f p "' THIRD PART. jffiT - - . SIATESMEIMI JULY. i. Glimpse of Congress When the Mer cury is 'Trying to Climb Out of Its Glass Tube. SPEAKER TOM REED'S GAUDY BELT. j Amusing Spectacle of Major McKinley Bak ing a Speech in a Prince Albert Without Any Test. ,?L1KKL SHIETS GEOWIKG POPULAE. ' ' the Hot Bathrooms An 21 Popular la Summer ax 3 Darin; the Winter Months. tCOSKZEPOXDEXCE OF ?HE DISPATCH.! "Washington, July 19. peakek Eeed has one of the gaudiest Bum rner suits in Washing ton. I saw him on Pennsylvania avenue this aiternoon. His big round cannon ball of a head was covered with a broad-brimmed rfm hat and his 300 pounds of bone and flesh were adorned with a suit of lavender gray. His coat was a cutaway, but it was unbuttoned at the front and I noted that he had no vest to cover his flannel shirt and that his pantaloons were held up by a blue silk band fully one foot vide, and necessarily at least six feet in length. This is the fashionable Congres sional suit for summer, and it has been adopted br Heed, Henry Cabot Lodge and others of the Eastern Congressmen. About one half of the members of the House now appear upon the floor without vests and dignity has gone to the winds. A large number of the statesmen wear flannel shirts, and Henry Cabot Lodge has one of navy blue, and he varies that at times with another ol a delicate lavender. He wears a flannel shirt collar iastened to the shirt and his coat is also a blue flannel. His pantaloons are light, and a deep blue silk band holds them in place. Below the bottom of his pantaloons show out russet shoes and he looks more readr for a foot race or a camping-out expedition than for speech making. SPINOLA'S CHANGE OP COLLABS. General Spinola sticks to his big white collar, but he wilts five every day and spends one-rourth of his time in rushing into the cloak-rooms to change them. He has the same blue suit that he wore in the winter, but he wears his vest unbuttoned, and during the last few davs the perspira tion has run off of him in streams. He does not seem to mind it, however, and he man ages to get along without the use of a fan. Dockerv, of Missouri, always his a fan in his hand, and he always looks hot Amos Cummines has been in a parboiled state, and, though he works right along, he can not stand the heat. His summer suit is of gray and his handsome face is shaded as he waits upon the avenue by a tall white plug hat. Stewart, of Yermont, is a symphony in rellow. His coat is a delicate chrome. His shoes are the brightest of golden morrocco, his necktie is of Jersey-cream, and he wears a vest which has a yellow tinge. All of his clothes are of some cotton or silk goods, and his Ballow complexion and sandy beard ehine out of tbem as though they were touched up by an artist to be a part of the vellow whole. Even "Bise-TJp William Springer has shed his vest, but he pounds the air just as earnestly as though the ther mometer was at zero, and he is ready to make a speech whenever h e can catch the Speaker's eve. He has roses in his button hole notwithstanding his negligee dress, and he frequently gets an admiring glance from the galleries. A MISSOUBI OUTFIT. One of the brightest and brainiest of the Young men of the House is Frank, of Mis souri. He came out the other day in a light black silk coat, a white vest and black shoes, with the brightest yellow of uppers. McKin leymade one of his biggest speechesthe other day without a vest. He wore a Prince The Speaker's Sath. Albert coat and this was thrown open at the Iroat and bis big expanse ol white shirt fchowed out with all tbe gloss of the Chinese laundry. When he raised his bands toward tbe ceiling in emphatic gesture, the little round tag that is fastened to the end of the bosom to hold it in place popped out and stood straight at right angles with the bosom and just over the center button of the black band of his pantaloons. As he enforced period a ter period with emphatic gestures, , this little white sign kept bobbing up and down, and McKinley, who is usually as cool as the center seed of a cucumber, grew warmer and warmer. His collar began to weaken, and the soft parts of bis shirt clung to his body, making his well starched bosom stand alone. I have seen other statesmen who have spoken under similar circumstances, and it is tbe general conclnsion among the mem bers that the flannel-shirtcd statesmen are the best off. Among the handsomest of these are Breckinridge, of Kentucky, who has doffed his statesman black and has clothed his big rame in a pepper and salt gray suit He does not wear a vest, and "his flannel Bhirt is of the most delicate cream. Bound the collar of this he ties a nobby blue scarf, and upon the lapel of his ".cost be wears a bright buttonhole bouquet 'of L Trance roses. '-rlCTUBEEQUE AND HANDSOME MEN. rJoseph G. Cannon, of Illinois, makes all .ibis speeches in a gray cutaway suit He ,worK himself into a sweat whenever he speak?, and he has no summer gestures. He has changed hiR standing collar for a turn over, and he wilts thisevtry time he takes the floor. General Banks wears a white (tiuck vest and a snit ol black goods of lk'ht weight. He covers his handsome white head with a black slouch hat, and his neck tie is a black ribbon, which he ties himself. General Buny Lee, the son of the great Con- federate General, wears a gray suit, Tom Bsyne, of Pittsburg, bobs around in a 535 Scotch tweed, and General Tracy, of New York, has a gray basinets suit, a boiled shirt and no vest. Ben Butterworth looks like a preacher in his white tie. Bising Sun Morse, of Massachusetts, the man who makes the stove polish, has a coat of a bombazine which shines as though it had been polished at his own factory, and his big frame is bonnd around with a white vest. Judge "Wickham, of Ohio, has mar ried winter to summer, and sticks to his black wiuter suit, having put on a yellow cloth vest for appearance sake. O'DonneH, ol Michigan, always looks cool, and his white silk necktie makes him cooler than ever. McComas, of Maryland, is a bru nette, and he is the handsomest black haired, bright-eyed young man in Congress. His