" -8BMRsBBBBBMWPffHg!HflffWlffl y . f"h'n ?v 'tps? cv ' "' , JHfqrw rvjwe i&iv mi1 " TF"ffyi)rvyTrcH8BBflHBBBBMl - - THE PITTSBURG- DISPATCH. SUITDAT. MAT 22. 1892. 15 A REVIEW OF SPORTS. The Good "Work of Anson's Team and the lessons It Teaches Other CItids. PEMAKT KACE FEATURES. Haltere Pertaining to the Local Ball Clnb and Burns' Engagement DB. SHEEADT AND J. L. SULLIYAK. Fred Johnson's Arrival and the Excellent Impression Hade by Ilim. ever there is a time when kind word are of more good than at another. It is when they are spoken to friends in trouble. Bv all means don't let ns tear our hair out because our baseball team have suffered a few defeats. TEE GODDARD 1XD 1TAULIFFE FIGHT There has not been much of an exciting nature in baseball this week. Rain has again had much to do In the way of pre venting games and keeping down the at tendance, hut despite the bad weather the patronage bestowed on the games has been exceedingly good, particularly in Pitts burg. One of the features in the pennant race during the week has been the iorm displayed by the Chicago team. Anson and his colts are jnst now about as good as they will be this season. They are playing first-class ball and it is not too much to expect that they will land very near the top in the race for the first pen nant. Much credit is due to Anson for the heroic manner in which he has pulled his team togelher. They setoutby meeting de feat after defeat and many people under the circumstances would have been making all kinds of chances. He did no such thing, but --tuck to his men and the club owners of course stuck to him a-id as a result the team stenped out of the unfortunate rut nicy iinu gotten into. in mis mere is a leson for the directorate of other clubs. Experience has shown that these chances arc in the majority of cases not very profi table. I have often thought tint the desire for chances in the Pittsburg club has been a little too strong. There is nothing like giving an honest and capable man a good try. The Boston team continue to hold a good lead in the race and thev are likely to con tinue to win more cames than they lose. Some misfortune will have to befall them if they lo not win the pennant, although ILc Brooklyn team are now showing up in jrrcat strengh. Ward has fully demonstrated lhat he has an excellent team of players mid after all there is not much difference between his team and the Bostons. Thd Louisville team are out of the con test as ;ar as first place or anywhere near it is concerned. Their flash-in-the-pan vic tories have subsided and now they are com jnratively weak. Our friend Jones, of Homestead, is no longer a terror, judging lioin his recent efforts, and altogether the Colonels are poorly off for pitchers. There lis been nothing special among the other teams. Cleveland continues to play a clean arti steady game and the Xew York's are ini proviuc. The Phillies are still out of con dition and the l.altimorcs are playing much belter than they did. Loon: Rail Clnb Misfortnnrg. Like Ii eland, our local baseball club is hardly ever clear of trouble and difficulties. Jut as rccular as the season comes, misfor tune ooner or later environs the club. No matter how encouraging or how successful iin- iram may start our, me evil lales are always in waiting for it and catch it just as mrc as such a thing as trouble is in the "norld. This is all very disheartening, particu larly to.those gentlemen who are connected v itli the club and who have been at so much expense and trouble in ttying to make and keep things light. Certainlv there is no disorganization in the club, but a series of defeats of the team have brought very black clouds ovcrhea 1. Three consec utive de:cats are what have caused the trouble. Host assuredly there is hardly unvihing that makes us all so discontented, so disheartened and very often so deaf to reason as defeat after" defeat Anybodv who has the least interest in baseball" soon becomes disgruntled by an over-supply of defeats of his iavorite team; indeed, this discontentment about defeats is the great proof of the interest that is taken in the game. I would give little for a man's in terest in the came who would never grumble, rant and rave when his favorite team were beaten time alter time. It is our prerogative to grumble, and, depend upon it, these honest grumblings often do pood, as they result in setting our mind at rest. Bnt if we'll only stop at a legitimate grumble thincs will be all right It is when ue oxersiep the crumbling line and begin to abusp everybody that it brings liarm. and real I v there is no necessity tor It. During the last few davs I have h'eard many people call our baseball plavers and everybody connected with the club some very hard names, simply because the team Lave lost a few games in succession. Xov, really, theie is no reason for this particu larly, because it cannot do any good. I ad mire game losers, aud a game'loser doesn't deaf in abuse u hen everybod v is trving his best to win. But he will investigate the causes of defeat and set himself to work to make remedies w hen he has found defects. 