1 a . f --; THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH. " PAGES 9 TO 20. ' tW I- !.! SECOND PART. MOURHING BY ORDER Doesn't Prove Much .of a Suc cess, Even "When It Is a Boyal Command. IMDOX'S MAKY MILLIONS Tail to See Anything in the Death of the Duke of Clarence TO MAKE THEM FEEL YEET SAD. Hary Anderson Writes a Letter Kefating a Tecnliar Charge. THE CAEEEE OP A IUCKT CHICAGOAX ITY CABLE TO THE DISPATCH.! Loiroox, Jan. 16. Copyright The death of the Duke of Clarence and.Avon dale has afforded an opportunity "which English newspapers have eagerly taken ad vantage of, to prove the claim of the British people to the title of the most hypocritical nation on earth. For the last three days every journal in London, Con servative and Liberal alike, has been vieing with every other to see which could present the most sycophantic and servile editorial tribute of grief in view of the ter rible calamity that has fallen upon England in the death of the shallow, arrogant and vicious princeling who has just passed away. The historian of a century or two hence who goes over the files of the London daily press of January, 1892, in the British Mu seum to form his opinion of these times will speculate upon the different course English history ruicrht have taken if this princely prodigy had been spared to direct the destinies oi his country, "and will marvel that in the age of commerce an entire peo ple should put aside their usual avocations and give themselves over to grief at the death of the heir presumptive to the throne. Samples of Editorial Toadyism. "We have to record a tragedy as terrible as any that imagination has ever con ceived," says the Post, in its leader on the Duke's death. "Nothing more remarkable in its own kind has ever been recorded than the demonstrations of sympathy and mourn ing with which our columns overflowed yesterday and are overflowing to-day." "From every part of the United King dom nay, more, from every part of the British Empire there came unprompted maniiestations of sorrowing loyalty," says the Timet this morning, and this is the tone of every newspaper in England. The fact is, that outside of the Dnke of Clarence's own family there is no grief over his death at all. On the contrary, there is a general feeling oi satisfaction that Prince George, who is as popular as his dead brother was unpopular, now stands in the line of succession to the throne, and it is - quite within the confines of possibility that the death of Albert Victor will prolong the existence of the monarchical institution in England. Everybody Ordered to Mourn. The Earl of Marshall to-day, "by Her Majesty's command," calls upon everybody to put themselves in mourning for the late Duke of Clarence in this big city. Possibly 10,000 men and women will give heed to the quaint proclamation. The remaining 5,000, O00 or so will just go their way an though nothing had happened at Sandringham. Englishmen have been told in the editorial columns of their $ black bordered newspapers that the whole nation is mourning, and the statement is repeated so frequently, and in such a variety of forms, that the people almost be gin to believe it, but a stranger coming to this city would have difficulty in detecting the popular grief He might walk for miles, except in the aristocratic "West End, and see nothing to lead him to suppose that an heir presumptive to the British throne lay dead, save lor an occasional flag at half mast. Had he been in Pall Mall, Thursday morn ing, when the bulletiu announcing the young Pnnc's sad death was posted out side the Marlborough, the same stranger would have been surprised a few hours later to read in the ecning papers of the sorrow-stricken thousands who blocked the streets and wept aloud when the mournful news was proclaimed. Later in the day Pall Mall was blocked not by people, but by "carriage folk." The Signs or Mourning to Bo round. Members of the aristocracy rushed wildly to Marlborough House to inscribe their names in the visitors' book, which they knew would in due course come under the eyes of the Prince of Wales. The same people, as in duty bound, have pulled down the blinds at their houses, royal shopkeepers and caterers have put up narrow black shutters kept in stock for such oc casions, flags on public buildings have been lowered to halt mast, and there, as far ax eye cau see. this so-called national mourn ing ends. The gigantic make-believe kept up by the newspapers here renders it de Eirable, however ungracious the task may seem, to put these facts on record. The spectacle of parents suddenly robbed of their first-born and of a maiden rudely thrust bv death from the threshold of the bridal chamber has, of course, evoked wide spread t mpathy, but this natural feeling .quickly gave place to speculations as to the eflect of the Duke of Clarence's death upon the dynasty. It bad been somen hat pretty generally assumed that Princess Louise, the Prince ot "Wales' eldest daughter, re nounced all her rights of succession when she married the Duke of Fife. Uuclirb. of Fire a roi,sib:e Queen. Now Englishmen learn to their Riimrisft and deep disgust that should anything happen to Prince George, who, it must be remembered, is barely convalescent from a dangerous illness, the heiress presumptive to the throne would be the Duchess of Fife. Presumably there is no doubt about the matter, lor the "garter king at arms," the mysterious being who presides over the College of Arms, and to whom such things are asABC to the schoolboy, declares to day that there was no renunciation at the time of her marriage, and there has been none since. Even had there been a private family arrangement it would not be bind ing, because it has not been registered at the College of Arms. Among the qualities of mind and heart which no doubt the Duke of Fife possesses there is not one calculated to commend him to popular favor, and even his dukedom is a shoddy thing of yesterday. Princess Louise is the most dutiful of wives, and should she become Queen of England the Duke of Fife would either "boss" the British throne or cause a revolution by attempting to do. so. The prospect is so displeasing that some newspapers, even the most loyal of the Tory organs, are already with questionable taste denouncing the Queen and the Prince of Wales for allowing the Duke of Clarence to remain so long a bachelor, and there is a