T ' SECOND PART. " TICK SEEDED To Provide an Inexhaustible Market for Pittsburg's Coal Product. THE DEMAND DIMINISHING, Because of Uisli Freight. Hales and Difficult Distribution. EFFECT ON FOREIGN COMMERCE. Cheap Coal for Steamboats Would Eevive the Merchant Marine. AX ANALYSIS OF FACTS AND FIGURES ItriUTTEK FOB TBI DISPATCH.l "Where is Pittsburg coal to find a market? Pittsburg coal is tbe best coal; it must go to the best market by the best means. If our coal trade is to grow with our growth we must have first-class water transportation to New York; there onr coal will find the most extended use, the readiest sale, the best prices and the leastconipetition. Fortunately two comparatively economical measures nill enable Western Pennsylvania to place coal in the New York market at prices to defy competition. These two measures are (1) the construction of the Pittsburg and LaEe Erie Ship Canal; and (2) the enlarge ment and improvement of the Erie Canal. "We must get an Eastern outlet and East ern trade, for the Western and Southern trade is being fought for by "Western and Southern coals, which have material ad vantages in every point save excellence. We cannot sell coal west of the Mississippi. That section mines most extensive native deposits. Underlying the Rocky Mountain region vast coal measures extend from Mex ico to Alaska from which were mined in 1883 anthracite, cannel, bitumimons and lignite coals nearly 7,000,000 net tons in all. A Few Facts Clearly Stated. tjnderlying the 11 States and Territories beAween the Mississippi and the 103d meridian are coal measures extending from Mexico to Canada from which were mined in 1SSS cannel, bituminous and lignite joals nearly 12,000,000 tons in alL I Ohio, Indiana, Illinois and Michigan mined in 18S8 nearly 29.000.000 tons trom the central field. West Virginia, Ken tucky, Tennessee and Alabama mined in 1S6S a trifle less than 13,000,000 tons, nearly all from the Appalachian coal field, which we ourselves work, and far the greater part from the Southern extension of the Pitts burg seam. The facta carry their own argument The operators of the Western and Eocky Moun tain fields can and do supply the trade west of the Mississippi, andean carry an effective competition to Gulf ports. The operators of the central field, im mediately west of ns, can maintain a keen competition in the lake trade. The southern miners in the Appalachian field have ad vantages in lower Mississippi trade. The Kanawha, Cumberland and Tennessee rivers have better navigable waters and a longer season of navigation than the upper Ohio. Alabama can ship coal down the Warrior river and supply the Gulf and East Indian trades so cheaply as to monopolize them. In all Western and Southern trade we are under disadvantages which only the certainty and volume of our output and the excellence of our coal enable us to overcome at all. Our Proportion of Trade Diminishing. In the past few years our proportion of this trade has steadily diminished; and no reason se:ms to exist that it should be oth erwise. It appears that we must either open new markets or mine coal mainly for our own use and for coking. We must turn from Western and Southern trade and look for the future to the North and East; from markets where other operators can place coals cheaper than we to markets where we will have the advantage, and exchange a relatively narrow and ever-narrowing mar ket tor one practically limitless. We have an inexhaustible supply. The Pittsburg seam alone, in the counties of Allegheny, Westmoreland, Payette, Wash ington ami Greene, being estimated to con tain 11,000,000,000 tons of coal. Beneath this are other seams, the coal measures being 3, bOO feet thick, bearing coal seams aggre gating 100 feet in thickness, and upward of 100,000,000,000 torn of coal, one-third of which is easily workable, even with our present crude and wasteful engines of de velopment. These vast deposits, in fact, nearly ail the countless millions of tons or coal in the coal-bearing counties of West ern Pennsylvania are most advautageously located upon the natural road lines, being adjacent or convenient to the Allegheny and Monongahela rivers and their principal tributaries, which render easily practicable the development o: first-class water trans portation for the products of all this region. Ihe wonderful ramifications of the river system, the nearness of the great lakes and the ease of access to them point unerringly the best methods to convey the best coal to the best market. The Pittsburg and Lake Erie Shin Canal will he our outlet; will give us dollar freights to Chicago and Duluth; will give Pittsburg coal a decided advantage in the lake trade. It will do more: It will give us a market fur Alder and more absorbent u market practically without a limit Com cnient A ccess for Pittsburg. Tne Eric Canal will be enlarged and im proved, ami will complete a line of first class navigable waterways, lroni Dulnth to New York City, to which Pittsburg will have convenient access at a central point .tiie? waterways will give us encan carnage lo interior New York, where 40 tnanufact- urine titles and towns are accessible by waier, to vliicli, and to 50 railroads, we can , uelivcrtoal ur cheaper than it can be ob- taintd from any other source. This region alone lists more coal than we now ship. Tins is n great opportunity, but greater are in t-iore lor us. Nov York Cuy js the great objective the center of lhe Eastern coal trade. Last year the Sew Y!k market handled near! f 31, 000,000 net tons of anthracite, nearly 17,000,. 000 Ions nf bituminous ar.d cannel coals and tw.i.-ly 1,000 U0U toi.s of imported coals. The nuthracite cts an aviri?c of $1 37 at the nine's month, jiikI &i oQ,i 00 delivered on i-ars at New York, 'lhe bituminous coal, which is tn be delivered under a pool ar rangement, comes as lol!ow: Cumbciland, Md., 30J-K per cent rail and Mater. Clearfield. Pa.. 3S per cent rail. 1'ocabuot.iR. Va.. HlX iter cent rail and water. New ltirei, Yi a.. 11 per cent rail and water. lli-ecu Creek, Pa.. 