1 lie .Ml Are in Earnest. In speaking of our baseball club, there is one thing which wc must not lose sieht of, viz, that everybodv connected with it is in earnest Every player on the team is doin ins utmost to be victorious, and a.ter an excellent start they have reached a point where it seems almost impossible for them to do anything but make mistakes, in fact, some of the best players on the team have recently comraiUe.f some of the most egregious errors. Now, these players can not Sor their lives tell vou how these mis takes were made, and certain it is that nobody on earth was more surprised the committal of those errors than The Efforts to Sign Tommy Bnrns. A few straight defeats have caused the directorate of the local club to make one more strong effort to sign Tommy Burns. Up to present writing nothing definite has been done; that is Burns has not really signed a contract His demands are sweeping. He wants to be assured of a three-vears' position no matter how things go. The local club di rectors may consent to this, but if they do, they will simply be doing what very few other people would. The demand of Burns is unreasonable, to say the least of it What in the world has he done to make him so important? He is not able to play, and as to looking after players he has had precious little experience. I know that opinions are that he is a "brainy" man, but his record ought to be one of deeds before he asks for an iron-clad agreement for three years. I am aware that it was reported that Man ager Buckcnberger was to be released. Prob ably there were good grounds tor such re port and iudcinc from what Anson said when here I think there were. But Presi dent Temple, of the local club, assured me the other day that he had no notion what ever of releasing Mr. Bnckenberger. Mr. Temple said: "On my honor as a gentleman I have en gaged Buckenberger to manage our team and he will certainly remain with us." "Well, this sets at rest all report and con jectures on that point and as one patron of the club I am very glad ol it Jfor the lite of me I cannot see what reason there is for anybody to even think of releasing Mr. Buckenberger. Ifa few defeats form the only reasons, then the Philadelphia clnb have a stronger reason to discharge the vet eran Harry Wright There are, indeed, many rays of hope for the success of the team yet Better batting must come, because such good hitters as are on the team cannot continue long at the bottom of the list The team is certainly shaky as far as pitchers are concerned, but if Woodcock fulfills expectations he will add considerable strength to that depart ment, 'lie has made a very good impres sion, but we'll wait and see'more of him be fore saying anything more about his merits. An Interesting Local Feature. Now and again it is quite interesting to talk about any public personages or char acters, whether they be mixed up with our amusements or recreation as with the more serious items of life. So far as the local baseball season has progressed patrons of the came wiU have observed one of the noisiest and one of the most original men just under the entrance gate ot the ball grounds. He sells score cards and his name is Harry Stevens, and it is unnecessary Jor me to mention his name to any Pittsburg crank because no man enters the ball grounds without having occasion to ask: "What do they call that man selling the score ctrds." "Really, I have heard that question asked scoresof times. Well, our mutual friend Stevens is a base ball character, and I question whether he has an equal in his business, and I really take pleasure in putting myself on record on this point. Nobody is more re liable; nobody is more humorous, and cer tainly Blaine is not more eloquent, particu larly when Mr. Stevens dashes offa perora tion ending with something about the score card being the "alpha and omega of all that pertainsto the game." AVeli, after all.mcn of the kind named are very pleasing fea tures at a ball game and thev are useful when like Mr. Stevens, they ieep the spec tators informed un to date as to the score and all changes that may take place among the players. Judge Morrow's Brooklyn Victory. One of the great events of the week just ended has been the victorv.of Judce Mor row in the Brooklyn Handicap. It is a long time since there was such general interest centered in an American turf event as there was in that of Monday last. The national I enthusiasm concerning the event certainlv goes to show that the popularity of runuing races is greatlr on the increase. There seems to be ,a widespread opinion that the victory of Morrow was a surprise, rfailtosee it. True it was a surprise to many of the talent, but surely if the bet ting quotations are to be taken as a guide it wasn't much of a surprise. The awful de feat of Longstreet was a surprise sure enough and only goes to confirm what I said last Sunday about barking horses in big handicaps down to about 2 to 1 or even money. But how the victory of Judge Morrow could be a surprise at all I fail to see, because some time ago ho was backed down from 30 to 1 to 5 to 1. That means that a very large amount of public money was invested on him. and his starting price was about 6to L Surely that figure does not look as if few people did not expect him to win. The truth is that he was well backed, the price being such that the public were induced to speculate on him. The race was a good one, and doubtless the terrific pace set by Fairview ruineJ the chances of Russell and Longstreet The pace was desperate, and as it turned out was just the thing for Judge Morrow and Pessara. Little "Major" Covington had a deal to do with the victory of Morrow, and his eflort at the finish stamps him as one of the very best of the lightweight jockies. It is also worthy of note that had the Board of Pontrol not placed an embargo on such horses as Judge Morrow running at Gutten burg during the winter he probably would have been an absolute wreck by this time. He was almost ruined last season bv con tinual racing and many people wondered that the horse held ont as he did. The winter's rest has done him considerable good, and his owner may now know that he is worth taking care ot He defeated some great race horses and on a track