loud demand that Prince George shall "pro vide for the succession" by taking unto him self a wife with the least possible delay. carainai manning Jot forgotten. The London newspapers have beenjjui pleased to decide that the death of the Duke of Clarence "overshadows" that of Cardinal Manning, and their space hat been appor tioned in accordance with this strange esti mate of the relative value of things. The great Cardinal himself would not object to the appraisement, for Queen victoria did not number among her subjects one more loyal than he, but the working men of this country resent it in a fashion which has moved Tory newspapers to denounce them as disloyalists. The London Trades Council and other organized bodies of workmen have set on formal record their appreciation of Cardinal Manning's service to the people, while re fusing resolutions of smypathy with the royal, mourners, or ostentatiously ignoring death's presence at Sandringham. This procedure may be lacking in refine ment of feeling, but none can deny this is logical and natural There are 20,000 humble dock laborers in London alone who at this moment are earning better wages and working fewer honrs because of the in tercession and labor ungrudgingly made and given in the depth of winter three years ago by an old man, who, although a prince of the Church, has died poor. A Philanthropist In Beallty. The amount of practical good done by Cardinal Manning, or under bis direction, among the poor of London, and the value of his direct services to the cause of labor and social reform, cannot now be as sized, but workingmen rerlize in a measure the value of the friend they have lost, and in their impulsive, perhaps "disloyal" way, are en deavoring to emphasize the fact. A per sonal friend of the late Cardinal writes: It is well known in what affection he was rcRarded by the very poorest la his own community and he was very proud of his body guard, as Jio had called one or two rough laboring men who had ctmstituted themselves his protectors after see ing him on various occasians strug gling through a dense crowd on his way to' his carriage after preaching. Latterly these self-appointed guardianB of his person always arrived of their own ac cord when he was fulfilling his public en gagements and having performed this labor of love disappeared until the next time their services were required. Cardinal Manning often expressed won der that he had lived so long, and for some time past he had felt that his life's work was nearly done. He continually expressed his thankfulness that though his body was so weak his mind was still unclouded. He replied quite recently to an inquirer: "Thankvyou, I am quie'tly slowing into the station." The Machine Comes to a Stop. "And so," writes his friend, the Bishop of Salford, "after a gentle and gradual slackening of vital speed, the well-worn machine ceased to wore, and in perfect faith nd all contentment has passed away one of the keenest intellects and brightest spirits of our age." The action of the Knights of Labor in cabling a long message of sympathy to Cardinal Manning's Secretary has been much appreciated by workingmen here. The funeral will take place next Thurs day, and the London Dockers' Union, the London Trades Council and other organized labor organizations will be represented. The remains have been placed in Chapelle Ardente, at the Archbishop's houe, West minster. They lie on purple cushions, fringed with gold. The body is clothed in full canonicals, the gloved hands are joined on the breast, and the thin, ascetic face wears a look of profound peace and repose. But for the extreme pallor one could hardly distinguish the expression of the face from that of deep sleep. The head i3 surmounted by a white mitre, beneath which the worn features look very small. The catafalque is roped in, and within the enclosure six purple wax candles will burn until the body is removed. The round hat of the cardmalate, with its many pend ants or tassels disposed around it, lies near the feet The official ring is on the third finger cf the right hand outside tbe purple glove. Behind the bier a large silver cross has been raised upon a background of black. ROSENFELD A ROUNDER, The Chicago-San Franciscan "Who Is a Heavy Winner at Monte Carlo A Man "With a Peculiar Becord Burning the Candle at Both Ends. rET CABLE TO THE DISPATCH.! London; Jan. 16. Henry Eosenf eld, the young American, whose heavy plays and large winnings have been the sensation of the week at Monte Carlo, is an extraordin ary character. His home js in Chicago, where his brother is a well-known business man, and he is one of the heirs of Michael Recce, the famous ten millionaire, of Sau Francisco. Bosenfeld attained his majority and his fortune about four years ago. Since that time Chicago has seen him three times, his longest visit being of ten days' duration, and on each occasion he arrived from the west and left to tbe eastward, having been each time around the world. He varied the monotony of his trip last rear by buying an interest in the Cleary London Opera Company that left here in July to make a tour around the east and west coast of South America, and accom panied that organization for the fun of the thing. He forsook the opera company in the Argentine Eepublic, however, and went on to Chile to see the war. but arrived in Valparaiso the dav hostilities ceased. He got back to London about three months ago, and left for Paris and Monte Carlo soon afterward. He is now en route for Egypt and Japan and thence to San Fran cisco, Chicago, Hew York and London once more. Boscnfeld, who is smooth-faced, pallid and slight, does not look to be 21 years of ace. but he is considered one of the cooltst gamesters in Europe, either with cards or at the roulette table. Last year he was one of the four players at Monte Carlo who put down the maximum at the same table at every turn of the wheel, and gave the bank a bad scare. He left Monte Carlo loser by S30.000, however. To-day he is re ported to be between 575,000 and 5100,000 ahead of the game. Although Bosenfeld spends three or four months each year in London, where he keeps apartments the year around, and a month or two each year in Paris, he has never been inside Westminster Abbey or the Tower, or a picture gallery, nor visited the Pantheon, Notre Dante, the palaces, or any other places of historic interest. It is