EbbsSbS flffP," THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH. SECOND PART. PAGES 9 TO 12. DIFFERED COST Of the Improvement of the Riv ers and Purchase of the Railroads. THE FIRST AN EASY TASK Compared to the Complications Sure to Follow the Other. NOT A SOCIALISTIC EKTERPKISE, Cat One That Woald Encourage Competi tion and Individualism. EFFECT OX inOJT, COAL, GKAIN AKD OIL PAPEE NO. 10. The people of the United States can do one of two things: they can improve their waterways at a cost of 515.000 per mile; or they can buy the railroads at a cost of 560, 000 per mile. They must do one thing or the other, and that very soon. They can improve their waterways and ptovide transportation routes ample for the traffic of all times; or they can buy the rail roads, extend them and increase them yearly and let the next generation improve the waterway s as the only adequate relief. To improve the waterways will not mater ially add to the duties of employes ot the Government, complicate its organization or so extend its functions as to increase its interference with the citizen. To buy the railroads would so load the Government with duties, complicate its organization and increase the number oi its employes that the machine could hardly be made to run; while the relations of the Government to the daily life and business of the people wonld be so close the individual would be touched so nearly and so constantly that a chance ot party would mean ruin to whole sections of the country. As a resnit party strifes would be intense and perpetual, to the ex tent of rendering life unbearable nnder such conditions. To improve the waterways would augment and perfect that glorious individualism which is the mainsprine of success in Amer ican Democracy its elastic strength, its supple grace, its all-conquering, all-uplifting fire. To buy the railroads would bring upon ns an onerous State socialism destructive to our manly fiber. We would be bound in fetters, cribbed in iron vaults, our individ ualism destroyed, onr progress hampered beyond conception. Individualism in democracy is Ameri can, a wonder-working genius. State socialism is Chinese lead wings for the eagle. It may be argued we do not hang on the horns of this dilemma. "We do. Seventy years ago Webster said of the then new law of succession in France that the Government must change the law or the law would change the Government. The French Benublic proclaims the foresight of the American statesman. No Websterian foresight is needed to see that our people must chance transportation methods, or the transportation methods will chain the people. What! Arc we to see the people taxed 5400,000,000 a year that 40 railroad nabobs may have incomes or 510,000,000 each? To this measure is it cornel Every dollar of increase in the fortunes of these nabobs is represented by a dollar of depreciation in the value of the farmers' lands. Charginz 'what the traffic will bear" has been rather teverc on farmers, who have seen their lands shrink in value and their debts increase. The people are robbed, the few are made nargerously wealthy. The past 30 years lme witnessed a most cxtraordinarv con centration of wealth in these United States. A lew families have become affluent by ll c increasing value of citv property; a few bankers and merchants, have piled up rail lions by increasing devotion to trade. This happens everywhere and can be guarded against only bv a law of succession, such ns that of Trance. A few manufacturers have made zreat fortunes, while building up our industries, with the consent and approval of the people. Inventors have produced ideas which have added enormously to the wealth, comfort and productive power of the people at large, and have reaped con siderable profits, as they deserved to do. But none of these people have enriched themselves by making other people poorer. All the fortunes in the above category are tmial compared to the great sums of money ncniunulated by the transportation nabobs. Here is the bald comparison. On the one hand are the transportation nabobs, enor mously, dangerously wcilthy; on the other hand are our farmers, who have employed ana been robbed by them, grown poorer and poorer with every passing year. The men who have carried the freight have "chargea what the traffic will bear"; the farmers, who fnrnish the traffic, have seen their profits dissolved in the water of the corporations. Within 30 vears the transportation nabobs hae grabbed one-fourth of the treasure of !.c nation, and the farmers' lands have shrunk in value an equal amount. It is futile for sophistry to endeavor to veil the facts with fine phrases. The people cannot be fooled. They have paid too well for their knowledge. They see that the farmers, the mass of the people, have lost their monev. They see that the railroad and transporta tion nabobs have got it. What can be done about it? Indolence may suggest that we let thincs go; allow the inequality to increase until the nabobs own eicirthing and the people notning; until ve have become a nation made up of a few princes and a world of paupers; that we drift into a bastard feudalism, lacking the manly and charitable features of its media yal namesake; until the plaint of the poet JUW rH g - -K IM 05JVCE ' ' ' 1 ' ' ' I Tl M 11 i n , SKKIU i 1 KK m B J , CASX WcFl I " I ' ! v -Si . ! ' v v ' zn t I ,pHj rn t" ii rs5j ? , ' i , csujuj t s ' jjtai jLSi M I I v 5 I, I, JJ1S.J j , ' " 'elkhIrn 1 j !nv8vaTTAW,y8 !v ei:w-JJ :-1 v 22 S " S 3S Sg j i " , J " ' ' . . .' ' t ' 1 " U f I ... JL.. .1 4 1 I ' of "The Deserted Village" becomes the wail of our once fair country: 111 fares the land, to bast'nlng ills a pray. Whore wealth accumulates and men decay. Pnnce and lords mav flourish, or may fade, A breath can make them, as a breath has made; liut a bold peasantry, their country's pride. When once destroyed can never be supplied. Ye friends to truth, ye statesmen who surrey The rich man's joys increase, the poor's decay. Tis yours to indf e how wide the limits stand Between a splendid and a happy land. Dishonesty may tempt, in sophistical propositions, to "resume" or appropriate the railroads, after the Henry