TUje Bf&. ESTABLISHED FEBRUARY 8, 1846, Vol. 47. So. CS. Entered at Pittsburg Fostofflce X ovember, 1887. as second-class matter. Business Office Corner Smithfield and Diamond Streets, News Rooms and Publishing House 78 and So Diamond Street, in 'New Dispatch Building. FASTER V ADVERTISING OFFICE. ROOM 78, TRIBUNE BUILDING. NEW YORK, where com riletc flies ofTHE IHSl'ATCn ran always be found. Foreign advertisers appreciate tlie convenience. Home advertisers and trleuds of THE DISPATCH. vrhUe In New York, are also made welcome. THE DISPA TCH it regularly on tale at Bmtftino'. Union Square Sew Tork. and 17 An deV Opera, rant, trance, where anyone uV hat been dlsap jxtitei at a hotel nor ttand can obtain it. TERMS OF THE DISPATCH. POSTAGE TREE IJf THE UKITED STATES. IJaii-t Dispatch. One Year 6 00 Dailt Dispatch. I'er Quarter. 1 00 Daily Dispatch, One Month 70 Daily Dispatch, Inclmilne Sunday, 1 yew.. 10 00 Daily Dispatch. Including Sunday,3m'tln. ISO Dailt Dispatch, including Sunday, 1 m'th. 90 fr-UXDAY Dispatch, One Year 2 SO Veeklt Dispatch, One Year IB The Daily DlsryiTCn Is delivered by carriers at 15 cents per week, or, including Sunday Edition, at 10 cents per week. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 1892. TWELVE PAGES Parties who have changed their residence will please leave new address at the busi ness office. In order to Insure the uninter rupted delivery of The Dispatch to their homes. ANARCHY AT HOME. Two self-styled Anarchists have been placed under arrest for arson in Brooklyn. Time was -when the horror in which An archists were held was tempered to some slight extent by an admiration for the strength of political principles which led men to defy the law" and declare war on civilization at the risk of their lives. To day society is confronted on all sides with men too idle to -work, who simply prefer to cover the nakedness of their criminality with a political clothing. Ravachol, the Parisian Anarchist, was a common murderer and pilferer whose cunning was only equaled by his cowardice, and whose disregard of public safety was only surpassed by his general moral obliquity. The men who have been making use of chemical knowledge in Brooklyn to secure insurance premiums by fraud, thus endangering the lives of their fellow beings, are no more moved by principle than is the pickpocket or the sneak thief. One of .the gang, whose scientific knowl edge was the most dangerous feature of the organization, is still at large. He is said to be a Portuguese, and it will prob ably be found that he has sought this country because he was too urgently wanted in his own. This should be a fresh warning to exercise special care at this time to exclude intending immigrants fleeing from the law of their own land. "We havejnore criminals than is.good for us now. There are enough of them bom in our country to provide occupation for our police, and we neither need nor desire the refuse of Europe. GORMAN'S PKESIDENTAL IDEA. It is interesting to find evidences In the political literature of the day that Senator Gorman, of Maryland, continues to take himself seriously as a Presidental quality. The fact that the Calumet Club of Balti more, one of the leading political organi zations of -the Senator's State, has pro nounced for Cleveland was at first taken as evidence that Gorman has "followed the advice of Wolsey and laid aside ambition. But it is gravely explained that while Gorman is not in the race for the nomina tion this year, he is acting with a view to his chances in 1896. If Cleveland Is nom inated and elected which comprises a rather large "if he cannot expect another term. But if Hill were nomina ted and elected an equally large contin gencyhe would expect to be re-elected. Therefore Gorman favors Cleveland in order to keep the track clear for himself, four years hence. This exhibits a peculiar idea of the pos sibilities of politics. Gorman, as a Presi dental candidate, would have all of Hill's faults without any of the excuses for put ting him in such a.position of leadership. He is at the bead of a political ring as un scrupulous as Tammany and only less notorious because it has not such a wide and rich field of political plunder. He has all of Hill's shiftiness and insincerity on such public questions as the coinage, and has the same reliance on the arts pf wire-pulling and the distribution of pat ronage for political rewards and punish ments. The only thing that ever gave nill any prominence as a Presidental pos sibility was his supposed control of the Democratic machine in a State whose electoral vote is large and pivotal. But this pretext is wholly .absent in the case of Gorman, who carries in his pocket the vote ot a State with but eight electors which are certain to be given to any Democratic candidate. The nomination of Hill would be suicidal for the Democracy. But the nom ination of Gorman would be evidence that the Democracy is so determined on suicide as to resort to it without provocation. COMMERCIAL, AGENCIES' LIABILITY. If the verdict rendered in New York in the case of the City National Bank of Birmingham against R. G. Dun & Co. is to stand as a precedent, the commercial agencies must change their methods of business or put up their shutters. The case was one in which the plaintiff asked the defendant for a report on the standing of a man, and, the rep'ort being favorable, the bank discounted paper and when the debtor failed sued the agency for the amount and recovered judgment This puts the commercial agency in the light of an guarantor of the liabilities of those whom they report to be worthy of credit The impossibility of such an attitude is plain from the fact that there , is no definite limit to the credit which may be extended after the favorable re port has been made. It should be said that the charge of Judge Shipman in the case was clearly that the claim against the agency could not be upheld except on proof that its report was made fraudulently or negligently. 