doubtful, even, if he ever thought to in quire who was premier of England or Presi dent of France. On the other hand he knows where to find the best cooks and the rarest wines in every European and a great many Oriental capitals, and possesses ex pert knowledge concerning the places that are open all night in the principal cities oi the world. HAEY AHDEESON K0T GUILTY Of the Charge That She Kept Her Theater Open on a Mourning Night, IBY CABLE TO THE DISPATCH.; London, Jan. 16. The following letter is published in the Daily Noes this morning : Sir Will you allow me to correct the statement in your issue of to-day to the effect that "the Lyceum Theater, then under tho temporary jnanagement of Mary Ander son, who issued a public explanation ex pressing her deep regret that tho theater could not be closed, etc., etc.," on tho night' of the day of the funeral of the lamented Duke of Albany. Messrs. Abbey and Munn were managing the theater, as well as my affairs, at that time. I wrote no suoh ex planation td"the public, and, if you remem ber, the Lyceum Theater was closed on that nlgut Yours very truly, Maet Awuersoit De Navakbo. 17 Feehdale Paek, Tutjbmdge Wells, Janu ary 15. Some grossly ignorant or malicious indi vidual wrote this paragraph 'in the Daily News yesterday: The day of tbe Duke of Albany's funeral the West JJnd theater, savo one. woreXthe Vatican, It will not be accepted. closed. The exception was the Lyceum, then under the temporary direction of Miss Mary Anderson, who issued a publlo explan ation expressing her deep regret that the theater could not be closed, all having been booked and it being Impossible to transfer them to another night, owng to the tact that this was the last night of her engagement in London. Her patrons, one would thine, could hardly have felt quite at ease in wit nessing her performance in Mr. Gilbert's comedy and tragedy of "Pygmalion and Galatea," that night, with the consciousness that far and wide around them dramatic en tertainments were everywhere suspended. The writer doubtle'ss was not aware that Our Mary had taken up her residence in this country, but he is a wiser man now. DEATH OF THE PELICAN. Something About a Lately Famous English Club Members Gathered From Every Circle Deadbeats Hobnobbing With the Gentry and Sports of All Kinds. rnr CABLE TO THE DisrATcn.l London, Jan. 16. The Pelican Club, that has just succumed, probably possessed the most heterogeneous membership of any club in the world. Theie were members whose incomes were in the hundreds ot thousands, and members who slept on the club sofas at night in default of any other resting place and sponged on tbe club for victuals and drink. There were dukes and earls and lords galore, and blackmailing journalists, music hall singers, and a Strand restaurant keeper. There were members whose checks for 1 were invariably dishonored, and members who could write checks in six or seven figures that would be accepted without ques tion in any bank in England. There were members who went to court and were on in timate terms at Marlborough House, and members who would be kicked out of the kitchen of any respectable cabman. Any young spendthrift in the bankruptcy court was sure to turn out to be a member of the Pelican, as were half the corespondents in the divorce courts, and the membership also included all the best gentlemen sports in England. Perhaps the Pelican was the only West End club in London where an exhilarated member who mashed the furniture and the windows was not brought before the com mittee, or where no attention was attracted if gentlemen who had finished their supper nd wished to play a game of dominoes to see who paid for it cleared their table of its dishes and cloth by the simple expedient of tipping it on end. This heterogeneous membership was natural enough, the result of its origin. It began with the getting together weekly of a few devotees of boxing for a little quiet sport, and only became a social rlub when, the present fine new house was built It was impossible when the club grew, and there was a rush of gentlemen for membership, to kick out the objectionable ones who were already mem bers, and hence tbe conditions that existed. However, although the Pelican remained primarily a boxing club until its demise, no prize fighters were ever admitted to mem bership. The demise, of the Pelican makes the National Sporting Club, where Slavin and Jack sou are expected to fight this year, the leading organization of the kind in England. Its membership is growing rapidly, and in cludes a great many Americans. There aro knock-out fights every Monday night at the new club, which are largely attended by the nobility and gentry of England. AMEBICANS INVADE EQYPI. Minister Vhelps at tbe Head or a Brilliant Party in the Land of Pyramids. - Caieo, Jan. .16. Hon. Walter Phelps, Minister to Germany; Jesse Seligman, who has been visiting the various European cap itals as the representative of the United States Government in connection with the silver question; Leopold Morse, ex-Congressman from Boston; Mr. Houghton, (ho publisher, and a large number of Amer icans are staying at Shepard's Hotel in this city. Mr. Phelps took a steamer at Triesto and landed at Alexandria, where he stayed for a time at the home of Judge Barringer, who was appointed by President Grant a Judge ot the International Appellate Court 18 years ago. Mr. Phelps was also entertained by Sir William Butler, the British Admiral, and others. He will remain in Cairo until February, when he will make a journey up the Nile. Judge Keily gave a dinner in honor of Mr. Phelps, at which Tigrane Pasha and the leading American visitors in Cairo were present John A. Anderson, the Diplomatic Agent and Consul General of the United States at Cairo, has been seriously ill ever since his arrival in Egjpt He submitted to an operation last week which the doctors say was entirely success ful, and they promise that he is certain to. recover. PSIHCB B0NAFABTB FEES. His Ball Is Bedncrd and a Mother-in-law Goes His Security. LONDON, Jan. 16. Prince Louis Clovis Bonaparte, who, on a complaint of his first wife, Eosalie Bonaparte, was arrested on the charge of conspiracy to defraud her of jewelry valued at 20,000, was again ar raigned in court to-day. At the previous hearing bail in the sum of 5,000 was de manded, but to-day .the magistrate reduced the amount