George plan steal them, in plain English, as he pro poses we should "tax" the land. Propositions emanating from confused, impotent or dishonest minds will never find ear with us. . The United States will never impair the validity of a contract. "We are not a nation of rogues, whatever fine speci mens ot that kind we may turn out. Xejther are we a nation ot do-nothings. : We will adopt one of two courses; in the last resort, every other measure failing, we would buy the railroads and operate them for the public good, as nearly as we could, assuming the tremendous burden on our means and the awiul strain on our political system. But this desperate chance will not come. A wide open way is before uand we need but walk therein to escape the evils of our present state without incurring the risk in cident to a radical change of policy and Bysicm. i Our relief is in our waterways. By im- J proving them we will reduce our railways to a subordinate position, and restore to the people their prestige and primacy. Our ncglectof nature's opportnnities our water ways our natural avenues of trade has made the transportation nabobs our masters has placed it in the power of a clique to ruin millions of people. To do our duty, now will shear these people of their power and make them our fellow laborers. With highly developed railway transpor tation facilities and undeveloped water transportation routes, the waterways feed the railroads. The resources of nature and the labors of the people all go to enrich the railroads. They command, and all other things and people are subordinate to them. To develop our water routes, make them navigable to the fullest possible extent, and connect them by great arterial canals, will make the railroads the feeders ot the water ways, restore to the people sovereign power and prosperity, and reduce the inequalities of wealth. Then the resources of nature and the in dustry of the people will enrich the people and not a few. This will follow when the development of our waterways enables a man with $5,000 to become a common carrier, where to-day a thousand times that sum is not sufficient capital. This will follow cheap water trans portation, bringing widely separated regions into cheap exchange, and establishing trade and competition between regions now en tirely cut off from intercourse. Let us see how this would work In par ticular instances. New England and the East arc to-day in the clutches of the Anthracite Coal Combination cut off from the boundless coal measures of the Ohio Valley, as though on another planet Her manmacturcrs and families pay 55 a ton or more for coal. Given 20 feet of water be-' tween Pittsburg and the Hudson river, and snips will load coal at the mine's month, and lay it down on the wharves ot Bangor, Boston, Fall Kiver, Providence, Bridgeport, Hartford, New York, Syracuse, Rochester ct al, lor less than halt what these places now pay. Thus the Anthracite Coal Combination would be broken, the people east of the mountains rescued from a villainous extor tion amounting to 550,000,000 a year, and the demand for Monongahcla coal increase 200.000,000 bushels per year. Such items as the following would cease to appear; KEGtJLATING COAX. TBODUCTION. Sales Asents Hold a Sleeting at New York and Take Action. New Yoek, Jan. It The sales agents ot the coal-producing companies met to-day and were In session about two honrs. No official Infor mation could be obtained In rejrard to the re sults arnreu at. but it is stitprl that afler a lull discussion of the condition of tbo trade, it was decided to arrange monthly productions on the basis ot a production of 37,0001000 tons lor the year, and lo continue the percentages that were in lorce during the past year. The saving to the people east ot the Alle gheny Mountains, in coal bills alone, will in six months pay for the canal from Pitts burg to Lake Erie. In iour years it will pay for an opeu waterway 20 feet deep from Pittsburg to New York; and in six vears will pay far the loute from New York "City to the head waters ot the Missouri. It was the perception of this erand oppor tunity,.and the desire to divert the profits therefrom arising, away from the people and into their own pockets, that led the Standard Oil monopoly to dispatch their ablestengioeer and most trusted agent, W. P. Shinn, to buy the Monongabela coal field, immediately after the Pittsburg and Erie Ship Canal was broached and the American Society of Civil Engineers had taken under consideration the creation of a navigable waterway 20 feet deep from Buf falo to New York City. The effect on the l'on and steel business would be almost equally marked. The competition of the mills at Steelton, Spar row's Point, and other Eastern points, when aided by railroad tariffs on onr products, will prevent ni from lending a rail or a bar l2 1 i '. sl sts D , g) fj su-gi sIsiolslolol-cJcJololoilioisioi'gi gi, th, -j -M ii&rf&L ',V -a - .; tj f h-M-4" -- 'dM ; 'ijhi III v? H , , HjCiMBjjurjD.Jt ugggzl J 'DIAGRAM i ' 1 jsiifc 3 -msc 3ALNG D STAIICIS "i i,;. v f ft-juaasa p j( Y Uf I? 49' I I HFZLsaL-ii.lJPnpairfiirrheu .! U ., J,., - Vf jtffesH: JPtewrShJ)isMl:E , ", ? I . .' rt&gLpw' rCB ? -cT ,'.', i , .&- V fo( Y .Slk i i. j ". j ATopo rap ilea En line srf H l h si a si a a -a g aj g t 5? east of the mountains. Water transporta tion, together with our cheaper ore and fuel, will put us on equal footing. We can sell our metal in any port on the Atlantic or any of its rivers. Yesl right in Balti more, to the neighbor of the Sparrow's Point mills. Free navigation will redeem the oil busi ness. Tank steamers will load crude or re fined oil right in the heart of the oil coun try, the independent oil producer will have as cood and as cheap an outlet as any com petitor, and the Standard Oil Monopoly, which exists by virtue of its control of the pipe lines, will become a legitimate business enterprise, competing on even terms. Let us seeliow the grain trade wonld be affected. The cost oi transferring grain from the farmer in Kansas or Nebraska to the consumer in the East, or putting it afloat in New York, is from 20 to 30 cents per bushel. The development of our water routes