'Whether the jury found any evidence of fraud or negligence does not appear in the reports; but after such a charge it can be presumed that the verdict for the full amount of the claim with interest was. simply one of those peculiar eccentricities of the jury system that are observed at occasional intervals! If this verdict establishes the rule the commercial agencies will have their choice between voluntarily winding up their affairs or having it done for them by the Sheriff. It would place on their shoulders the burden of paying for a large share of .. it need not be concluded in a hurry either1 that this verdict will stand as law or that the agency will have to pay this partic ular" claim. It will be less hazardous to expect that the verdict will be set aside and a new trial ordered. PRATER AND PERQUISITES. A flurry was caused in the Ohio Legisla ture the other day by the too urgent prayer of a clergyman whose turn it was to open the proceeding. Legislators are prone to criticise the prayers with which their pro ceedings are inaugurated, thus indicating a new point of conflict between thescience of politics and the church. But this flutter has its distinctive features. The Rev. Francis Marsten, one of the Columbus clergymen who share the gra tuitous duty of praying for the Legisla ture, touched in his invocation on a point which the legislators seem to regard as a forbidden topic H i asked the Deity to remember those statesmen "gathered here in this maelstrom of iniquity," fraud and 'corruption;" referred to the fact that the Legislature was looked upon with sus picion by the people; asked for a delivery from "the bribes, bribers and bribe-takers in our midst," and prayed that the mem bers be "kept from the way of tempta tion." And the legislators were very wroth. At first there was a disposition to dis cinline Mr. Marsten at least to the extent of calling on him for an explanation of his language. But a conference on the subject decided not to take that course and let the matter drop. We cannot suf ficiently applaud the discretion of that course. The legislators might claim that the prayer placed them in a false position before the Deity to which it was ad dressed; but the embarrassing rejoinder might be made that the falsity of the position was due to their own acts. Be yond that when the real point of the peti tion was that the law-makers be delivered from bribes and bribers, and kept out of temptations an objection to it might provoke the crushing inquiry whether they were afraid that the prayer would be answered. The legislators had better let the clergy men pray for them in any terms the latter may choose. It cannot barm the members at all; but it may be regarded as an in teresting prayer test to wait and see whether such petitions produce any visible mitigation of the ways of boodle. ECONOMY -WITHOUT STINT. Several strong arguments in favor of Representative Duburrow's bill appro priating $7,000,000 to carry into effect the World's Fair Act were advanced before the World's Fair Committee yesterday. The whole question resolves Itself into one of how much money careful and business-like estimates show to be necessary for the purpose. Thn national credit has been pledged to individual States and to foreign nations. No stint 'must be allowed to interfere with the suc cess of -the project as now planned, though thorough economy should be ob served, and It Is to be regretted that the scheme has been allowed to reach such vast proportions. The estimated cost should be Itemized in detail as far as possible, that no open ing may be left for wastefulness under such heads as "miscellaneous expenses." Properly managed the expenditure may be made a profitable investment simply as an advertisement of national'industries and products. It is this advertising aspect of the Fair which should never be lost sight of by Pittsburg. A good representa tion of our commerce at Chicago will far more than repay the most strenuous efforts put forth to secure It. AN ABSURD CONSTRUCTION. There is need for Impressing on some official minds that common sense goes to the enforcement of laws as well as to a good many humbler occupations., A strict enforcement of the laws against making any "imitation" of bills or coins, for the purpose of preventing counterf eits, Is to be approved. When it was announced recently that the law would be so con strued as to forbid the printing of a pic ture of a silver dollar it was supposed that the climax of absurdity was reached. But it seems this was a mistake, A Chi cago sign-painter has been arrested for painting on a sign-board a picture four feet long of a $20 greenback. Judging from the average efforts of sign-board art it is in one sense a high testimonial to this artist's skill to call his effort an imitation. But common sense applied to the construc tion of law might perceive the absurdity of imagining that anyone would attempt to pass off a newspaper portraiture of a Bland dollar as the actual coin or try to purchase twenty dollars' worth of goods with the four-foot Chicago sign-board pic ture. This remarkable method of pushing th law against counterfeiting to extreme con clusions appears in a more unfavorable light' when contrasted with the actual absence of enforcement for other laws of the United States. There Is a statute against trusts and another Important en actment Known as tne inter-state com merce law, which are violated with im punity and to the public injury every day in the year. There is legislation touching the civil service which influential politi cians find no difficulty in evading. Does it not present a singular picture of the in fluences which inspire official action when there is this absolute supineness concern ing the illegal acts of great corporate com binations or of powerful politicians while sign painters are laid by the heels for the awful crime of reproducing on wood the counterfeit presentment of United States legal tenders? Common sense, honesty and Impartiality are good things to use In the enforcement of law. Their application is conspicuous by its absence in the enforcement of this absurd construction. A QUESTION OF RETURNS. A local cotemporary arguing with re gard to the relative merits of lake gun boats and a ship canal as a means of defense makes this statement as against a deep water canal. "The gunboats would not cost more than a million dollars apiece while the outlaying for a ship canal would run into the hundreds St millions." Tho assertion is made with especial reference to the canal between the lakes and the Hudson river one of the least efficient projects for lake defense, although of great importance commercially. But a Pittsburg newspaper should have been aware that the engineers' estimates have placed the- cost of connecting the Ohio river with Lake Erie by a ship canal at $30,000,000. So far as the question of economy is in volved, the advantage is all on the side of the ship canals; because a large invest ment which yields a constant return is much better than a small one which yields' the liabilities disclosed by commercial agencies. With the peril on the other hand of being sued for damages in case tbey make unfavorable reports on Incor rect grounds, our friends like Bradstreet and Dun & Co. may aptly be described as between Satan and the deep sea. But no return at all except' in an' improbable event, and then an Inadequate one.