'H per cent rail. Wen Virginia Central Railroad, o per cent rail. Rcjnnldsvillc, Pa., Us per cent rail and water. The imported coal was all by water from dpo llielnn and Nova Scotia, brought in under a duty ol 75 cents per toi.. Bi.uniii.oui coal sold for $33 25 on cars, and about 20 cents higher alongside. About five-eiebths of the bituminous coal comes from Chesapeake Bay and its watershed, and costs 90 cents to $1 at the mine abont the same as Western Pennsylvania coals. The Pittsburg and Lake Erie and improved Erie ship canals will enable us to come into New York with freieht charges not much over half as hieh as freights from the Cum berland and Pocahontas coal mines. Must Drive Anthracite Out of Use. What will this mean to us? What will this mean to New York and New England? To us it will mean freight rates less than 51 to New York. It will mean to run our mines to the limit; that Pittsburg coal will drive anthracite out of use as a steam coal. It will mean that we can carry Pittsburg coal by water to 70 manufacturing cities anu towns and to nearly 100 railroads and their terminals in New England; that we can place coal on all sides of New England, and in each city and town within her bor ders. To New'England it will mean salva tion. To many of her languishing indus tries it will insure profits; and enterprises now profitable will extend business and in crease profits. In fact. New York and New England will be the principal gainers. They will save 510 where we make 51. The Eastern anthracite coal combination and other disreputable schemes of like nature fleece Eastern people of a fabnlous amount every year, certainly 550,000.000, probably more. If New Yo'rk and New England defrayed the entire expenses of making 20 feet of water to the Great Lakes and the Ohio, their savings on coal hills, freights and incidentals dependent on fuel would pay interest and maintenance and leave enough to pay the expenses of the Government of those States. A Great Effect on Foreign Trade. The construction of these waterways will have a great effect on foreign trade. When they are completed Pittsburg coal can be delivered in New York cheaper than English coal can be delivered in English ports. This will canse the use of our coal in coastwise, West Indian and South American steam ships; in all trans-Atlantic steamers for the eastward voyage, and in many as the sole fuel. It will cause onr coal to be a standard fuel in Southern Europe and Mediterranean ports; in South Africa and South America; and in the West Indian ports, except where Warrior coal from Ala bama shuts us out. Warrior coal is to be our chief com petitor in foreign trade, with the exception of anthracite. We will be about 750 miles by water from New York, and nearlv 2.000 miles from New Orleans. The Warrior coal is scarcely half so far from Mobile as Pittsburg coal is from New York. Warrior coal can shut us out of the gulf; but when we get to New York we can confine Warrior coal to the gulf. Take a globe and with a pair ot dividers strike a circle throuzh New York from Para, as a center, and at the same time consider the advantage which the t-ade winds, ocean currents and free navigation give shipping from the Northern port It will be seen at a glance that New York is our objective is natural ly and inevitably the port of Pittsburg. All our energies should be devoted to obtaining cheap first-class water rontes to that point. Ten times greater is the advantage to the East of a cheap ronte to us. Coal for Our Commerce In this connection a few reflections on foreign trade will not be out ot place. Our Government is solicited to grant subsidies and bounties to steamships engaged in foreign trade. A first class steamship, car rying net 5,000 tons or" freight, running 500 miles a day, uses 500 tons of coal daily. For onr Government to so develop internal trans portation routes that this coal can be laid alongside the vessel at a reduction of SI per ton is a very practical way to give a bonnty of 500 a day every day the steamship is under way. Bounties, subsidies and reciprocal trade arrangements will not alter the facts. Nearly all the commodities of trade must originate in the Mississippi Valley; if not in manufactured shape, then as raw mate rials. It certainly seems reasonable to ask the people who beg for subsidies and boun ties (that foreign trade may betimulated) to help us get cheap transportation, that we may deliver goods so cheaply that a natural trade will develop, bounties or no bounties. THE CHILEAN REBELLION. GOVEBNHENT TROOPS WIN A BLOODY VIC TOBY AT PISAGUA. It Is Offset by a Terrible Disaster at Fort Coronal, Which the Insurgents Bombard ed and Captured Two Hundred People Burled Beneath Falllnc Wall. NewYoek, March 13. The report that President Balmaceda, ol Chile, has been murdered, is as yet unconfirmed. The con dition of affairs in Chile is so desperate, however, that no occurrence there will sur prise those well informed on the situation. A bloody b?ttle has been fought at Pisagua. The rebels were defeated, having 40 killed and 34 wounded. The Govern ment continues to exile all persons who are in any way inclined toward the rebels. Several German and Enelish merchants have been given 36 houre in which to leave the country forever. A perlecl surprise, to say the leas., has been the decree of the Government expelling from the country the representative of a foreign nation the Con sul of Austria at Valparaiso. The Consul, it seems, was very much inclined toward the rebels, and in an unguarded moment stated his feelinsrs and opinion of Balmaceda to a friend. The Government prisons are filled to overflowing with prisoners not the scnni of society, but revolutionists who are con sidered worthy of imprisonment by Balma ceda, who is styled by the revolutionists "The Modern Despot" Confiscation on a grand scale is being resorted to by the Gov ernment. A most terrible disaster took place at Port Coronet It was about 3 o'clock in the afternoon when the Esmeralda appeared in the harbor and demanded the surrender of the town. This was refused. A perfect shower of grape end canister was followed by solid shot The people fled to the heights for