f- '22' l ' X THE. TWO NEW SENATORS The Twin flnsllers From the New State of Wyoming and Their Interesting Careers. WAUKEN A MAN OP MANY PARTS. He Claims His State Got the Worst of the Census Count and Cites Its Kalnral Advantages. THE ALLIANCE AND 11 S POLITICS. Bettors for til Great Protjoity tut Seal Eattte Booms of Wulingtoa. ICOnREEPONDEXCE or the msrATcn.1 Washikgtoj.-, Dec 13. The United States Senate opens this year with two full grown babies. These are the twin Senators from the new State ot Wyoming. They arc both bright fellows and they promise well. Senators Carey and "Warren are of the same age, both were born in the East, both have made money in Western stock raising, and both come from the capital of the new State, Cheyenne. Senator Cany has a good standing here as a territorial delegate. He has served five years in Congress, and he is as straight as a string and as bright as a button. He has studied the machinery of Congressional legislation, and he goes into the Senate well equipped for his duties. The most interesting of the new Senators, however, is Governor Warren. He is en tirely new to Washington, and his only political service has been as Governor of Wyoming Territory, Mayor of Cheyenne, and as one of the leading politicians of his section. He is a man with a history, and his life has been typically American. His father was a Massachusetts farmer who be lieved that all the learning a boy needed was comprised in the mastery of the three It's, "rejdin, ritin, rithnietic." LEARNING Br A TALLOW DIP. When young Warreu was 13 years old he had to a certain extent mastered these, and he wanted more schooling. His father told him that if he got it he would nave to earn it, and he let him hate his time for himself, from that age until now Warren has made his own living. He not a good education by working in the summers and going to school in the winters, and the most of his les&ons were studied by the lieht of a tallow dip. away up under the roof in his attic room in his grandfather's house, where he boarded. He had progressed well in his academical stud'es when the war broke out, and he wjs at this time about 16 years old. He wanted to enlist at once, but his father sent him word prohibiting it, and, accord ing to the laws of Massachusetts, he had to be considerably older before he could go without his father's consent. Hewasjinderc ntract to work for his master until he was 18. But on his 18th birthday, the 23d of June, 1862, he came into town with a load of cheese, determined to go to the war. There was a meeting in the town hall that night for recruits and Senator Warren tells me that when he went in he saw his father there and he was airaid he might prevent his enlistment. WEST WITH A rATIIEn'S BLKSSIXG. He was also backward because a bounty of $150 had been offered for volunteers, and be ieared it would be thought he went into the army for the bounty. When the re quest lor recruits was made, however, he found himself on his feet before he knew it, and as be started up for the front his father stood by his side and took his arm and walked with him saying that be had not wanteu him to go be.'ure; but that he was a man now, and he had confidently expected to findhim here and that he went with nis consent and his blessing. So young Warren started out to battle. He was only in service about a year and had been offered a commission, when sickness drove him home to Massachusetts. He had lor a time charge of the largest dairy farm in that part of the country and was making a high salary for New England, when he de cided to go est. He stopped in Iowa, workid there for a time, and then went on to Cheyenne. He had no money to speak of, but he got into merchandising and cattle raising, and gradually increased his capital by successful turt.s and by his knowledge of slock, until he is now one of THE RICHEST OF CATTLE MEN. He is the President and the chief stock holder in tne Warren Live Stock Company; and this companv has 100,000 sheep, 3,000 cowi, and about 2.000 horse-. It has a flock of 5,000 Angora coats, and it has some of the finest imported rams in the United States. It owns 100,000 acres of land, and it is increasing the number of its animals right along. Wyoming is a State ot thousands of hills, and Warren may weil be called the Job oi the Senate, lor his cattle roam o er the best of them. He is like Job, too, in his other possessions, lor he isa man of niaur interests. His merchandis ing interests extend over the whole State, and the Cheyenne house has agencies in Salt Lake and Ogden. He has interests in the electric light plant of Cheyenne, and there are few business interests in the city with which he is not connected. Let me tell you how this Wyoming Senator looks. I called upon him last night in his room at the Arlington Hotel, and onnd him a good-looking fellow oi about 46 years of age, dictating like mad to a tipenriter, who took down bis words on a machine that rattled like a cornsheller. The Senator le t off his dictation upon my entrance, but the infernal clicking went ou during our con versation. HOW THE SENATOR LOOKS. Senator Warren is about six feet tall and his lorm is as straight as the straightest pine which hugs the Wyoming slopes of the Bocky Mountains. His shoulders are as broad as are Western ideas, and his chest has been made deep and full by the rarified air ot Cheyenne which contains, I am told, SO times as. much ozone as any air east of the Mississippi. Senator Warren is a blonde. His hair is of a light brown. His eves are blue and he has a luxuriant straw-colored mustache, which comes well down over a strong and clean-cut mouth. His forehead is high and broad, his nose is straight, and his face is, on the whole, rather handsome. He dresses well, talks well and will, I judge, be a man or more than ordinary weight on the Senate floor. I asked him as to tne present condition ot the new State. Said he: "The State ot Wyoming is" in creasing in population right nlong. It is true the censns gives uionly '60,000, but we had only 15,000 in 1870, and I think our population to-day is really about 100,000. We have a great many out-of-the-way towns and districts tu which it was hard to get au accurate census. IRON", COAL AND OIL. "Our State contaius about 90,000 square miles, and you could lose the six New Eng land States inside of it. Some ol our county seats are 175 miles from a railroad. Ne vada is decreasing in population, but our population will steadily grow, and we will h ive, I think, one of tne' great States of the Wet. We have one of the richest mineral re; ons in the United States. Our coal and iron ill eventually make us a rre.it man ufacturing State, aud'we have 30,000 square miles of good coal. Some of our iron can not he surpassed in quality and quantity, and we have copper and lead and gold and silver. "We have considerable agricultural coun try, and it the Government would give Wyoming its arid lands, stock companies could be formed for its irrigation and great tracts of desert could be made to blossom like the rose. We have some of the richest oil regions in the United States. I have teen oil wells which would throw a stream 