--Eyery million dollars put into lake war vessels will be dead capital exespt in the case of war with Engiand. If the United States should get into a war with any other government its lake vessels would be utterly unavail able. If it should get into a war with England it would have an equal force to ours already on the lakes and could rein force It at once while ours would have no reserve to draw on... On the other hand, every million dollars put into ship canals will through all the long years of peace yield a constant return from the cheapen ing of 'transportation. Both in peace and war the ship canals will be far more jiseful to the country than any such half-way and foolish expedient as 'disturbing the settlement of 1819 for the sake of building a few vessels to lie idle until we get Into a quarrel with Eng land. The corporate influences may be loth to have this fact recognized, but it is too manifest to be ignored. The first spadeful of earth has been dug In preparing a wigwam for the Chicago Con vention. The grave digging for Tariff "re form's" representative was begun In earnest by the Rhode Island election. Some enterprising publisher should com pile a Presidental letter-writer. There Is abundant material for the purpose, and future candidates would be saved mucli labor by a perusal of the good, bad and in different effusions of their predecessors. The tendency is so great toward an increase of aspirants to the occupation of the Execu tive Mansion that a wide circulation for such a book is almost a foregone conclusion. World's Fair appropriations or loans are to be judged by the items necessary and the returns expected rather than by tne mere grand totals with their appalling vast ness. Befobe the "World's Fair Commission yesterday, In speaking of expenses neces sary forjudges and examiners, John Boyd Thatcher said: "In this country it would not be fair to ask competent men to aot without recompense." This is perfectly true, and it is a sad Indication of tho preva lent American patriotism which almost uni versally demands a monetary return for its service! "Xheee is plenty of money in the country," says a contemporary. Of course there is. The only tronble is that it is a good deal too gregarious. It flocks together too much. Cleveland's letter to a Chattanooga supporter is worthy the attention of cer tain other Presidental possibilities. A man with modesty bold enough to admit doubts as to the wisdom of his party, should it nom inate him, is well on tho way to the philos ophy which abolishes disappointment by an absence of that expectation which is its most fruitful source. FEOJI one point of view the small mi nority which voted against the Chinese ex clusion bill was so select as to be more ex clusive than the majority which supported it. Professor Garnieb studies the Simian tongue by means pf a phonograph charged "in one cage of monkeys and discharged in another. He should try the effect of filling an instrument with volapuk and then let ting it loose among the monkeys. But it is probable that the Humane Society would od Ject to such cruelty even in the interest of linguistic science. Pittsburg has won the first ball game of Its season. Last year's record prompts the warning that a good beginning must not be regarded as an excuse for a bad finish. Since State Legislatures are supposed to be elected by popular suffrage, it is bard to understand why they should be better qualified to elect United States Senators than are the voters whom they represent. Yet it appears to be Senator Chandler's opinion that the people are not to be trusted with the direct power of choosing Senatorial representatives. Since Mr. Cleveland's last testament was addressed to a Bible it should be spoken of with proper respect as "The first Epistle to the Chattanoogans." Oan it be that the dark ages of onr councilmanio World only ended four years ago, since objections are raised to the search light investigation of an audit extending further back than that! There must be some reason for the limit, and it can only be found in an insidious distinction discredit able either to things before 18SS or after. Habrisburg is full of Democratic dele gates to-day. It is to be hoped the latter will be full of nothing worse than politics. Ix is natural that the younger members of the Senate should have been the strong est objectors to Clerk Young's expulsion. 'Until the farce of Executive sessions be abolished Mr. Young's character will be vin dicated by as full an account of their pro ceedings now as before. Lubricators for political machines are in demand in Harrisburg to-day. Horrible sufferings from starvation and disease are reported from a suburb of At lanta, Ga. It is difficult to believe that such a state of affairs can exist) without the knowledge of Atlantans and without sncli assistance from them as would remedy the evils. Harrison takes an unusual interest in spring hoosiery this year. It is said that Pritts, one of the hunted Hochstetler murderers, succeeded in escap ing to the Westjsome ten days ago. By this time he should have found congenial oc cupation and companionship with the belligerent rustlers of Wyoming. FAT0E1TBS OP FORTUNE. The Queen ot England never goes to.bed before midnight. "The composer, Verdi, told his admirers on Sunday that he had finished his latest work "EalstafT." Mb. Gladstone is. a believer in paper money, and would like to see one-pound notes in circulation. , Governor Brown, of Georgia, wears a pair of cuff links made ot brass buttons cut from a Confederate soldier's coat. 'Congressman Cubtis, the one-eyed Representative from New York, is known about AVashington as the Cyclops of the House. The nearest living relative of Shakes peaie is probably Thomas Hart, a resident of Australia, who is eighth in descent from Shakespeare's sister, Joan. Pbof. Abthub S. Hardy, of Dartmouth Colleie, the well-known author, and Mrs. Haidy, aro making, a tour through Italy, having recently visited Egypt, Constanti nople, Greece and Spain. Lo Sessions, once a powerful New York State Senator, but now a very much disap pointed politician, is frequently seen flitting though the corridors of the House of Repre sentatives at Washington. Ashbel Fitch and Colonel Fellows ap pear to have been the only Congressmen who had the courage of their' habits, and confessed, that they had been taking cold tea In the House restaurant. Senatob Cablisle recently received a 125,000 fee for winning a suit involving $200, 000 .before the Kentucky Court of Appeals. It is probable that the able Senator will not be reduced to 75 cents again in a long while. Watterson In a New Role. Boston Herald. . Hon. Henry Watterson says he is simply awaiting developments. This is a new role for Henry. OF NATIONAL .INTEREST. Arguments for the