to 1,000 and tbe prisoner was released, the mother of Princess Bonaparte becoming his security. Mrs. Bosalie Bonaparte, from whom Prince Louis Clovis Bonaparte is trying to secure a divorce, alleges that her husband has given her jewelry to his second -wife, lormeriy jaiss xiaura -L,iizaDeth bcott John Bull Stands No Nonsense. LONDON, Jan. 16. The British war ships Boyalist sndBingdove, have just completed a "cruise of revenge" among the Solomon Islands, where several native chiefs have been executed. The chiefs in question were implicated in the murder of some British subjects. In punishing the natives for the murders, their war canoes, villages, and other property were destroyed by the men who landed from tbe war ships. Egypt Receives Her New Baler. CAIBO, Jan. 16. Princo Abbas', the new Khedive, this morning entered the harbor at Alexandria, from Trieste, on board a steamer. Tbe steamer was accompanied by a number of British war ships, which, as they entered the harbor, thundered forth a royal salute. The Egyptian vessels took ud the refrain. At 10 o'clock he took a special train and proceeded to Cairo. Bunslm Treats Finns us Foreigners. St. PEikHSBtrno, Jan. 16. The pro jected Zollverein between Bussia and Fin land has been abandoned. Henceforth Finnish products imported into Russia will be subject to the same increased duties that are applied to imports from other countries. The Grip Invades Ireland. DUBLEr, Jan. 16. Influenza of a malig nant type has appeared in the western part of Cork county. Nine deaths from the dis ease have occurred in the Skibberean work house within a week. Not Bothering A boot the Fair. Madkid, Jan.-16. The energy of Mr. Little, agent for the Chicago Fair, to the Government and people of Spain, has so far been powerless to move the Government to action in behalf of a proper representation. An American Bishop Resigns,' HOME, Jan. 16. ThelJIshop of Greenbay, "Wis.. EiAt Eev. Frederick Xavier Katzer, D,B., has sent his resignation to. I PITTSBURG, SUNDAY, THE BUST MICROBE. Heaping a larger Harvest Than Cholera, Grip Causes No Panic TWO STOEIES OP PRINCE -GEOEGE. Eussell Sage Tells How He Did Not -Use Laidlaw as a Shield. FEESH GOSSIP .ABOUT MEN OP FAME rcOBBESrONDENCE OT- THB DISPATCH.1 New Yoek, Jan. 16. Death and politics have this week divided the attention of those who live in New 'York. The grip microbe is unquestionably bulging with pride as he contemplates his achievements. The heir to the English throne, two cardi nals and a chief justice, all in one day, con stitute a fine showing for the smallest known bacillus. By makinghis grand coup on Thursday, instead of waiting one day, the vicious microbe has acted thoughtfully. He has at least deprived the superstitious of some very satisfactory conversation. Such a series of calamities on a Friday would have been very damaging to the "13 clubs" that give to so many harmless men a chance to feel brave and noble. It is interesting to note that while health board reports, newspapers and common ob servation prove that a very deadly epidemio is raging here and m Europe, the average individual is not really frightened at it, and does not take any precautions to insure his own safety. The grip and pneumonia do not appeal to the imagination. Ten deaths from Asiatic cholera in a week would send theusands of New Yorkers fly ing out of town. One case a week of cholera in Venice made hundreds of Americans abroad give up their only chance of seeing that clean town. Heath in Its Quiet Phaie. Fifty deaths a day in New York from grip alone would not keep the ordinary man from standing on a street corner in the rain without an overcoat It is in some ways gratifying to observe that as a nation we are not very much afraid of death all by itself. It must come with waving of yellow pestilence flags, sudden deaths in the streets and other smallpox or cholera char acteristics that act on the imagination, or it cannot frighten us. The death of the Prince of Wales' eldest son, the young man who was to have been King, makes everybody think in some form or other of the question that Mr. Clemens' Huckleberry Finn put to Tom Sawyer when they wouldn't make up their minds to be either hermits or monks. "How much do Kings get?" was the Question, and "Over 51,000 a day" the substance of the unexag gerated reply. Concsrnin? thehannvman. Prince Georce. who is to be King of England by the grace of the grip microbe, every man who writes for a newspaper will tell a story. Here aro two incidents in the early youth of that young man, which were heard in London, which perhaps have, a foundation in truth and which may have the flavor of novelty while moat writers are telling how the young man told his brother to go and sing "God save your grandmother." Two Stories or Prince George. The stories, at all events, whether true or not, feive an idea of the young man's inde pendence and originality. On one solemn occasion, having misbehaved himself at ta ble. -Prince Georce was severely rebuked by his Toyal grandmother. Full of wounded. vanity and eager tor revenge, the little boy disappeared under the table. Presently he came forth naked. He had laboriously un dressed himself In a crouching attitude. He was rewarded by the sensation he created. At another time, in a critical mood, ho observed his grandmother holdings chicken bone in her fingers, and remarked in tones of.scorn, "Who's a pig?" This is to be the greatest year in politics since the war. Even New York is begin ningto take an interest in political doings and in political probabilities. Two New Political Straws. Two interesting straws have been blow ing about on the political breezes this week. As usually happens with significant straws, they have been blowing in opposite direc tions. Th first straw was the conduct of the New Jersey Legislature, which on being interviewed, one-man at a time, expressed an overwhelming preference for Cleveland as compared with HilL Many excellent judges of politics, in cluding Hill, believed that Hill had a solid hold on New Jersey. Mr. Cleveland's course in taking his little baby to live on New Jersey air has produced a great effect, or New York politicians are out ia their reckoning. Straw No. 2, a rare" and unusual straw, is the similarity of opinion expressed by GeorgeWilliam Curtis and Bourke Cock ran, one'of the Tammany Big Four. Both have expressed a belief that the