60 feet in the air, and there are in parts of the State ponds of-oil-efght'feet deep, where the oil has run out from natural wells and has been caught in basins. It is not really known how valuable Wyoming is, and the State is in its babyhood, materially as well as politically." TLUMB HOPES TOR INGALLS. Senator Plumb tells me Chat Ingalls will probably be returned to the Senate, and that lie has a number of friends among the Al liance legislators which, in addition to his Republican friends, will secure his election. Senator Ingalls himself will sav that b'e considers his success certain. There is a general desire here that Ingalls be returned to the Senate, and expressions of this kind are common even among the Senators who have been the most bitterly attacked by bim. The newspaper correspondents without ex ception are auxious that he should remain, as he furnishes better descriptive material than any other man in the body, and always has a new idea to offer upon every subject that comes up. I hud a general impression that the Alli ance party will be ephemeral, and that it will not have much influence on the next election. Senator Plumb said last night: "You can't tell what will be the state of things two years from now. Times may be better, and the effect of the McKinley bill may show that it will be a good rather than a bad thing for the country. The Farmers' Alliance party will have a number of offices to distribute. Its leaders will probably quarrel among themselves, and it may all go to pieces before the Presidcntal election." POOn-POOHING THE ALLIAXCE. Judge Tyner, ex-Postmaster General, Tind now Attorney General of the Postoffice De partment, thinks with Senator Plumb, and be says it reminds bim of the granger move ment which struck Indiana about the time he ran for Congress. He was advised not to accept the Republican nomination on ac count of the strong farmers' element of the district, which would certainly 'be against him. He took this advice, and another man was nominated. He was a weaker candidate than Tyner, but he was elected because. (be grangers fought among themselves, and could not at the end agree upon a candidate. Boswell P. Flower thinks the Alliance has too many crazy ideas as to fiat. money, etc , to hold itself together, and George O. Jones, who was the Greenback candidate for the Presidency some years ago, believes that the old Greenback element will" unite and that they will rally around Senator Stan lord as the next candidate for the Presi dency. I called on Senator Sanders, of Montana, last night. He says there are no Alliance people in Montana, and ventures the statement that the Alliance party will, within two years, be a thing of the past. MUST BE ABOVE BOARD. "The people of the United States," said he, "will not support any party which holds its meetings in the dark. Such'actions are against the spirit of American institutions, and they are a part only of the craze'of the times. We are growing insane over secret societies. If you will go into any crowd you will fiud more buttons and badges than you can count, and it would take more learning to read their meaning than it would to write a history of Moses and the prophets. "Parties have been in a transition state for the last ten years, and just now there is going on all over the United States a disin tegration of parties and a change of social conditions, which make it almost impossible to prophesy lor the lutnre. This is an age of trusts, of false values and of great fort unes It is an age of fortunes made dis honestly, and it would seem to me that a day of reckoning must come sooner or later. Our great corporation values are based on false estimates. Our railroads are operated so that their directors and managers and great proprietors are little better than thieves in regard to the public, and the bal ance sheet must be made up sooner or later. As to the Alliance party it is only an evi dence of the discontent." FORTUNES IN REAL ESTATE. New railroads are being built out from "Washington in every direction. Three new eltc ric lines are being constructed and the rails are already down between the Treas ury and the Patent Office of the new G street line, and cars will be running, it is said, by the 1st of January. The business part of Washington is changing. A few years ago all of the chief business houses were on Pennsylvania avenue. Now the F street property is the most valuable busi ness propertr in tb? city. Hon. John W. Thompson, Washington's millionaire bank er, bought last spring the corner of F and Thirteenth street, just below the Ebbitt House, and paid $225,000 for it. This was considered an immense1 price, but Mr. Thompson went off to Enrope during the rummer, and, after a nice trip through Norway and Switzerland, returned a few d ivs ago and sold his properly lor 5350,000, making $125,000 off it in six months. The G street railroad has made a great boom in G street property, and it will soon be as busy as F street is now. The owners of residences along it have grown rich, and houses which three years ago were worth 53,000, are now worth" 525,000. QUITE -A SUBSTANTIAL TOWN. General Denver, the man alter whom Denver was named, tells me that his land lady was the other day offered $51,000 for a house which she h id bought for 54,000, and there is a negro woman who owned a little 55,000 property on F street some years ago, who ha made 575,000 on it. Ex-Senator Buckalew, of Pennsylvania, and General Denver were chatting together last night of the wonderful growth of Washington and of its elements of prosperity. "The people outside ot Washington," said General Denver, "can't understand it. They say the town has no manufacturers, no water front, and no commerce, and they cm t see anything to mace it grow, it has, in fact, the biggest lactones in the United States, and its hands are the best paid. There is the Treasury factory, with its 3,000 employes receiving an average of about 51,000 a year. There Is the Interior De partment, which has 3,000 or 4,000 more high-priced, bands. And there is the Pen sion Office, the War, Department and the dozen of other governmental institutions which must increase in size, and which dis tribute millions of dollars here every month." LOTS OF MONET SPENT. "Yes," said Senator Buckalew, "and there is Congress, with its 400 men getting 55,000 salaries and spending more than 55,000 a year heie on the average. There are the thousand odd people who hang around Con gress wanting to get something out of it, and there are the nabobs who are coming here from all parts of the country foe their winter residence, and spending here the income of their millions. There are millions of dollars spent every year in a social way, and Wash ington has, I believe, the best elements ol growth of any city of its size in the country." " "Yes," said General Denver, "and the transient element of Washington brings a great deal into the city. Every inaugura tion brings 100,000 strangers, and he is a mighty close calculator who can pass throueh Washington without spending at least 520 on the way. Washington gets 53,000,000 out ot every inauguration, or an average ol 5500,000 a year