safety, while some took refuge in the railroad station. The bombardment continued, amid the screaming of women and children and the imprecations of men, when suddenly a shot struck the railroad station. This was followed bv several others, and before auybody could escape the roof and the next wall fell in, bnrvin" over 200 men, women and children in the rnins. lhe hnug continued, and this, dried tn the rrip nf the tlvirirr f!iiii.d tl,- nnn.M.n.T.. in,nrnJiiii)nni. a. , ' j was sent t0 the cruiser, the surgeons of the sIli,,( witn a detachment of marines were snnt tn nPT mi the wr.t ,A i.nj ' .:.. r ----. uku icuu USaiOV aucc iv mc nuuuueu. oixiy-seven aeaa bodies were taken out, and about 100 per tons were more or less injured. The block ade of Valparaiso is beginning to tell. Pro visions are scarce and expensive. The two cruisers which are now blockading the port keep up an incessant vigilance and nothing can get in or out ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON will tell Rome tor!es of the South Sea cannibals in THE DISPATCH to-morrow. This Is the fourth letter on the Isles of the Pacific. ACHES and pains don't stay long where Salvation Oil is kept handy. Price bnt 25 cts. ' B.&1S. Windsor ties 66 dozens extra qnality silk, lor ladies and children's wear, 15 cents 25e quality. Boggs & Buhl. 8-B. Sncde Mosquctalrcs, Tans, 75c, worth SI 23; bner qnality black or tau, 51, worth 51 50, at Roieuoauni & Co's. xbs THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH. MONTE CARLO'S LOSS. English Players Struck the Bank for $200,000 the Other Day. GREAT GROWTH OP THE CASINO. The Downfall of the German Gamblim; Places the Causa of It, BAD CHaEACTEBS ARE MOT TOLERATED PABI3, March 13. Yesterday the Monte Carlo bank lost $200,000, the largest amount lost in any one day for 20 years. The winners were JSnglish players, but others of, that nationality can be relied upon to soon return the wealth to the bank's i coffers. The exist- i ence of Monte I Carlo as the home oi roulette is one of the many indi rect consequences of the victory gained by the Prussians at Sa dowa. Till then thepublio gaming tables in Germany Entering the Casino. existed without their proprietors caring for the morrow. 7, Ok fiMfk f!ff 11 AT THE BOULETTE TABLE. After that event these proprietors rigbtH felt that their days were numbered, and M Blanc, the ablest among them, made ar rangements in view of the inevitable conse quences. He was thj founC - vand chief ot the gaming tables at Hombu -g. He sought for the site of a new Casino, where he might be free from the interference of any Prussian Parliament or Minister, and he found what he required in the Prin cipality of Monaco. In that small State there is no Parliament, the ruler being as autocratic as the Czar of Bussia. Before M. Blanc appeared on the scene the Prince of Monaco had been driven by his financial necessities to grant a concession to the founders of a gaming house. The venture had not Droved so successful as was ex pected. It is easy enough opening a gaming house, but it is far from easy to keep it filled with players. About the year 1872 one gaming house after another in Germany closed its doors forever. All that is special in the life of a place where play is the chief subject of talk and attraction is now con tinued and concentrated at Monte Carlo. It is the last home of roulette in Europe. The Great Transformation Effected. The visitor to Monte Carlo who now sees it ior the first time cannot conceive the transformation which the spot on which it stands has undergoue since M. Blanc tounded the Casino. Before heacquired the concession for keeping gaming tables there, similar tables were in operation in the citv of Monaco. That city was then very diffi cult of access. It was not n pleasant place of abode. One hotel existed lor the enter tainment of visitors, and those only who can feel t.t home in a fourth-rate Italian ho tel could feel at home there. It accurred to him that a fine sice for a Casino, a hotel and villas, existed on the nromonotory opposite to Monaco, which is now the suburb oi Monte Carlo. He built a Casino, which has been nearly quadrupled in size since then, and close to it he built au hotel, which has long been one of the best on the Riviera. M. Blanc had appealed to the public for the money wherewith to carry out his plans, having formed a company under the name of "Societe des Bains de Mer et Cercle des Strangers," with a capital of 15,000,000 francs. The response was but slight, not more than a. fourth of the shares being ap plied for. M. Blanb and his friends took the rest, and the original shareholders have had no reason to complain of their venture, as the shares are at upwards of 200 per cent premium, and the dividends on the original capital have been at least 30 per cent. Monte Carlo had the advantage over the German towns in which there were pnblic gaming tables in possessing a fiue climate in winter. At Homburg the Casino wait kept open dur ing the winter, but the climate of Homburg in winter is much less balmy than that along the Biviera. Everybody Not Allowed to Play. Perhaps it may be well to correct a com mon misapprehension about the Casino at Monte Carlo. It is spoken of as one which the publiccan enter just us the public could enter those at Homburg, Wiesbaden and Baden-Baden. The inhabitants of the Ger man towns were forbidden to play at the 1 Counting Hit Winnings in the JJalL PITTSBURG, SATURDAY, MARCH 14, 1891. gaming tables, bnt no resnectably dressed stranger was excluded from the casinos. Now, the company to which the Casino at Monte Carlo belongs claims and exercises the right to admit and exclude whom it pleases. There is little difficulty in obtain ing a ticket of admission, yet tickets are not granted as a matter of course. The natives of the Principality are not permitted to lose their money at play. Sometimes foreigners gain admission who would -be excluded if they gave a correct description of them- selves; but the company cannot be blamed for this. The tiroprietors of the tables have no interest in those playing who cannot afford to lose