"'y'SWMSSHJfi THE PITTSBURG .DISPATCH - .TUESDAY NOVEMBER-. :.17,.f 1891rf p- ESTABLISnKD FEBRUARY 8. IMS. Vol. 4. No, 33. vnterea at nttsbnrg Postofflcs, yoremttr li7, as tecond-class matter. Business Office Corner Smithfield and Diamond Streets. News Rooms and Publishing House 78 and 80 Diamond Street, in -New Dispatch Building. EASTERN ADVEItTISlNG OFFICE, ROOM B, TRIBUNK BUILDING. XEWTORK, whcrecom pletr files of TIIIIDISPATCItcan always be found. Foreign advertisers appreciate the convenience. Home adrcrtlvrs and Mend:. ofTHE DISPATCH, while in New York, arc also made welcome THE DISPA TCHIt rewta rly m c nl Brentano's, t Union Syware, -Vw Tori, and 17 Ave de V Opera, Fnris. Prance v&erc anyone toko has ben disap pointed at a hotel news stand can obtain it. TEKJIS OF TOE DISPATCH. POSTAGE FEEE IS THE UKTTXD STATES. Dailt DisrATcn. One Tear f 00 DAtLT Dispatch, Per Quarter. 2 00 Daily Dispatch. One Month TO Daily Dispatch. Including Sunday, 1 rear.. 10 00 D ly Dispatch. Including Sunday, 3 m'ths. 2 SO D lt Dispatch, Incli'ding Sunday, 1 m'lh. 90 FChDAYDisrATCH. One Year. . J 50 Weekly Dispatch, One Year 1 25 Tiif. Daily DisrATcn is delivered by carriers at ISccnU per week, or, including Sunday Edition, at SO cents per week. FHTSBUKG. TUESDAY, NOV. 17, 1891. TWELVE PAGES NEEDS ONLY ZEAL AND LIBERALITY. If Pittsburg does not put her best foot foremost for the Republican National Con vention, it will be from a strange under aluingof her own advantages, combined with a singular want of perception of the best opportunity she has had for years. The great city whose push and prestige would as usual have jostled all competit ors out of the race Chicago has form ally declined to compete this 3-ear. San Francisco is the most ostentatious entry, offering free transportation for delegates ' and a fund of 550,000 for entertainment But San Francisco is out of the question" by reason of distance. There should be no compulsion upon delegates to devote three weeks of their time to nominating a ticket That is what a trip to San Francisco and back, with a week thrown in for the con vention, wouldmean. The scenery en route is beautiful; the California wines and fruits are worthily famous, and the climate at certain seasons quite as "glori ous" as the poets and orators of the Slope are wont to assert but if the delegates all over the country are tc be limited to the class whom it will suit to give three weeks' time to the nominating business, this exclusion of all others will neither be popular nor a good precedent With Chicago out voluntarily, and San Francisco out by the logic of circum stances, there are only Cincinnati, Sfe Louis, Minneapolis and Omaha to con sider. The two former cities have had their share of political courtesy and con sideration in times past They have not been lucky in the fate Which befell the tickets nominated there; and they are not a? well prepared to move the crowds of visitors as Pittsburg h, with its unap proached rapid transi; systems. As for Minneapolis and Omaha there is no sens in dragging the great majority of the dele sates, who will come from the New Eng land, Middle and Southern States, on a three days' journey when Pittsburg is within twelve to twenty-four hours' reach of them. Such are some of the practical ar guments presenting themselves for Pitts burg. The sentimental one of this being the birthplace of the party will count for something, also ana about all that re mains is for the people of this town to guarantee a bigger f nnd than any other point for the entertainment of the dele gates. San Francisco offers $50,000 but a the newspapers of Pittsburg alone offer about 510,000 as their own contribution, the hotels and merchants and manufac turers and great special interests, such as the railroads, coal, coke and petroleum, should readily put the figure up to $100, 030. The advantages to the city of having 50,000 to 75,000 active strangers from all parts of the country see its development and the splendid opportunities it offers for new capital and brains will far exceed any sum it can be called on to contribute for the securing of the convention. The movement is, therefore, one of real im portance, and should be forwarded with the utmost zeal and liberality. A POSSIBLE DILEMMA. The rumor that Italy lias taken advan tage of the strained relations between the United States and Chile to renew her de mand for apology and indemnity for the New Orleans mob murders may be a mere locrfcach, but it arouses interesting specu lation as to the logical dilemma in which such a demand would place the Adminis tration. How would the State Department deal with a double diplomatic situation of this tort? Would it be possible to make an in ternational issue out of a sailors' riot at "Valparaiso while declaring that the organ ized mob at New Orleans was without in ternational significance? Can we claim that the Chilean Government is responsi ble for the former fight, and at the same time assert that our Government has no responsibility for the acts of the New Or leans lynchers? The fact that consistency is not usually deemed an essential quality in diplomacy has been clearly recognized, but it seems rather difficult for a diploma tist at the same time to set up one theory of international law for the United States and another for Chile. Not to speak of the ultimate difficulties which might arise if the United States had the navies of Italy and Chile to deal with at the same time, the logical complication presented by this report justifies the hope that Italy will generously spare us this di lemma, or that the Administration will take the earliest steps to straighten out the Chilean muddle. MTCCKSSIX'L CO-OPERATION. The discussion of co-opeiat'on is gener ally limited by the assertion that industrial co-operation, or the organization of work ingmen to carry on a manufacturing enter prise, is sure of failure. This rather dog matic view is based on the belief that intelligent' and consistent direction of the enterprise cannot be secured unless the head is principally interested in its success. For that reason profit-sharing which leaves the management under such a head has received a more general indorsement This view is not entirely unfounded, although it is worth while to notice that it presents as valid an objection to industrial enterprises in corporate form as to co-operative organization. But there are some very striking Instances to prove that the rule is not universal. In England working