from this source alone, and it has conven tions of all sorts from week to week, year in and year out. To-day it is the dentists, to morrow it is some branch of scientists, and the next day it is something else. It is a city of low taxation and of fair taxation, and it will be the Mecca of the capitalist for years to come." Frank G. Carpenter. An After-Dlnner Man. New York bunTj - "Depew," said an enthusiastic admirer of the genial Dr. Ghanncey M., "is the best attex-dinner man in the world." "You do him an injustice," replied his friend. "Do you know that an 'after-dinner man' is really a deep drinker? Head up and you'll see, and, having seen, you won't malign a great public man by any such charge as that again." The friend was right An "after-dinner man" is really the old English idiom, for the hard drinker." i Alter THE REALM QF RHYME. GARXEIIED FOR THE' DISPATCH. A Trifling Correction. An Old English Epigram.': Bays Tom, who held great contracts of the na tion, "I've made ten thousand pounds by specula Hon." Cries Charles, "By speculation! you deceive me; Strike out the s indeed, and I'll believe thee." An Oriole. By Mrs. Mary E. Blake. A dazzle of yellow, a quiver of wines, A flash like a beam from .the -sun's rays shaken. And high on the tree tops an oriole sings, Dizzy wltb gladness, like hearts afloat On an ocean of love, in a fairy boat. While the Joy bells of life pntohliss awaken. Only an instant, and then away Like the flight ot a thought through the sum mer weather; But still and forever the song shall stay; To wake in my soul through the winter's night ,.- . The rapturous thrill of that keen delight, When it and the oriole sang together. The Dreams of Youth. ' Nora Perrr, in Brooklyn Standard-Union. 1 The daisies blow, the roses grow In garden, field and wood. And care is sweet, when youth 1 sweet, And God Is very good. 1 still must weave and still believe My dreams will all come true; For hope is bright, and sorrow light, When lite is fresh and new. Love Can Tell. Cape Ced Item. Say 'Papa,' darling," the mother cooed. lc opened its big eyes blue. With wondering eyes the visitor viewed, And laughed and said Goo-goo." "Say 'Mamma,' darling." the mother said; "Say 'Mamma,' sweet one, do," It tugged at the hair ot its enrly head. And laughed and said "Goo-goo."' "Now say 'Goodby,'" and the mother smiled With a joy that was pleasant to view; "Now say Uoodby,' V and tho winsome child .Responded and said "Uoo-goo.' , . . Then the mother embracing the little dear," And kissed it again and again, As she gurglingly said -Did you ever hear A baby that talked so plaint" . . - Novels, Oh, Novels, Oh, Novels! From the Library Journal. I t " At a library desk stood some readers one day Crying, "Novels, oh, novels, oh novels!" And I said to them: "People, oh, why do you say Give us novels, oh. novels, oh, novels?' Is it weakness of intellect, people." 1 cried, Or simply a space where the brains should abidef They answered me not, for they only replied: "Give us novels, oh, novels, oh, novels!" Here are thousands of books that will do yon more good Than the novels, oh, novels, ob, novels! You will weaken your brain with such poor mental food As the novels, ob, novels, ob, novels! fray take history, music, or travels, or plays, Biography, poetry, science, essays. Or anything else that more wisdom displays, Than the novels, ob, novels, oh, novels! , . A librarian may talk till he's black in the face About novel, ob, novels, oh. novels! And may think that with patience be may raise the taste Above novels, oh.'-novels, oh. novels! He may talk till with age his round shoulders are bent And the white hairs of time 'mid the black ones are sent. When he hands his report in, still 70 per cent Will be novels, ob, novels, ob, novels! No nope for English Literature, 3. TV. Foss In the Yankee Blade. At the debatln' club las' night we all discussed aenre "For the debilitated state of English lit'ra- chure.", "The stuff theft writ for folks," I said, "don't move 'em an' dellcht 'em. Because the folks who write the things, don't know enough to write 'eni." "The folks who-wnte. they stuff their heads in some big cyclopedy, W'ch ain't no place fer mental food to feed the poor au' needy; They're huntin' on an em'ty shelf, like poor ol' Mother Hubbard, An' go right by the open door of Mother Natur's cupboard. "They crawl into come libery, far from the worl's inspection. Bury themselves in books beyond all hope of resurrection; They cry out from their tombs, in w'ich no sun nor star can glisten, An' weep because the liv'n' worl' don't fin' no time to listen." Then Elder Pettcngell he asked: 'Canyonsug- cest a cure For tho debilitated state ot English lit'ra- chure?" "Ain't none; our authors' ignorance is far too dark for lightnin', ,J While we ho know enough to write haitft got no time for writinV ' A November Note. Alfred Austin In the Spectator. L Why, throstle, do you sing In this November hazer Singing for hat? for whom? Deem you that it is spring. Or that your woodland lays Will stave oS winter's gloom! n. Then did the bird reply: "I sing becanso I know That spring will surely como; That Is the reason why, 1 Tboucb menaced by the snow, Even now I am not dumb. in. "But few are they that hear. And fewer still that reel. The moaning of my song; Until tho note be clear. Re-echoed be the peal. Early and late and long. rv. "But you have heard and owned The sound of my refrain. Yet tentative nnd low. Thus, post, be iiitoned. Your own loresbadowlng strain. Trusting that some will know: v. That some will know and say. When greetings of the spring , Wake winter from Its bed; This is the self-same lay We overheard him sing When dead h ear's deemed bim dead.' " Old Man Thurman. Oeorce Horlon, In Cleveland l'lalndealer. Allen G. Thurman usually addresses his wife as "Sweetheart." A song for old man Thurman, t 1 And sing it clear and strong; ' Bis life has been a sermon, Now let it be a song'. And this shall be its burthen "' To give us greatest joy, He calls bis old wire "Sweetheart," And loves her like a boy!" v There is no fairer story In all our nation's life; No better, purer glory In all Its peace and strife True is I hat man and steadfast. Fine gold with no alloy. Vr ho call hi old wife "Sweetheart," And loves her like a boyk Who cares for his position On questions ot the day? He has a higher mission, A nobler Dart tu play! Smiling ahd patiebt ever. Though age and pain annoy. He calls bis old wife "sweetheart." And lores her like a boy! ? A fig for flowery diction OfinecKnu eloquence! A fig for all the nctlon OI wealth and vain pretense! Here Is a man whose glory No envy can destroy He calls his old wife "Sweetheart," And loves her like a boy! ' We well could spare the splendor And tinsel of these days. Glrrf us true hearts and tender, And plain, old-fashioned ways! Of men like Allen Thurman This world will never cloy. Who calls liu old wife "Sweetheart,"' a-ou loves uer ue a uoyi .,. ... EITTSBUKG DISPATCH," LIGHT FROM'THE ARC. An Explanation of the Electric Lamp Used in the Streets. THE SODUCE OP ILLUMINATION. How the Carbon Points Are Kept the Be quired Distance Apart. THE CAUSE OF THE