their money. ' Though the gaming tables are the chief feature in the Casino, they are not the only attraction. Concerts are given twice daily all the year round, and in the winter season a classical concert is given weekly which cannot be surpassed anywhere. Indeed, the lovers of music have a frequentlv recurring treat provided for them in the Casino, and for this they have nothing to pay. It donbt- 'ess happens that the crowds which fill the oocert room afterward flock into the gam ng rooms and help to fill the coffers of the hink. Por those who abstain from play a large supply of newspapers is provided, and the Casino is mJe a: pleasant a place as possible to those who frequent it. The sums which change hands in it are enormous. Last year the gross receipts were 20,000,000 francs; the expenses were 14,000,000, ieaving a sum for distribution among the share holders of 6,000,000. The Advantage of the Bank. The administration plo. against its cus tomers individually, everyone ot whom ex pects to win, but the administration is quite sure, on the whole, not to lose. The roulette wheel, divided into 37 stalls, of which 18 are colored red, 18 black, num bered one to 30, while zero has no color, is the familiar instrument of apparently fair Supplird Free of Charge. chances. Wheu the ball is dropped in, from a fixed groove at the outer edge of this plausible toy, uo hand having touched it, and the wheel begins to revolve horizon tally, you may put down your money, call ing either "Rouge" or ".Noire," and you think it as likely as not that the ball will stop in a stall of the color you have named. In that case the bank will p,y you equal to the money you have stiked, and you are lucky to get it, wise if you put it in your pocket and walk away. If yon have chosen to bet on one of the numbers, instead ol the colors, the bank will pay you 35 time-ynnr stake in the improbable ovnt of the ball resting in the stall marked with your num ber. When the hall settles in tlie'uncolored receptacle that is designated zero, every plaver on color forfeits half his stake to the Dank. As there are 37 chance in the revolving wheel, it is evideut that the bank, in its ag gregate of operations, has the advantage ol" half a chance over the collective plavers on either color, reckoning 18 for red aai 18 for black, while it has a chance on in 37 gainst each of the players on numbers. In the long run, the total of zeros is more than twice the exress of either color above the other color. AVe do not see any c.iuse to complain of this ndvantaze over the public; tint it makes the business of the administra tion financially safe. The mischief done to the player begins with speculating on a series of" ventures, imagining that he will retrive his first losses by subsequent gains; that by some mysteri ous law of sequences or alterations the past event may effect a future chance. All snch persistent gambling comes from the conceit of beine too cunning, either in blind reliance on a presentiment of final victory, or belief in some fanciful "system1' of arithmetical combinations. The fallacy or supposing that there can be any statistical ground for such a system was ably exposed by a recent writer, Mr. Norwood Yonntr, iii an article analyzing the results of 37,691 con-, secntive tnrns of roulette at Monte Carlo. It may be regarded as certain, however, that a millionaire playing all day long, every day of his life, against the wheel, would, if he lived long enonch, be deprived of hisMaftt franc; and nobody who determines to nlay 50, or 500, or 5,000 tnrns can reason ably expect to be a gainer. Beating Up the Money for the Night. . " tt-JL- - fit !ilrili II m! m IB I II 111 FAY0RITES FOR '92. Views of Senators as to the Nomi nees of the Two Great Parties. BLAINE AHD CLEVELAND AHEAD, With Some Expressions for Harrison, Alger, Kusknd Bill. A EECEET POLITICAL ORGANIZATION As the summer of 1892 draws nearer and nearer, the coming great national event the nomination of a candidate for the Presi dency of these United States by the two prominent political parties already begins to cast its shadow before. "Whom do yon waul in '92?" is the question that each man is asking of his neighbor, and to which he is eagerly waiting a reply. This query is followed up immediately by another: "Whom do you think the Democrats and Republicans will nominate in '92?" With a view to ascertaining the preferences of a large number of voters, and by thus answer ing the first question to approximately an swer the second also, there was recently pro pounded to the United States Senators rep resenting 11 different States, this following qnerv: ''Who, according to the best of yonr knowledge and belief, would be the most congenial Republican nominee to the Republicans of your State for President in 1892, and who would be the most congenial Democratic nominee to the Democrats of the same section?" This inquiry was made by a man who is the head of the most powerful and most secret order ever organized for political pur poses. Its very name is a mystery and it already has a large membership "in every one of the 49 States and Territories compos ing the Union. It is, therefore, unques tionably destined to exercise a powerful in fluence upon the political future of every candidate for national office in this country, though its only object is to carry out the will of the majority of the whole people, irrespective of pa"rty, race or creed. The answers received will be found below, and they certainly present a better and more re liable report of the popular feeling on this all important subject and a better forecast of the action of the two great nominating conventions of 1892 than can possibly be ob tained in any other way, as their authors are of all others the best qualified to write on these subjects. Whom Oregon Wants. Hon. Joseph N. Dolpb, the senior United States Senator from Oregon, writes as follows: "I am just in receipt of your letter. In reply to yuur question with regard to the preferences of political parties in Oregon as to the Presl dental nominations for 1S92, 1 would say that Secretary Blaine has