would save freight and elevator charges to an average amount of 15 cents per bushel. This train, or half this gain, means the gain of independence to the Western farmer. There is yet another aspect to the ques tion. At this moment corn is 60 cents in Pittsburg, 60 cents in New York, 60 cents in St. Louis, and probably 30 cents in Kan sas. Coal is worth 5 cents a bushel in Pitts burg, 20 cents in New York, and 40 cents in Kansas. It would seem that Pittsburg coal and Kansas corn would be exchanged. No I Transnortation rates forbidl The Kansas farmer can burn his cor, and the Ohio Valley miner can work half time. The improvement ot our rivers would bring these people together. Coal would go to people who want warmth and light and power, and corn would come to those who want meat. The Kansas farmer would live and prosper and the Oh,ion Val ley miner would work full time. These things cannot be considered nar rowly. We cannot help one section only. Every sod turned in the Missouri Valley makes a pulse leap in the heart of Eastern business. New Ensland cannot grow cheap grain; but her farms are peculiarly well watered and adapted to stock and dairy farming. Cheap water transportation, giving her cheap grain, would build up her stock and dairy industry, repeopie her healthy hills and vastly widen the grain market Under such conditions New Eneland wonld ex port great quantities of meat and dairy products. Her market for hides she does not look abroad for. The great copper-producing districts are Montana and the Lake Superior district. The great copper and brass mills are, with few exceptions, in Connecticut The de velopment of waterways giving cheap con nections between these widely separated regions would reduce by one-tenth the cost of brass and copper goods. In 1800 the world produced about 300,000 tons (2,000 lbs.) of copper. We produced 130,255 tons; 61,475 tons coming from Mon tana, ot which Anaconda yielded 32,023 tons. Lake Superior produced 49,785 tons, 29,500 coming from Calumet & Hccla. If Montana had water transportation to the Atlantic by an improved Missouri, and the great arterial canals, the saving in freight on her Eait-bound copper would be not less than $1,000,000 yearly enough to pay tor 35 miles of first-class river improve ment; while the saving in freight on the manufactured product from the Eastern mills to the consumers would be half as great The saving on 187,000 tons of lead would equal that on coppei; and the saving on C8,000 tons of zinc would be no mean figure. It is probable that the saving in freights on copper, lead, and zinc and their manu-. factures would exceed $5,000,000 annually, which stems a great sum. But how small does it appear when we trv to imagine the effect of the saving ou the 17,300,000 tons of domestic and 2,800,000 tons ol imported iron ore, and the iron and steel produced there- iron, more than one halt ot wnicn would have found a market alone the line of our great river system; on the tens of millions of tons ot coal, and the hundreds ot millions oi tons of agricultural products. Why do not the cotton growers of the lower Mississippi sell their bales to the cloth-wearers ot the upper vallev? Why does the fiber go to New England, and the cloth, the cotton, and the goods in which tucy are paid for make the circuit of the country instead of following the short, straight line from producers to consumers? Because so long as our rivers are unim proved, the longer is the cheaper way. The same is true of wool and woolens. Transportation charges compel unnatural and expensive courses. Given water transportation and St Louis ought to be the center of the woolen and cotton trades, because located at the inter section of the roads connecting the people who grow the fibers and the people who must wear the fabrics. To enumerate all the phases of this ques tion would be to discuss the business of every village and every man in the United States, and then to treat of foreign conn tries. Let those interested figure it out for themselves. Let them determine sailing distances, as given Jn the diagram, to their markets, and then calculate the difference between water transportation at 1 or 1 mills per ton per piile and what they now pay. The result will make every man who will do so a believer in, and an advocate of, the improvement of onr rivers to the fullest extent, to rob them of their destructive power, ana at the same time to create a ays- PITTSBTTE&, SATURDAY, tern of navigable waterways free to all the people. The main object of these papers has been to make clear to the people of the Missis sippi Valley that their interests are one; that what will benefit the people of the extreme headwaters ot the tributaries will 'also benefit the dwellers of the bottom lands; that the measure desirable to add to the wealth of the one section are necessary to preserve the lives and property of the other. Although these people are separated by vast distances; live in different climates; follow different pursuits; their interests are united. Owing to the labor necessary to prepare these papers and also to give time lor con sideration of what has been printed the publication of the next papers will be de ferred for some weeks. Later it will be shown that the interests ot the Pacific States are closely linked to those of the people of the Mississippi Valley and that the im provement of the waterways of the Missis sippi Valley is a necessary part of. the Pan American plan of building up the com mercial intercourse of the republics of this continent. It will also he shown that in (he arid re gions of the West, irrigation and naviga tion must go hand in hand; that the same measures will provide the water necessary to grow the crops and the means to give them carriage when they are harvested. In this connection, also, they will give an an alysis ot the rainfall in the Mississippi Valley, and show the moderating effect upon n To determine sailinq distances, by improved rivers and arterial canals, find city on diagram and look on top or bottom for distance in miles from New York. Points on Lower Mississippi and tributaries, as Red and Arkansas rivers, do not figure to New