FLICKERING rWSlTTEN TOO. TBI DISPATCII.l In describing incandescent limps we have shown how that in the lamp filament the electric current, or better its energy, is transformed into white heat through the friction between the current and the fila ment. "The light of the arc lamp ig pro duced in the same way except that in this lamp there isa combination of effects namely, the white heat of the carbon tips due to the passage of the current to and from the air, and the" white heat of the air due to the passage of the current through it. The ordinary arc lamp consists of two vertical carbon pencils about a half an inch in diameter and 12 inches long placed end to end, with about a quarter of an inch air space between these ends, and a suitable electrical device for automatically keeping this quarter of an inch air space while the carbons slowly burn away. If we firmly fasten two arc light carbons in the positions Just described and force about ten amperes of current to pass through from one carbon to the other, that is jump the air space between them, a light of dazzling bril liancy will be formed between the carbon ends. THE THEORETICAL AKC LAMP. The electrical and mechanical details of an are lamp are many and complicated and could Dot possibly beentered into here, but the main principlesinvolved will be readily understood from figure 1, which represents a purely theoretical lamp. Let "D" repre sent the dynamo, "A' its positive pole and ,"b" its negative; "g" and "h" are the carbons and these are connected, one to one pole of the dj namo and the other to tne other pole of the dynamo as shown and indi cated in the figure by the wires and signs, plus and minus. Between "j" and "e" there is represented a solinoid or coil of wire; inside the solenoid there is a loose iron core, which is attached to the lower carbon. The solinoid is con nected to the circuit on either side of the two carbons, as shown nt "c" nnd "f." If now there is an electric current generated at "D," the current will start from "a" and go to "cj" at "c" the current will divide, part going through the solenoid "j e" to "1," and so back to "b." The other part will pass to the upper carbon "g," then jump to the lower carbon "h," and so to "f," and then hack to "b." TOWARD THE LEAST PRESSURE. However, at "c" the current will divide itself according to the resistances of the two paths. In other words, the strength of the currents in the divided parts of a circuit are inversely as their resistances. The action in the arc lamp is then as lollows: When the current is started, the cir cuit through "g" and 'h" will be open, so that1 all the current will pass through the solenoid "j e." The action of the solenoid will then be to draw the carbon "h" up against the carbon "g." Under these circumstances the greater Dortion of the current will pass throuch the carbons, but now the solenoid will lose much of its 'power, and the carbon "h" will, by the force of gravity, fall away a little from the carbon "g," and au electric arc will be formed between the two carbons. The falling away of "h" increases the re sistance of the circuit through "g-b''and the solenoid will again be energized, but this time not so much as before. The' carbon "h" will thus vibrate back and forth a few times till a state of equilibrium is es tablished between the force of gravity and the torce of the solenoid. When tbis is done the carbon "h" will maintain its posi tion quietly so long as" the airspace between "g" and "h" is kept constant COMPENSATES FOR THE BURNING. This space, however, does not remain con stant. It increases as the carbons slowly bnrn away. Now, this increasing of air space between the carbons means an increas ing resistance in the circuit "g h," and any increase in the resistance)! the circuit "g h" will cause more current- to flow through the circuit "j e," and this increase of current in the circuit "j e" means an in crease in the power of the solenoid. The core of the solenoid will thus be drawn up higher and push the carbon "h" up toward the carbon "g," and so decrease the air space between the carbons. A state of equilibrium will thus again be established and the electric arc will have the same brilliancy as before. Of course in practice the action of the solenoid is as gradual as the increase of the space between the carbons, so that there is no sudden up and down motion of the carbon "h." If, however, there is a solt spot in either end of the two carbons, rapid combustiqn will take place and the carbou "h" will drop suddenly. The solenoid will at once act correspondingly, the carbon "h" will vibrate for a few seconds, causing a flickering in the light, till equilibrium is again estab lished and then all goes on as beore. -The flickering that we see in onr street arc lights is thus due, not to any electrical or mechan ical defects in the construction ot tne lamp, but to the uneven composition of the car bons. THE SOURCE OP LIGHT. It must not be understood that the electric arc isvisible electricity. The passage "Of the current from one carbon to another gen erates great heat that is, electric energy is transformed' into heat -energy and small particles of carbon being set free, they become incandescent in tbis heat and give out an intense white light The ends of the car bons also berome white hot, due to the heat The light, therefore, from an arc lamp comes lrotn two sources, namely, the white hot carbon ends and the white hot carbon particles or dust that is set free by the pas sage of the current front one carbon to the other. , It is found that if the current passes from the upper carbon to the lower the upper car bon will burn aw&y much faster than the lower; in iact, the current seems to tear off particles irom the upper carbon and deposit them on the lower. This action tends to make the end of the lower carbon somewhat pointed and that of the npper carbon blunt, as shown in the figure. NATURE OP LIGHT. Although we talk of the electric light, yet, strange as it may sound, electricity does not produce light; neither do oils or gas produce light In the oil lamp, the gas burner and the arc, or incandescent lamps, light is produced In the same way. In each case it is a transformation ot some form of energy into heat energy, and the heat vto- Figure t. SUNDAY? '''DECEMBER'" 14 1890. i i -- duced raises solid carbon or carbou dust to a white heat, and the white hot carbon is what produces the light. For ezample,Vin a Bunsen burner giv ing a blue flame we have intense heat and no light, but if we sprinkle a little carbon dost into the flame abright light will atonce be produced, due to the incandescence of the carbon dust. In the caudle flame or gas jit light is produced in the same way; particles of soot and dust are made incan descent by the beat generated, and from them we get light. And so it is in any electric lamp. "Electricity is converted into heat, and this heat causei'carbon to become incandescent, and thus emit light. TEMPERATURE OP THE ARC. The temperature of the electric arc is, ac cording to the latest researches, between 3.000 and 4,000 O. This is the most in tense beat known to man and of the greatest value in