that was not very bad. Doubtless, we'll hear from the Judgo again. at these very players themselves, and these extremely surprising mistakes have of late often been made just when our pitchers were in better iorm than they have ever been. Take many of the games that Bald win has pitched for instance. Time and time acain he has pitched the most wonder ful kind ot ball, and still has been beaten because of mistakes being made that nobody cyer dreamt of. The game Woodcock pitch-d and Wednesday's game were also instances of what 1 mean. Nobody can tell me that the pUying of the team on these occasions was thcirrcgular standard of play. It was no mch thine, and was simply the consequence of the players being extraor dinarily out of form. True it i that weak hitting is another delect that has brought about our trouble some defects, but 1 alwajs claim that club officials are no more responsible lor the poor hitting of a man than they are for his inability to sprint faster than Harrv Hutchius. Each pJaver will have to culti vate his own hi'tinc. and. rlpr.pnd imnn it fclf-interest will prompt him to do the best he can on that point Well, then, let us look at the situation fairly and generously. "We have seen that everybody is doing the best he can, and when that is being done, of what use is it to burl oil' abueV I am sure the officials of the club don t descneit, for if ever men worked hue Trojans lor success thev are doin- it now. The players don't deserve it, because whatever some of their short comings may be no team in the baseball business arcmore anxious to win than they aic All this being so, would it not be bet ter to give the unfortunates encouragement instead of adding to their iniscrv and dis comfiture by administering more ticks? If Good News for Sullivan's rriendi. A day or two ago readers of The Dis patch would see a Dr. Shready's state ment that John L. Sullivan is in perfect health, extraordinarily strong and able to knock any man out on earth. This ought to settle all differences of opinion as to the outcome of the proposed battle h'rr John L. and James J. It may be that in a few days we'll have some other doctor mot. ing affidavit to the eflect that James J. Cor bett is physically the most wonderfully made man that history has known, not even excepting S.tmson, and that the "said James J. Corbett is able to knock any two men.out that can be produced on earth." Why I say this is because there would be just as much reason for the one as the other. These doctor's examinations are entirely tor effect and advertising and were never heard tell of until the show business was a feat ure. I mean they were never heard tell of in the way they are now. Bnt when wc are told that Dr. Shready or Shrady, says that "with the fat off his stomach" Sullivan will be in excellent con dition, falsehoods are cither beine told about the doctor, or else he knows.as much about "excellent condition" as a cow does about the history of the moon. Such state ments are absolutely ridiculous, and are made lor swindling purposes. Many of ns saw Sullivan when he was here, and most certainly any of us who know anything at all about a man being in condition to fi"ht know very well that John L. VM jnai respects tremendously over weight And let me remark here that if he is gotten into as good condition to meet Corbett as he was when he fought Kilrain he will be luekv. He was not in "excellent condition" when he met Kilrain, as his vomiting in the ring proves. Why there is such a irent.ro l h; to conceal the shortcomings of John L. Sul livan and exaggerate his good qualities I don't exactly know. One tiling I do know, that such scheming is an imposition on his admirers and the public generally. If an extraordinary amount of work is not needed to put Sullivan into a sound enough con dition to continue an active pugilistic con test, under Queentberry rules, lor CO or 90 minutes then I am free to admit that I know nothing about boxing or anything that per tains to it I have known pugilists whose flesh.felt as hard as desirable, but who were considerably overweight and sadly out of condition. The hard&css of their flesh led many -to believe that they -were all right, but that hard substance was simply hardened fat; whisky fat or something like that It wasn'tmuscle; on the contrary, the mnscle was injured by it A man in this condition, no matter how well he may look, cannot last. His wind soon goes and his muscles soon get weak. Any old and practical man will tell you this. Nothing but hard work, and plenty of it, will remove the injurious substance. The old timers knew this and it was because of the honest work they did that they were able to be such remarkable stayers in the prize ring. The Arrival of Fred Johnson. A very interesting event of the week, as far as pugilism is concerned, has been the arrival of Fred Johnson in this country, the feather-weight champion of England. He comes here to fight our unbeaten champion, George Dixon. It is two years since I saw Johnson, and according to pub lished descriptions of him since his arrival here he must Tiave developed a little physically. When I last saw him he did not impress me as being very strong, bnt I am aeeni nim a very clever little. leilow. If he has thickened, so much the better. He comes here with an excellent record and he is to meet an opponent who also has had a remarkable career. It is much too soon to say anything about the proposed battle. There will be opportunity to learn much before the con test takes place. But one thing I wish to state at present is that Johnson is quite a hitter. He may not be as powerful as some of his class but he is effective and can reach a