men have given much attention to co-operation, and a remarkable example of its success is presented in the opening of the mammoth boot and shoe factory at Leicester. This factory covers six acres, the buildings and machinery cost $250,000, with a capacity of 50,000 pairs of boots per week, and it has a working capital of 31,000,000, which has been created by the earnings and enterprise of co-operating workmen. It is evident that only a few such suc cesses as this are needed to shake the dogma .that workingmen cannot organize to be their own employers. It may remain the case that the organization will require the most careful guarding against negli gence or dishonesty in this direction; but the fact that such success is within the reach of co-operation when properly organ ized is an important one. The effect on labor problems is readily perceived. An Eastern journal says with reference to it that "the capitalist per se disappears by absorption into the workingman," but another way of stating the same thing is that the unattached or floating working man disappears by becoming a small capitalist and his own employer. Certainly every such establishment as the one at Leicester is an incitement to the pursuit of the co-operative experi ment in the hope of producing a complete solution of the labor problem. THE BRAZILIAN CONTKST. The efforts of the representatives of Fonseca, and the organs of Brazilian ab solutism in' the United States, to suppress the uprising against usurpation so far as publication of it is concerned meets with an insuperable obstacle in the obstancy of the Nationalists, who keep on capturing towns and extending their opposition to the dic tatorship. The advices from Buenos Ayres, which is the nearest large city to Rio Grande do Sul, give tolerably authentic information that the Nationalists have taken Porto Allegro, the capital of Rio Grande do Sul, and are practically in complete possession of that populous and important State. The provisional organization of this move ment is taking steps to extend it to other States, while Fonseca is concentrating all his forces to suppress it In the geographical division of the movement, as well as in its political aspects, this closely parallels the Chilean struggle. The Southern provinces, being those where the more temperate climate produces a more active and independent social development than in the more trop ical regions, takes the leadership in forci bly opposing the usurpations of a military dictator. Whether the same success will attend the Brazilian contestants against absolutism as the Chileans won is only to be determined by the issue of the conflict But those who believe in the maintenance of representative institutions will be glad to recognize that a gallant stand is being made for that cause in Southern Brazil TRUE AND FALSE CHIVALRY. The latest demonstration of "Southron chivalry," a common fisticuff fight in a stable between two scented scions of bluest-blooded Blue Grass aristocratic families one of them a son of Congress man Breckenridge who adjourned for the purpose in their dress suits from the Governor' reception ball at Lexington, will suggest to the average Kentuckian or Southron gentleman of the old school a most lamentable degeneracy from the "duel under the code" in the days "befoh the wah, sir, when, by 'gad, we did things differently, by 'gad." To the average Northern why not Northron gentleman it will merely suggest that after all per haps the best form of chivalry is that which begins far enough back to obviate the giving of offense. ONLY ONE "WAY. We have received, with a request for careful perusal, a pamphlet written by Rev. Samuel W. Dike, Secretary of the JSationai Divorce Keiorm .League, on "Uniform Legislation for Marriage and Divorce." It sets forth, what has long been recognized in these columns, the necessity for uniformity, discusses at length the obstacles in the way of Con stitutional amendment which will bring the subject within the purview of national legislation, and concludes by setting forth thte direction which the effort has taken, namely, the appointment of State com missions to confer with a view to securing uniform State legislation. We can go with the National Divorce Reform League to the extent of regard ing this plan as a proper one for securing adequate study of the question, and agita tion of its importance; but as for the hope of securing uniformity in the marriage and divorce legislation by separate State action, it is a futile dream. There always will be a wide diversity of opinion as to what should be the legislation on these subjects; but all will agree as to the scan dal and public injury of a system under which a couple may be legally married in one State and living in violation of the Commandment in another, or by which a man divorced in one State may commit bigamy by marrying elsewhere. But so long as the subject is left to independent State action the different social conditions of the various States will be reflected in the different legislation which produces these incongruities. The Divorce Reform League is worthy of encouragement in its effort to study and improve upon present conditions; but it should understand that there is but one way of securing uniformity of legislation, and that is to put the subject on which uniform ity is desired in the control of a single legislative power. KEEPING UP THE MISSTATEMENTS. The persistence with which misrepre sentations are circulated concerning the inter-State commerce law, and especially concerning the status of the Canadian railroads under it, has been noted hereto fore. But the presentation of a champion example of the sort appears in the New York Telegram with an iteration of the misstatements worth noticing as a legal phenomenon. The article in the Telegram starts out with the assertion that "Canadian rail roads can make wiat rates they please to the detriment of American lines which must conform to the law," which is at once characterized as an "unjust and ab surd discrimination in favor of foreign roads." Anyone who takes the trouble to inform himself on the subject could learn that the first section of the law in question makes all its provisions apply to the Canadian railroads doing business in the United States equally with United States lines, and that the effect of that sectioiu has been affirmed by a ruling of the inter-State Commerce Commission. In view of that fact the repetition through the article of assertions concerning