been for many years a fa vorite candidate upon the Pacific coast. If he were to be a candidate forthePresidental nom ination in lt921 have bnt little doubt that a majority or the Republicans in the State I rep resent would very sirongly favor his nomina tion. Governor David B. Hill, of New York, has Some warm admirers among Democrats in the State of Oregon, but now tbat he is wholly out of the Presidental race by his acceptance of the United States Senatorship from Now York, I think, from all the expressions I have hearu in regard to the matter from the Demo crats of my State, that at present a majority of the Democratic party wonld favor the nom ination of ex-President Cleveland." Whom Massachusetts Wonld Like. Hon. George F. Hoar, the senior United States Senator from Massachusetts, contrib utes the following interesting letter: "1 do not think there Is as jet any marked feeling of preference among the Republicans of Massa chusetts as to their candidate for the next Presidency. The developments of the next year are awaited with great interest and uncer tainty in my State, and tho opinion which will determine the next Republican randidate is yet to be formed, lassacbusetts Democrats feel a cood deal of respect for Mr. Grover Cleveland, but the expressions of that respect are. I think, largely artificial, and do not repre sent a very deep-seated popular feeling among the Democratic masses. Some ot the agricultural papers of my State recently undertook to obtain the Uev.sof the farmers throughout the country on cer:ain practical, economic and political questions, and also desired them to name the men whom thev desired to see nominated for the Presidency by both the Democrats and Republicans. Thousands of answers were received, and when the votes were counted li was found that tne ballot for a Republican nominee fbr President gave Blaine 39.209 votes: Harrison, 81,013; Sec retaiy Rusk, 20,746, while 16.DC3 were scatter ing. Tin- vote for Democratic candidates showed 71,787 for Cleveland; 17.11S for Hill, 11.0S2 for Congressman William H. Hatch, of .Missouri, Chairman of the House Committee on Agriculture, and 8,803 scattering. In the "ev England Siates alone the result was as follows: Republican candidates For Blaine, 11,630: for Hamson. 10,921; for Secre tary Rusk, 7,02-1: scatterinir, 4,837. Democratic candidate Cleveland, 23,5J!: Hill, JUS!: Hatch, 4.7GS; scattering, 2.031." Maine lor Blaiuo and Cleveland. Hon. William P. Frye may he called the junior United States Senator from Maine by just H days, having first taken his seat in the Senate on March IS, 1831, while Eugene Hale, the other Maine Senator, had first takou his on March 4, of the same year. He gives the news from the Pine Tree State in the following words; "In reply to yours of the other day r would say, that in my opinion the administra tion uf President Harrison has in every regard commenuea itscii to me republicans ot Maine. Hut they are very loyal to Mr. Blaine, and would probably prefer his candidacy to that of any other man in the country. 'I believe the Democratic preference wonld be decidedly for Mr. Cleveland." Michigan ior Alger and Cleveland.'' Hon, James McMillan, the junior Unitod States Senator frum Michigan, thinks that bis Stato will continue loyal to her favorite son, Oovernor Alger, as will be seen from his letter. "In reply to your letter inquiring as to the Presidental preferences of Michigan Repub licans and Democrats for 18U2, J would say that the delegates from my S'.ato to the Chicago Convention in 1888 gave their united and most hearty support to our former Governor, Gen oral It A. Alger, and I firmly believe tnat the delegates to the next Republican Convention in the summer of 18'JJuill repeat that action. At the M. Louis Convention of IBS! the vote of the delegation from the State 1 leprescntwas cast for the Hon. Grover Cleveland, and I think that there is no doubt that our Demo cratic ex-President will continue to be the favorite with the Michigan representatives of tne uemocratic party at tne Democratic nomi nating convention in the summer of 18U2." Little Delaware's Choice. Hon. Anthony Hiscins, is the junior United States Senator from Delaware. Ho thus gives voice to tho Presidental desires of his State. "Wnh reeard to the choice ot the Democrats of of Delaware, ot a standard hearer for their party in the approaching Presidental contest of 1832. 1 would say that the Delaware faction of tho Democratic party controlled by ex-Secretary of State Thomas F. Bayard and United Senator George Gray, have the mastery of their party In my State now, and I believe ihey are heartily for Grover Cleveland in 1S9Z. With regard to the chuice of tho Republicans of Delaware for a Presidental candidate in 1S92, 1 think opinion has not yet taken definite shape. No preterence, eithcrpopnlar or otherwise, has as yet been expressed." Arkansas AVants Cleveland and IUaine. Hon. James K. Junes, United States Senator from Arkansas, first took his Senate seat on March 4, 1S85, while his colleague, Hon. James H. Berry, did not do so until March 25 of the same year. Mr. Jones may therefore take rank as the senior Senator irom the good old State which is popularly believed to 'pick its teeth with the tiouie knife. He voices the choice of his people for '92 as follows: "Yonr favor is received, and while it would be impossible for me to give you in detail all the reasons lor my belief, there is no doubt In my mind that Mr. Cleveland is by all odds, at this time, the most popular Democrat among the people of Arkansas, and I am Inclined to think tbat Mr. Blaine is the most popular anions the few in telligent Republicans in that State, but the fact that Mr. Harrison is PreIdent,would give him a strong support, and as tie rank and file ot the Republicans in the State have no opinion of their own and I have no doubt they wonld follow the one class or the other the supporters of Blaine or the followers of Har rison." Kansas on the Fence. Hon. P. B. Plumb, junior United States Sen ator from Kansas, writes tbusly: "At the pres ent time I hardly think there has been mani fested by