scientific researches. The arc light is oest suited for street lighting; it is also very uselul in .factories "anil places where general illumination is all that is needed. But it is quite unsuited for dwell ings and stores, and in fact any places where detail work is to be done, such as writing, reading or the distinction of colors. For interior lighting and places where the fight would not be needed after midnight, one pair of carbons is suf ficient, but for all night work a double set is required so that when one pair has burned out, the current is automatically switched over to the fresh carbons and the light thus kept up during the entire night. The consumption ol carbon is about twice as much in the positive carbon as in the negative, and the total consumption is about one-tenth of a grain per candle of ligh per hour. The Average street arc lamp gives about 2,000 candle-power, but if globes are used much of tbis light will be absorbed, the amount depending on the character of the glass of which the globe is made. Scire Facias. ENGLISH ON INDIAN BCAKE. Our Trans-Atlantic Cousins Feel Puzzled and Wax Facetious. The Saturday Review. The so-called Indian scare is one of those things which no fellow can be. expected to understand on this side of the Atlantic Who is scared and why? Thq great Yankee nation cannot surely be scared by a few thousand Sioux in Dakota; and if the Sioux are scared, one cannot help suspect ing it is because the acents of the great Yaukee nation have been doing 'something they should not The items of information are difficult to pick out from among reports of what the Free Silver Democrats intend and what the Farmers' Alliance. When yon-do get them they hardly prove more than that somebody is lying like a Z mzibari valet At the top of the column we see told that 'seven settlers have been scalped and that a battle is raging. At the bottom it is confidently an nounced that this is fiction, and that all is quiet on Fine Bidge. . We dare say it is; but then, if nobody has been scalped, the fuss would seem to be' about nothing. Then the appearance ot our old and re spected friend, Buffalo Bill, as an active personage on the scene is confusing. We like Buffalo Bill. We never.Jiked him the less because his temporary popularity with duchesses was so maddening to "respectable Americans." It was justified by the excel lence of his manners. Then, too, he wore his long hair and picturesque costume with cranerie, and rode lice an angel. Still one does associate him with a traveling cir cus, and though General Sheridan certifies him a brave fellow, and good frontier guide, his reappearance on the way to the scene of action harmonizes pleasingly with the air of unreality cast over the whole thing by news paper lies. It fills up the picture to learn that Bed Shirt "is with him." Bed Shirt, if our memory does not fail us for the first time, was with him when we last saw him at West Kensington. We respect Bed Shirt He refused even to be enticed by Mr. Glad stone into giving his opinion on home rule. He is a long-headed red man, and his can did.i opinion on the Indian scare would be vorth having. TEE PET OF TEE FAMILY Is tho One Most Likely to Find MaAlage a Failure. I never see a petted, pampered girl who is yielded to in every whim by servants and parents, that I do not sigh with pity for the man who will some day be her husband, KaysElIa Wheeler Wilcox in the 'Ladies' Home Journal. It is the worshiped daughter, who has been taught that her whims and wishes are supreme in a house hold, who makes marriage a failure all her life. She has had her way in things great and small; and when she desired dresses, pleasures or journeys which were beyond the family purse, she carried the days with tears or sulks, or posing as a martyr. The parents sacrificed and suffered for her sake, hoping finally to see her well married. They carefully hide her faults from her. suitors who seek her hand, and she is ever ready with smiles and allurements to win the hearts of men, and the average man is as blind to the faults of a pretty girl as a newly hatched bird is blind to the worms npon the trees about him. He thinks her little pettish ways are mere girlish moods; but when she becomes bis wile aud reveals her selfish and cruel nature be is grieved and hurt to think fate has been so unkind to him. A DAZZLING SUCCESS. The Operation of the Women' Lnnch Counter In New York. The woman's lunch counter ia New York City is a dazzling success, and is patronized as extensively as any of the men's places down town, sajs the u7i. The women took to it from the day it was started, and now no young woman, with a day's shopping, or alistol callers on hand, would think of wasting time at a restaurant table. Last Saturday noon a reporter followed a crowd of women into a well-known restaurant in UDper Broadway. All turned to one side ot the room, where there was an oval lunch counter of cherry, smoothly polished aud much lower than the lnnch counters patronized by men. exclusively. The stools were of cherry with cane-bottom seats. Sixty persons could sit very comfortably at the counter, but the managers oi the institution bad crowded the seats together so as to ac commodate more. The service was much better than men are accustomed to. At the time of the reporter's entrance the seats were nearly all taken. Behind the counter were four mild-mannered waiters in white jackets and aprons. All sorts ot .feminine gossip conld De neara, ana, oi course, mat settles it Stools for ladies' lunch counters are a success. FB1ED 073TEBS BY THE FOOT. South Australia Claims to Oatdo the Ancients Along This line. From Oysters and AU About Ihein.i Fliny mentions that, according to the his torians of Alexander's expedition, oysters a foot in diameter were found in the Indian Seas, and Sir James . Tennent was unex pectedly enabled to corroborate the correct ness of tbis statement, for at Kottier, near Trincomalee, enormous specimens of edible oysters were brought to jtbc rest house. One measured more than 11 inches in length by half as many in width. But this extraor dinary measurement Is beaten by the oysters of Port Lincoln in South Australia, which are the largest edible oues in the world. They are as large as a dinner plate, and ot much the same shape. They are sometimes more than a foot across the shell, and the oyster fits his habitation so well that lie does not leave much margin. It is a new sensation when a friend asks you to lunch at Adelaide to have one oyster fried in butter, or eggs and bread crumbs, set before vou; but it is a very pleasant ex perience, for the flavor and delicacy of the Port Lincoln mammoths are proverbial even in that land of luxuries. A EAINLESS CAPITAL. The City of the Three Kinjjs and Its Wonderful History, ITS DAYS OF SILVER AND GOLD. An Odd Climate Made Tolerable by the Use of Permian Bark. THE DEATH KATE EXTEE1IELT HIGH rCOBBESFOSDEXCE OF THE DISPATCn. Lima, Peru, Nov. 15. Pizarro must have been rather hard up for names when he dubbed his Peruvian capital La Cuidad de los Tres Beges, "The City of the Three Kings." It came about in this way. After he had subdued one of the royal