light summer suit sets off his beauty, and his snowy shirt and white necktie makes him look as though he bad just jumped out of a band box. Che general appearance of the House is far different now than in the winter. In stead of men in stalely black you have all of the different sorts of suits above mentioned, and a number of instances have been known of members-taking oil their coats and work ing awav at their desks in their shirt sleeves. " And still the Capitol is the coolest place in Washington, and is one of the coolest places in the country. Thousands o dollars have been spent in order to make it so, and the same power that is used to cool Congress would run a vast manufactur ing establishment There is a tunnel which extends rom the foot of Pennsylvania ave nue up through the grounds into the base ment of the Capitol, and there are two great forcing fans over 12 feet in diameter which draw in a current of fresh air and send it into the Houses of Congress. This air is passed through a fountain in order to cool it, and it loses some of its heat in its under ground passage. Another tunnel is talked of, and in tbis4:ase the air will be brought from a great distance, and will con sequently be cooler. The en gineer of the Capitol thinks that the air ought to be passed over ice, and he sends a good part of the air through the heating pipes in warm weather in order to cool it There are more than.three miles of (hac. ninH 111 til Cftmtol. the lllOSt of f which are under ground, and the air by racing aronnd through tbem gets cooled oil. In addition to these arrangements there are fans to take the bad air out of the Capitol, and the ceiling of each of the Houses of Congress is perforated in order that tbe bad air may escape. The most careful means are taken to render the Congressmen comforta ble, and one of the instruments which the engineer has is one to test the humidity of A HOT DAT IN the-atmosphere. This is tested by a single human hair. Human hair absorbs moisture like a rope, and it becomes shorter when wet This hair is six inches long, and it is laid on a dial. The hand or pointer of the dial moves backward or forward as the moisture in the hair varies, and in this way tbe air can be perfectly regulated. The bathrooms of tbe Capitol have never been more patronized than they are now. Fiity members of the lower House take two baths daily, and nearly every Congressman gets his tub at Uncle Sam's expense dnring the hot weather. Ben LeFevre, of Ohio, used to spend about hall his time in tbe bathtub during tbe summer, and he was one of the few Congressmen who got fat on the Bussian bath. There are nine bathtubs in the basement tinder the House, and each bathroom is as big as the ordinary hotel bed room. The tubs are immense, and Tom Beed or George Barnes, or any of the fattest men in Congress can roll about in tbem without grazing their elbows or their knees. Some of these tubs are of marble, and in one of them Beagait was bathing when be was called up to vote on the Morrison bill. He came op in a blanket, and like the bed bug, got there just the same. THE EFFECT OF A BATH. Some members take a bath just before speaking. It makes one feel like a new man and when they get on the floor instead of leeling hot and tired they start off as fresh as a daisy. A number of the mem bers like tbe Bussian bath and even in these hot July days you will find some of the greatest men of the country dressed in nothing but a towel sitting in the steam room and drinking cold water until the perspiration runs down their cheeks and off their backs in rivulets. From time to time some of them will go off and take a plunge and then come back to sweat again. Alter they have been well rubbed down and sprayed off with cold water they come out at peace with themselves and all tbe world. Not a few of them bring their constitu ents here to bathe, and the Senators as a rule are inlly as fond of the public baths as the members of the House. In tbe Supreme Court basement there is a sort of an electric bath, which, it is said, will almost make a dead man think and which is resorted to by such members of Congress and the Judi ciary who are very tired from over-work and over-drink the night before and who want to put themselves in immediate trim. Speaking ot the Senate, tbe members of our so-called House ol Lords are quite as undig nified in their dress as tbe Representatives. A large number ol them wear no vests at all and I saw "Zeb" Vance this afternoon walking through the chamber with great heads of pearly sweat standing on his hand some forehead. He was fanning himself violently and a vast expanse of boiled shirt showed out between the frocks ot his light gray business suit He had evidently come to the Capitol in a hurry for his shirt was SOAKED WITH FEESPIRATION and it clung to his person. Piatt, of Connecticut, is another vestlcss Senator. Vance and Piatt are about the same height, bnt Vance weighs 250 pounds and Piatt weighs 125. He is as thin as a rail, and his six feet at bone and skin look longer and thinner than ever in his summer" attire. Another tall thin anatomy is Ingalls, and he and Eugene Hale, ot Maine, have evi dently bought theirsumuer suits in partner ship." They have the same cloth, and as thev sit side by side tbey are dressed enough alike to be brothers. Scuator Ingalls is a good deal of a dude. He has been called the best dressed man in the Senate, and in the winter he wears the most costly of heavy goods, and always has a red necktie sticking oat of his coat breastpocket. He now wears a double-breasted frock coat of light gray. THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH. It has enough material in it for an overcoat, and it corresponds with the remainder of the snit He wears a white necktie instead of his red one, and his long thin neckis clasped around by a standing collar as white as tne driven snow. The Vice President looks cool and pleas ant in a business suit of light brown. He is never hot, and he does not allow himself to appear otherwise than smiling. Stewart, the millionaire, looks like a farmer. He has