New York delegition would be solid for Hill. Before estimating the importance of Mr. Cockran's utterances as a Tammany Hall representative it is necessary to know that Mr. Richard Croker when questioned on the same subject only shrugs his shoulders. one else. Able man, Air. Croker. doesn t talk, but be does things. Dolncs Amone Mrn of Fame. In the Garden of the Luxembourg, when the band was playing,. I once heard an old French workingman, in a blue" blouse, re mark: "C'est egal, il n'y a rien de beau comme lamusique ei les fleurs." To which his wife, studying the crowd, replied: "Oui, mais les gens, ils sont plus interessant." It is not necessary to translate the words in full. The same conversation took place between Boswell and Tohn6on before the French workincman was bom, and between Adam and Eve previous to that. Men and their doings always interest man more than any thing else, so the facts that follow are im portant. Mr. Eussell Sage has decided to reply to Mr. Laidlaw, the clerk who accuses Sage of using him as a shield during the explosion, and who asks for $100,000 of Mr. Ease's valuable money." James Gordon Bennett is said to have given 1,000 to a man who knocked him down. Bichard Harding Davis is going out West, and then to Europe to write. Billy McGlory is working at the blacksmith business on BlackweUs Island, and no one has said a good word for him. Laidlaw's Snlt AgHlnst Sagr. Mr. Laidlaw was in Bussell Sage's office when then the satchel went off, and now he is in the hospital more or less damaged. Mr. Sage, on the contrary, is as free and active as a bird.and as gay. In this contrast the enterprising editor of an evening newspaper on a certain dull morning detected the seeds of a pleasing sensation. He went to Laid law and said to him: "Here's your chance. Sue Sage for $100,000 for holding you be tween him and death, as you say he did." Mr. Laidlaw seemed to think it was a good idea, and acquiesced. Ho one took the matter very seriously except Mr. Sage. His feelings were hurt at the prospect of a series of small financial explosions following the big dynamite one. Two weeks ago I heard from Mr. Sage his account of the Laidlaw matter. At that time, on the advice of Mr. Jay Gould, he decided to make no reply to Laidlaw's statements, hut sijje then he has changed his mind. It annoyed him to be accused of holding a man in front of dyna mite. Sage's Aceonnt of laidlaw's Fart. Mr. Sage's statement, as I heard it. should ,make i.t.difficuH for Mr. Laidlaw, to recpyer.. '." """" "i""' ". wurug. , ieave gaps below the crust into which great ping on y Mr Croker knows what New vdunfesof water will pour. That, by the York will realty do about Mr. Hill or any wav. elDlains uow we aFre to die. once and AlTltiln M IVjil'a.'c rknnl... - ! I a.0 JANUART IT," 1892. Mr Sage's physician testifies that Mr. Sage had about 70 wounds on the front of his body, He still has the scars to exhibit, Eoman-like, to a jury if necessary. What ever made these wounds must have gone right through Laidlaw if the latter really was held in front of Sage. If that had hap pened Laidlaw would not be alive now. Mr, Sage was very graphic as he acted out the dynamite f cene in his sitting room uptown, using me for the dynamite&and a chair for Laidlaw. Briefiv he says that he and the dynamiter faced each other con stantly, while Laidlaw set off to one side, the three forming a triangle. The dynamiter backed away, dropped the satchel, and the explosion came. Mr. Sage had never once spoken to Laidlaw, and had not touched him. When the explosion was over Mr. Sage says he found himself knocked flat Laidlaw had been knocked toward him. His head lay across Mr. Sage's knees. Mr. Sage picked himself up, then grasped Laidlaw under the arms and lifted him up. Who Laidlaw Beally Is. Laidlaw, according to Mr. S'ge, was em ployed by Bloodeoo, the distinguished broker, to go from office to office and con fide to big men in deep confidence important, pieces of news calculated to affect the mar ket to 'suit Mr. Bloodgood. Mr. Laidlaw's conduct has hurt Mr. Sage's feelings. It is not likely that the case will ever come to court It is probable that Mr. Laidlaw feels hurt also. It was not his dynamite satchel, and perhaps he feels that Mr. Sage otieht to make some cash acknowledgment of Fate's discrimination against Laidlaw. Mr. Sage's hearing is now almost as good as before the accident Mr. Sage has heard from Inspector Bjrrnes that the annals of crime do not show any case analagous to his. That fact interests him and he has de termined himself to write and to sign, for the benefit of history, a complete account of his adventures. That writing will be inter esting! It will give to every newspaper man a chance to calculate just how much poorer Mr. Sago would be nowif he had pone originally into journalism instead of groceries. Mr. Sage speaks of the gentle man who blew himself into tne otner worm as "My Dinnamitter," with the accent very properly on the "din." Mr. Sago does not Bhare the belief that Norcross dropped tho valise accidentally. Doing the West With a l'enknlO. Bichard Harding Davis, who is going to do Mexico, Texas and other wild" places for the Harpers, will surprise these places. Ha will wear hii best clothes out there and has bought no daggers, boots, leggms, saddles, revolvers or sombreros. He will be able to write a piece entitled, "Through the West With a Penknife." After the West he goes to London, also for the Harpers, and next fall he resumes the management of Harper' 'a Weekly. As everybody has said something un pleasant about Billy McGlory, a dive keeper of this town, and as he is now in prison; it is only fair that someone should mention the good that is in bim. He once jumped from his buggy, stopped a runaway horse and saved a young girl's life. The horse was going so fast that many quieter men than McGlory, policemen and others, had let it go. He is certainly one of the bravest men in New York, so far as physical cour age goes. He is a thin man, and consump tive, but the biggest rufhans in tne city stood in terror of him. When knocked down by McGlory, their habit has always been to get up and walk off. What McGlory Might Have Been. On the side of morals nothing can be said in McGlory's favor. But ft is possible that if he had been born under different con ditions his name might have had a different meaning. He would have