either party In the State ot Kansas a preference for a Presidental candidate for 1892 sufficiently strong to last until the assembling oi me itenuuilcan anu .Democratic conventions in the summer of that year. Blaine and Har rison have many admirers among the Repub licans and Cleveland and Hill amons: the Dem ocrats. Whether the Republican delegates will vote for either of the two former, whether the Democratic delegates will voto for either of the two latter, or whether either or both will favor some 'dark horse' it is now Impos sible to tell. Personally 1 have no opinion of my own to express as to who will be nominated or who misbt with propiiety be nominated by either party." Senator George Gray Speaks. Hon. George Gray, the senior United Status Senator from Delaware, Is now in his seventh year in the Upper National House, he having been elected to fill the unexpired term of Sen ator Bayard when tbat gentleman was called to Cleveland's Cabinet In 1885, and having been re-elected in 1887. As be la one of the political masters of the Democratic party in his State, his views, as expressed In the appended com mnmlcation, may be regarded as oracular. "In reply to yours I wonld say that at tho resent time the overwhelming cnolce of the lemocrats ot the State I represent for Presi dent in 1892 would be the Hon. Grover Cleve land. As to who is the most popular man among the Delaware Repunlicans. 1 wonld say tbat 1 believe that his name is James G. Blaine." Connecticut Wants Cleveland or Hllh Hon. OmlleH. Piatt has sat for Connecticnt in the United States Senate since March 18, 1879, and in point of service is the senior repre sentative of his State in that body. Senator Hawley having first taken his seat on March 4, 1881, bnt in point of age the latter is nearly one year the senior of Mr. Piatt, who sends the subjoined epistle: "In their choice of the next Democratic nominee forPtesident 1 think the Democrats of Connecticut are pretty evenly divided between Hon. Grover Cleveland and Hon, David B. Hill. Which, if either, has the preponderance of the popular sentiment in his favor it would be hard to say. Whether or not the recent election of Governor PH11 to the United States Senate has affected or will affect the feeling in his favor it is difficult to tell. I do not think that the question ot who shall be the next Republican nominee for the Presi dency has as yet been much agitated among the Republicans of -Connecticut. Both Blaine and Harrison have many admirers in the State." Iowa Is Non-CommlttaL Hon. James F. Wilson, junior United States Senator from Iowa, speaks for his State: "There has been very little discussion In Iowa as to possible or probable candidates for the Pres idency in 1892 by either Democrats or Repub licans. Blaine and Harrison, Cleveland and Hill are the names most frequently mentioned, and each one ol those gentlemen has, no donbt, a considerable following; but it Is Impossible for me to say at present who is leading in the popular favor of their respective parties or what will be the action of the Iowa delegation at tho nominating conventions of the Repub licans and Democrats In 1892. Public sentiment among both parties seems greatly divided at the present time." A Letter From Chairman Quay. That no shrewder politician or one more fa miliar with the political complexion of bis own State and the conntry at large ever figured in American politics than Matthew S, Quay, Chairman of the National Republican Com mittee, tbat gentleman has himself abundantly demonstrated. He therefore speats with some authority In the appended letter: "I believe that Blaine is the Presidental candidate de sired by the Republicans of my State for 1892, and that Cleveland occupies the same position among the Democrats. If it were left to the Democratic rank and file Cleveland would be nominated. But despite his popularity with tho masses I believe he would be easier beaten than any other Democrat. He has made too many enemies amongihe Democratic leaders. Sena tor Gorman, of Maryland, is now talked of by the Democrats. He would be a strong man. I believe we wonld fair better with a Southern Democrat for President in the event of such a calamity as the election of a Democratic Chief Magistrate than a Northern one. The Democrats of the South are more liberal mindeu and cleaner than those of the North." A Kentucky Senator Talks. Hon. Joseph C. S. Blackburn, Kentucky's senior Senator, has thus civen his sentiments: "However popular Mr. Cleveland may have been witn Democrats generally, I think bim no longer available as a candidate by reason of his letter on the silver qnestion. Personally, I have not the slightest objection to bim, but I believe any man opposing (ree silver coinage wonld be defeated for President in '92." CABLE LETTERS covering Enrope com pletely make the Sunday Issue of THE DIS PATCH a welcome caller at all homes who have relatives abroad. ONE MAHEIAGE A TRAGIC FAILURE. A Young Wife of Five ajonths End Her Troubles With a Pistol. Indianapolis, March 13. Last October Kate Weaver, daughter of prominent peo ple of this city, married Leon E. Rbiueh, a young lawyer with a good practice. They settled in their own cozy home, and life seemed full of promise for the young couple. Lately, however, the neighbors have shaken their beads ominously, and intimated that all was no: well with the couple. At 10 o'clock last night pedestrians pass ing the Rbinehold house heard a pistol shot within. An entrance was forced, and Mrs. Rhinehold was found dying Irom n wound in the breast She had taken her own life while alone in her home. The following letter, written by her just berore firing the fatal shot, tells the story: "When this reaches you I will be out of this world. I could not stand it. I hud a bad, low hus band, who beat and cursed me and tried to make me believe I was unfaithful. I could not stand it, and took my own life." WILL BEK0VJ3 LEGAL OBSTACLES. The True Title to the Cherokee Strip "Will De Tested In Court. St. Louis, March 13. Advices from the Indian Territory are that, although the civilized tribes are willing that further