a suit of navy blue flannel and his straw hat cost about $L SHEBIIAN'3 -WHITE PANAMA. Senator Blair is another straw hatted Senator, and John Sherman has a white Panama which he bought in Cnba a few vearsago. He has a gray business suit cut very much like that of Ingalls, and he looks JVbt Afraid of Boi Baths. not unlike a wealthy Southern planter in his seashore dress. Blair looks more like a Vermont farmer, and his snit is black and of light .weight Senator Payne sticks to his black Prince Albert winter clothes, and though he walks out to the Capitol he is as cold as ice cream. He has not enough flesh to get warm if he wanted to, and he believes in eujoying life and enjoys it. One of the coolest looking Senators is Bntler, of South Carolina, who is the white haired Adonis of THE SENATE. the Democratic side of the chamber. He has a skin as fresh as that of a baby's, and there is not enough hair on the top ol his head to make his brain hot. He wears a business suit and a white vest with a lavender necktie. He keeps the sun from his bead by a white straw hat, and usually carries an umbrella. Philetus Sawyer has thrown off his collar as well as his necktie. He has a winter neck and his short, fat Irame is pasted to bis big strong face by only a wafer. The result is his collars last only a few minutes, and he would, I doubt not, throw off his coat if he dared. When he is at home, in Wisconsin, he likes to work about his saw mills in his shirt sleeves. He is worth, it is said, about $5,000,000, and he has thousands ot acres of pine lands. Not long ago an Eastern merchants who wanted to mate a deal with him, was told he was at one of his sawmills. The man followed the directions and went to the saw mill, and seeing a little fat old man with a bald head and a big nose in his shirt sleeves working among the machinery he accosted him ratherly roughly and asked him several questions. "The latold man in shirt sleeves answered him and the man said he wanted to see Sen ator Bawyer. feofited'bt the mistake. "All right," said the fat man, "tell me your busiuess." "But I don't want to talk to you," said the man. "I want to see your chief. Where is the Senator?" Senator Sawyer then disclosed his iden tity to tbe man's great surprise and made a bargain with him based on the conversation which the man had bad with him when he thought he was a workman. The result was that the Senator made a small fortune by the man's mistake. Senator Cush Davis wears the cleanest and prettiest white silk necktie in the Sen ate. His linen is always Iresh and his com plexion is clear. He is not averse to hot weatber and his clothes are always in good order for his wife buys tbem for hiaiandshe watches as carefully over his wardrobe as over her own. Senator Davis' summer drink is a glass of iced milk, one of which' he always takes just before he goes to bed. Father Dawes, of Massachusetts, wears a black silk coat and a linen vest Senator Spooner has come out in summer pantaloons of light lavender. Paddock, of Nebraska, wears a white vest, Manderson has a navy blue suit, George Vest is clad in yellow and Casey, oi Dakota, looks cool in black. All of the Senators have changed their clothes and I am told that if the thermometer rises another degree a number will appear in flannel shirts. Fbank G. Caepenteb. DEATH TODER FIHGEE KAILS. Narsca Often Carry Dancerona Micro Organisms Unawares. There are medical reasons why the finger nails should be kept clean. This is shown in a paper read by Dr. Joseph Kinyoun, of the United States Marine Hospital, before the American Medical Association, in which he described some investigations in regard to the presence of micro-organism in finger nail dirt In "one case he examined the hands of nurses at the hour when they were dressing, the wounds of patients, and found that only two were not infested with pus micro-organisms. Continuing the search, he ound that, these organisms were after ward conveyed to utensils, furniture and bandages handled by the nurse. "Many a poor woman's death warrant has been carried to her under the finger nail ot a nurse," he declared. 1 3 PITTSBURG, SUNDAY, A TOUR OF ENGLAND Will Cost Dearly if One Implicitly Trusts the Guide Books. MEMORIES OF NORTHUMBERLAND. The North of England Coal Miner Fares Folly as Wei as Ours. EESOLTS IK C0-0PEBATIYE BT0EES ITBOM JL ETAJT COBEESFOHDIXT.I Newcastle on Ttne, July 10. Noth ing is more surprising to an American in England than to meet so many people from the United States. A short visit to this conntry soon shows that the travelof human beings between America and here must be enormous. In some parts of Central Lon don Americans haye fall sway, and in every large English city . they are to be found in great force. As a result, I re ceived numerous invitations to celebrate the "Glorious Fourth." But what I want to point out is that, as the visitors from America increase so do the number of "Guide books." I wish to say a few words on this point, knowing full well whereof I speak. The number of "Tourist Guides" now in circulation throughout England is very large indeed, and at'first sight one would think that almost every man, woman and -t.:i J .1. - TTJ.- J TTi 1 . 1- uuuumine unueu axuiguuiii wcreeA-ircuici solicitous for the earthly and eternal welfare of the man from the land of Stars and Stripes. The first impression one gets from the "Guides" in guestion is that something like Guardian Angels will hover over one's path from end to end of tbe British Isles. The lact is, however, that these "Guides" are just the things, in the majority of in stances, to lead visitors to places where hosts are, metaphorically speaking, waiting to bleed them to death. We may depend on the fact that wherever we go by the advice of a "Guide Book" there are many people waiting for us, Tbey know all about us and in a short time we discover that the difficulty of finding out places of historic interest is not half so great as getting clear of these leeches. NOT ENTIBELY -WOETHLESS. Mark, I'm not going to Bay that the "guides" are entirely worthless; but I do contend that Americans who visit England depend too much upon them, and, as a re sult, the thousands of Americans who come here annually unnecessarily throw away thousands of dollars and do not see the most interesting parts of England. The latter statement may seem strong, but there is truth in it. For instance, how many ox these "guides" tell us of the quaint and his toric county of Northumberland? I have failed to see one, and I contend that every American who visits England without taking a short tour through the county named misses one of the most interesting features of the trans-Atlantic journey. 