York. the temperature and humidity of the air, of developing to the fullest extent the reservoir action of the water courses of those regions. The necessity in these regions of saving the water, that with it we may redeem the land to agriculture, requires "an improved method of locking vessels. One paper will therefore be devoted to describing a lock or ship elevator which will permit navigation without preventing irrigation by wasting the water in raising and loweringyvefsels. HEAD Robert Louis Steyenson's opening South Sea Island letter in to-morrow's bie DISPATCH. PROPERTY VALUATION. The County Commissioners Think It Is Too low and Issue a Circular to the Assessors Tho Board of Revision "Willing to Work. The following circular was issued from the County Commissioners' office yesterday: There appears to exist with some people, in various parts of the county, a doubt as to whether assistant assessors are to be elected at the election to be held on the third Tuesday of February, 1891. Wo wish to state for the In formation of all persons interested, that under tho existing law, no candidate for the office of principal Assessor should be voted for at the coming election in borouehs, townships and cities of the third class. But two assistant as sessors shall be elected in all wards, townships and boroughs, except Braddock borough. Homestead borough, Millvale borough, Taren' turn borough, Wilkinsburg borough. In cities of the second class, there should be elected one principal ana two assistant assessors. Fromreportson flloin this office it appears that a great inequality of valuation is shown. In some districts too low a valuation is on tho records, while in many other districts the most glaring inequalities are found. In order to correct this condition of affairs, and in its stead to have a just, trne, equitable and legal valuation for taxable purposes, men should be elected as assistant assessors with a view to this end. It is very important that the assistant as sessors should he men possessed not only of local interests, but also be citizens of good judgment While there are some snch men on the various Boards of Assessors, there are not enough. Tho equities of the case demand that radical changes be made in tho county valua tions at the next triennial assessment. It is the desire of the County Commissioners to assist the Board of Assessors all that lies in their power in the performance of their dlffl cult duties. With this object we have prepaiea lists of sales for the two years past, of property in tho different districts, together with tho prices paid, for the use of the respectivo Boards of Assessors, who, we trust with this as their guido in making the triennial assessment dur ing the fall and winter months ot this year will be able to mako the best assessment vet re turned to this office. J Inequalities have heretofore prevailed to-wif The valuation in some districts is not more than 50 per cent of the real value, while in others they run CO. 80 and 100 per cent of the real value. This is owine altogether to the fact that tho Board of Revision has not in this county sufficient time to revise and adjust the returns of tbo different Boards of Assessors; and if the Boards of Assessors will follow closely and to tbo letter the instructions given under tho dif. fcrcnt acts of Assembly, it will obviate the necessity of the Board of Revision increasing tho return made by any Board of Assessors! which certainly will bo done when it appears that the returns are not in conformity with the acts of Assembly and the information fur nished. A hearty co-operation on this bisis by all Boards of Assessors will prove to be a real benefit to the vast majority of the taxpayers bf the county. WOMEN trace workers receive attention at the hands of Bessie Bramble in THE DIS TATCH to-morrow. THEY MUST WOBK HOW, Buttner and Hughes, the Divorce Paper Forgers, SentenceoUto Imprisonment New Yoek, Jan. 30. William H. Buttner and William D. Hughes, con victed of forging divorce papers, were sentenced in the Court of General Sessions this forenoon by Eecordcr Smvth. Hughes was sentenced to five years' im prisonment, aud Buttner to seven years at hard labor. FAILED FOB 8600,000. The Winona Paper Company, of Holyoke, Suspends Payments. SPBinaFiELD, Mass., Jan. 30. The Winona Paper Company, of Holyoke, has suspended payment The liabilities amount to nearly $000,000. The company claims that its assets amount to considerably more than its liabilities. BEAD Itudyartl Kipling's third letter on America - In To-Sorrow' DUpatch, JANUARY 31, 1891. THE BOTTOM POINT, Prices on All Kinds of Iron Touch Almost the Lowest Spot on Record. NO REACTION IN PROSPECT. The Local Situation How . Presents Many Serious Conditions. LOOKING FOR A SOLUTION OF IT. A Nnmbar of Heavy Contracts for Some Pittsburg Companies. IHCEEASIKG TOE CAPACITY OP SIILLB. The close ot the month of January finds the local iron and steel trades confronted with many serious conditions. The pro ductive capacity of the country is far beyond the present demand, and, as a conseqnence, prices on every grade of raw or manufac tured iron and steel are down to almost the lowest point ever known. This is especially true of pig iron and steel rails, and the most disconraging feature is that there is likely to be no reaction in prices, at least during the remaining months of this winter. Though the production of steel rails has been greatlv reduced in Pittsburg during the last six weeks, it is still far beyond all requirements. The formation of the Steel Bail Makers' Association in the East last week, having for its object the regulation and divis ion of the output among the different mills, may relieve the trade somewhat, but owing to the refusal of the Carnegie and the Illinois Steel Company, the two largest produ cers in the country, to enter.the success of the association is doubted. The best evidence of the abnormal depression iu this branch of the trade is the shutdown of the four mills ot the Illinois Steel Company, all of which have been idle since January 1, aud it is expected that none of them will resume again before February. The Edgar Thom son Works will also