brothers' who claimed the Inca throne and treacher ously strangled the other, he found little difficulty in conquering Cuzco, the splendid "City of Gold," which was at that time the capital of Peru. As soon as he and his few European followers, a band of drunken ad venturers whom Spain was gladto be rid of, had glutted themselves with the vast treasures of the place, they marched west-' ward, not so much in search of new worlds to conquer as to find a more convenient spot in which to enjoy their ill-gotten gains. They did not relish heme surrounded on all sides by the Indians, who, althongh con quered, outnumbered them a hundred to one, but preferred to be within sight of the sea, the broad highway that led toward home. This Emerald valley of Bimae, with a river running through it, the ocean on one side and the towering Andes on the ether, combined all the advantages they sought So here they established the second Spanish citv in South America, which soon grew to be one of the proudest and most luxurious capitals of those profligate days and continued to be the seat of a corrupt vice-regal court for three centuries. THE STORY OF- A NAME. It happened that Pizarro designated its site on January 6, 1555 (old style), the day of the festival of the Epiphany or the mani festation of our Savior to the JJagi, who in King James' version of the New Testament are called "the Wise Ken" from the East, but are known in all the old Spanish tradi tions as "the Three Kings." Hence he made a tremendous celebration of that feast of the Epiphany and christened his capital accordingly. Then Carlos V. of Spain, sent over not only his benediction and congratu lations but added some complimentary words to its already ponderous title, mak ing it "The Host Noble and Most I Joy al City of the Three Kings" so it appears in the original charter and formally ceded its appropriate coat of arms; three golden crowns for the three kings and a rayed star on an aznre field in memory of the star which led them to the spot where the young Child lay. But that was altogether too long a title for every-dav use, and so the easjr-going Spaniards fell into a habit of calling it "the city of Bimae," the latter being the name of the valley in which it stands. Bimae is a Quichua word, the past participle of the verb rimay, to speak; and in tbis applica tion it re'erred to a famous oracle of Inca times, whose shrine was in the valley, prob ably among those extensive ruins that may yet be seen near the present village of La Slacdalena, and in honor of whom the river and surrounding country were named. THE SOUND OP A LETTER. . Tne Quichua sound of the letter "r" is much like the Spanish "1," and so it is not strange that in the mouths of another race it soon became transformed to Limae and then to Lima. For many years the river was called Lima, too, but somehow it got back to its ancient cognomen. It is a small and quiet stream through most of the year ex cept during the summer months, the season of melting snows and rains among the mountains where it rises, when it swells into a deep, swift and turbulent torrent, whose yellow tide resembles the Missouri in spring time. It is as essential to the valley as is the Nile to Lower Egypt, and indeed without it Lima would long ago have dried up and dis appeared from this rainless region. To the Bimae, which furnishes ample irrigation, the city owes it own water supply and the fertility of its surrounding fields and gar dens. One walks about the streets of Lima as in .a dream, oppressed by a multitude ot his torical reminiscences that crowd upon the memory. Here, too, were centered the products of the mines. In 1631, I think it was, La Palatt, the Viceroy of Lima, rode through these streets ou a horse whose mane was strung with Dearls and whose shoes were ol pure gold, over a pavement made of solid ingots ?r ;i m i. - i-.-11 iL.' oi silver, xu m 3?.i-j;aic, imiuu, cauie tug Galleons of the Fast, bringing silks and spices from far Cathay and the Philippine Islands; and following fast in their wake came the buccaners Rogers, Anson, Hawk ins, Drake and others, all eager to snatch from the "treasure ships" the rich booty which even the Virgin Queen did not dis dain to share with her loyal free boot era of the South Seas and the Spanish Slain. THE MODERN CAPITAL.' Modern Lima is about ten unlet in cir-H cumference, but as a large part of its area is laid out in gardens and public squires, the whole is by no means densely populated. The old walls of the city which that ener getic Vice King, La Palata, caused to be built in 163S, described an irregular oval, on the left bank ot the Bimae, about three miles long by a mile and a half wide. They were from IS to 24 feet high and twenty feet thick, and were entered by 12 gates. But they were never of much useexcept to facili tate the collection of lccal duties and to af ford an elevated pasco or bridle path for equestrians, and were demolished long ago. The city's present population ii variously estimated between 100,000 to 125,000. Much of the beautiful region round about was laid waste by the Chilian army during the re cent war, and has not yt been rebuilt The invaders were as merciless and as needlessly cruel as they were completely victorious. In the battle that decided the fate of Lima, hundreds of country villas and all the suburban villages were burned to the ground. Thus Chorillas, the Long Branch of the coast, was entirely destroyed. A, railway leads from Chorillas to Lima, pass ing through the once lovely village of Miraflores, whose name literally translated mean "See the flowers!" The Chilians landed at Chorillas, and having reduced that town to ashes, they marched along the line of the railroad to 'Lima, ruthlessly de stroying everything on the route. A NIGHT OF TERROR.. - For one whole night Lima was in the hands of a mob of armed soldiers, who had broken loose irom au restraint and were as bloodthirsty and unfeeling aa so many Sepoys; and tbey were only prevented irom entirely burning and sackiug the city by the energy of the British Minister and other members of the diplomatic corps, backed by the English and French admirals whose war ships were in the harbor at Callao. It is said that there ore 1,500 foreigners in Lima, and no Jewer than 0,000 priests. The latter gentry are met at every step, in blacK robes and white, gray cowls and shovel hats, monks ot all orders and varieties of habit, and clergy of every degree. Pro'. Ortnu affirms that there are at least 25 dif ferent admixtures of blood in Lima. Be that as it may, certainly a more mixed col lection ot people would be bard to find. There are English, French, Spaniards, North' Americans, Belgians, Chinese and negroes, black, white, yellow and all inter mediate shade of complexion, mingled among the leather-hued native population; and one need not walk half a square to bear a dozen different languages spoken. CLIMATE OF PERU. Being situated under the tropics and at an elevation of only 512 .feet it might reason ably be expected that the climate of Lima would be too warm for comfort, but such is J hy so means the case. During the six months that answer for winter on this side