'Taking every thing into consideration there is not a county or shire in England that abounds more in matters of the most historic interest than does Northumberland. The numerous cas tles that have withstood the ravages of time for 900, 1,000 and LlOO years tell the stories of the bloody conflicts between the Scotch and English from beiore the time of Wal lace until the two countries were made one. Of course, Northumberland is'the county adjoining Scotland and a trip along the border line will repay anybody. It was near the borders that the famons battle ot Flodden was fought; the battlefield is not far from Berwick and the traditions that yet are found among the natives regarding that battle are very amusing, indeed. I met one old man who, in speaking of the battle of Flodden Field, said: "Yis, man, blud ran doon that field for ite (8) days and grass hes nut grown on it since." The battle field is naturally barren and it is tbe earnest belief of the natives who reside near it that its fertility was ruined by Providence as a consequence ot the battle. THE DAYS OF FREEBOOTINO. But the castles located on either side of the Kiver Tweed, tbe dividing line, also re mind us oi the freebooting days when the English used to steal the Scotch cattle and seek shelter in the English castles, and of course the Scots acted similarly when oppor tunity afforded. There is not space here to even attempt to go into details on these features. I am only mentioning them, feel ing assured that thousands of newspaper readers who visit England will be interested in what I say. Old castles in Northumber land are numerous, and each one has glories aisociated with it that we would never tire of listening to. And in tbe villages which surround these castles there is no designing method of filching from the visitor his money; mostly because the places are not mentioned in the guide books and the sharks have not been apprised of the visitor's com ing. At the village inn, over a pot of ale, the entire history of the particular castle can be learned. Northumberland also contains the Roman wall, bnilt soon after Julius Coisar con quered tbe ancient Britons. The wall com mences in the city where I am now writing and extends many miles. It was intended to circumvent the county by it, and light in the interior of the county is located a Gipsy tribe. Those Gipsies have been there for generations and the name of their town is Yaik. Some strange and true stories are told ,of them. They still have their King or Queen. THE HOME OF GRACE DABLING. But Northumberland is also the home of Grace Darling. Everybody has heard of Grace Darling. The place where she lived, North Sunderland, is located only a few miles from the main line which runs between England and Scotland. I visited Noith Sunderland, bnt tbe weather was too inclem ent to go out to the Fame Island and see the island irom which the famous heroine started in a little fishing boat to rescne the shipwrecked sailors. North Sunderland in a little old-fasbioned fishing village and tbe islands are only a short distance from shore. George Darliugj a brother of Grace, still lives. He is more than 70 years old, and was younger than his sister. The sturdy old man delights to tell the story of his sister's noble performance when she, ac companied by her father, leit the light bouse and faced the tempestuous billows on a life-saving errand. The old-fashioned folks of North Sunderland are proud of Grace Darling, and their pride caunot be too great It is a lovely seaside village, North Sunderland, and nobody will regret visiting it Three or four miles, perhaps, from North Sunderland is located Holy Island. It is only about a mile or two from land, but probably is one of tbe quaintest and most historic places in the United Kingdom. It was famous in history in the fourth and fi th centuries, and in those early times was known as Landisfarne. It was on this isl and that the first monks tbat appeared in Britian located, and the ruins ol their mon asteries stand on the island to-day. We can learn much about it iu St. Bede's history, and that ancient divine made his abode on the island, and if I mistake uot, his history was written there 1,300 or 1,400 yeurs ago. THEY DON'T BLEED THE TOURIST. The monastic ruins are instructive to see. Theisland is only six or seven miles in cir cumference, but there is plenty accommoda tion for visitors. Of course, there are no grand hotels, because, singularly enough, the "guides" don't advise tourists to go there, which is all the better, for those who have the good fortune to drop over to this strangelittle island. But there are numer ous old-fashioned inns on the island, and there is no desire to squeeze the last shilling from the visitor. An excellent supper, bed and breakfast can be obtained for 75 cents or$l. -But what rhave been talkipg about re-, JULY 20, 1890. lates almost enterely to the north part of Northumberland, where superstition is very powerful and where tradition has great sway, and where we can see so much to link the present directly'with the past of nearly 1,800 years ago. I now intend to ssy a few words about the more modern part of North umberland, and what I will say on this point will have direct' connection with the industrial affairs of both the United States and England. The southern section of Northumberland is almost entirely made up of coal mines, and that coal region is known as one of the foremost in the world. I think I will be able to show that in all things the Northumberland