close down in about a week, to remain closed for repairing, which will last about a month. The Pig Iron Situation. Among pig iron producers the situation is no brighter than in the steel rail trade. Among the local furnaces 23 furnaces arc in blast, casting about 4,200 tons daily and four are out of blast furnaces A and X) at the Edgar Thomson plant at Braddock, one stack at the new furnaces of the Monongabela Furnace Company near McKeesport and one stack at the Isabella plant near this city. The reason of the activity among Pittsburg furnaces in the face of the general dullness is the fact that all the iron produced in this vicinity is consnmed at the various mills of those who produce it. There is quite a laree stock of pig iron held at the different furnace and storage yards in and about the citv awaiting a rise in prices for disposition. There is no change whatever in the con dition of affairs among the Mahoning and Shenango "Valley furnacem en, though many persons in a position to know declare that the railroads are beginning to show signs of weakness. The fur- nacemenin the valleys, have reorganized the "old association into a new one under the name of the Mahoning and Sbenanco Valley Iron Manufacturers' Association, and will include every mill and furnace in the two valleys. What this shut-down means to the trade is shown in the fact that at the first of the year the productive capac ity of the two valleys was 20,000 tons per week. The result has paralyzed business within a radius of 100 miles of Youngstown. Almost all the men employed in the lime stone quarries in that vicinity have been discharged and are now idle. The different railroad companies entering the two valleys have thousands of empty cars idle, and many of their brakemen, engineers and fire men are seeking employment elsewhere. The idleness among the furnaces has further caused a decrease in the demand for coke. Operators Are Standing Firm. There is no change in the strike between the miners and operators along the Monon gahcla river. The operators declare most positively that they cannopand will not pay the 4 cent advance asked for. The ship ments during 1890 were the largest in the history of the trade, and the consequence is tnat stocks ot coal are extremely large at Southern ports, and Monongahcla river coal can be bought on the flats at Cincinnati as cheaply as it can be bought here in Pitts burg. The mine owners further declare that the miners are being illy advised; that the walk ing delegates and master workmen are con tinually stirring up strife in order to attach importance to their position as the leaders of tiie strikers and afterward as the instru ments of peace, and that the miners fail to recognize the fact that Pittsburg does not hold supreme sway over the Southern mar kets, as in years gone by, but it must enter into active competition with Kanawha, Ken tucky, Tennessee and Alabama coal. On the side of thd strikers their leaders main tain that the men arc more determined than ever; that they are more united and better equipped to go through this strike than they ever have been, and nothing less than 3 cents per bushel will satisfy them. The miners further assert that the bill now pending in the Legislature for the cre ation of an examining board of mining ex perts, and that all miners must pass a satis factory examination and receive a certificate of efficiency before eligible to work in a mine, will prevent the operators from secur ing Hungarians. TJp to the .present writing there has been no suffering among tne miners lor lack of food or clothing. They went into the struggle prepared for a long sicce, and ant aid that may be needed will be furnished from the general defense fund. Increased Demand for CoaL The changes among mills from gas to coal is progressing slowly, caused by the insuf ficient mill sidings, and the timo and mobey which are necessary to build receptacles for the coal. TJp to the present there are 24 mills out of the 36 mills in the city wherein coal. is wholly or partially used. The change i3 principally in puddling furnaces and will increase the consumption of coal about 2,500 tons every day. There is also quite a heavy demand for slack coal for use in gas prodncers and other devices! for fuel making. At Lindsay & McCutcheon's mill there has been a periodical shortage of coal owing to the miners' strike. Such has been the case at J. Painter Sons& Co.'s mill iu the West .End and 300 men were idle temporar ily. At this latter mill about SO furnaces arc now using coal and 26 others, together with all the furmices in the heating department are being supplied with gas. The trestle work for the coal dump at this mill is now being built. At the lower Union Mill of Carnegie, Phipps & Co., on Twenty-ninth street, on the 28th iust., five heats were made in one turn for the first time in three months. Orders at this mill are not very plentiful. At the Thirty-third street mill operations were resumed on the 26th inst. after a suspension of six weeks. The firm wjs experimenting with the Linn crude oil at one of the furnaces iu this mill, similar to the process tried at Painter's mill, but the return ,of a full supply of gas pre vented a completion of the experiment. At Park Bros. & Co.'s mill the shortage was at one timoTery serious, the fall work'. J ing force of 1,200 men being at times idle. Many of the departments were shnt down for repairs last week. Coal is to be tried in eight of the puddling furnaces as a reserve. At the Pennsylvania Tube Company new furnaces were built and are adapted to use fuel gas. Producers were also constructed without interfering with operations. Itesorting to Fuel Gas. A number of furnaces are running on fuel gag manufactured from coal, and recently 150 tons to each heating furnace was heated with this fuel in 24 hours. . It is reported that a company with a capital of 5200,000 has purchased a site in the Twenty-t;hird ward, this city, on which to construct a plant to produce iron for crucible steel by the Adams direct process, the capacity to be 60 tons per day. The Latrobe Steel Works has adopted the Adams direct process for making open hearth steel for locomotive