the "superior rights" of the Canadian rail roads, and allowing them "privileges which are not accorded to our own rail roads," is shown to be purely an effort of the imagination. It.is of a piece with the assertion credited by the Telegram to the president of an important railroad that "the interstate law was intended for the protection of American railroads," the tact being that its entire purpose was the protection of the American people against the greed and misuse of corporate power. It is the fact that the Canadian railroads which transport freight to and from any portion of the United States stand before the inter-State Commerce Law on exactly equal terms with the railroads of the United States. The railroad president already referredto is quoted as acknowl edging that violations of the law are fre quent among the railroa'ds of thistiountry. "Yet," he says, "there is no means of reaching the great and supreme offender of all the Canadian railroad." This is another triumph of imagination over facts. There Tire exactly the same means of reaching the offender in one case as in the other, namely, by the penalties of fine and damages provided in the law for both. When those who affirm this inequality are pinned down to an exact statement they trytomake it good by asserting that on that portion of the Canadian roads' traffic arising and terminating in Canada they are not subject to the restrictions of the long-and short-haul clause. But in "that respect they are on an equality not only before the law, but in actual fact with "the trunk lines of H19 United States which have the same exemption on their traffic within States having no such enactment The real trouble between the roads of the United States and those of Canada is that the latter are carrying the products of the Northwest more cheaply than our trunk lines are willing to do. This makes the object of , the corporations, in continu ing the palpable mistatements concerning the law, plain enough. But what is the purpose of the esteemed Telegram in mis informing its readers concerning the law? A SILVER ANOMALY. Mr. David A. Wells, in a recent article, takes occasion te'present a humorous view of the stock of silver held.in the Treasury. It now amounts to $400,000,000. If erected in a column one foot in diameter it would reach above the highest mountain in the world, being sixand a half miles in height To move it by wagon would take a train of 5,500 two-horse teams, or if carried by hand it would enlist the services of 220,000 men, while one person who undertook to count it dollar by dollar, would have a job for eleven years. These aids to realizing the magnitude of the Treasury stock of silver are given especial significance by a recent assertion of Secretary Foster. So long as the outstanding silver certificates were represented to be redeemable in-this silver, it had an obvious function, although it contained the danger of possible return to the silverJiasis. But now we have the statement of the Secretary of the Treasury that the certificates, though based on this silver, are, by the pledge of the Govern ment, to be redeemed in gold. In that case, it appears that this immense stock of silver is absolutely without use, except that of using the Treasury funds to take the sur plus silver out of the market Moreover, we are confronted with the inquiry, first, as to what is the Treasury.reserve of gold, by which these certificates are to be re deemed, and, second, as to what resources the Treasury'will be able to call up, say ten years hence, when the silver stock has increased to nearly a thousand millions, and fhe other cash resources of the Govern ment have been used in accumulating it The entire range of monetary history contains, nothing more remarkable than this example of an immense stock of silver heaped up as an alleged basis for a note circulation, which the head of the Treasury now declares is not to be redeemed by this silver, but by a gold reserve that, so far as public knowledge extends, is non existent Compliments are extended by the New York TForfa to the distinguished editor of tire Herald to the effect that "Mr. Bennett is to be congratulated, upon the organization of his great establishment which permits him to manage it, if he so elects, from the four quarters ofthe globe." The practice of editing from the remote sections of the earth has more than one exponent in New York without exactly producing a vindica tion; but the ubiquity which enables Mr. Bennett to manage his paper from the four quarters at once may be the explanation for some of the editorial outbreaks of that journal, which have heretofore been sup posed to be due to the fact that Sir. Bennett had been dining. "How to Feed a Railway" is the title of a new publication, -which ought to convey valuable instruction to the corporation managers -who have heretofore shown that their ideas of feeding were confined to an al most unlimited watering of the stock. As.The Dispatch indicated, it was the typographical error which did its wotk on those iron ore statistics. Our esteemed cotem porary, the Philadelphia Record, explains that it should have said there was a decrease of 50 cents per ton in the cost of mining and 95 cents per ton in the value of ore at the mines, instead of giving these figures as percentages. This very radical difference makes It quite evident how the richer veins of the new regions should permit this de crease concurrently with an increase in the wages of miners. The question of war at present is not whether there will be war in Europe or a naval contest in America, but whether there will be a desolating, Internecine conflict be tween the baseball organizations. The agitation of the Poor Farm question is bringing to the. surface numerous evi dences that plenty of suitable land can be had for prices much less than the recommended $350 tract. Considering that Controller Mor row estimates a probable deficiency In the Treasury af the end of the fiscal year of about $500,000, it would seem that a diversion of some ofthe surplus proceeds from thesale of the old farm to the relief of the taxpayers would be more timely than throwing it away on nn unwise and indefensible real estate venture.' It is singular that Uncle Jerry, in deal ing w ith the recusant Massachusetts people, omitted to warh'them that he may yet be roused to eive them the worst assortment of weathe'r he' has got in stock. Dn. Hamilton Griffin, on whom the the fierce sunlight of publicity throws