World's Fair Approprla- ' Hon of 87,000,000 The Rank of'Llea.' tenant-General May Be Recreated The Cool Nerve of CousIn'Ben. "Washington, April 12. The "World's Fair Committee held a special -meeting to day to hear arguments favoring Represent ative Durburro w's bill appropriating $7,000,000 to carry' Into effect the World's Pair act. John Boyd Thatcher spoke in behalf of the Committee on Awards, asking for $700,000 to payjudges and examiners and to secure awards and diplomas. Vice President O'Dell.of the local directory spoke of the plans of the exposition. He said the Commission had decided that the scope of the exhibition should be such as to require the expenditure of more than $10, 000,000. It had determined that the Fair should be produced on suoh a scale as to re quire seventeen and a half or eighteen mil lion dollars, hence the necessity of the Ex position Comnany for funds beyond the $10, 000,000 required by tho original act. The further appropriation was asked for because the great Exposition was going to redound, not to the benefit of any single locality, but to the benefit of the entire country. There was no city so large, no hamlet so small that it would not receive some advan tage. The scope of the Exposition had been enlarged wisely and Judiciously with due deference to the highest aspirations of man kind. There Should Be No Curtailment. Mr. Fred S. Winston, a member of the Chicago Directory of' the Exposition, re ferred briefly to the extent to which the Fair enterprise had grown and to the fact that more money (about $8,000,000) was ab solutely necessary to carry on the work so as to insure the openinsr of the gates of the Fair. How to get the additional amount re quired was therefore the question confront tne management. Some persons might sug gest curtailing certain features of the entor Srise, but this would not be done. Chicago ad raised the amount specified in the act or Congress. The citizens of the city had done what lay in their uowor as they always did in matters of this kind. They did not want and did not expect to make money out of the enternrlse. If Congress in its wisdom thought that under all tho circumstances it should not make' the appropriations asked for by the bill, and share with the citizens the proportionate receipts of the Fair, he had another proposition to make. A Second Mortgage for the Money It was in effect that Congress pass a bill making an appropriation of $5 000,000, with a provision that would not di3bar the man agement from borrowing on bonds the money necessary above the amount. The management would mako the bonds issued to secure the extra amount a first mortgage on the gate receipts and make the $5,000,000 appropriated by Congress a second mort gage on the gate receipts. Replying to Representative McCreary. Mr. Winston said this proposition had been agreed upon by the members of the delega tion now before the committee after they left Chicago. It had not been brought be fore the local Uoard, but he (Mr. Winston) was satisfied the proposition would be agreed to. Mr. Winston suggested an altern ative proposition to the effect that Congress appropriate the money found necessary by the snb-Commlttee on Appropriations (In vestigating the World's Fair expenditures) to finish the Fair, said appropriation to be a first mortgage on tie gate receipts. Another meiuueroi me unicago airectory, nowever, said he was -opposed to this alternative proposition, and the matter was for the time dropped. The committee then ad journed until to-morrow morning. Big Money Advanced to Foreign Tourists.' The examination of Mr. Sutherland of the Treasury department by a sub-committee of the House appropriation com mittee showed that out of the money appropriated for the Government building at tho Fair, the disbursing clerk of the Treasury had received $1,100 In commissions., The sub-committee will inqulie into this matter to see whether there "be any authority of law for the payment of com missions to a Government disbursing agent. Chief Clerk Stock, of the Treasury Depart ment, testified with rcfeience to the ex penses for foreign exhibits and gave a statement showing that the larger part of the $10,000 apnropriated for this purpose had been exponded in sending abroad about a dozen persons who each received advances to cover expenses. - The effort to revive the grade of Lieutenant General, which is being actively supported by Secretary Elkins, .has brought to light the interesting fact that the rank has been held by only four officers since the establishment of the Government. It was nrst created py law in 1793, and George Washington, then living in retirement at Alt. Vernon, was appointed by President Adams. He held it from July 3, 1793, until his death, December 14, 1799, at which time it lapsed. General Washington never held the fall rank of General of thearmies'ofthe United States, according to the records of the Adjutant General's office. After his death tho rank of Lieutenant General was not re vived nntil the War of the Rebellion, when, on March 2, 1864,- General Grant was ap pointed. He was lollowed by General Sher man, whose commission ran Irom July 25, 1866 to March 14, 1669. Sheridan held it nntil June 1, 1SS8, when being on his death bed, he was promoted to the rank of general which he held until his death, August 5, 1883. Shortly before the war General Scott was made Brevet Lieutenant General and with that rank-placed on the retired list. Among army officers there is a feeling that the commanding general of the armies should be of higher rank than any ot his subordinates, and the movement to re-establish the grade of Lieutenant General will meet general approval in military circles, and all will rejoice that the promotion if it Is provided for will fall upon General Schofleld, whose devotion to the best inter ests of officers and men has endeared him to them in no common measure. "Cousin Ben" Folsom's free and easy application to the administration of Piesi dent Harrison for promotion from the con sulate of Sheffield, England, whioh he now holds to that of Birmingham, which in the it ay of fees pays a little better, recalls some breezy correspondence which took place a few years ago. Mr. Folsom was commis sioned to the position of Consnl to Sheffield by President Cleveland in October, 18S6, nearly six years ago, more than the average lifetime of an officeholder in the United States. He had not been at his uost of duty three weeks before he astonished good, easy going James D. Porter, then the Assistant Secretary of State,having charge of consular matters, by a cool suggestion that his salary ought to be increased at least a thousand dollars. "I find myself," he wrote, "in the center of such