tires. They are having constructed at Youngstown a tire mill, which will roll tires from the size of the largest locomotive to that of n small car wheel. The mill weighs 100 tons, con tains seven hydraulic cylinders, and will be driven by a pair of 1,400 horse-power engines. The strike inaugurated some weeks ago at the works of the Braddock Wire Company is still in force, and, at present, appears to be no nearer settlement than when it was first enforced. The men claim it is not con tinued solely for the reinstatement of the two discharged rail workers, but also to obtain recognition of the Amalgamated Association Committees by the manage ment. Tne strike at Baker's Chain Works at last accounts was still on. Twenty-five furnaces are idle on account of it, and the boys who are out for an advance ot 20 cents a day, declare they will not return without the advance. Strikers Were Not Sustained. The Millvale Iron Company started in ail departments after two weeks' shut down. The strike was not sustained by the nnion, and new men were secured at Carrie Furnace Ho. 1. The three old style hot-blast stoves, which are in use at present, will be replaced with a similar number of Massock & Cooke's make. At the Homestead Steel Works they are now turning out steel plates for 16 new boilers for two blastfurnaces built by the Badford Crane and Iron Com pany, Virginia. Kiter & Conley, of this city, have secured the contract for making the boilers, which will be each 32 feet long and 42 inches in diameter. At the works of the Lewis Foundry and Machine Company they are building a 150 ton Tallman wire rod mill for the United States Steel Company, of Jactson, O. The Lewis firm has also shipped to the Roanoke Iron Company, ot Roanoke, Ya., a 50-ton squeezer and a large shear. Will iam Fisher's engine, fonndry and machine works has secured a contract tor a crnsher and nine-foot grinding pan for a local brick making firm. They just skipped two similar pans as the above to the Crescent works, on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. Wilson, Snyder & Co. have been awarded the con tract for building two 10,000,000-galIon pumps for the Cincinnati Water Works. Riter & Conley have seenred the contract from Bicbard Heckscher & Sons, of Swede land, to build their No. 2 furnace, which will be 15J feet by 80 feet, and erected at Swedeland. The Totten & Hogg Iron and Steel Com pany is furnishing, besides other equip ment for the Westerman Natural Gas and Iron Company, at Marion, Ind., a large double lever plate shear. The local com pany is also turning out a number of steel castings for drawbridge construction at Memphis and other Southern points, as well as stocking up on tneir stone crushers, an ticipating a heavy demand next season. Big Orders lor Local Firms. H. K. Porter & Co. are ready to ship for the United States Government, for use on the Mussle Shoals Canal improvement in Alabama, in towing barges through the canalL'two Forney style locomotives. 48 inches gauge, ana named respectively "Yan kee" and "Dixie." J. R, Witherow & Co. have contracts on hand for the construction of nine new blast fnrnaces, all at different points in thr South, and all of the material for the construction of which will be sup plied from this market. The following is a partial list of orders received by the Westinghouse Machine Company: For compound engines, one 200 horse power, for New York, Cincinnati and St. Louis eacn, and two 200-horse power lor Newark, N. J.; two 150-borse power for De troit; one 150-borse power for Gilford, Ark.; one 100-horse nower lor New York and Gal veston; one SO-horse power for Media, Pa.; two 65-horse power for Bryn Mawr, Pa.; two 50-horse power and one 33-horse power forsbiptnent to Australia. For Standard engines, one 250-horse power for Michigan City, Ind.; one 100-horse power for West Croton, Mass., and onn 45-horse power for Germany. For Junior engines, one 75 horse power for New Cumberland, W. Va., and two 60-horse power for Walls station. The aggregate sales for the month of Decem ber were 47 engines, with a total horse power of 3,530. The sales for the entire year of 1890 numbered over 900 engines, with an aggregate horse power of over 60,000. Improvements, Additions and Stoppaces. The men employed at the National Tube Works, numbering about 4,000, have a movement on foot to organize a mutual benefit association. Hussey, Binns & Co., of this city, recently melted the first crucible steel ever produced in Washington county, at their new works at Charleroi. The Clin ton Furnace, on the Southside, was recently banked, to admit oi necessary repairs being made. Shoenberger & Co.'s blast furnaces, on Pike street, are now doing better work than ever. In one week recently the largest ton nage of pig iron in the history of the plant was made. The Neshannock Furnace, at New Castle, owned bv the Crawford Iron and Steel Compauy, has just blown out, after a successful runot 90 weeks, producing in that time 109,790 gross tons ol Bessemer iron, and average of nearly 1,219 tons per week, which is one of the best average runs of any furnace iu this vicinity. The Alle gheny Bessemer Steel Works, at Duquesne, closed down last week, to remain closed for several weeks for repairs. Gas will be put under nearly all the boilers in the works. A large 20-ton converter will be added aud a new blooming mill completed. Will Dimand n Scalo. It is rumored (hst the workmen desire a scale similar to the one in force at the Edgar Thomson (mill and tbo Homestead mill, and it such! a demand is made it is likely it will hi granted, as that is the favorite wage syslem of Mr. Carnegie. Car negie, Phipps &Co. are rapidly pushing to completion the immense new beam mill at Homestead, which will cost fully f500,000. It will be some months yet before all the contracts will be given. The only work so far completed is the ponderous engine built by Robert Wcthernc & Co., of Chester, Pa. The ilrn heel weighs 150 tons, the bedplate uuu ouwuaru nci;u ivu wus, iiuu iue snail is 26 inrhes in diameter. The Edgar Thomson Works of Carnegie Bros. & Co. at Braddock will suspend opera tions on Saturday, February 7, to admit of several repairs, and improvements being made, and the suspension will probably last a month. Three new 15-ton converters will be put in, and a trestle will be built in the rear of the mill, ou which will ran ladle cars for conveying the metal while hot to the converting department. A new engine will also be placed to operate roils No. 2. Furnace A, of the blast furnace plant, was torn out last week, and will be rebuilt. A new "bosh" will be put in furnace D, which has been off for a month, and will not be put in blast for some time. Seven new sup porting columns have been added, and the furnace will be re-lined. These works during 1890 n ade 404,000 tonso. Bessemer steel, an iucreasccf .ibnut 8 per cent over 18S9. The increase was due to the addition of a new converter, uiaeing four in all, and tbs time which would be lost while the others were being repaired was saved. The blowing and rolling capacity remained the "same.