its glare less freqnenly than heretofore, has permitted himself to he Interviewed in Louisville, and assures the publfc that Mrs. Navarro is happy; that she has no intention of returning to the stage, and that she is not writing a book. As Mrs. Navarro has no en emies the news that she is not writing a hook will be received with satisfaction that com pensates for any disappointment over the fact that she will not resume her profession. "When we remember that free coinage solves the problem of what newly married couples shall do with their duplicate silver presents" the - political strength of that measure explains itself. The people of New York built a big ac queduet for thgir city a year or two ago, but they omitted to provide for n constant supply of water to fill it. The long-suffering tax payer may bo induced by the ptesent scarcity to put'up enough money to enable the political contractors to construct a water supply in proportion to the magni tude ofthe tunnel. The eclipse of the moon attracted some attention where it could De observed, but it was transient and evanescent compared with the obscuration of the recent tiger hunt in New York City. Our navy .is larger than it was. but, with business flrt in Brazil Bering Sea, Chile, China nnd Hawaii, its employment seems to have increased iu in'oie than due proportion If we build more ships shall we feel the ne cessity of watching the North Sea the Brit ish Channel, Cronstadt, the Dardanelles, Gibraltar and the Suez Canal? The bitterest stab yet given is in the re port that thoso arrests the other day were not of Chicago Anarohists, but of Chicago editors. The assertion that the police conld not tell the difference between the two leaves open a topic for debate whether it was most severe on the police or the editors. The German war department has re solved that the German soldiers shall eat American corn and rye mixed in the same loaf. Corn is rapidly demonstrating its claim to royal honors. Tjie discovery by The Dispatch of one man, who will let the city have a Poor Farm at less than he will sell the land to anyone else, is a Krateful compensation for the pre vailing determination of the rest of the county that the city must pay 75 per cent more than the price for private purchasers. The Conservative programme is a strong bid-for the support of the labor element an d the conciliation of the Irish in any way that can be done without swallowing the Liberal programme whole. A Cotemporary remarks that an American corn-meal agent could nnd a large demand in the hungry parts of Russia at the present time. True; but thov Russian sov eminent is not either paying for corn or allowing the charity of the outside world to relieve the distress of its subjects. The victorious pig of America is extend ing its conquests. Austro-Hungary now proposes to recognize his. supremacy. BNAP SHOTS IN SEASON. It doesn't spoil the barrel organ to knock a few staves out of it. People above suspicion must, of course, stand very high. Baedsley has conclusively demonstra ted that a man can keep a secret. Wheu bank stock bound to he a run on it. is watered there's Before she left the dry goods store The merchant smiled in glee; But you can bet her hubby swore When those goods came C. O. D. Postal clerks who can handle males old enough to vote just suit Harrison. , The Anarchists say it will take 20,000 years to reform the world. It shouldn't take 20 minutes to reform the Anarchists. The early bird is now apt to catch a cold. Doctors are the ones who can afford to smile every time they see men drinking each other's health. Those who imagine they are close to the throne of grace because they sit in the front pews will some day And out their mistake. The Salvation Army fanatics that carry guns are hound to go over to the enemy sooner or later. Once she was true, but now, alack! She's given me the cold, cold shoulder Because I bought no sealskin sacque To keep her back from growing colder. All watches stop, but all are not stop watches. The tired actor smiles when the curtain drops, and so do a good many in the audi ence. Mascagni, the new composer, is a bak er's son and is well bred. It does seem strange that poor farms fetch more money than good ones. EEBTIKENT PERSONALITIES. Mrs. Potjltney Bigelow has a million in her own right, but she writes stories and takes pay for them, just the same. Prince George, second son of the Prince of Wales, Is ill with the suteric fever, but his physician says he is in no danger. Scalchi and Patti don't speak nowa days. Scalchi even goes so far as to say she won't sing on the same stage ns Patti. Hon, Dice; Oglesby, of Hlinois, says he has had enough of politics. Three times Governor of a State ought to satisfy any body. Rev. Hosea Wise has been preaching against vice in Illinois for 50 years, and he is still a vigorous opponent of his satauic majesty. Willard, the actor, pronounces his name with the accent an both syllables. Since he is coining money lor his manager, no one objects. Robert Hoe, Jr., of printing press fame, has a penchant for old and curious en gravings. He has already collected $500,000 worth, hut he can afford it. Some of the American ladies could well follow the example sec by Lady Arthur Bus sell. She has built and donated swimming baths to the village in Surrey, England, where she resides. V. K. Vanderbilt pays a physician $10,000 for taking a six weeks' trip with him. It is to be presumed that the physician will take extra good care of his patient. He will if ho knows a good thing when he sees it. AFTER THE CONVENTION. If Cincinnati wants the Republican Na tional Convention she must give a bond that the gas supply will not fail. N. Y. Press. San Francisco is working for both nation al conventions next year. It is supposed to be competing with the City of Mexico as the only other place of equal inconveniences. St. Louis Republic. The Republican National Committee should understand that there should be no toadying to Tammanv by locating the National nominating convention in New York City. Chicago Inter Ocean. New York wants both of the national Presidental conventions. She wanted the World's Fair, but didn't get it- Her younger rivals are better "hustlers" when it comes to grabbing for the plums. New Haven News. Chicago has the earth now, why should she insist upon the wire fence. She has her hands full with the AVorld's Fair and the decent thing under the circumstances is for hertogetoutof Omaha's way for the Repub lican National