a social circle that for the honor of the Stars and Stripes I must enter tain in a style befitting my position, and I cannot do it on my present salary. Please see that it is Increased a thousand dollars, ir possible bat $500 at the least." Greatly perplexed what answer to make to this missive, bearing in mind the Consul's relationship to the powers at the White House, Mr. Porter sought coun sel of his chief. Secretary Bayard, and was much relieved when that astute statesman suggested that Mr. Folsom be advised to make his anplicatlon to Congress. Nothing abashed, "Cousin Ben" addressed an almost similar letter to the Chairman of the Com mittee on Foreign Affairs of the Hoase, and was no donbt painfully disappointed by re ceiving a reply that the House committee only aated in such matters on the recom mendation of the State Department. The estimates lor the year 1SS7, as prepared in Secretary Bayard's office, contained no rec ommendation for an increase in the salary of the Sheffield Consul, and "Cousin Ben" has struggled along uncomplainingly at the old salary of $2,500 a year until now. Kepbesentative LANE,of Illinois,from the Committee on Military Affairs, to-day re ported to the House a bill authorizing the Secretary of War upon the application of the Governor of a State, or Territory to issue for tho sole use of the National Gnard of such 8tate or Territory, any 3 inch muzzle loading rifled field guns, wrouzbt Iron, or 3 2-10 inch breech-loading rifled field guns, steel or machine (Hotchkiss or Gatling) or rapid fire guns, with Implements and har ness for the same, which may be on hand and not needed immediately for the service of the regular forces. A Newspaper's, Gift to Russia. New .Tore, April 12. About 200 people attended this afternoon. at the pier of the Inman line, on the. invitation of Rev. Dr. Talmage, to assist in asking God's blessing on the 280,000 pounds'of flour representing the - first installment of 1,000,000 pounds which the Christian Herald. has piormsed to send to the famine distiicts of Russia on tho steamship Coneinaugh. vThe Concmaugh will sail in a few days for Riga. Russell as an Interesting Lover. ., Chicago News. J . "" Governor Russell is" very interesting as the pale and disappointed" lover of fickle Massachusetts, THI0BIES OF BAIN PRODUCTION. Rarefaction of Air May Be a Powerful Factor In Condensation. New Tork Herald. An interesting discussion In the New Eng land Meteorological Society, touching some what the practicability of produoing rain by explosions, has recently been reported. The question, In one form or another, Is an old one. But neither time nor discussion seems to have settled it. Still the controversy may be useful if it leads to clearer views of how important rainfalls are generally produced in nature's laboratory. The eonclusion to which, it would appear, the New England "weatherologists" Incline is that of Espy, that the chief cause of rainfall is the cooling of vapor in the nir due to an ascensional movement. Mr. B. H. Soott, Secretary of the Roval Meteorological Society of Eng land, also, in a recent address, advances this view, urging that "the most effective mode of lowerine the temperature of air and of restoring the snspended moisture to the earth again in the form of rain is to cause the air to rise above the earth." And this may be regarded as the prevailing view among scientists. -,.1!? lt. ' questionable whether this expla nation IS ,.- ii tha fnll and the final one. .m!S 't0 nossible to see how heavy preclpi L" may resnlt from the cold of expansion mm 'he rapid indraught of moist air in fyil'ely horizontal lines from regions of SJ pressure into areas of low birometer. 01 in that case, by expansion solelv. the J'rjjor laden air undergoes rapid chilling jVf its vapor may be profusely condensed, ji 'he degree of rarefaction taking place in "j higher part of a cyclono conld be at all B80ertained, it might be found sufficiently -reat to account for an expansion of the Tapor masses reaching it quite adequate ro produce torrential .rains, without any re course to the theory of ascending currents. The oft observed dlreot relation between the amount of a cyclone's rainfall and the fall of the barometer at the base of the cyclone is a strong presumption that the rarefaction of air in the invisible upper portion of the storm center may be a power ful factor in causing condensation. TOO SACRED TO SELL. An Attempt to Bispose of the Grave of Washington's Mother Frustrated. Richmond, Va., April 12. The Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals to-day heard ar gument of counsel in the case involving the allegation that an option had been given on the lot upon which is tho grave of the mother of George Washington. The records show that the defendant, Shepherd, gave Kirtley A Kalbert, a real estate firm of Fi ederlcksburg, an ftption for thepurohase of tho lot. The sum mentioned was $2 500, which was to include also the monument and shaft, which had been contributed by a New Tork gentleman, but never completed. The real estate firm claim, and the records bear out that claim, that they fonnd a pur chaser for $20,000. The lesnltwas tbatthe people of Fred ericksburg held a mass meeting, at which resolutions disapproving the proposed sale oi tne sacreo, spoc were naopteu. .air. anep herd refused to accept the $2,500 and to make a deed for the lot. The result was a damage suit Instituted by the real estate firm in the Circuit Court at Fredericksburg. The de cision was against the plaintiffs, the Court holding that the spot containing the grave of the mother of Washington could not be the subject of a sale. This opinion will, it is believed, be substantially approved by tho Supreme Court, as this tribunal intimated to-day by refusing to hear argument. PATTIS0VS intentions. Now, note the appearance of the little Pattlson boomlet over the Rhode Island grave of Cleveland's aspirations. New York Recorder. If Pattison refuses to permit himself to be trotted out as a dark steed some of the Jockeys are going to be badly unhorsed. Philadelphia Times. Governor Pattison enjoys the distinction of not being a candidate either for first or second place on the Presidental ticket. That clears the ground a little, at any rate. New York Commercial-Advertiser. Tot: fact that Senator Wallace came ont for Pattison for President does not necessarily mean that the ex-Senator Is for the Governor first, last and all the time. It means that he is "agin" Cleveland, perhaps. Philadelphia Call. It seems to be the idea that favorite sons, such as Gray and Pattison, may pull away from the ex-President some of the more important states and that thus he may fail in the pinch to receive the expected two