made a wonderful fighting cavalryman if he had had a chance. It is quite possible that he is thoroughly bad, but it is certain that he does not know or feel that he has done wrong. Tbe interesting story concerning James Gordon Bennett which comes across the water, and which perhaps is true, tells how this journalist and some of his merry men were disposed to play with boxing gloves. Stanhope, of the Herald, knocked out one or two rivals in play, whereupon Bennett challenged him to do as, much for his superior officer. Stanhope,' after warning Bennett, did so most successfully. Mr. James' Gordon Bennett got an unlucky upper-cut, where upper-cuts are most ef fective, and, in the language of sport, was dead to the world. When he recovered he made Stanhope a present of 1,000. The story is told now about the Herald office. If true it is calculated to drive Mr. Sulli van from the stage to the newspaper office. He could easily make 2,000 a day while his popularity lasted. Patti and a Change In Clothes. Patti, charming and everlasting monu ment to the wisdom of careful living and careful eating, is singing here again. She has not changed, and the preservation of her voice is marvelous. She has a secret that would be valuable to all who pretend to preserve peaches, asparagus and other good things. The feature of the opera this year, a more interesting one to some than Patti or the de Beszkes, is the marked change in the dress of the women. Gowns are not worn as low as they were; in fact, nothing like. Long sleeves and dresses almost high in the neck prevail. The comforting deduction may be drawn that when women aro fools the only thing to do is to let them go on and they will recover all alone. The End of the World. An astronomer consoles us with the state- ment that we shall not have to handle all the water now visible, because as the inside of this earth gets cold and contracts it will for all. When'all the water has sunk out ot sight the atmosphere will follow, men will have to dig one well for airand another for water, using pumps on both. It will he a workaday world. Birds will all be dead, and no fish or oysters to eat. An imaginative gentle man inclined to write up tbe end of the world could do a fine picture of the rich man hoarding his air while the poor suffo cated, etc. The moon is alleged to have died that sort of a death queersortof a corner this corner of the universe will be with two moons lighting each other up and not a young man to walk with his young woman in the double moonlight, Aethtje Beisbane. Fonght hy tho Light of the Moon. City op Mexico, Jan. 16. A duel took place by moonlight Thursday night, between Carlos Esparaza, a discharged prison official; and Inocencio Arriola, of the editorial staff oi the Mario Dei Hogat. Tbe combatants were placed 20 paces apart, and exchanged shots without effect Then they advanced 'five paces and fired again, when both were wounded. Neither man is fatally hurt. A South Dakota Bank Failure. Aberdeen, S. D., Jan. 16. The North west National Bank, of this city, organized 1888, went into voluntary liquidation by the action of the stockholders yesterday alternoon. Both President Barnes and Cashier. Briggs say there is- plenty of cash on hand to pay depositors, and creditors will not lose a cent. Drowned In tbe Touch. DAWSON, Pa., Jan. 16. ISpeciaf John Bimel, aged 19 years, while crossing the Youghiogheny river near Dawson, fell from his boat and was drowned. Any informa tion, if found, would be thankfully received by his widowed mother, Mrs. John Bimel. Maglnn to the Fore. My old customers and friends will find me at the old spot, with a large and varied stock of cakes, candy, fruits and nuts. E. Magmit. 913-91 Liberty-street 80 Federal street,. Allegheny. - jpiffipflifj M FOR' PENNSYLVANIA. vZfl J " COLD rWAV. AND SNOW; Mm ffl T BUZZARD AT PHILADELPHIA; j I WS f STORM'-CENTFR MOVING- w 'M 1 ON HARRISBURC-; 4 kWl . ATJ'JTJSBUROH.COLbFrZ. ' -5-sIiLV.v- -- J A fiiir.-. .It A. iiJJUJ' ZITTLE CONSOLATION AHEAD OF EDISON. An Underground Trolley System for J the Electric Street Car INVENTED BY HARRISBURG MEN. They Use a Magnet to Draw the Conductor Up for Contact THE -CROSSING OP USES MADE EAST rEFXCm. TELIGKAM TO Till DISPATCH.1 Haebisbitrg,- Jan. 16. A practical method of propelling street cars by elec tricity without tho aid of the overhead wire or the storage battery has been invented by EdwarJEBaum. and Harlin A. Hoopes, of this city. It is simply the trolley system underground. v A porcelain lined iron tube or sealed con duit, similar in shape to an ordinary T rail, is imbedded between the two rails. A flat continuous strip of copper or a copper wire, which conducts the electricity from the dynamo, is laid in the bottom of the con duit 'On this is placed a chain of ordinary sized links, which of course is charged with electricity by reason of its' contact fith the copper strip. The conduit is covered with short sections of non-magnetic plates. These are eight or ten feet in length. There is a space of two inches or so between the chain and the covering plates. Suspended from the car is a magnet immediately above and within a short distance from the plate covering. Directly in the rear of the magnet' is a small wheel which runs on the plates. The magnet draws the chain, which is continuously charged, against the plate covering, which being consequently charged will in turn charge the wheel, and the same power of locomotion will be obtained, greater in fact, than that from the trolley in the overhead system. One Plate at a Time Alive. The nlate coverinc is only alive when the chain is drawn against it by the use of the magnet, and as the links are small only that portion of the covering immediately under the wheel will be alive, as link after link will drop on the wire again as soon as the magnet and wheel pass. Appliances for locomotion of any pattern can be used, the invention being simply a device for con ducting the electricity from the wire to the car. Another and hitherto unsolved question is easily overcome by the Baum-Hoopes system. It is that of "crossing other roads, turnouts and switches. In this respect it is vastly superior to the cable or grip method and the overhead systpm. The chain makes these difficulties simple in a way that can readily be understood. There can be no danger to life with this new electrical inven tion though high tension