negotiations with a view to the sale of the Cherokee Strip should be had, some con tend that nothing will be done toward nego tiations until the case of Jordon and Bushy Head versus the United States for damages done them by being removed from the Cher okee Strip, where they held a lease from the nation to quarry stone, is decided. This will settle the title to the Outlet, und the Cherokees are looking forward to the decision with much interest. The c.se comes up in Guthrie, March 20. WOODEUFI'S EHOHTAGE GROWING. Rumors of Other Defalcations by the Ex State Treasurer Flying Fast. Little Rock, March 13. Rumors of an additional shortage in the accounts of Treasurer Woodruff are again flying fast and furious. It is said he is short more than 600,000 in scrip. Members i.f the joint committee investi gating the office reluse to talk at all on the subject, and it is impossible to learn any thing authentic. Senator 6. Tillman, 'a meiuberof the committee, says there is no truth id the report. LENVEE WITHOUT A MAY0E. The tjittinz Official, Who Has Served a Year, Declared Illegally Elected. DENVER, March 13. This city is with out a Mayor. The Supreme Court this morning denied a re-hearing in the Mayor alty case. The present Mayor, Wolle Lon douer, was a few weeks ago declared to be illegally ele:red, after holding his office nearly a year. D. & Packard, President of the Board of Supervisors, will probably act as Mayor un til after the city election next month. Mks. VVinslow's Soothing Syrup is the best of all remedies for Children Teething. PAGES9T0 J : ' i "Randolph Crescent, N. W. "My Dear Pngh I hone you will like the pipe which I senU with this. It is rather a curious example of a certain school of Indian carving. And is a present from "Yours truly, "Joseph Teess." It was really very handsome of Tress very handsome! The more especially as I was aware that, to give presents was not exactly in Tress' line. The truth is that when I saw what manner ot pipe it was I was amazed. It was contained in a sandal wood box, which was itself illustrated with some remarkable specimens of carving. I use the word "remarkable" advisedlv, be cause although the workmanship was un doubtedly, in its way, artistic, the result conld not be described as beautiful. The carver had thought proper to ornament the box with some of the ugliest fignres I remember to have seen. Tbey appeared to me to be devils. Or perhaps, they were intended to represent deities appertaining to some mythological system with which, thank goodness, I am unacquainted. The pipe itself was worthy of the case in which it was contained. It was of meerschaum, with an amber mouthpiece. It was rather too large for ordinary smok ing. But then, of course, one doesn't smoke a pipe like that There are pipes in my j collection which I should as soon think of smoking as I should of eating. Ask a china maniac to let you have alternoon tea out of his old Chelsea, and you will learn some home trnths as to the durability of human friendships. The glory of the pipe, as Tress had suggested, lay in its carving. Not that I claim that it was beautiful, any more than I make snch a claim for the carving on the box, bnt, as Tress said in his note, it was curious. The stem and the howl were quite plain, bnt on the edge of the bowl was perched some kind af lizard. I told myselt it was an octopus when I first saw it, but I have since had reason to believe that it was some almost unique member of the lizard tribe. The creature was repre sented as climbing over the edge of the bowl down toward the stem, and its legs, or ieelers, or tentacula, or whatever the things are called, were, if I may use a vulgarism, sprawled about "all over the place." Por instance, two or three of them were twined about the bowl, two or three of them were twisted round the stem, and one, a particularly horrible one, was' uplifted in the air, so that if you put the pipe in your mouth the thing was pointing straight at your nose. Not the least asreeable feature about the creature was that it was hideously lifelike. It appeared to have been carved in amber, but borne coloring matter must have been introduced, for inside the amber the creature was of a peculiarly ghastly green. The more I examiued the pipe the more amazed I was at Tress' generosity. He and I are rival collectors. I am not going to say, in so many words, that his collection of pipes contains nothing but rubbish, because, as a matter of fact be has two or three rather decent specimens. But to compare his collection to mine would be absurd. Tress is conscious of this, and he resents it He resents It tn such an extent that he has been known at least on one occasion to de clare that one single pipe of his I believe he alluded to the Brummasem relic prepos terously attributed to Sir Walter Raleigh was worth the whole of my collection pat together. Although I have forgiven this, as I hope I always shall forgive remarks mda when envious passions get the better of our nobler nature, even of a Joseph Tress, it is not to be supposed that 1 have forgotten it He was, therefore, not at all the sort of person irom whom I expected to receive a present And such a present! I do not believe tbat he himself had a finer pipe in his collection. And to have given it met I had misjudged the man. I wondered where he had got it from. I had seen his pipes; I knew them off by heart and some nice trumpeiy he has among them, too! but I had never seen that pipe before. The more I looked at it, the more my amazement grew. The beast perched upon the edge of the bowl was so. like life. Its two bead-like eyes seemed to gleam at me with positively human intelligence. The pipe fascinated me to such an extent that I actually resolved to smoke ti I I filled it with Perique. Ordinarily I use Birdseye, but on those very rare occasions on which I use a specimen I smoke Perique. I lit np with quite a small sensation ot ex citement As I did so I kept my eyes periorce filed upon the beast The beast pointed its upraised tentacle directly at me. As I inhaled the pungent tobacco that tentacle impressed me with u feeling of actual