mark with wonderful aim. He has de feated tolerably good men out of his class, notably Stanton Abbott, who is to fight Austin Gibbons. The proposed battle between the little champions is sure to be one of very great interest Both lads are sure to be well backed, as thev contest is sure to bring to the surface leelings of nationality. The Battle Between Jackson and Slavln. After a lot of changes and conferences, the date of the Jackson and Slavin 20-round contest has been fixed tor to-morrow week. Decoration Day, or rather in the evening of that day. At present I have little or nothing to add to what I said last week re garding the contest I still favor the chances of Slavln. There was a well defined rumor last week that the battle would not take place before the National Club.owingto thestraincd rela tionshin between Slavin and the manager of the club. But it seems as if all had been fixed up. Charley Mitchell is to be one of' Slavin's seconds and that ought to quiet these all wise people who have persisted tor a year or more in having an unbridgeable breach be tween Slavin a'nd Mitchell. I have known all along that there was no serious differ ences between the two and I know exactly what was the cause of their two or three little differences, which never amounted to very much. But many people have so sig nally failed to "best" Charley Mitch ell after trying for many years, that they lose no opportunity of trying to injure him either by true or false report Another BIc .Australian Among Us. Joe Goddard, "The Barrier Terror," is now fairly located on American soil and has had the honor of talking to newspaper re porters. If reports from San Francisco are true Goddard has made a very good impres ion there since hi! arrival. But the funny thing is that after telling of the good im pression the reports go on to state that the odds are on Joe McAuliffe for the fight be tween the pair. Now what I would like to know is: If a big man like Goddard makes a good im- Sression as a fighter, why all the odds in etting should be on a man like McAuliffe defeating him. If he as a heavy-weight pugilist cannot defeat JoeMcAulifle he had better remained in Australia. Much has been said for .and against Goddard, hut I am induced to think that he is a more ef fective fighter than many people think he is. He is a better man than Choynski and that is sufficient in my judgment to esti mate him as a better man than Joe Mc Auliffe. Mark, I am not coming to any definite conclusion on the point just now. I will defer that until later. What I want to point out at present, is that it is probable that the odds offered, or alleged to be offered on McAuliffe is only a "bluS" to create a greater interest in the contest. I know full well that anybody who could succeed in betting 4 to 6 on Goddard just now would be a very wise man to bet U, and on a big scale. True.the Australian is not a clever man. In reading accounts of some of his battles I have found that out clearly, but he is one of those customers who will not indulge in sparring, and tries to prevent his opponent from doinc so also. It needs a very powerful hitter to knock him back, and, big as Joe McAuliffe is, I do not think be is able to keep knocking the Barrier strongman out of the way. They are to fight in the latter part of next'month. The Difficulty With Fitzsimmons. It is somewhat difficult to tell what Rob ert Fitzsimmons will do or what he in tends to do. One day Robert seem" quite contifnt to do anything, and the next day he declareshimself in quite another way. A week or so ago he stated he was eager to ngnttiem naii.in any shape or form. Hall disappeared, and then Fitzsimmons de clared himself willing to fight Ted Pritch ard, the Enclishman. Now he won't fight Pritchard if the latter fights O'Brien. As things go in modern time pugilism Mr. F. is probably right in declining to meet Pritchard except under certain condi tions. If the latter were to be beaten by O'Brien there would not be much of what is now termed glory for the Australian in meeting a beaten man. But as has been suggested, why can't Fitzsimmons be per fectly willing to meet the winner of the Pritchard and O'Brien battle? I venture to say that the winner of that contest will give Fitzsimmons all the fighting he wants, and it may be a little more. There is still another difficulty and that is on the part of Pritchard. He has experi enced a desire to fight Hall before coming to America, and, if that programme is car ried out, then we may give up all hope of seeing a fight between Fitzsimmons and anybody else for a long time. This will be a pity, because really Fitzsimmons has not been tested by a nrst-rate man of his class yet We all must admit that he is a good pugilist, but it would be more satisfactory to everybody if he was in front of a real tip topper in a finish contest IToine Park.Sprinc Kics Mertlnjr. Secretary McCracken, of the Horaewood Driving Park, tells me that he expects the spring races on the Homewood track will be of" a very interesting kind. Certainly if hard work will make the meeting a good one it will be one of the best because Mr. McCracken has, indeed, labored very ener getically in making arrangements lor the meeting. The latter will open on Decora tion Day, to-morrow week, and a large number of horses are expected to take part in the five days' racing. There is a good list of local horses and it is to be expected that there will be some very promising youngsters among the locals. It is somewhat of 'a venture to have five days of racing in spring time, but the track officials think the venture will be a success ful one. I trust it will. The relusal of the License Court to