currents should be used, as the plate coverings will be entirely dead, except when and at place where the car is passing. Electricians to whom the invention has been shown have pronounced it the best method of conducting electricity as a mo tive power for burface cars, and there is no reason why it cannot supersede eam in locomotion. The inventors will give a public exhibition in 'the Board f Trade rooms, this city, next week, when they will show the workings of the system in every detail, embracing turnouts, switches and crossings of roads. Cable Lines Can Adopt It The various grip or cable lines can easily adjust their lines to tne new system, as they already have a conduit between the tracks can be easily made to fill the require ments of tbe copper conductor. Tbe in ventors claim that the system will in time supplant steam on the great trunk lines of the country. A patent has been applied for, and prob ably by this time has been issued. The simplicity of tbe invention has been com mended by all the electricians who have seen the drawings, and the practicability of the idea has been demonstrated. Mr. Baum has for a number of years been a successlul newspaper man in the capacity of business manager. He is now business manager 6f the 'Patriot. Mr. Hoopes was the city's Chief ot Police fori years, then a detective and he is now conducting a sinte mantel establishment. He is unassuming in manner and very popular. These are the last two men who would be expected to solve an electrical problem which noted electri cians have studied in vain. The tests made with miniature apparatus have fully de veloped the completeness of the method. Both Exports and Imports larger. Philadelphia, Jan 16. The exhibit ot business at the Custom House shows im ports valued at 62.438.000 for 1891. aeainst S6,057,000 for J890, and exports of $42,845, 000 against 136,462,000110x102 -the previous tyear. rcimrtii. '"i hin i iiihi. apiim" "W 'FJIIUH W PENNSYLVANIA. NEWS. GEAVS ASKS A BEPBIZVE. The-Flnkcrtons Don't Believe the Story of an Alleged Detective. Desteb, Col., Jan. 16. Dr. Graves, through his attorneys, has applied to Gov ernor Boott for a reprieve for 60 days. His petition is accompanied by his affidavit, in which he denies that he is guilty, and avers that it will require at leaast 30 days for the stenographer to prepare a transcript of the case for his appeal to the Supreme Court It also states that repeated errors were made by Judge Bising during tbe trial. A dispatch from Chicago says: Tbe story told in San Francisco by Joseph "Woods, who claims to be aPinkerton detective, that he has discovered evidence to prove the in nocence of Dr. Graves is discredited at the headquarters of the agency here. Assistant TJ. P. Murray says 'Woods is not and never has been in the agency's service, and points to the fact that the evidence against Graves waa worked up by the Pinkertons as show ing that they were in the employ of the other side, and could not De hired to clear Graves. MEXICANS ABB SHEEZING. The Grip Causes a Frightful Mortality In the Interior of the Krpnbllc Cits" of Mexico, Jan. 16'-There are many cases of the grip in this city. It has been prevalent for a month past, and 300 deaths have resulted within the "past three weeks. In tho States of Oaxaco, Vera Cruz and Pueblo the epidemic is very severe, and in the city of Orizaba the schools have been closed and many deaths occur daily. The common people are the worst suffer ers, and in the mountainous region the malady is most severe. The fatality among tbe 1,200 Cninese laborers employed on rail road construction and coilee plantations in the State of Oaxaca ha3 been very alarming. The epidemic is spreading rapidly to the northern parts of the republic. COLOEED MEN OBJECT. Befased Representation on TTorld's Fair Board, They Oppose Further Grants. Chicago, Jan 16. The colored men of the United States have been for some time preparing a protest against the loan or ap propriation of f 5,000, 000 by the Government in aid of the world's Fair. This protest will be presented when the matter comes up before Congress. T. A. Dawson, of this city, who was at one time a member of the Arkansas Legis lature, has the matter in charge.. He said to-day: '"The Fair is run as a close corpora tion, and we are prepared to prove it TVe were refused representation upon the Board of Directors and National Commission. "We will not stand such treatment" A L. & 0. INFOEMIB IS JAIL. Arrested and Fined for Doing, Business Without a License. ' - St. Johits, N. B., Jan. 16. Joseph Holly, who is head agent for the Massachu setts Law and Order League, was brought to "Woodstock recently to act as an in former in the Scott act case. He went about as a traveler, and succeeded in ob taining information against several illegal liquor sellers. Yesterday he was arrested for doing business without a license. An effort was made to bail him out, but it was not successful, and he was sentenced to pay a fine, which not beiDg paid, he was sent to jaiL There is much excitement over the affair. Bankers Must Go to Jail. Cbestojt, Ia., Jan. 16. Wesley Taylor and A.E. Jackson, officers of thcFontanelle Bank, of Fontanelle,Ia.,which failed for f40, 000 about a, year ago, were yesterday found guilty of receiving deposits while knowing that the bank was insolvent Each was sentenced to four months in jail and to pay afineoff50O. Kewfonndland'i Census Disappointing. St. Johns, N. ., Jan 16. The census returns have been completed. They show the population of Newfoundland and Labrador to be 202,000, an increase in the last seven years of only 4,100, or at the rate of 2)4 per cent This showing is a great disappointment A Georgia Town Flooded Oat Bome, Ga., Jan. 10. The business part of the city i3 from four to seven feet under water. The weather is'.very cold, which adds ,to the discomforts of hundreds of people who have been driven out of their homes by water. The Guatemala Fresldental Election. Guatemala Crar, Jan. 16. Dr. Lain festa has been elected President Manuel A. Sab6rio, a Guatemalan exile in this country, will be made Secretary of the Treasury. He will leave for Guatemala in i.a.few dayi. THE GOOOuM POET, Jolrn Russell Young Tells How Walt WlutmaE's Works -Were Beceived. ABSENCE OF JIG LEAVES Cost Dim the Clerkship That Gaye Him a Very Scant Living WRATH OP A CABINET OFFICER. Patient Toil in the Hospitals and