uncanniness. It was broad daylight, and I wag smoking in front nf the window, yet to snch an extent was I affected that it seemed to me that the tentacle was not only vibrating, which, owing to the peculiarity of its position, was quite within the range or possibility, but actually moving, elongating stretching lorwani, that -is, further toward me, and toward the tip o! my nose. So impressed was I by this Idea that I took the pipe ont of my mouth and minutely examined the beait. lie illy, the" delusion was ex cusable. So cunningly bad the artist wrought that he had succeeded in producing a creature which, such was its uncanniness, I could only hope bad no orig inal in nature. Replacing-lbe pipe between my lipsl took several whiff. Never had smoking had such an effect on me before. Either the pipe, or the creature on it, exercised some singular lascinatlou. I seemed, without an instant's warning, to be passing into some land of dreams. I saw the beast, which was perched upon the bowl, writhe and twist I saw it lilt itself bodily from, the meer schaum. . . . II. "Feeling better now?" I looked up. Josenh Tress Was speaking, "What's the matter? Have 1 been HI?" "Xbu appear to have been in some kind of swoon." Teess' tone was peculiar, even a little dry. "Swoon! I never was guilty of sueh a thine in my life." "Nor was I, until I smoked that pipe." I sat up. The act of sitting up made ma conscious of the fact that I bad been lying down. Conscious, too, tbat I was feeling more than a little dazed. It seemed as though I was waking ont of some strange, letharzic sleep a kind of feeling which I have read ot and heard about, but never before experienced. "Where am I?" "You're on the couch in yonr own room. Yon were on the floor; but I thought it would be better to pick you up and place you on the couch though no one performed the same kind office to me when I was on the floor." Again Tress' tone wa distinctly dry. "How came you here?" "Ah, tnat's the question." He rubbed his chin a habit of his which has annoyed me more than once before. "Do you think you're sufficiently recovered to enable you to understand a little simple explanation? I stared at him, amazed. He went on strok ing bis chin. "The truth is that when I sent you the pipe I made a slight omission "An omission?" "I omitted to advise you not to smoke it" "And why?" "Because well, I've reason to believe tha thing is drugged." "Drugged!" "Or poisoned." "Poisoned I" I was wide awake enough then. 1 jumped off the couch with a celerity which proved it "It is this way. I became its owner In rather a singular manner." He paused, as if forme to make a remark; bnt I was silent "It is not often that I smoke a specimen, but, for some reason, I did smoke this. I commenced to smoke it, that is. How long I continued to smoke it is more than I can say. It bad on me the same peculiar effect which it appears to have had on yon. When I recovered consciousness I was lying on the floor." "On the floor?" "On the floor. In about a3 uncomfortable rjosition as you can easilv conceive. I was lying face, downward, with my legs bent under me. I was never so surprised m my life as I was when I found myself where I was. At first I sunposed that I had had a stroke. But by degrees it dawned upon me that I didn't feel a tbongh I had had a strofee." Tress, bv the W3y, had been an army snrgeon. "I was conscious of distinct nausea. Looking about, I saw the pipe. Witb me it had fallen onto the floor. I took it for granted, considering the delicaoy of the carving, that the fall had broken it But when I picked it upl found it quite un injured. While I was examining it a thought flashed to my brain. Might it not be answerable for what had happened to me? Suppose, for instance, it was drugged? I had heard of such things. Besides, in my case were present all the symptoms of drug poisoning, though what drug bad been used I conldn't in the least conceive. I resolved tbat I would give the pipe another trial." "On yourself? or on another party, mean ing me?" "On myself, my dear Pugh on myselfl At that point of my investigations I had not begun to think of yon. I lit up and had another smoke." "With what result?" "Well, tbat depends on the standpoint from which you regard the thing. From one point of view the result was wholly satis factory I proved that the thing was drugged, and more." "Did you have another fall?" "I did. And something else besides." "On that account. I presume, you resolved to piss the treasure on to me?" "Partly on that account, and partly on another." "On my word, I appreciate yonr gen erosity. You might have labeled the thing as poison." "Exactly. Bnt then you mutt remember how often you have told me that you never smoke your specimens." "That was no reason why you shouldn't have given me a hint that the thing was more dangerous than dynamite." "That did occur to me afterward. There fore I called to supply the slight omission."' "Slight omission, you call itl I wonder what you wonld have called it if you bad louna me aeaa. "If I had known that you intended smoking It I should not have been at all surprised if I had." "Really, Tres, I appreciate your kind ness more and more! And where ii this ex ample of yoursplendid benevolence? Have you pocketed it regretting your lapse into the unaccustomed paths of generosity? Or is it smashed to atoms?" "Neither the one nor the other. You will find the pipe upon the table. I neither de sire its restoration nor is it in any way in jured. It is merely an expression of ser sonal opinion wheu I say that I don't believe it could be injured. Of course, having dis covered its deleterious properties, you will not want to smoke it again. You wfll there fore be able to enjoy the consciousnesa of being the possessor of "what I honestly bf lieve to be the most remarkable pipe in ex istence. Good-day, Pngh." He was gone before I conld say a word. I immediately concluded, from the precipi tancy or bis flight, that the pipe was injured. But when I subjected It to close examination I could discover no signs of damage. Whili Il'lll 'MFf Mi . I! ,"!'l''Hll t ' n M - 4yte&, a--iiumtf