grant a liquor license to the Park club-house is a hard blow to the association. If that relusal makes matters any better than they have been in the past I will, indeed, be surprised. If a license had been granted I am confident that the arrangements made by the track officials to carry on the business in an absolutely re spectable way would have been carriedf ont to the letter. It cannot be helped now, and I suppose that those interested will just have to do the best they can. I anticipate some very good racing at Homewood this year, and it will be well it it is profitably patronized by the public. Pbingle. MUSCLE IN COLLEGE. Walter C. Dohm's Forecast of the Contests for Neit Saturday. THINKS HARVARD A SURE WINNER Fortj roints in Reach With Tale, Prince ton and Columbia After. RECORD OF THE MEN 6N THE LISTS Peter Vredenburg. rwriTTEN ron THE PISPATCn.1 Nearly COO students, representing more than a score of the leading colleges and uni versities of the country, have been entered for the 14 contests in run ning, walking, leaping, weight throwing and bi cycling that will be decided at the seventeenth annual c h a mpion ship meeting of the In tercollegiate Asso- sociation of Amateur Athletes of America, to be held at Manhattan Field, New York, next week Saturday. Each man who is to compete has been training for this particular event as only a college man will train. He will go in to win. And if he sees he can't win, he will work just as hard for second place. And if another slips in between himself and the winner, he will struggle almost to the last gasp for the third prize. After all it is the thirds that win the championships. Har vard won two years ago on her third prizes; and last year a single place prize, lost by Yale to Princeton, would have transposed the blue and the orange and black. I have seen college athletes in an ecstaey of de light over the bronze medal given to third man. It is the keen competition for the places that makes the inter-collegiates the most interesting and exciting games ot the year. The O'd Champions Are Gone. As far as individual winners are concerned, the uncertainty as to results of the various events is probably greater than ever before. Cary, of Princeton; AVilliaras ami Ryder, of Yale; Finley and Lee, of HarvardjVic tor Mapes, of Columbia, and Shattuck, of Amherst, have been graduated or have re tired. In consequence, the 100, 220 and 440 yard dashes, the hurdle races and the broad jumping, vaulting and weight-throwing competitions have been transferred from the column of "stfre things" to the list ot open events. Fearing, ot Harvard, in fact, seems the only certain winner. Judging by his recent performances Fearing is likely to win la both the high jump and the lew hurdles. For the team chamnionshin everything looks crimson and Harvard will win as she pleases. A first place counts 5 pointj, a second 2 and a third 1. Of the 112 points to be divided among the score of colleges, Harvard is likely to score more than 40. For second place, Princeton and Yale seem to have nearly equal chances. Yale has carried over one championship from last year, and Columbia will be represented by a champion of 1899 and another of 189L Princeton has no prize winner, but more place men of last year's team than the other two together." Columbia will be fourth. Amherst and the University of Pennsylvania will fight for fifth place. The Probabilities in the Sprlntn. Spectators at the championship meeting will not see a Sherrill or a Cary in the EM I f I'ictorlal Ian;riie. It is told of James Nasmyth, the famous engineer, that, when he was traveling in Sweden, where he knew not one word of the language, and where his English was as little understood, he used to order his dinner at the inn by drawing in h:s sketchbook whatever" he wanted. For example, he would draw a table covered witB a cloth, and a cooked fowl, smoking hot7 upon it, with vegetables, bread, cheese, salt, and anything else a pressing appetite might suggest as desirable. .c3ttBb4LU lLif awjC sprints, and on this account they will wit ness more exciting races than have been seen for years.except- lng lHSftlj wnen these two great "cracks" raced against each other. The fastest sprinters this yearare Vredenburg and Swain, of Princeton, Harding, of Colum bia, Swayne and Al len, of Yale, BIoss, Cook and Hawes, of Harvard, and Rnley, of Amherst Then there is Connell's "unknown," who will probably do as' well as most of the "un knowns" who are credited with ten second form. Early in the season it seemed that Vre denburg would win II' . hnyM. both dashes. He is a remarkably strong runner and comes at the finish with" a rush that has beaten such men as Downs, Jewett and Remington. He can run an unlimited number of heats without tiriug, and lhis will give him an advantage over the others. Recently, however, he has been running in poor form. Swain, of Princeton, who fin ished next to Vredenburg last year, and Swayne. of Yale, are the likeliest of the others, though Allen is doing fast work at 220 yards. The Harvard men are alwavs dangerous. And the Yale men, under the coaching of "Mike" Murphy, who is back at New Haven, may also furnish a surprise. For the Longer Itaces. W. H. Wright, of Harvard, and Roddy, of Princeton, if both are in good condition, vill make a close race in the quarter-mile dash. Wright, in previous trials, has run the distance in 50 seconds. Roddy, two years ago, was beaten by a" yard in 50 2-5 seconds. Since that time Roddy has run poorly, but he may have trained into his old form again. A large field of new men will also start in this race. Ot these the best are McCampbell, Black and iiroKaw, 01 I'rinceton; Merrill