Convention. OmaJia Bee. The claims which Cincinnati makes for the honor of having the next Republican National Convention are naturally rein forced by the splendid vote which the city gave to the Republican candidates and the noteworthy victory of Major McKinley in Ohio. Chicago is not so Importunate as usual, but Minneapolis, with the aid of St. Paul, is making a vigorous effort to secure the convention Boston Journal. Ik a political point of view the metropolis is the place of all places for the national gathering of the Bepublican party. ,Her newspapers are not only national but inter national In their eirculation and influence, and the Democratic ones are, under their new policy, distinguished for the absolute fairness and fullness of their reports of political gatherings iriospectlvo of party. New York is the place. No argument worth considering can be urged against It. N. Y. Recorder. Honest Banking Profitable. Chicago Journal. Honest banking Is one of the most profit able business enterprises of the 'day. The stock of the well-managed banks of the country Is from 200 to 500 per cent, or more, above par. There is enough in the business honestly conducted to satisfy any ordinary desire for business profits, the accumulation of which constitutes wealth. 7" PLANT CANNIBALS. The Devil's Snure found in .Nicaragua It Lives on the Blood or Any Animal That Gets Into Its Clutches, and Never Snffers From Dyspepsia. Some years ago a striking story was pub lished in .France describing a wonderful flesh-eating plant discovered bv a creat bot anist. If we remember rightly the story lecounted how a certain collector discov ered a plant of the flytrap species of so gi gantic a size that it could consume huge masses of raw meat. Just as the fly-catching plant snaps up a fly and draws nutri ment from the fly's dead body, says a writer in the London Spectator, ?o this one fed itself on tho legs of mutton and sirloins of beef which were thrown into its ravening maw. The botanist in tho story, for some reason, possibly fear of having his plant destroyed as dangerous to public safety, keeps tho ex istence of the plant a secret and preservesit in a loeked-up conservatory. Hi' wiie.'how ever, who is made miserable by his absorp tion of mind ho think- of nothing but how to feed and improve his wonderful and fas cinating plant-idetermines to follow him. This she does, accompanied by an old school friend of tiie.husband. When the pair reach the inner conserva tory they see, to their honor, the infatuated botani st tossing bleeding joints of raw meat Into the huge jaws of a giant flytrap. They are at first petrified with horror. At last, however, the wife throws herself into the arms of her husband and Implores him to give up dwelling upon the horrible carniv orous monstrosity which he has discovered and reared. Unfortunately, hosrever, the wife in appealing to her husband goes too close to the plant. Its huge tentacles sur round her and then nroceed to draff her In, and the two stupifled men see the plant be gin to devour Its victim. Fortunately, how ever, the friend catches sight ot an ax lying near, and seizing this he strikes at the root of the plant. A few frenzied blows do tho necessary work, and the flesh-eating plant tumbles to the giound and releases from its clutches the terrified woman. The botanist, however, cannot survive his most chorished discovery, and with the exclamation, "You have killed my plant!" he falls back dead. It Is a Vegetable Octopus. The story is good enough as a story, but if we are to believe an article said In the iJe view of Reviews to 'be taken from Lucifer vie say "said" advisedly, because we have looked in the October Lucifer and can find no such article, and therefore presnme there must he some mistake it is only another in stance of fiction being prophetic, and antici pating scientific discovery. According to the article quoted by Mr. Stead, there has been discovered in Nicaragua a flesh-eating, or rather, man-eating plant, which for horror is qnite the equal of the novelist's imagination. This plant Is found, it is as serted, in Nicaragua, and is called by the natives "the devil's snaie." In form it is a kiud of vegetable octopus, or devil fish, and is able to drain the blood of-nny living thing which comes within its clutches. We givu the story with all reserve, but it must be ad mitted to be circumstantial enough in all its details to be possible. It appears that Mr. Dunstan, a naturalist, has lately returned from Cential America, where he spent two years in the study of the plants and animals of those regions. In one of the swamps which surround the itreat Nicaragua Lake, he discovered the singular growth of which we are writhur. "He was engaged in hunt ing for botanical and entomological speci mens when he'heard his dog cry out, as if in agony, lrom a distance. Running to the spot whence the animal's cries came, Mr. Duncan found him envolODed in a rjerlect network of what seemed to be a fine, rope-like tissue of roots and fibers. A Dog Captured by Its Arms. "Tho plant or vine seemed composed en tirely of bare, inteilacing stems, resembling, more than anything else, the brances of the weeping willow denuded of Its foliage, hut of a dark, neaily black hue, and covered with a thick, viscid gum that exuded from the pores." Drawing his knife, Mr. Dunstan attempted to cut the poor beast free; but it was with tho very greatest difficulty thnt he managed to sever the fleshy muscular fibers of the plant. When the dog was extricated from the coils of the plant, Mr. Dustan saw, to his horror and amazement, that tho dog's body was bloodstained, "while the skin ap peared to have been actually sucked or puckered in spots," and the animal stag gered as if from exhaustion. "In cutting tho vine, the twigs curled like living, sinu ous fingers about Mr. Dunstan's hand, and ic requited no slight force to free the mem ber f-om its clinging ginsp, which left the flesh red and blistered. The gum exuding tiom the vine was of a grayish-dark tinse, remarkably adhesive, ana of a disagreeable animal odor, powerlul and nauseating to in hale." The natives, we are told, showed the greatest hotror of the plant, which, as we have noted above, they call the "devil's snare," and they recounted to the natural ists many stories of its death-dealing pow ers. - Plants of a Similar Nature. The neighborhood inhabited by that Ama zonian tribe who by the use of some seciet can leduce a human corpse to a tenth of Its