ol the equator (from June to November), the thermometer ranges from 57 to 61 Fahr., and is often so cold that warm woolen clothing is -necessary for comfort, especially indoors, where the thick walls retain d.imnnHssnd -exclude the sun, ren dering the interiors jnnch more chilly than J the open street. The low temperature oi the place may Impartially accounted for by the close proximity to the snowy cordilleras and also from the foot that the great Ant artic current of the Pacific sels from the southwest lull on the eoast, where the tem perature is 31 less than the waters of the open sea 100 miles from land. It is not positive cold that renders life in Lima unpleasant during the winter time, so much as the fogs and dampness. Sometimes for days together the sun refuses to show his face, and a regular "Scotch mist," heavy enough to form a continuous drizzle, makes the sidewalk slippery as ice, and so per meates the air that-even the sheets ot one's bed feel sticky. Though visitors are often assured that"'"it never rains in Lima," the most partial citizen is obliged to admit that what be calls la guara, a dense fog that lorms itself into minute drops brings all the discomforts without any of the benefits of a good, healthy shower. Yet umbrellas and overshoes are not in fashion here. CURES OF1 PERUVIAN BARE. It is said that when the last of the Incas heard whereFizirro was going to establish his capitil, he rejoiced in his heart, saying that soon not one of his enemies would re main alive. Tradition has it that long be fore the arrival, of any Europeans this par ticular portion of the -valley of Bimae was set apart as a place of banishment tor crim inals a sort of Inca Dry Tortugas, or Si bcrif, where evildoers soon succumbed to the deadly climate and ceased from troub ling. Some 60 years ago the celebrated Von Teschudi wrote that "Two-thirds of the people of Lima are at all times suffering from tercianas (intermittent fever), or from their consequences," But that was before the Countess ol Cinchona, whose husband was one of the Vice Kings of Peru,had been 'cured of her terciatia bjr the "Peruvian bark," whose remedial virtues had been discover by a Franciscan Iriar during the early days of the conquest . The aborigines made a decoction of it to cure their agues; it was tried upon the shaking soldiers with great success, and it remained for the Vice Queen to make it fashionable by merely consenting to be set upon her legs again through its agency. She introduced the hark into Spain, where it was given her name, cinchona, and the drug that has since been made ot it, known as quinine, has. certainly accomplished mpre real, substantial good right here in Lima than have all the missionaries, Bomish and Protestant, that ever came over. Yet year by year the death lists are alarmingly longer than those of births, and were the city not constantly recrnited from other parts of the country it would have been depopulated long ago! it is said that the mortality among ."infants here is three times greater in proportion to population than in London, PaflSj or -New York; but that is doubtless as much, due to bad drain age and the poverty, carelessness and filth of thelower classes as to climatic cause. Fannie B. Ward. INDIAN GUIDES FOB GUESTS. They Repaid The Summer's Sportsman by a Fraternal Visitation. Queer things happen the world over says the New York, Sun. A well-known lawyer of Hartford went every year down to Nova Scotia to fish, and always had the- same In dian guides. He- liked them as guides; they liked him, too. One day his office boy appeared in bis private office in great ex citement "Indians I" he exclaimed; and Indians it was, seven of them, the lawyer's Micmac friends. They had come to spend the summer with him, tbey announced 'cheerfully. Luckily he lived just out of the city, and had a fair sized place; tox as he. couldn't send them away, he took tbem out to his home. There he had them pitch 'their tcnU in tbe re motest field, near a little brook, and there tbey spent the .summer. They fished and cangbt little. Three times a day they came np to the house' for What they called "les restes de la maisort," 'and countless, other times a day they, came np to see the family. The lawyer's place became famous. John and Biddy walked out in the summer even ings to see the "rale Injuns," and so did Hans and Grctchen, and Silas and Hnldah. At the end of the summer tbe IndUns went home, telling fheir relieved host that they had enjoyed their visit very much, and would come jgiin the next summer. But tbey didn't Forewarned was lore.irraed, and the lawyer kept them away. Perhaps he enjoined them. QUEEB DOGS IN THE OLYMPICS. A Western Exploring Party Claim to Find a Itace of Whistling Animals. One of a party recently returned from a tour in the Olympic Mountains gives the Whatcom Reveille the following account of some strange animjls discovered there: One night we camped near Sentinel Bock, about a mile from the divide. This rock stands boldly out alone, like a massive fortress, guarding tbe entrance to tbe valley of .the Dnngeness. Suddenly the mountain sides seemed to be alive with men whistling to one another, when and one would tcrc sharp around only to bear another and shriller wbew on the'other side; and soon we saw lots of ani mals, abont the size of a fox, with long, bushy tails, running about from rock to rock, sometime lying down, but more orten sitting bolt up, erect, like a ferret does. We shot a couple of small ones that night and alteward shot several more larger ones. Campbell cal led j. them whistling dozs, and declared they were good to eat; but the smell was enough for us. Their odor is peculiar, but not fragrant. They have two long teeth in front like a beaver and feet almost shaped like-squirrels' feet I believe their right name is mountain beaver. Whenever we went afterward to the mountains as long as there was ana we saw these whistling'dogs, as we got to call them. I like to see them; they seemed to make the place cheerful and lively, and were very amusing to watch. In winter thev have long burrows under the snow, and their coats get a dark gray; in sarnmer they are yellow. Their skins should, make good fur, and, I think, would pay for being trapped in winter months. ' A DIOTTEB GIVEB'S SICBET. Koswell P. Flower Turns Bis Little Ban quets to Good Account. rwitlTTES; FOB tfllE DISPATCH'.! Boswell P. Flower, of New York, gives some of the best dinners of the Capital City. He dined nearly every member of Congress last session, and he is now one oi the most popular men in publi: life. I learned last night the secret of these dinners. Xheywere given on the ground floor of good fellow ship in the first place, but in the second place they were also given to educate Mr. Flower to the peculiar tastes and natures of the men who'dfned with him. Under tbe sparkling bubbles of Flower's champagne tUeSenatorsandBepresentatives burst forth in their real feelings as to public matters, aud Flower now understands how to work each of .them as to his own plans in regard to nation.il interests and as to the axes of his constituents. Flower is one of the best diplomats in Congress. He has a big heed and a brainy one. When he smiles he smiles all over, and he never smiles in vainl A Drunken Man's Fall. George Tompkins, a drunken logger at Marysville Wash., fell from the second story winddw of the Pacific Hotel, in that Ibwn, to the plank sidewalk, some distance below, striking with such force as to break tho sidewalk. Picking himselt up from the wreck he coolly walked indoors, remarking that he was in search of a companion who had fallen out of the window. He was ap- f.unt1ii ntSA? liw rti tttmVllt wMf!l tfi jaicuwj uuiujiiicu uf tux w, .. u.