and Bingham, of Harvard, and Glenny, Collins and Beardsley, of Yale. Brofcaw is, I think, the fastest of the lot. He is a dark horse that will'bear watching. Brokaw has run in better than 52 seconds this spring. Wright, however, will probably finish first Probably the best races of the day will be the half mile and one mile runs. In the half such men as f. B. Wright, Jr., of Yale. T. B. Turner, of Princeton, and Cor bin and White, of Harvard, will meet Wright won the championship last year at this distance in 1:59 1-5. White has a rec ord of 2:00 1-5. Turner has shown his speed by.defeatiug W. C Dows at GOO yards, and his endurance by winning prizes iti one aft ernoon in qnartcr, half-mile and 1,000-yard races. The inter-collegiate record is 1:57 1-5. Frank Lee will run well for the University of Pennsylvania, but will probably find himself outclassed. There will be a score of new men in the race. The Winner In tho Mile Bace. The mile race is even more open than the half. Harvard will be represented by a strong trio in Carr, Nichols and Lowell. Whitney will run for Columbia, Wood bridge lor Princeton, and A. C Williams and scoville for Yale. Carr is last year's champion. He won the race in tour min utes 34 2-5 seconds. Two weeks before Nichols had won the mile run at the Harvard-Yale meeting in four minutes 35 1-5 seconds on a very heavy track really, a better performance than Nichol's. Lowell holds the Harvard record, having run a mile in four minutes 34 1-5 seconds. AVhit ney, Woodbridge and Williams have each done performances equal to four minutes 36 seconds, or be ter. I fancy Lowell for firsf place, with Nichols second. Columbia's men still think Collis will win the one-mile walk. Gregg, of Amherst, who wen easily two years ago, is again on the track, and is in good form. R. S. Hale, who holds the Harvard record, may repre sent Cornell this year, but in that case is not likely to be in such good condition as he was 'while at Cambridge. Borchcrling l-iiftllfnaaililni" and Ottley, a strong pair, will wear the orange and black of Princeton. Borcher ling, by reason of his victory in fast time over Collis, is now the favorite. The Columbia man was not in his best form two weeks ago," however, and may turn the tables on the Princetonians. Hale and Gregg are very unsteady walkers. The Miscellaneous Contests. Columbia has also an excellent chance to score in the .hurdle races. Harding, who will wear the blue and white, will be very likely to be bothered by the numberot heats, if he attempts to run in both the sprints and hurdles. Lyman, of Yale, who beat Fear ing for third place over the high hurdles last year, has improved so much since then that he has an excel lent chance to win. Van Ingen is another Yale man, who is clear- TT. W. Greg!. ing the "sticks" weih Fearing will undoubtedly win the low hurdle race the 220 yard. There should be a great race for the place between Hor ton, of Cornell, and the Yale and Columbia men. Ramsdell, of Princeton, gave great promise early in the season of developing into a champion. He took up baseball, however, and this has, in a great measure, spoiled his chances. It seems a foregone conclusion that Har vard will this year win all three places in the two-mile bicycle race. Pratt, P. Davis and Hawes outclass the other competitors. Davis should finish first Harvard has also a good chance to win the broad jump with either Hale, Green or Bloss. Pell will jump for Columbia and Remsdell for Princeton. The last named is one of the best jumpers in America, but has not trained for the event regularly this5 year. i'ell 13 last year s inter-scholastic champion. He seems a sure point winner this year. Bl;h Jnmplne and Taaltinc In the high jump Howard will again come tothe front with Fearing, Green and Sher win. The three are lik'ely to finish in the order named. Sill, of Princeton, has a chance for third. Sherwin, besides scoring points in the high jump, is the favorite for the pole vault. Last vear he cleared 10 feet Clinches. He will'probably fight it out with Cortwright, of Yale, who has a record of 10 feet 6 inches. The hammer, like most of the other events, will also probably go where it went last year to Harvard. Evins took sec ond place to Finlay last year when the latter broke the intercollegiate record. Evins is throwing the ham mer even farther this spring than he did then. Princeton has a number of heavy football men practicing for this event The shot-putting competition will probably he won by one of the hammer-throwers; Evins, Beveridge and Lyman have chances in tne order named. To sum up, it seems that the individual competition this year will be more exciting than in 189L It is not- probable, however, that so many records will be broken. The one mile wa'lk, two mile bicycle race, the high jump and pole vault records may be lowered. Harvard will score more than 40 points; Yale should be second, with close to 30; Princeton may score about 24, and Colombia will be doing well to get a dozen. Walter C Dohm. EXILED TO AMAZONIA. Consul Kerbey Has a Talk With the Victims or Brazil's President. THEY MADE A. JOLLY SHIPLOAD. A Lot of Cadets Acted as Guards and I.nxir ries Were Abundant. PEIXOTTO IS A FIRST-CLASS CZAE rCORnESPON-DESCE or THE PISPATCH.l Para, April 26. It may appear far fetched to compare the Czar of Russia, whose subjects live nearest to the North Pole, with the acting President of the new Brazilian Republic, whose warm-blooded citizens swelter in the tropics, yet it is a 'difference of latitude and longitude rather than degrees or decrees of despotism. The Czar of all the Russians, by divine right, by n simple imperial decree, banishes to the foreign