thirds. Washington Star. A FRiESD of Governor Pattison now announces that Pennsylvania's favorite Democratic son is not in the Presidental race. Cleveland seems to have got rid of Campbell, Russell and Pattison, but Boles, Gray, Palmer and Carlisle still think the nomination should go to a Western man. And Hill and Flower continue to saw wood. Buffalo Express. MONET WISELY EXPENDED. Great Good Accomplished by the Establish ment of Trade Schools. Brooklyn Eagle. Mr. J. Fierpont Morgan has recently made himself known in the best way by giving $500,000 to the New Tork trade schools under tho direction of Colonel Auchmuty. The object of this beneficent institution is to provide yonng, industrious and ambitions men with instruction at trlflng cost in man ual and scientific trades. The good which may be accomplished by such a scheme wisely carried ont is well nigh incalculable. What an impetus to this good work will be imparted by this liberal gift anybody can conjecture, but the real value of the act of generosity can be better estimated by those who are engaged in the undertaking. Sympathy is a warm and commendable quality, but unless it is Judiciously directed the emotion is often wasted. It might be inconsiderately nsked, why did not Mr. Mor gan spend his money in buying food and .fuel lor tne suffering poor or tne city; xnis sort of icllefis sometimes necessary, but, wnlving the question how much of this char ity might be ill-bestowed, a little reflection will show that muoh more good may be done in the way proposed by furnishing employ ment by and by, which will prevent future distress, by helping ineu to help themselves, the most fruitful of aid. ABUSES IB THE Y0SEMITE VALLEY. Their True Inwardness to Be Brought Out by an Investigation. San Francisco, April 12. Special. There is a good prospect that the facts in regard to the management of Yosemite "Valley will soon be brought to the Government's at tention, and that the valley will soon pass from under the control of the Stato Commission. Last night Captain Wood, of the Fourth Cavalry, and Special Agent Speers, of the United States land office, started for Yosemite. The captain's mission is to select a camp for his cavalry troop that will patrol the National pane surrounding tne xosemite vaney. speers' duty is to ascertain the abuses that have giown up in the valley and against which eastern and foreign tourists have com plained. Some of the principal abuses aro these: Exaction or tolls on all roads leading Into the valley, which is a heavy tax on camping par ties and travelers, allowing squatters to re tain ranches in the south w estern part of the reservation. In the valley itself abuses are numerous, but tho most flagrant abuse of the prettiest part of the valley is to grow hay for horses, and exorbitant prices are charged for-saddle norses and guides. The State Commission has winked at the very monopoly in the valley that bears heavily on tourists. Not Meant" for a First Class Missionary. Boston Herald. It is to be feared that Rev. Dr. Parkhurst of New Tork was never Intended for a first class missionary among the wicked. DEATHS HERE AND ELSEWHERE. CnARi.ES Bexnett Holt, for many years busi ness manager of the Weston, W. Vs. Republican, and brother of Dr. Holt, a leading Republican, and editor of the paper, died In PaKersburg yesterday of consumption. He will be burled at Weston. Mrs. llANNAn W. Boctelle. of Defiance. O.. Is dead, aged 101 years. Her centenary was cele brated with much ceremony on March 21, 1891. Mrs. Boutellc was married In 1312. Her husband and all bat one of her six children are dead. CnARLES O. Wells, of the Cleveland Plain dealrr, died of typhoid ferer in Cleveland Monday. He was an A mherst graduate and held the mile running championship of the Inter-Collegiate As sociation for three years. Dr. Edgar Parker, the well-known portrait painter of Boston, died at his home In Brldgewater, Mass.. Monday, aged SI years, after a painful Ill ness, which lasted two years. JOXA8 LAUEENSTEIU, an extensive screen man ufacturer of MinersTlUe, Pa,, Is dead, aged 65 years. LIFE'S BRIGHTER SIDE. A Golden Wedding Celebrated in the "East End Interest In the Free Kindergarten System Commencement Exsrclses of Trained Norses Gossip of Society.. On the 12th of April, 1842, George Berry led to the altar a famous belle, whose name was Miss Llppincott. Last evening the bride and groom of SO years ago smiled upon each other in the presence of their children and grandchildren and about a thousand friends. It is so seldom that the span of human life is extended so that a golden wedding can be celebrated that suoh an occasion is always Interesting. It was particularly so last night. Mr. and Mrs. Berry are among the most honored and prominent of Pittsburg's people, and there is not a couple in the city who have more warm friends and admirers. The reception took place in the handsome residence of Mr. and Mrs. George W. Dil wortb, on Fifth avenue, MrsDilworth being the eldest daughter ot the golden bride and groom. The house was full ot flowers. The idea of the "golden' wedding was carried ont in the floral decorations, the blossoms being generally of a golden hne. There were daffodils, yellow roses, narcissus, etc.. with all sorts of modest spring flowers, sug gesting that the spring of life can last to the end of it, provided the heart is kept young. TJio musicians were hidden in the grand re ception hall by a screen of gigantic palms at the back ot which was a lattice work in which trailing passion flowers were en twined. In the dining room the center piece was of daffodils in a basket. Below them was maiden hair fern, resting on a bed of lavender primroses. On the mantel piece were two tall vases containing yellow and white narcissus, while here and there thronghout the room were large vases of white and yellow roses. The reception room, where the bride and groom received the congratulations of their friends, was tastefully decorated. In one corner of the apartment were palms that reached nearly to the lofty celling, while among them was a vase filled with gloire de perl standing on a pedestal. The rest of the house possessed its share of the beautiful yellow and white flowers and deli cate terns, and the atmosphere was laden with the flagrance of blossoms. Messrs. A. M. and J. B. Murdoch were the decorators. There were a number of handsome toilets, too many to be described. Mrs. Berry wore a black velvet gown, with beautiful white lace. Mrs. Dllworth, the rostess, was at tired in a heliotrope silk brocade. Mrs. Childs (who was Miss Dllworth up to last November), wore her white silk wedding gown. The religious service in the horse was very simple, Rsv. Mr. Holmes, of the SUady slcle