original size, and so produce a perfectly pro portioned miniatuie mnmmyof the dead man, would have been a good locality in which to "place" the tale of the cannibal plant. Again, Nicaragua is within the tropics, and plant life there is therefore specially gross and vigorous. Besides, there isno inherent impossibility in the idea of a flesh-eating plant. It is merely a question as to whether evolution has or has not hap pened to develop tho fly-eating plant on a sufficiently large enough scale to do what is related of the vampire vino. No one who has seen the ugly snap which that tiny vegetable crab, Venus' Jly-trap, gives when tho hairs inside its mouth are tickled Dy tue unman nnger 111 tue way tnat a fly would tickle them by walking, can doubt lor a moment that tne development ora plant capable of eating or sucking the blood of a man, Is only a matter of degree. Even in England, there are plants which act on a small scale exactly the part asserted to be played by the vampire vine lorexample, Lathitea squamaria, the toothwort, "a pale chlorophyl-Iess p.irasite found in British woods?' Theie are known to be several bundled dicotyledons which, in someway or other, catch and live on animal food. From such a basis the evolution of a giant and man-eating dicotyledon is within the bounds 01 possibility. Experimytlng Wiih Their Digestion. We cannot help hoping very much that the story of tho vampire vine willturn out to be true, for if it does, tho botanists will be able to try some curious experiments as to how these vegetables which are half animals, digest, and whether their move ments can property be regarded as muscular movements. It is true that Darwin admin istered extremely homeopathic doses ( OOOiOS of a milligramme) of nitrate of ammonia to a sundew, and found the plant responded to the drug exhibited: but it Aould be far easier to conduct experiments on a larger plant. Even as it is, we know that the insect eating plants secrete not only an acid, but a "poptonising ferment" for the purposes of digestion. They also feed, like animals, "nn substances at a high chemical level." More than 150 years ago, Linhieus noted that the Lapps "used the buttcrwort for curdling, milk, a pronerty due to a rennet-like ferment which the plant lias in addition to the dieesMve or peptic." Again, we are told that Dr. Bnrdon Sanderson has "detected electric currents similar to those observed in the neuro-mucuiar activity of animals." The borderland between animal and plant life occupied Dy the insect-eaters is. indeed, one of the most curious and In teresting fields of biological study; and it a plant as large as the vampire vine could be obtained to experiment with, discoveries of enormous Importance to science might very likely be made. The vampire vine wo'uld doiibtle-s stand a srain ot calomel after a heavy meat meal without damage or annoy ance. Individualism Fostered. Boston Transcript.2 The Australian method fosters individual ism. It enables every citizen to voters he pleases, and for the candidates he believes will best serye the public, without anyone to molest or make him afraid. It imparts a new dignity to voting. Of course it proceeds upon the supposition, as 00 our institutions generally, that our election machinery has been conflded'to honest men. But it takes a step in advanceof oldmcthodsbyprevent ing corrupt officials from intrenching them selves so firmly that they canuot be reache J. by tho popular voice. It renders ballot stuffing an impossibility. Bellamy's Colony Fails. Detroit Journal. The California Bellamy colony has gone all to pieces. The honest members have been starved ont by the rascals and aro now under arrest for stealing sweet potatoes in order to keep themselves alive. No com munity, scheme unless Inspired by leliglous motive like the Moravians, Shakers, Mor mons, Mennonites and tho like, has ever attained enduring success. TALK: OP THE TIMES. The Chicago Anarchists are again demand ing public attention. Columbus Journal. They will probably get more than they want. This is a bad season lor them. The Sandwich Islands would be a valuable addition to Uncle Sam's domain. Cncacro Tubune. They aie a little too farnwayand there are a few questions to consider before the annexation can take place. It's bad enough to hlto off more than you can chew, bnt it's worse to try to chew it Detroit FreeJ-ess. That Is what is the matter with the caliimityitps. They bit off more than they could chew and now they are chewing the cud of reflection. The British colonies of Central America now seek leciprocity with tbo United States. Tho whole continent apparontlv wants reciprocity. St. Louis Glolie Democrat. The United States stands ready to enter into commercial treaties. The doors are open. The long and tireless chase after the train robbers has begun. Detectives say they have a clew to the villains. Cliicago Globe. So long as the detectives have a clew, the robbers are safe. Clews are strange things, generally leading everywhere save in the right direction. Every part of the country pays tribute to this Insatiate monstor (the Louisiana Lot tery), and eveiy State is interested in Its ex termination, but how tobnng it about Is a very knotty question. Buffalo Courier. The simplest means would be for each part of the country to stop paying the tribute. President Diaz, of Mexico, gives Instruc tions to his army to kill no more men until it is ascertained whether or not they are Teally guilty of what thev are suspected. This is a good Idea. Fort Worth Gazette. It would have been more satisfactory, though, if the orders had been given out before the alleged insurrect ionists had all been killed. THE SATE IS SET. Next Summer Fixed as the Time forthe Great European War. Chicago Trlbune.l All signs indicate the probability of a great J European war next summer. France and Russia upon the one hand and Germany, Australia, and Italy upon the other ire plac ing themselves upon an active war footing by concentrations of troops on their fron tiers, by reinforcements of their fighting strength, by frequent maneuvers and move ments of their armies, and by laying In enormous supplies of provisions far more indeed than would be necessary If there were no prospect of war. Speaking ofthe massing of troops, a correspondent of the New York tfimef calls attention to the fact that there are over 6C0.000 men in position between Odessa and the Pruth and Warsaw, nnd that since the first of August 300,000 Bnssian troops have been thrown