-t m ma t titr mttM aaeose vrnnld nmTtttlllT have proved serious, if not fatal, i THE BEA7ER ANGLER. Senator Quay Chats About the Sport He Had Down in Florida. SHOOTIKG THE WILD TDKKEY. Dick Quay and Faitbfnl Ben Sooy Treed by a Wounded Sack. AS XC1TIXG FIGHT WITH' A . TAKP05 Senator Quay sat in his library at his resi dence enjoying his post-prandial cigar, says a Washington correspondent of the Phila delphia Times, and willingly opened the subject of fishing in Florida. He said: "I leached St Luce in the very nick of time for tarpon fishing. Dick and Ben Sooy be grudged tbe time it takes to bait and hook the big silver king and went off in the country, where they camped out for two weeks, often sleeping in the woods in No vember without sheets when miles away irom camp. Florida is the most wonderful country in America for game, and as an evidence of the abundance of deer, from the hummocks within a mile of where Ben Sooy and he had their camp, they killed six deer in the last two weeks of November. "To a genuine lover of the joys of the woods, no sport is more fascinating than hunting the wild turkey. Two negroes who ore skilled in 'calling the gobbler built a blind out of pine tags, scattered brush over the tags and taking care to build the Mind intbe neighborhood of a turkey roost, for this avariest of game birds, if nothunted too much, will return for years to the same spot to roost, generally in tbe deep woods, and often on the loftiest hemlocks at the edge of some big swamp. HOW TO KILL TTJBKEYS. "The keenest hnnter brings out his 'call,' made from a turkey wing, and soon he will have a big gobbler strutting through tha woods, with his 'pat-put-pnt,' his beard The Senator in His Olorjr, - shining in the gray of the dawn and his he id well in the air. Yon reserve your fire till you can see the sheen of his eyes and then let drive at him with your right barrel. , atrrl, if only wounded, you take the gobbler on the wing as he rises, and the game rarely -escapes you nnless some bad Inck scares the ,v wary bird away before he reaches witbiu gunshot of the blind. On the loth ot No vember three of us killed two hens and four 1 gobblers by 9 o'clock in the morning, rising 1 at i o'clock to reach the turkey roost "I care nothing for hunting deer, as it in- x volves walking or riding many miles when the game is started, unless the gunner has the patience that makes a good still hunter. , The last day Ben Sooy and Dick were out they wounded a buck by breaking its fore leg, and it led them a chase for six miles around a dense swamp, and then, when wounded again, drove both tbe boys up a big cypress tree, charging ou them when . their guns were empty. Z5 "Fortunately the buck was so badl;j ,. wounded that they only had to hold tbe lorf an hour till the deer died atthe foot of tho tree in which they were ensconced". THE BETJTAI. SAtVriSH. "You saw at mv bouse in Beaver some immense blades with teeth two inches long and wondered what tbey were. Well, these are the swords of the sawfish, a very differ ent animal from tbe Block Island swordfish, which are good to eat, and give a great deal of sport off the Bhode Island coast in sum mer. "The sawfish is a big sea brute and often weighs 1,500 ponnds and is a terrible nui sance when he gets into the fishermen's net, winding the same all around bis huge body till the fish has to be killed with a rifle. His flsh is of no use. With this terrible saw he dashes into a school of menhaden or mullet and at every whack cuts hundreds of the little fish into pieces and devours them at leisure. .Even a shark never at tacks a sawfish. "Tarpon is the king fish of the bays and estuaries near the sea. The excitement and pleasure of baggine and his lordly fighting qualities have not been exaggerated. It is tne gamest of our big fish. 3Iy last tarpon weighed 1W3 pounds, and after swallowing the mullet bait he swam away in the most indifferent manner till he elt the barb of tbe hook bite; then he dashed off and towed my little boat three miles up the bay, jump ing ten feet at a time and savagely sbaking his silvery head In vain to break "my hold. THESE MOXSTEE PISH. "It was the longest fight I had in No vember with a tarpon, but when the big fish turned, as they often do, and went straight back to where he was hooked be ran in between two splendid specimens of tbe sawfish, which weighed at least 1,200 pounds each. "My big fish got tingled up with the fighting sawfish, and every moment Tex pected to see him break away. AH three monsters worked into shallow water, where the tarpon always feeds, and while the negro held my big tarpon I killed both sawfish with a Ballard rifle and pulled the tarpon into shallow water and gaffed him safely. The stories of sharks killing tar pon are a good deal exaggerated. Gener-' ally speaking the tarpon can hold his own even against the scavenger of the ocean." THE CHAHGE IK CAEPETS. The Colonial Style of Furnishing Slakes Very Radical Revision. What a change there is in the styleof car pets now that the Colonial style of furnish ing is in fashion. The carpets are made to match it in designs and tone both. The Scotch Axminster carpets arefavorites now, and come in tints that are delicately exqui site, tbe carpets being of pmin centers in all the. favorite colors, surrounded bv rich, Bor derings in floriated and set designs. The Aubusson, Wilton, moquette and bbdy brussels are also in new colorings and de signs. A novelty in the design of a carpet, chiefly in the Axminster. is tbe orchid de sign, the flowers scattered artistically over the center and tnrned in a garland for the border. The design in any color of ground ing desired. Tbe pale gray, however, is quite the swell color lor a carpet and looks exquisite when furniture and drapery cor- , respond to its tint The furniture covering is French in design, too, a pretty style being tapestries, with the seats and backs in land scapes, or in great odd flowers. Draperies " and curtains this year are of the richest o brocatelle, and are in the pale tints. The j drapery is above all things beautiiul this year, and the cost is quite in keening with the other extravagant luxuries of the day. Bow Sunday Opening Works. In Philadelphia, says the Inquirer, the Mercantile Lihrsry, which is open to read- . era on Sundays, isopposlte the St Stephen's f Church, and a candid and impartial specta tor would be forced to admit on any Sunday T that the open library and the decorous con- ""' duct of its irequenters interfered no more with the church than the chimes of the church interfered with the readers at the library. " -,r5 t