miners stand ahead of all other miners, in the world. This may seem a strong statement in view of the fact that not long ago a cer tain writer visited England and subse quently declared to tbe world that the English coal miners in social and moral af fairs were not far removed from the hog. What I am going to say is regardless of either free trade or protection. THE COAL DIGOEB AT HOME. First, I will deal with tbe Northumbrian coal digger at home, that is, when he is out of the mine. He has comforts and avenues to intelligence that an American coal digger never sees and even may not dream of. I have examined carefally'into tbe conditions of each and I know that I have just slated a fact At home tbe Northumberland miner has a splendid house and garden free. The houses are generally built ot brick or stone and have from three to five and six rooms. The gardens are large enough to grow suffi cient vegetables for the house and the miner generally "feeds his own bacon" and rears bis own poultry. These conditions, that is, all that I have just mentioned, are not to be found in the United States, and it is of very great importance to have bouse and coal free. But every colliery village is laid out admirably and has a lecture hall and read ing room, besides three or four churches or chapels. Now the proprietors of these mines have paid the lion's share of money in building these institutions. As a rule the reading rooms and lecture halls have entirely been built by tbe mine owners. The churches or chapels have been erected jointly. These reading rooms are well patronized, and this accounts for tbe remarkable degree of intel ligence there is to be .ound among the North of England miners. I use the term North of England because what I say of Northumberland miners applies to the miners of Durham county, the neighboring county. In many colliery villages there are excellent debating socie ties and musical organizations, and the hours of labor are short enough to allow all these things to be well patronized. THE CO-OPERATIVE STORES. But the crowning glory, I might say, of these sturdy coal miners are the results of their co-operative efforts. In every village they have their "co-operative store," founded and managed by themselves, and in the two Counties named I am under the mark when I say there are 400 mining vil lages, some of them in net being large towns. The managerial work of these stores is free, and the skill of management dis played would o'ten surprise the heads of the biggest concerns in the world. Current prices are paid, and at the end of each quarter the profits are divided among the members in proportion to their purchases during the quarter. Some stores hardly ever fail to pay 20 per cent profit. I was informed that the store at Cambois was seldom short of that figure. At any rate, a 10 per cent dividend is deemed very small. The members can either withdraw their dividend or let it remain and the latter is generally done. As a result, the miners not only have these stores, but they have thousands of pounds gained by the profits invested in them. Here is a very significant lesson for the workmen of America. I could say much regarding these stores, would space permit, but I think sufficient has been said to prove the intelligence of the miner and the power of co-operation. The North of England miner is ont of the house about eight hours when at work; that time includes his going to and coming from his work. He, therefore, may work about seven hours per day.' The rules are rigid on this point. He earns from 5 to 8 shillings per day and in saying this I am taking the lowest estimate; that means Si 25 or $2 per day. This seems small when compared with the wages of some mining districts in the United States, and this great difference has given rise to almost all the talk in America about the starvation wages of the English miner. I am not going into details regarding the comparative value of the wages of English and American miners, but I say this that the Northumberland miner lives just as well and has more social comfort than has the average miner of any mining district I know of in the United States. I judge things by results and the results prove what I say to be true. A LIBERALLY SUPPLIED TABLE. It is also nonsense for writers to scribble away about English miners living on un buffered bread and salt herring. I stayed a day or two with some last week, and I'have seen no working men of any vocation with a better supplied table before them. And there was no special preparation. -Certainly, tbe miner in question works hard, just as hard as he can, but at home he has rest and comfort. There are other important features of his life. If be receives an injury while at work the' employers pay him a certain sum per week as long as lie is unable to work. He also receives another weekly allowance from theTeimanent Belief Fund, to which the employers voluntarily contribute one-fourth of the subscriptions. These allowances, together with the free houses, gardens and coals, are something that weigh heavy in the balance when weighing or estimating the comparative worth of the English and American wages. Altogether I think it can easily be seen that, tree trade or no free trade, matters are not as bad in England as we in America are sometimes led to believe. The truth is that were 1 digging coal I would prefer to dig in Northumberland to anywhere else. Of course it will be noted in what I have written that the mine owners have done much to improve matters. This is quite true, and many people fear that tbe leaders of the North England miners will ruin this good work by asking for law to force the owners to still do more. John D. Peingle. IBVIHG AS MAHOMET. Tbe Actor Contemplate Bringing tbe Groat Chnrncter Oat on tbe Stage. Fall .Mall Budget. It has been rnmored during the last day or two that Mr. Henry Irving had deter mined to create the part of Mahomet in' a play founded on that nf M. Henri de Bor nier. There is, we understand, a grain of truth in this rumor. The fact3 are not yet ripe for public reference, but we are in