into South western Russia, the entire force pievious to that date having been posted In Eastern Knssia. Such colossal movements as these roea war if they mean anything. The nationsare expecting war. The peo ple talk of war ai if It were sure to come. In the Baltic provinces the old antagonism be tween Russians and Germans grows more bitter every day. Bloody encounters fre quently occur between the students of these respective nations. They share the enmity which exists between the Emperor and the Czar. There is no sympathy and can be none between these rulers, for they repre sent national sentiments us far apart as the earth and the sun. Twice the Czar has passed through Gormany lately withoutpay ing his respects to the Emperor, thus show ing a degree of personal antagonism which in itself is sufficient cause for outbreak be fore long. Such a strain as this, which Is shared by the people, cannot long continue without ruptuie. AST IK TRAIN BOBBING. Unnecessary Violence repreoated by Mem bers ofthe Profeesion. , Philadelphia Inquirer. There arg various methods of stopping the train; but the simplest, quietest, most merci ful and, on the whole, preferable one ia to hang out a red lantern. This avoids the labor incident to ditching the train, takes less time and does not endanger tho lives ot nothing for hnman life; butit is still scarcely I professional to take it without occasion, and I besides if one happens to be arrested, asfwill occur sometimes, It Is better to be "sent op" for a few yeai s for robbery than to be hanged for murder. When train robbing becomes a fine art, unnecessary violenco in conducting it will be deprecated by the profession. By careful planning beforehand and a systematic arrangement of work, it Is esti mated that a train can be stopped, the ex press car broken open and the safes trans terred to a wason oy six men In from 20 to 30 minutes; dining which time, if tho sched ule lm been properly studied, there need bo little danger of interruption by other trains. A slight disarrangement of tho locomotive will insure its further detention for an hour or moic, and in the meantime the band can escape with their booty to a rendezvous previously arranged after which there is nqthing to be done but to open the safes, divide their contents and keep out of prison. The last is a contingency that must be faced, hut it never deterred hank burglars, mul train robbers will be equally readv to take the risk. In this way train robbing can be made a fine art, and the indications are that unless something is done to nip the glowing industry in the bud it will soon de velop Into something of the kind. ALUMINUM FOE WAS. The German Government Purchasing It in Large Quantities. Cleveland Leader. The German Government is .buying great quantities of aluminum in this country to be ued in making cups, linings for knap sacks, and in other ways employed for light ening the load which common soldiers must carry in a campaign. It is such attention to details which make the German military es tablishmant the finest in tho world. After tho Franco-Prussian War It was said that the splendid triumph of tho German arms had been won largely by tho "goose step" In which lecruits are drilled until they acquire I m-eat nower nnd endnrance in marchin?, nnd it is probable that the rank and file of the German army is now better able to carry heavy knapsacks through long and arduous campaigns than any other troops iu the world. This, however, does not by any means cqnstitute a reason, in the estimation of the Imperial Government, why any German soldier should be weighed down with one unnecessary ounce, and hence the German army is to profit by the lightness of the metal which is not used to anything like the extent that it should be, simply because the inertia of habit is so dimcult to overcome. In -many respects the naiser's Government is voi y conservative, but when the welfare and efficiency of the army are concerned no pushing American business man could be mote alert and li-ady to make use of every improvement. Canada's Awkward Position. Detroit Evening News. Some little figures are scaring the conser vatives ot Canada to-day. They are reading of the progress of negotiations for reciproc ity in trade between the United States and the British West Indies, nnd tho little fig ures that scare aro those which represent $I,49t,0C0 worth of Canadian products shipped to the British West Indies by Can ada in 1883-90. If those figures should be ttiped "out it would strain the back of the national policy another notch to appease the losing province with railroads and other subsidies. Things are getting mora awkward with every tick of the clock for the present Canadian Government. Where Was the Brpom? St. Paal Pioneer Press. The London papers having discovered that the "Democrats made n clean sweep of the State of'Philadelphia," wo would like to know where they left the broom. It would be funny to unearth the sources of American news as published over there. A Heap of Difference. Chicago Times. Sometimes there's a heap of difference between what the minister is preaching in the pulpit and what the congregation i$ thinking in the pews. Just Begun to Come Back. Chicago Inter-Ocean. I Nearly $26,000,000 of American gold has found its "way back from Europe to Uncle Sam's money boxes, and It has only begun to come. r.iTRTnrs rnNnpusATinxs " Missouri has 108,100,000 bushels of corn. In Kansas sunflower stalks are being nsed for fuel. ' Washington now has newspapers in all its counties except one. The only fish that never sleep are salmon, pike and goldfish. ' The French Minister of "War is about to establish three acrostic stations in the Alps. In the Solomon Islands the market quotation on a "good quality" wife is 10,000 cocoannts. The Glasgow magistrates have been ' fining cyclists 30s each for riding at night without lamps. The, slowest thing on earth, an ox teas; has run away and killed a Tennessee family. Wonders never cease. Official statistics show that Colorado has over 20,000 square miles or coal, and tha product of 1S90 was 3,000,000 tons. A fir tree ten feet in diameter has been discovered In Washington. Its lower limbs are 200 feet from the ground. Barnesville, O., has a cow which has presented its owner with triplets. It is' con-" sidered qnite an unusual occurrence. A woman of Thibet who chooses to re main single and to earn her own living is re regarded as an object of scorn and derision. It is the lament of an Oxford