Presbyterian Church, offering a short prayer and making an appropriate address. Afterward the guests gave themselves up to enjoyment of a social nature, and it was into the morning wbon the lastoarriaze rolled away with its freight of happy vis itors. Mr. and Mrs. Berry reside at the Ken mawr. The free kindergarten system is awaken ing muoh interest in Pittsburg. It culmi nated last night In a very enthusiastic gathering at Curry University to listen to an address on the subject by Mrs. Ada M. Hughes. She was brought here through the Influence of Mrs. Cutten, who has a class of yonng women desirous of becoming kinder garten teachers. It is the intention to es tablish kindergarten schools all over the two cities. A number of places in which the schools can be conducted have been offered to the projectors of tho movement, so tnat there will be no difficulty about procuring buildings. The members of the Fourth Avenue Baptist Church, for instance, say that if a teacher can be found, tbey will open a kindergarten shool in that edifice at once. The chief difficulty is to get teachers. It takes a young woman a year to qualify for this work, and she must bo a graduate of a normal shool to bogin with. Mrs. Hughes is chairman of the international Educators' Association of Bnffa lo. Mrs. Hughes is a pleasing speaker and is thoroughlv conversant with her subject, as well as'being most enthusiastic. She gave an outline of the work of the so ciety of which she is President, and told of the great good she had accomplished by kin dergarten schools in other cities. She en couraged the people of PlttsDurg who are about to organize a society for .the estab lishment of iree kindergarten schools, and expressed the belief that Pittsburg would have a number of them before this time next year. She thought the only reason they did not exist hi this city now was that the sub ject had not oeen Drougnt up. jurs. ungues was frequently interrupted by upplause, and at the conclusion ot her remarks n bearty "vote of thanks was tendered her. It is the intention of the ladies and gentlemen act ively interested in the movementto give en tertainments and to use other means to raise money for the education of the teachers, and for neoessary expenses, such as furniture for the schools, etc. The idea i3 to take poor children off the streets and alleys, wash them and give them different views of life from those they have had. By this means it is hoped that the parents will be reached through the children, and tbat much good will result in more ways than one. The annual literary contest for the presi dent's gold medal will take placo to-morrow evening at Curry Univeisity Hall. The commencement exercises of the Training School for Nurses will take place in the chapel of the HomOBopathio Hospital to morrow evening at 8.30. Miss Wright, the superintendent, says, that she has had a great many applicants for entrance to the school who are obviously unfitted ior the work. She wants intelligent, refined women people that the sick naturally like to have around them. She says she has had women only fitted for the lowor order of domestic service call upon her In the hope of being made trained nurses. The work demands that nurses shall be ladies in every sense of the word. It is a good-paying business, and hence there are more applicants than there would be otherwise. The Holy Trinity E. C. Church, Fulton street and Center avenue, will have its an nual tea party on Easter Monday and Tuos day. This is always an enj oyable occasion. The students of King's School of Oratory gave1 a creditable entertainment at Lyceum Hall last night. Miss Kate Conway Macon was to be come the bride of Mr. Frank G. Paulson nt Orange, Va.,yesterday afternoon at 4 o'clock. Some score of Plttsburgers went to Orange to attend the ceremony. Bet. Geobge T. Pubves, D. D., made an address last night in the Grace M. P. Churoh, Sbarpsbnrg. It was the occasion of the tenth anniversary of the T. M. C. A. of 8harpsburg and Etna. BLAIR'S CHISE6E EEI1TI0XS. The objections of China to receiving ex Senator Blair as Minister were objections to our laws rather than to his personality. But this fact will have no effect on his Presi dental aspirations. Toledo Blade. Ma. BLAra can spread his facts before tho country in the press; and it is his duty as a patriotic citizen to do so if in his Judgment these disclosures would tend to the better ment of our relations with China. Phila delphia Mtcord. CoifsnEBuro that Mr. Blair is still a candi date ior Presidental honors, the administra tion is displaying a good deal of magnanim ity in taking up tho cudgels for him against the Chinese. Is it desired to send Mr. Blair abroad prior to June? Boston Herald. ' Ann now Mr. Blair wants the Senate to "investigate" the Chinese Government's rooted dislike of him, aud Incidentally to inquire the reasons for the dislike felt for him by persons in this country. Mr. Blair 1 getting to be comic New York World. It Mr. Blair feels any embarrassment over his ineligibility, from tho Chinese stand point, to be a representative of the United States in celestial climes, he can at least comfort hlmselt with the vefleotion that- he has a great deal of company. Washington Star. The New Hampshire statesman is a candi date for the Republican Presidental nomi nation, and no donbt he expects to stampede tub Minneapolis convention by making be fore that body one of his famous seven-day speeches on excluding the Chinese. The melancholy outcome, however, will be that Blair himself will be excluded. Syracuse Herald. 'One of Reld's Hankerings. Boston Globe. Whitelaw Held says he is going to retire from the world of action. We always did think he had a hankering after the Vice Presidency. COBIOUS CONDENSATIONS. A quarter of Scotland Is owned by 12 persons. The first mention of writing is found In Exodus xvli. 11. It is estimated that there are 1,300,000 Irish in Australia. A Bank of England note measures fire inches by eight inches. A man obtains hismaxlmumheight&t40 years of age, a woman at 50 years. All Fools Day is traced through every country of Europe to the Hindoos. The natives o Damascus are said to call drunken men victims of "the English disease." It cost the present Emperor ot China to get married no less a sum than tw o millions of pounds. Edinburgh "University is one of the chief medical centers in the world. It was founded In 1282. t Fleet street, London, the center of th? British newspaper world, is never lonely at any hour of tne li. The average age of the policeman is 35J years; averaro service, BJg years; average height, 5 feet 10 inches. A paper published in Greenland can boast of the longest name in existence. It is ArrangaglioUo Natinginnavnik