a position to state that, though Mr. Irving had never the very slightest intention of producing M. Henri de Bornier's play at the Lyceum, or any play founded upon it be bought the English rights of it, partly as an act of courtesy, and partly to hold con trol of the subject. We understand, further, that some time ago he commissioned an Eastern play from a well-known English novelist and drama tist This plav, which is not in any sense whatever an adaptation of M. de Boruier'n play, bnt an entirely original work, in all its essentials quite different, is now nearly written und ready, and report speaks of it iu very warm terms. Kirklna Reduced to a science. Kansas City Star.l Luther Challis gave four lots to the coun ty for a Court House at Atchison, and now the County Commissioners are kicking be cause he did not give eight. There is not a place in Kansas where kicking has been reduced to a science as it has in Atchison. HOT WEATHER TALK. Spots Where Over High Tempera lures Would Seem Cold "Waves. THERMOMETERS WAY UP TO 190. At Aden it Bains Once in Foar Tears and Every Drop is Hoarded. BLASTS THAT WITHER AUSTRALIA rwaiTTIN TOB THE DISPATCH. When weary mankind swelters in the stifling summer beat and refuses to be com forted by tbe predictions of the Signal Service they may find relief iu the thought that men have to live in places which, after all, are much hotter even than Chicago in the latter days of June. By comparison they may imagine themselves almost cool, and, if their imagination is sufficiently vivid, it re sults in a measure of comfort independent of the readings of the thermometer. Hottest of all torrid spots upon the sum mer earth is Aden, at tbe mouth of the Bed Sea, where tbe English Government main tains a coal pile for its navy and a force of soldiers to watch the pile, lest it be set afire by jealous powers. They lead the life of lonely salamanders upon their isolated rock, with a view of almost boiling sea in one direction, with wide stretches of baked sand in the other, and behind them rugged ranges of mountain, dry and red, where no green thing is ever seen to grow. No matter whence the wind may blow, it-brings no moisture to the Straits of Bab el Mandeb even dew is a rare phenomenon", for the clouds which appear in the sky at sunset serve as blankets to make the night stagnant with heat more unendurable than the blaz ing sun by day. BAIN ONCE IN FOUR YEARS. About once in four years the thermometer registers as low as 90 in the coolest part of the day just before sunrise; the lowest point of ordinary nights is fully 5 warmer. But with the sun returns the heat; bour by hour the mercury in the thermometer emulates tbe course of the sun in the sky; it climbs higher and higher and brings more discom fort to suffering humanity. Shortly after midday it reaches its highest notch, which it maintains until nearly sunset, and it is never lower than 115, and frequently travels many degree higher yet, and has been known to register 135 in the shade. It rains on this blistered military post about once in three years and that is the sole water supply, for there are no springs, and well borings tap nothing but seams of eter nal drought. As much else in Arabia King Solomon is credited with the responsibility for the Aden reservoirs,.and, to this day, tbey are caljed King Solomon's well, Here is collected the water of the triennial shower and, by economical use, it may be made to last until the rain comes again. DIVING IN THE SEA FOE WATEB. Bad as is the case at the southwest corner of Arabia, it is even worse at the southeast angle, where lie the Bahrein Islands, just off tbe coast of Oman. It is almost as hot here as at Aden, and there is tbe additional discomfort that it never rains at all. Dates grow upon the islands and provide food for the population; for their drinking water they are forced to seek it in the sea, which is the last place where one would expect to find fresh water. Strange as it may seem, not a drop of water is drunk by the Bahrein Islanders which harnot been brougbt from the bottom of the sea. Springs exist at a deyth of several fathoms, and the only way of getting a drirjk is to dive for it. Water bearers go down with empty skins and bring them up full to peddle the precious contents. It is not within the tropics that one finds the maximum heat, nor is the heat of the torrid zone so insupportable as summer extremes in more temperate zonea. If the rocent hot spell in Chicago had occurred in the Java seas it would probably have de populated the archipelago with cholera yet the average heat of the Maylayan Islands is more than 80. The cause is not far to seek; the people are accustomed to a climate of moderate range and do not have to exhaust their vitality in supporting great cold for a large portion of the year. Their systems grow used to a certain amount of heat and their mode of living is conformed to tbat standard. NO WATEB IN AUSTRALIA. Australia is probably the hottest of the temperate lands inhabited by white races, and it is at the same time almost the driest excluding snch absolute deserts as a large portion of the Pacific coast ot .South Amer ican. From tbe time when its summer be gins, in September, until the coming of win ter in July, the earth gives up all its moist ure, almost the largest bodies of water dry up, the air is dry and day by day the sun sends down ever fiercer beams. Adelaide, which is upon the south shore of the conti nent, finds 115 no unusual temperatnre for Christmas, and an additional 10 scarcely calls for comment in the journals. Not con tent with the appalling state of. the ther mometer in the shade, they expose it to the sun and find to their dismay a temperature of anywhere from 150 to 190. Sheep and cattle die, yet men manage to live, and, despite the torrid heat, neverbave ice. The nearest approach to a cooling drink is water from canvas bags, which is cooled by constant evaporation. Taere is an interesting comparison America uses ice water and suffers sunstroke: Australia, with much greater heat, knows neither sun stroke nor ice water. DEPENDS ON HOW YOU