county (Me.) village that there are only three young men in town town eligible for social pur poses. The New Year book of the 'Congrega tional Church reports 4,817 churches, with 606,8J2'members, and 613 810 in the Snnday schools. . .. , Five Indians from, Indian Territory passed through Reno, Nev., the other day on their way to Walker Lake, in search of the "Great Messiah." A lump of coal weighing a ton has been sent to Denver from Rock Spring's, Wyo., a3 an advertisement. One lump broken up there last week filled seven cars. , There are yet a few beaver along the Umatilla River to remind old-timers of the days when this little animal frequented Oregon streams in large numbers. The population of Kome has decreased nearly 30,000 (durlng the past four years" The hand-organ industry in thi3 country has increased perceptibly during that pe riod. Santa Catalina, a small island off the coast of Southern California, has become a great summer resort. The waters are so clear in its harbor that fish can be seen W feet below the surface. A firm of chemists in Birmingham place upon all poisons sold by them direc tions as tb the antidote which should be ap plied in cases where the poisons are taken accidentally or intentionally by human be ings. " The palace and even the bedchamber of the young King of Serviawere recently in vaded by a huge monkey, which had es caped from a menagerie and had climbed in a window while His Majesty's bed was being mad;. t While the Penitentiary Commissioners were.in session at the Santa Fe (N. Mex.) orison three prisoners with "wooden re volvers," wrapped with tin-foil, held up the guard, and succeeded la escaping in a car riage which was in front of the building. A Saco Qle.) man whose home had been haunted by weird, mysterious sounds at night for a fortnight or so, at last opened the unused parlor stove and found therein a poor little pigeon wasted away almost to a skeleton. The mystery now Is, how the pig eon get there? Flounders and other bottom fishes fre quently fall a prey to the appetite of the lobsters, and sometimes they will nimbly capture small minnows as the latter go swimming by. They dig clams out of the mud or sand and crush the shells of mussels with their claws, devouring the soft parts. A Delaware cobbler gave his wife a cer tain sum ot , money each week for her per sonal use. He never inquired what she did with it, bnt, after 39 years of wedded life.the wife died, and in the drawer or an antique table the husband found a bag containing; gold, also a roll or grecnDacks, amounting in all to $10,000. Some few years ago the Paris picture dealer Ferrett bought a picthrejor 10 francs' In a rag and bone shop. He soon discovered that it was a portrait by Jordaen, and he got rid or It for 1,500 francs, to the late M Rothan, the diplomatist. The picture which is in Jordaen's best manner last year fetched 53,000 francs. Who would believe that any one could make money out of cigar ends? Yet tbo business of gathering them Is so lucrative that the Russian Philanthropic Society haa organized a regular system In St. Peters burg of collectimr these trifles, and dispos ing of them for the benefit of the poor. Up wards of $1,500 was realized in the month of July. As to what is the ultimate destina tion of this, refuse matter it would be some what hazardous to decide. The Emperor of Germany is fond of. poetry, but does not like plagiarism. A Prof. Herman Thorn, of Berlin, rocently dedicated to His Majesty a hymn of labor, so full of beautiful sentiments that it was greatly admired, and the professor was lib erally rewarded by the Emperor and other members of the royal family. But upon the discovery being .made that the poem had been stolen bodily from an old book of poetry, Thorn was arrested and sent to jail. Anatomists classify animals by their teeth more accurately than in any other' way, and the jaws of the small lemur, which connects the anthropoid apes, like the chim panzee and goiilla, with beasts not so high In the scale of creation, are pi ovide d witn a dentition so astonishingly human like that one might well imagine the teeth to bo actn allv those of a miniature man. Molars and incisors are shaped and placed in exactly the same way, and the canines, two In tha upper Jaw and two in the lower, correspond perfectly with the human type. BAZAB BUZZINGS. "I nicked that vase up in Home. The armor I picked up In Paris." ' 'I expected 10 Dim a 101 01 nice inings nere. 1 oar brother told me last winter, when I asked after your health, that you were picking up all tne time." , "Why did that Frenchman demand, your blood, anyhow? "Oh, I was Joking with him. I said that Inas much as Sedan was responsible for the overthrow of the French Empire, the rrcsldental chair should be a Sedan-chair. He got awfully hot," If every one would think of me As mr boy does', I wis To all the world I'd seem to be The greatest man there Is. "I know what I'm going to give pa this Chrltn.as," said Arabella. "What, my dear?" asked her mother. A nice woolen comforter. It will be lovely t wear when Ned comes to take me tobogganing." "Mamma, I want- some water in a bowL I am going to christen my doll." "No, little dear. That would be trifling with a sacrea subject." Then give me some wax to waxclnate herwl b, She's old enough now to have something done to her." After the barn is rifled, When stolen Is the horse. Why do we lock tne potal? To save the door, of course. "I suppose the baby is a delicate pink eh, Bronsonr" "No. He'sa robust Teller," rcpUedthe proud, and slcepyv father. ;- A joke is very like a nut . -' '. Ictatethlsasafjct "... Since none can tell if it is good Until it has been cracked. ".Timmie. do you know when 'your sister's birthday Is?" asked Chappie. ft Ynn mean was. don't you? She had'lt thirty years ago," returned Jiinmie. - The man who lives upon his brain,- ? ISv wit earns all his bread, . Ne'er finds It lu the least way vain To tand upon his head. Willie (scared) Now we've milked the cow, what'U we do? Pop 'II be awrul mad.' Jlmmie (equal to the occasion) We'll drive her down to tRe pond and fill her up with water. I always know when autumn's hero Oh. baneful time of life! For then fur-dealers' cards appear Addns.ed unto my wife. "Do you ever weary of .your beautiful borne here In town, 3Irs. DeCashlv?" Never, Mrs. Bronson. What with our tubman homo at Lenot, our winter home at Ashevllle, our summer cottage at Newport, and the spring in London, I hardly have a chance to grow tired of IU"