wilds of Siberia those of his sub jects who may, by the fateful process of evo ution, become so far advanced in their education as to be "thorns in his Imperial crown." The acting Vice President of the Republic of Brazil, Florianna Peixotto. an army officer, who abetted his predecessor, Deodora Fonseca, in the military and naval conspiracy, which overthrew the late Em peror Dom Pedro II.", and, who in turn, subsequently seated himself in the chair, has recently, by a simple manifesto, ban ished to the Upper Amazon in the equator, an inhospitable and desolate frontier, as distant from Rio de Janeiro as is St Peters burg from Siberia, 22 of the'most cultivated as well as the most prominent personages of Brazil, simply and only for politi cal offenses, or because they ventured to express publicly opinions differ ing from him, or to respectfully criticise in the newspaper his official acts of usurpation. THE LADY CYCLEE3 Wore TTell Represented at the E. G. W. Ban Last Tuesday Kyentn;. The East End Gym t Wheelmen had a splendid run Tuesday evening. Twenty eight gentlemen and ten ladies were in the party. Captain Culbertson lead them over a circuitous route through the East End, making a run of oyer ten miles. This is the first run attended bv the ladies, and the iboys declare that to be a most charming leaiure 01 tne event All tne ladies who were in the run Tuesday, evening are now enrolled as members and will be expected to attend the majority of the meetings. Quite a number of other l'dies are expected to become members soon. Another run will be had Wednesday evening of this week. As soon as the country roads become good a longer run will be had. Notes of the Three A's. Jomr B. Wade, a new member, is training for the mile run. The club field meeting -will be given on Saturday, June It Entries will be announced shortly. Charles H. Petticord, who is among tha new members, is President of the Allegheny cyclers. The date for holding tho spring meeting has been chanced by the Athletic Commit tee from July 4 to July 2. Great progress has been made with the work on tho grounds, and with fair weather all parts of them will be ready the first of the week. At tho last meeting of tho Membership Committee the following persons were elected: Charles Wharron, Jr., Louis Wit derhold, Jr., William A. Carr, John Ander son, F. K. Alexander, Paul Beer, A. M. El liott, Austin G. Nicola. Charles II. Petticord, Herman G. Veeder. Edward G. Caughey, C. E. Middleton. William T. McCulIoush. finn. Irwin Holdshlp, Samuel W. Black, Tom Pat terson, 1'iestou C. Farrar, James 5. Cooke and V. II. Hall; also several ladies. FOUND INSIDE OF TREES, Toads and Fro;s Itoleased by the Opera tions of the Woodchoppers. Tid Bits.: In some strangely shaped fossil trees ac cidentally dug out of a stone quarry were found treasured up the petrified-looking bodies of reptiles, birds, bats, and such small deer which had thus been honored by preservation in. massive mausoleums. When cutting open the trunk of an elm, a live toad was found lying concealed about three feet from the root It skipped away very alertly, yet, we are told, no tree was more sound, nor could any aperture be dis covered through which the little captive could have penetrated. It is supposed that the spawn trom which it originated must have accidentally been treasured up in the tree from the tirst moment ot its vegeta tion. In like manner, while some men were' squaring the trunk of an oak they had" just felled, they suddenly started, back in astonishment on seeing an hideous frog, about the size of a large pullet's egg, en crusted in the tree, tour inches in from the bark and 15 feet from the root. Though mangled by the ax, the creature still moved, but it appeared old, thin and de crepit As in other cases, a careful examin ation revealed no entrance to its prison house. A HIGH HAWAIIAN CHIEFIESS, She Founded the Karaoliomjlm School or Trchnolosy for the Sandwich Isles. New York Evening Sun. J Bcrnice Pauhi, high chieftess, was the great-granddaughter of Kamehameha the Great and Italnntopon. These are not mem bers of the circle of Greek mythology, but Hawaiian dignitaries. Bernice married Charles R. Bishop, of Massachusetts, an early settler of the Sandwich Islands. When she died in 1884, and being childless, she devoted a laree portion of her wealth to founding the Kamehameha School of Tech nology, which gives instruction in the arts, trades and sciences to native Hawaiian youths. Recently two large buildings have been added, -one of which is a museum of ar chaeology and ethnology of these islands, and in them has been placed the inheri tance of tools, implements for hunting and fishing, warlike apparatus and objects for ceremonious occasions which have come down in the royaisuccessiontoMrs. Bishop. A correspondent, Frederick L. Stearns, speaks highly of their ethnological value, and points ont that it is the only instance where a people have themselves preserved the relics of their savage and primitive life. I ' ' inWflilMrfrri if ifyii Who Pelxotto'a Victim Are. All of the banished are Republicans and were prominent in their early adhesion to Fonseca. Among them are distinguished field marshals and Generals of the Brazilian army, a rear admiral of the navy, the de posed Governors of the States of Ceara and Amazonas, who were elected by their States, and who did not approve of the usurpation of a Vice President who seated himself, a Senator and three members elected to the National Congress, editors of daily papers, professors of colleges, a doctor and a dentist, a capitalist who is reputed to be the wealthiest man in Brazil, banker, a manager of a large corporation, and others. The