TAKE IT. There is fully 30 degrees difference be tween the mean temperature oi most oi the United States and India, this country aver aging about ou degrees and most ol Uin dostan being above 80 degrees. Thus the Anglo-Indian is a well recognized type of humanity with his testy temper and im paired liver, for which the excessive tem Eerature is held responsible. Yet itispossi le that the heat a ter all is not so much to blame; no one looks upon a Dutch-Indian as a well-recognized type of manhood; he has no liver and no temper to afford torment to bis family and torture to his friends, but great merriment noon the stage, yet the average temperature of the Dutch East Indies is considerably above that of Hin dustan. The difference is all in the way in which one takes the heat The English "griffin" makes no concessions to Indian life. The Dutchman renounces Holland and all its works from the instant he steps ashore at Batauia. The time-honored divisions of tbe day are overturned to suit the new order of climate. Broad daylight is the time for sleep. The twilight of morning and even ing are the time for work when there is cool ness abroad. William Churchill. A HEAD OF EXTEA LENGTH. Oregau'a Governor Itrfuse- to be a Victim of n Put Up Job. Anaconda, Mont., Standard. Governor Pennoyer, of Oregon, must be accredited with the poscssion of a head of extra length. He has declined an invita tion to umpire a game of baseball between the lawyers and real estate men of Portland. The scheme was doubtless a trap which the crafty and unprincipled Republicans of Oregon had set for his Excellency. Tbe Governor's popularity is altogether too firmly established to suit thim. and, having tried every other means of snaking it, his political enemies are at last 'resorting to the most desperate and outrageous methods con ceivable ot putting him in a bole. The ac complished Chief Magistrate of Oregon was sharp enough to perceive the pit that had been dug and gracefully kept out of it Governor feunoyer's sagacity merits tbe respefiitul consideration of mankind, v Jl THE END Of A STORY OF LIFE IN INDIA DURING THE HEATED TERM. "WRITTEN FOR THE DISPATCH. ,BY RUDYAED KIPLING, The Young Author Who in One Short Year Has Made Himself the Sensation of the Literary World. Four men, theoretically entitled to "life, liberty and tbe pursuit of happiness," sat at a table playing wbist Tbe thermometer marked for them 101 degrees of heat. The room was darkened till it was only just possible to distinguish the pips of the cards and the very white faces of tbe players. A tattered, rotten punkah of whitewashed calico was puddling tbe hot air and whin ing dolefully at each stroke. Outside lay gloom of a November day in London. There was neither sky, sun nor horizon nothing but a brown purple haze of heat. It was as though the earth were dying of apoplexy. From time to time clouds of tawny dust rose from the ground without wind or warn ing, flung themselves tableclothwise among the tops of tbe parched trees and came down again. Then a whirlwind dust-devil would scutter across tbe plains for a couple of miles, break and fall outward, though there was nothing to check its flight save a long, low line of piled railway sleepers white with the dust, a cluster of huts made of mud, condemned rails and canvas, and the one squat four-roomed bungalow that be longed to tbe assistant engineer in charge of a section of thCGandhari State line then under construction. The four men, stripped to the thinnest of sleeping suit, played wbist crossly, with wrknglings as to leads and returns. It was not the best kind of wbist, but they had taken some trouble to arrive at it Mottram, ot the Indian survey, had ridden 30 and railed 100 miles from his lonely post in the hummil's thick, muffled desert since the previous night; Lowndes, of the civil service, on special duty in the political department, had come so far to escape for an instant the miserable intrignes of an impoverished native State.whoseKing alternately fawned and blustered for more money from the pitiful revenues contributed by hard wrung peasants and despairing camel breeders; Spurstow, the doctor of the line, had left. a cholera-stricken camp of coolies to look after itself for 48 hours while he associated with white men once more. Hummil, the assistant engineer, iras the host. He stood fast and received his friends thus every Sunday if they could come in. When one of them tailed to appear, he would send a telegram to-his last address, in older that he might know whether the de faulter was dead or alive. There be very many places in tbe East where it is not good or kind to let your acquaintance drop out of sight even for one short week. DBY PLAY AND BYPLAY. The players w?re not conscious of any special regard for each other. They squab bled whenever they met; but they ardently desired to meet, as men without water desire to drink. They were lonely folk who under stood the dread meaning of loneliness. Tbey were all under 30 years of age which is too soon for any man to possess that knowl edge. "Pllsener," said Spurstow, after the second rubber, mopping his forehead. "Beer's out, I'm sorry to say, and there's hardlr enough soda water for to-night," said Hummil. "What filthy bad management!" snarled Snurstow." "Can't help it. I've written and wired, but the trains don't come through regularly vet Last week the ice ran out, as Lowndes knows. "Glad I didn't come. I could ha' sent you some if I had known, though. Pbew! it's too hot to go on playiugbumblepuppy." This with a savage scowl at Lowndes, who only laughed. He was a hardened offender. Mottram rose from the table and looked out ol a chink in the shutters. "What a sweet day!" said he. The company yawned unanimously and betook themselves to an aimless investiga tion of all Hummil's possessions guns, tat tered novels, saddlery, spurs and tbe like. They had fingered tbem a score nf times be forej but there was really nothing else to do. 