- C E. ; Ireland, with her woes and wrongs, what ever those may be, is a frequent topic of dis cussion in these days. For myself, I do not pretend to be a judge of political matters, but I do know that our sister isle is a very disagreeable anil unsafe place to live in. Twice I nearly lost my life there, and I leave the reader to judge whether I have not good cause to detest the country. My first visit to Ireland was, I am bound to confess, a very pleasant one, until the last evening; but the terrible experience of that night shall I ever forget it? It was in the height of summer, one of those perfect July nights whichseem the ful fillment of the sweetest promise of the year, and the scene was a ballroom at the house of an old schoolfellow with whom I had been staying. On the morrow my regiment was to sail from Cork, but I had extorted permission to delay joining until the very last moment, in order to be present at the Coventry's ball. I had strained every effort not to miss th dance, and had looked forward to it as to a dream of delight; and yet now the evening was more than half over, and I had not en joyed myself at all. I felt that there must be black ingratitude somewhere or other to account for this state of things. All around me I could hear the buzz, chatter and inane remarks of the wallflowers and partnerless demoiselles. "Such a delightlull ball!" "What a charmingly pretty scene!" "A most pleasant evening quite a success," etc; and I had the consolation ot knowing that these ex pressions were justas bitter-a mockery to them as they were to me. Some people were enjoying it, no doubt. Miss Marsac, for instance, and that idiotic young coxcomb with whom she was gliding so gracefully around the room. I stood with my back against the wall, gloomily watching them, and giving myself up to the bitterest reflections. At that moment not a landlord-hunting tenant iu the whole of that wretched country felt more desperate and hardly used than I. For why? I had not danced once with Eva Marsac, and now the precious moments were last slipping away and l should have to go. At last the never ending din of the fiddles ceased, and the lovely Eva, in obedience to a telegraphic summons irom the ever watch ful maternal eye, gravitated to her place be side Lady Marsac, who sat in the front rank of the dowagers, a monument of volumin ous matronhood. At that moment I perceived Tom Coventry, my chosen friend and ally and the only son of the house, in the act of putting up a pla card roughly inscribed with the mystic words, "Supper extra." Here was my chance. I rushed up to Miss Marsac, andwas in time to secure her for the dance, just as Tom was bearing down upon her. I saw his disappointed face as he turned away, but I had no sympathy to snare for him, for I was full of triumpb'.and I recollect I was inspired to make some witty remark abont the knight oi the rueful countenance. The band struck up with the last new waltz, and to the strain of that de licious melody I lost myself for a brief space in a dream of perfect happiness. It was over too soon. Eva said she was tired. "Tiredl" I whispered with tender re proach as we quitted the heated air of the ballroom for the cool of the conservatory. "Why, I could dance forever with you with out feeling tiredl" She said nothing, but I thought I could detect a deeper flush on her fair face, and I angured well from her silence. The conservatory doors were open, and we passed out into the balmy summer night. The moon was shining peacefully over the nuiet p-trk. and the spreading trees flnng deep shadows on the smooth bright lawn, which sloped gradually down to the edge of a dark lake. From within came the echoes of the sweet waltz refrain and the distant sound of danc ing feet and the murmur of many voices. Outside, where we stood in silence, the most intense stillness reigned, not a ripple dis turbed the surface of the gleaming water, not a breath of wind stirred the glistening leaves of the evergreens. All was wrapped in the solemn hush of natnre. Naturally of a poetic temperament, I am sensitivo to ex ternal influences, and I felt that this was an opportunity not to be lost. In a few passionate sentences I poured out all the love and devotion that lav pent up within me, and I listened breathlessly for my dar ling's reply. She looked more bewitching than ever as she turned her face away and fluttered the feathers of her fau in pretty confusion. "Ob, Mr. Robinson!" sue said, coyly; "you cannot mean all thatl You will soon forget me in the excitement of the war. You see you are so very young." J. coniess that this allusion to my youth annoyed me, particularly as I happen to be especially sensitive on that point; and I harbored a lurking suspicion that Miss Marsac was aware of the fact. But I put that aside as nn idle fancy, and hastened to assure her of ni y undying constancy. "As for the warlike scenes of which she spoke," I added, "should it bo my fite to survive the perils of the campaign, I would prove my devotion to her by the ardor with which I wonld woo honor and renown for her sweet sake." She did not seem so much affected as I could have wished at the mention of the dangers of my profession, but she encouraged m'e to go in for honor and renown, and she might have said something more satis factory; but at this most critical moment Tom Coventry burst upon us in his usual inopportune and tactless fashion. Though he was my friend, I must say that I found his meddling and interfering ways very try ing sometimes. He seemed In a great state of perturbation about something or other. 