Poetry of the War. Hia THE IFPICX OP BI3 UTIBABY STILE twsmzx r ok the niar-iiciM Faper No. X. Among my earliest indiscretions wa m "Walt "Whitman. So at least I was summa rily informed one day by the famous Shel ton Mackenzie, Doctor of Civil Law, literary editor and miscellaneous magnate on For ney's Press, a considerable and shining figure in hi3 time, with a large place ia criticism and current affairs, and memorable) to me always for many friendly words and" deeds. I had written something in an ambitious vein, and decorated the thema with lines from a book I had tumbled over in literary wanderings a thin book, with Bolid, square type, wide margins, the front ispiece a figure in shirt sleeves, brawny, spry, nonchalant, one hand on the thigh, the other in the pocket; deep eyes, a sorrow ful face and lips of expectation. Out of this hook I had dug something I have long forgotten what which seemed to beautify my composition. Mackenzie gava me dne monition. No gentleman ever read such a book. No gentleman ever referred to it in the presence of ladies. It was un speakable. And if I had ambition, as the good Mackenzie pointed out in his emphatic, paternal way, I must never have it known .that I had kept company with such a writer. Emerson's Opinion of Leaves or Grass. "Whitman was the author of the lines, and my quoting them among my earliest indis cretions. I accepted the admonitions of Mackenzie, and for a long time literary re lations with "Whitman were maintained un der furtive conditions. The wise, prudent Mackenzie spoke from his own conserva tism, which was likewise the literary judg ment of tbe hour. "Whitman was not re spectable. Mackenzie also had high, an tique notions as to what was proper in one's literary sympathies. He had lived when George the Third was King. He had been the friend of Mooro and Southey, had supped with Sir "Walter Scott Deep in hia heart he saw much tha might be mended in Tennyson, as well as in Thackeray and Bul wer and others of the "new writers." "Whit man had come upon bim somehow no one knew whence or wherefore how did he come? "One book last summer," wrote Emesson to Carlyle, "came out in New York; a non descript monster which yet had terriblo eyes andbuffalo strength, and was indisput ably American, which I thought to' send you. But the book throve so badly with the few to whom I showed it, and wanted good morals so much, that I never did. Yet, I believe now again, I shall! It is called "Leaves of Grass, was written and printed by a journeyman printer in Brook lyn, New York, named "Walter "Whitman, and after you have looked into it, if you think, ai you may. that it is only an auctioneer's inventory of a warehouse, yoa can light your pipe with it" The Criticism as to Morality. Yet, somehow, there were things ia "Whitman that I found in no other boot.un less I went back among the Hebrew pro phets. The wanting in "good morals" never occurred to me. Then, as now, when I look at "Whitman with maturer eyes, when I see him accepted and ruling Z3 one of the influences of the nineteenth century, I was never in sympathy with those who deemed him an immoral writer. He was an exem plification of nature. I should as soon think of finding immorality in his writing as ia the antique statues of Louvre, in the pad docks of the Derby, or the Zoological Gar dens! In Byron, yes! In a dozen other writers,sin exultant and in rose-tinted hues; the immorality that would awaken by mockery or invective the delicate sense of right and wrong, which underlies the de votion we call love this with too much abundance. But "Whitman, as I read him, never gave a thought which could awaken the sense of shame in those not prone to shame. "We were a long time coming to this recog- nition. I am not sure that we have reached it in America, but it will come, as it did ia England years ago. The most origiaal writer of our day, a generation since won across the sea what had been denied at home. I saw "Whitman in war times and later with an -experience akin to that of soma Athenian who had known Socrates, and perhaps followed the grand pug-nosed old . loafer from place to place to hear him talk. If ever the loafer may come to his own, and we amend our Christian legends, Saint So crates will be his patron. First Impression of Whitman. Even as I had fancied the shaggy-powed Socrates, floatintr alSout Athens, tne eye of the police upon Bim with their own thought! as to his means of support, there was tha suggestion of a parallel in "Whitman. He had a conspicuous, massive figure, invari ably ia frowsy, picturesque raiment Yott ran against him in out of the way places riding on the front of horse cars in conve;-- Qi sation with the driver, giving pennies to ragged groups of negro" children; sailing down Pennsylvania avenue, with that wonderful hat, that collar that was never buttoned, like some slow old three decker of a 94, or trailing out toward the camps ia suburban "Washington with packages under his arms or in his coat pockets, presumably for the hospital There was something of a rude, enviabla splendor in his superb, rugged health tho body dominant with wholesome conditions; something also of the Horace Greeley in his personality the same shambling,go-as-you-please gait, Whitman rather the sturdier of the two; nothing of the inspired childhood; phenomenal touch of genius, as in tha famous journalist You were apt to find him silent, civil, not communicative, bus cordial when you could reach him. He had no apparent companionships, apparently alone with his teeming soul. A sincere, absorbed man, whom you neversaw in what was called society, pr at the rude homely routs of war days; nor at dinners rather j gentleman of the pavement,even as Socratea must have been, when fe loafed about Athens and said such living, wonderful things. Walt Whitman Was a Martyr. "Whitman was in those days likewise a martyr and his sufferings were, much talked abont in our independent circles, although they seemed to sit bitterly upon the, shaggy, lounging wayfarer. The secretary of some thing or other, and by some odd twinge of fortune in the Lincoln Cabinet, had been told of "Whitman's book, "the nondescript monster which had terrible eyes, and buffalo strength." This secretary, as I well remember -him,-was of the dumb species, .i 4 i I I $6mhk. mmi m TXtrATi" ' ;-. -.v . , .. 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