Busaraminai Binik! Germany possesses 24,843 miles of rail ways: France, 21,393; Great Britain and Ireland, 19,811; Russia, 17,823; and Austria, 15,442 miles. In London more fires occur on Saturday than on any other day of the week, and more in August and December than In any other months. The smallest spots that we can see on the moon with the unaided eye occupy about one-twenty-fourth of Its visible area, J. e., some 150,000 square miles. In 1870 the Loudon School Board began their work with not a single school under tbelr control. In 1891 they possessed 410 schools, affording accommodation for 428,000 children. Prof. Biley, whose opportunities for observation place him among the highest authorities on the subject, estimates the loss of food crops by injurious insects alone at X 100,000,000 per annum. Burmah must be a heavenly place for women. In tbat country the members of the fair sex select their own husbands, and when they tire of them procure a divorce for the asking and marry again. The Empress of Austria lately ordered that 50,000 rose trees should be planted around the statue of Heine, to be erected on her property at Corfu, on a rock over 2,000 feet above the level of the sea. Judge "Wellhouse, of Tremont, Kan., is said to be the proprietor of the largest orchard in the world. lie has 1,078 acres in fruit trees, and it is claimed that no other grower on the face of the globe can mako a similar showing. One of the presents which is to be presented to the King and Queen of Den mark on the occasion of their golden wed ding on May 23 is a crown of gold, the gift of over 100,000 school children in Denmark, who have each contributed a penny. Earwigs diner from all other insects in both their origin and structure: they are hatched from eggs.like chickens. Naturalists often report seeing the maternal earwig with her newly hatched brood crowded under her like chickens under a hen. It is computed that if the traffic of the city of London were to be dispatched by a procession of trains, each with the engine touching the preceding guard's van, as far as Liverpool and back, tho first to return to Euston would find 214,000 persons waiting to start. In the Sahara region all the creatures assume a sandy hue, which, of. coarse, ren ders them Inconspicuous in their native home, and among the fishes, especially in thoe groups of flat forms which llo among the sand, the skin is all speckled in charac ter, like the surface on which they rest. In 1662 a royal decree of Louis XIV. authorized the establishment of a line of "twopenny-halfpenny" omnibuses, or "Car esses a cinq sous." The company had at its head tho Duke do Roanes and a braco of marquises and no lea a person than the gentle Pascal was among the shareholders. Italian-boot factories are manufacturing boots of a singular pattern. The heels and soles are not" sewn on, but riveted to the uppers in suoh a way that if the heels are worn down on one side they can bo taken off and turned round; worn soles can be re moved in the same way and new ones put on. Sir"SV. Hunter mentions a man-eater who v as Known to have killed 103 people in three years, and another, which killed an average of 80 persons a year far the same period. A third caused 13 villages to bo abandnned.and 250 square miles ot land to be thrown out of cultivation. A fonrth killed 127 persons in a year, and stopped a public road for many weeks. The Bayanzi, who live along the XTpptr Kongo, have a strange custom which makes lite a burden to the married women. Bras3 rods are welued Into great rings around the nocks of the wives. Many or these rings worn bv tho women, whose husbands are woll-to-do, weigh as much ns 30 pounds, and this burden must be carried by the wretched creatures as long as tbey live. In Italian cities the cleaning of streets is sold to the highest bidder at a public auc tion. The bidder puts every 400 yards of street in charge of one man with a hand-cart, who is kept constantly at work from sunrise to sunset nnd in the twilight At intervals largo carts go around and receive the con tents of the hand-carts. The dirt Is taken to a factory, where it is pressed into blocks of about a cubic yard in dimension. These are placed on the market, and are sold for fertil izing purposes. The first battalion of the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders (91), after seeing IS years of foreign service, have Just come home from Hongkong. The regiment is a famous one, having been formed so far back as 1794 at Stirling bv Colonel Duncan Camp bell, of Lochnell. The men werelongknown as the "Campbell Highlanders." Among tho mnny memorable events in its history are tho foundering of the Birkenhead, 44 mem bers of the regimentbelng among thedrown cd; and the fact that it was stationed at St. Helena when the body of Napoleon 1. was Temoved to Paris, and took part in the dis interment. In 1870 the "gallant 91st" were on duty at the wedding of the Marquis of Lome and Princess Louise at Windsor. BHTNKXES AND RHT3IELETS. "Is your clock on time?" "It ought to be that Is the waymyhuaoand bonglit it." Smith. Qray& Co.'t Monthly. 'lis leap year; in his lonely room The dade sits dreaming of the hour When beauty In Its bluslilng bloom Shall strive to make him feel Its power. And there he stays the while time alts And sits and waits and waits and sits. Washington Star. Interviewer Who is your favorite char acterln history? Great Man Well er yon see he hasn't been written up as yet. New TorkEveninj San. "What is your husband doing now?" 'Nothing. He has been appointed to an office." Sew lork Prat. In his tin cup the blind man a button had found. And he sighed as he felt its smooth face. While a tear dimmed his eye as he murmured, "Oh. 3e On th' man wot has acted so base I" Then a bright Idea struck him and he glanced swiftly 'round. Climbed on to the scales, and for pay Dropped the bat. in the slot. like the Arab of old. As he "silently stole" a weight Judge "Papa," inquired the little boy, "how big a hailstone did you ever see?" I've seen hailstones," replied Deacon Iron sides, with animation, "as big as-a blg-nol This Is Sunday I Bead another page of yer cate chism, Samuel VCMeaso tribune. Ethel Dick, my new bonnet cost 575. Dick (taking her in his arms)-Ethel. my dear dear Ethel. Brooklyn Eagle. So many years ago she burst in bloom, And still tne parent stem her beauties tax. She seems a flower that fates unkindly doom Never to wane, bat evermore be wax. Sew lork Herald. Magistrate I must commit you, for you have no means of support. Prisoner-Bat I work for s Uvlng. your honor. "Ha, ha! What do you work atr "Iwork everybody I can, your tenor. " Detroit Free Press. ! lx&A'Me&i ".-: r&'J' J".' ill m lilliii hi i iTwrlltffrri