'Oh, here you are, Jack," tu exclaimed. 4, jjjaM "I have been looking for you all over the place. It is high time for you to be off, my dear fellow; the train is due at 11:30, and I'm blessed if it isn't 10:45 now. I've got the black mare already harnessed, and I'll arive you myself but it will be precious sharp work." The music bad stopped, and the dancers were pouring into the conservatory. Lady Marsac's voice was heard inquiring for her daughter, and I dared not linger. I had only time to whisper a hasty farewell to Eva, and press her band, before Tom dragged meaway. I was anything but jirratefnl to hint for his ofneiousness, and I "suppose he saw my annoyance, for he said apologeti cally: "It seems a shame to hurry yon off like this, old man; but it cannot "be helped. There is not a moment to lose. We ought to have been off ten minutes ago." The dogcart was waiting at the door, and my luggage had already been put in. Tom. jumped up, seized, the reinsand before I was fairly in my seat he swnng the whip into the air with a crack and a hiss. Tt. fore it descended the fiery black mare threw DacK ner neaa, ana, with a violent plunge, that nearly upset the whole concern, set off racing at full speed down the avenue. We dashed through the parte like the wind, frightening the deer and rousing the echoes slumbering under the shadow of the grand old trees. Here and there, through an opening in the wood, we conld see the stately front of the house, with the light streaming from all its windows, and a faint sound ot music still reached onr ears. But soon we rattled through the park gates, and then, turning a sharp corner, we left that peaceful scene far behind us. Tom has no" soul for poetry, and I was aroused from my pleasing meditations by the unsympathetic tones of bis voice. "Br jove 1" he observed; "if those con founded church wardens haven't been and laid down new stones all along this bit of the road. We shall never do it." I now remarked that we were careering? over freshly laid flints. The jolting and Rattling were terrific: for, far from slacken ing speed, Tom was endeavoring to increase? it. I remonstrated. "She is going very well, Tom. Have) some mercy." "My dear fellow, I know she goes well; but horseflesh is no match for steam, and I don't want you to put down the loss of your promotion to my door. I almost wish thatl had let them put in the chestnut; he has not so much go in him, but he is more depend' able. Now with this animal you never know where you are. I wanted to call her Vixen, but my mother insisted upon Perdita; and upon my sonl I think it is not a bad name for her, for she really is just like a lost spirit. It seems as if she were possessed by the wickedness of all the devils sometimes." "Is she safe to drive?" I inquired, with some anxiety. Oh, she goes well enough in harness," re plied mv friend carelessly. "She bohs oc casionally; but I have got her well in hand to-night, and I'll take care to give her no time to play any of her pranks." We had now passed the stones, and were flying like the wind along a dark piece of road overshadowed by trees on one side, and bordered by a running brook on the other. In the uncertain light the most familiar ob jects took strange mysterious shapes, and the knarled old willows hanging over the stream looked intensely weird and unearthly. "Thank goodness we're out of thatl" ex claimed Tom, as we shot out of the shadow of the overarching trees and dashed along the level high road. "My heart was in my boots all the time we were in the dark bole. It was the very place for Perdita to make a boggle over, and if she turns vicious there's no doing anything with bcr." "You don't mean to say that it was your groom that was killed last year, and this is the animal?" I cried, suddenly recalling a ghastly story that bad reached my ears. "Absit omen I" ejaculated mv friend: and I saw by his embarrassment that my conjec ture was only too true. "We never talk abont that business, Jack," he continued, after a brief silence. "For one thing, there are some matters one hates to thins: about, and then it's best to let sleeping dogs lie. You know we are not bound to shoot the animal, for the gossoon did not die for some time after, and he im plored us with his last breath to spare Per dita." "Poor Mickey Flanagan! poor little Mick!" said Tom, relapsing into unwonted sentimcntalism. "He loved the creature as if she had been a human being; and he could not die easy in his bed until he had my promise that no harm should come to her." After these cheering remarks it may be imagined that I felt my position in that higli two-wheeled vehicle behind that de moniacal mare was anything but an envia ble one. I glued my eyes apprehensively upon Perdita's ears, which were pricked up as if ready for instant mischief, and, on the side farthest away from my friend, my hand furtively sought the iron bar ol the seat, so as to have a firm grasp in ease of the worst. Mice is by good luck a marching regi ment, and I have no false shame in admit ting that I know nothing whatever about horses-. In fact, ever since my childish days, when I came to grief with a donkey, I have always entertained a rooted dislike to the species, and the bad impression they made upon me was not likely to be dimin ished by the fiendish appearance of this specimen. Tom would persist in talking, though I implored him to give his whole mind to the management of the reins; but when I said this he only laughed, and replied that ha knew what he was abont. It is a consola tion, however, to reflect that all his conver sational efforts were wasted upon me, for my attention was, riveted upon Perdita's ears, and I did not hear a syllable of what he said. The pace was something tremendous, and I told myself that even Perdita could not keep it up long; yet she showed no sign" &a .L- -.,