and has always been used to money. For this reason she is never an over-dressed woman, but everything she wears is of the best materia), simply fashioned so that her toilets never hint of great wealth. Mrs. Hitt Is one of the clever women, a brilliant talker, and she speaks French fluently. She has no liking for large even ing parties, but gives many dinners and luncheons, and like the Vice-President's wife, Mrs. Hitt is reckoned a perfect hostess on sach occasions. It was at a luncheon given by Mrs. Hitt to young women, that Joseph Chamberlin was the only man gnest. Of course Miss Eadicott, now Miss Cham lin, was bne of the young women. It was said, and doubtloss was true, that Mr. Cham berlin himself gave such appealing hints to Mrs. Hitt that she could dono less than to say. laughingly; "Ob, yes; you m3y come too." And the fisheries diplomat jumped at the chance to lunch with "twenty "American girls," who naturally regarded him as the lion of the feast, though he had eyes but for the one fair blonde whom he not long after carried away to his English"home. YOTOG HEARST'S MAERIAGE. William Hearst, or "young Mr. Hearst," as he is usually called, is a young bache lor, the only child and the heir to his father's millions. Whom will he- marry? ' No other question is of such intense interest to his parents, particularly to his mother. Itis not extravagant because true that upon his marriage depends his mothers lature happiness. Senator Hearst is not a man of social'ambition. Even now he will slip away from his San Francisco house for a fortnight in a miner's camp to tell stories, and rough it in a miner's cabin on a miner's fare. It is certain, therefore, that Senator Heam will not break his heart if his son and heir but chooses a worthy woman, how ever lacking she may be in social position. Bnt not so Mrs. Hearst She is a woman possessed of much prida and social position. She would have her son travel abroad, min gle with men of culture and leisure, espe cially Englishmen, lor Mre. Hearst has a leaning toward England and the English. If it would so happen that young Mr. Hearst's wealth would bring about another international marriage, such as that ot Au gustus Jessup, it is safe to say her son's choice would come nearer the mark of gratifying Mrs. Hearst's fond hopes for her son, who is th "apple of her eye." But, unfortunately for his ambitions mother, William Hearst is hopelessly Ameri can, hopelessly democratic in theory and practice, and uncompromisingly "down" on aristocratic tendencies. Mrs. Hearst is hunting a "nice American girl" for him. Mios Getjndt, Je. Who's Got nn Elephant for Sale? Chicago Inter Ocean. 1 . The boys and cirls of Atlanta some months ago, aided by the Constitution, set abont raising funds "to bny an elephant" They have got the money in hand, and any body with a spare elephant should at once communicate with the "Constitution of At lanta. The qualifications are: That he must be amicable, love little boys and girls, have two sound ivories, and a good trunk of his own. lime. A. Rnppert'3 world-renowned faco bleach is the only face tonic in tne worlfi which positively removes freckles, moth patches, blackheads, pimples, birthmarks, eczema and all blemishes ot the skin, and when applied cannot be observed by anyone. Thousands ot ladles and centlemenare uslnc it daily in Pitts burg, and in all parts of the world, with pleas ing results. Call at mv office and see testi monials from ladies of Pittsburg and vicinity who do not wish their names published. The face bleach can only be had at my branch office. No. 93 Fifth avenne, Hamilton building, rooms liC and 201, Pittsburg, or sent to any address on receipt of price. Sold at $2 per bottle, or three bottles, usually required to clear the complex ion, S3. Send 1 cents postase for f till particulars. jylG-101-Sn MME. A. RPPPERT. The Soft Glow of Tha TEA ROSE Is Acquired by Ladies Who Use : ,g - 3 jsj - f g " : MEDICATED Lgp3 P1I TRY BT. SOXZD EVERYWTTEEB. .ton XlCwa- Iii tain. Hara jon sew Bobbers? Untf Xrt-ty. 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