'Got anything fresh?" said Lowndes. "Last week's Gazette of India und a cut ting trom a home paper. My father sent it out. It's rather amusing." "One of those vestrymen that call 'em selves M. P.'s again, is it?" said Spurstow, who read his newspapers when he could get them. "Yes. Listen to this. It's to your ad dress, Lowndes. The man was Mnaking a speech to his constituents and he piled it on. Here's a sample: 'And I assert unhesita tingly that tbe civil service in India is tbe preserve tbe pet preserve of the aristoc racy ot England, What does the democ racy what do the masses get from that country which we have step by step fraudu lently annexed? I answer, nothing what ever. It is rnrmed with a single eye to their own interests by tbe scions of the aris tocracy. They take good care to maintain their lavish scale of incomes, to avoid or stifle any inquiries into the nature and con duct of 'their administration, wnile they themselves force the unhappy peasant to pay with the sweat of bis brow for all tbe luxuries in which they are lapped.' " Hummil waved the cutting above his head. "'Ear, 'earl" said his audience. FAOC VEESU3 FANCY. Then Lowndes, Meditatively "I'd give- .PAGES 17 TO 20. THE PASSAGE J I'd give three months' pay to have that gen tleman spend one month with me and see how the free and independent native prince works thif gs. Old Timbersides" this was his flippant title for an honored and decor rated prince "has been wearing my life out this week past for money. By jove, bis latest performance was to send me one of his women as a bribe I" "Good for you t Did you accept it?" said Mottram. "No. I rather wish I had now. She was a pretty little person, and she yarned away to me about the horrible destitution among the king's women folk. Tbe darlings haven't had any new clothes for nearly a month, and tbe old man wants to buy a new drag from Calcutta solid silver railings and silver lamps and trifles of that kind. I've tried to make bim understand tbat be has played the duce with the revenues for the last 20 year3 and must go slow. He can't see it." "But he has the ancestral treasure vaults to draw on. There must be three millions at least iu jewels and coin under his pal ace," said Hummil. "Catch a native king disturbing the family treasure! The priests forbid it except as the last resort Old Timbersides has, added something like a quarter of a million to the deposit in his reign." "Where the mischief does it all come from?" said Mottram. "The country. The state of the people is enough to make you sick. I've known the taxnien wait by a milch camel till the foal was born and then hurry off the mother for arrears. And what can I do? I can't get the court clerks to give me any accounts. I can't raise anything more than a fat smile voice cried: YOU FOOL I fro m the Commander-in-Chief when I find out tbe troops are three months in arrears, and old Timbersides begins to weep when I speak to him. He has taken to the king's peg heavily liqueur brandy for whisky and Heidsieck for soda water." "That's what the Kao of Jubela'took to. Even a native can't last long at that," said Spurstow. "He'll go out." "And a good thing, too. Then I suppose we'll have a council of regency, and a tutor for the young prince, and band him back his kingdom with ten years' accumulations." "Whereupon that young prince, having been taught all the vices of the English, will play ducks and drakes with tbe money an J undo ten years' of work in 18 months. I've seen that business before," said Spurs tow. "I should tackle the King with a light hand if I were you, Lowndes. They'll hate you quite enough under any circum stances." BLACK CHOLERA. "That's all very well. Tbe man who looks on can talk about tbe light hand, bnt you can't clean a pigstye with a pen dipped in rosewater. I know my risks; but noth ing has happened vet. My servant's an old Pathan, and he cooks for me. They are hardly likely to bribe him, and I don't ac cept food Ironfmy true friends, as they call themselves. Ob, but it's weary workl I'd sooner be with you, Spurstow. There's shooting near your camp." "Would you? I don't think it About 15 deaths a day don't incite a man to shoot anything bnt himself. And the worst of it is that the poor devils look at you as though you ought to save them. Lord knows I've tried everything. Mv last attempt was em pirical, but it pulled an old man through. He was brought to me apparently past hope. and I gave him gin and Worcester sauce with cayenne. It cured him; but I don't recommend it." "How do the cases run generally?" said Hummil. "Very simply indeed. Chlorodyne, opium pill, chlorodyne, collapse, nitre, bricks to the feet, and then the burning ghat. The last seems to be the only thing that stops tbe trouble. It's black cholera, you know. Poor devilsl But, I will say, little BunseeLal, my apothecary, works like a demon. I've recommended him for pro motion if he comes througn it all alive." "And what are your chances, old man?" said Mottram. "Don't know; don't care much; but I'va sent the letter in. What are you doing with yourself generally?" "Sitting under a table in the tent and spitting on the sextant to keep it cool," said tbe man of the survey. "Washing my eyes to avoid ophthalmia, 'which I shall certainly get, and trying to make a sub-surveyor understand that an error of five degreess in an angle isn't quite so small as it looks. I'm altogether alone, y' know, and shall be till the end of the hot weatber." "Hummil's theluckyman,"said Lowndes, flinging himself into a long chair. "He has an actual roof torn as to the celling cloth, but still a roof over his head. He sees one' train daily. He can get beer and soda water and ice it when God is good. He has books, pictures" they were torn from tbe Graphic "and the society of the excellent sub-contractor Jeyins, beside the pleasure of re ceiving us weekly." Hummil smiled grimly. "Yes, I'm the luckv man, I suppose. Jevins is luckier." "How? Not n ."Yes. , Went out Last Monday." "Jp tel" said Spurstow, quickly, hinting the suspicion tbat was in everybody's mind. There was no cholera near Hummil's section. Even tvrei gives a man at least a week'- H .1 r 'j:iti4&&,Zi!&- tf ,jr.l . tr.S-itZiitf J EikkBMMHflsisI3HBli T- .- .-.. ;.'