cable will have conveyed to the' out side world only that portion of this story that has met with the approval of their Re publican dictator's censor at Rio de Janeiro. As the Amazon is 15 days nearer to America (bv mail) than Rio, I take this opportunity afforded by the outgoing Booth line steamer to outline a few facts that have come under my personal observation. There came to anchor at Para, which is near the mouth of the Amazon, yesterday, en route to the headwaters, the laree steam ship Pernambuco, of the Lloyd Brazileiro line, which had been seized or pressed into service as a Government transport to con vey these political prisoners and their fam ilies over the 3,000 miles of ocean voyage and 2,000 miles more of river transportation to their destination on the frontiers of Peru and Venezuela on the sunrise side of the Andes, which are as far west in Amazonia as are the Sierra Kevadas in our own land. On Board the Prison Boat. Through the kind offices of s couple of Brazilian friends I was, as a special favor, permitted to go on board the transport, and I availed mvself of thar opportunity to in terview the exiles. Thevesselhad anchored some distance, from the city, almost under the guns of the old fort add close by a Bra zilian warship. Fortified with an official permit and accompanied by Senhors Cher mont, a lawyer and a popular gentleman of influence, a brother of the late Governor and Secretary of State, and Sr. Watrin, who is a member of the Assembly and a supporter of the present Government, we were ushered on board without question. The Pernambuco is a large Clyde built modern ship, well arranged with ele gant saloons, comfortable rooms, extensive promenade decks, etc Whatever else may be said tending to create a contrary opinion, it must be conceded that the first impres sion made upon the visitor was that the passengers were a jollyparty bound on a select excursion, rather than that of a cargo of exiles en route to distant points of ban ishment The ship was in charge of a Brazilian naval office, though the regular captain and crew sailed her as usual An Amnslns Military Guard. In addition to this ship's complement of men, there was an armed military guard numbering 140, composed ot youngsters in gorgeous uniforms, oldercadetsfrom the Rio Military School to the number of 23. It is said there were 15 officers for the 23 cadets. Some of them wore canes and all wore im mense cuffs and collars. There was nothing in the bearing of the cadets that would, at all indicate the presence of any prisoners on board. Prisoners and soldiers mixed pro miscuously. The boys in their bright uni forms, sitting on the guard rails like college boys on a fence, chatted as only Brazilians can chatter, to the younger of the exiles who seemed to be quite amused and laughed merrily over the chaffing about their being sent to a place whereants were as numerous as grains of sand, moqueens on every blade of grass, mosquitos in clouds, and fevers always in the air. There were scattered about in the cabins or lounging about on deck old men and old ladies, one pretty girl of 16, and some that were not pretty, mothers and children, and in two instances nursing babies. Many wives of the exiles had, like the Siberians, chosen to follow into banishment their hus bands. There were colored servant girls, waiting on their masters and mistresses, dis tinguished looking men, silently promenad ing alone on the upper deck, who had pre ferred to be separated from their families rather than permit them to risk the priva tions ot their exile. A Hero Grizzled bj Age. , The table was well supplied with good food, around which officers, privates and prisoners gathered in a social way and drank warm beer together. 1 talked for a long time with a most interesting Brazilian, a veteran of years, and of distinguished ser vice in all the wars of Brazil, who was tremulous with age, and in any country would have been letired with honor lor the good he had already done his country, rather than cruelly exiled because as a patriot he would not be a witness to the usurpations of the President without raising his voice in respectful protest. This was Field Marshal Rarrctto, who is now a Senator-elect, but, without regard to the exemptions accorded to law makers, was roused from bed before laylight.sent aboard a ship and is now en route to exile. Prob ably among the lot there are none who ap pear to suffer or to feel more keenly the degradation than this old hero, but like a soldier, he bears i'jsilently and uncomplain ingly. The prote.3 that he seemed to em phasize most was his disgust with the Presi dent for putting him and his fellow officers of high rank under the guard of a second lieutenant and a lot of cadets. It is gener ally conceded mong Brazilians and even with the prisoners, that if the offense charged against them as military officers, i.e.,of having foundeda conspiracy werejust they deserve puuishment, and they think that a military execution would be more preferable than this banishment to a living graveyard. Ihry Do Not Admit An OfT-nse. But they all assert positively that there was no attempt at a revolution, that they had simply, as citizens, given expression to their respectful protests against usurpation. tfaJcTi wiirf r utebtejtjl This is a question of veracity or a fact that will not now be settled, as the President, by his summary ejectment of the cnlprits, has put them bevond the possibility of making any legal defense by an open trial, by court-martial or otherwise, and their story is first told to the world in these lines, through an American paper. Perhaps the most striking face was that of Jose Carlos de Carvalho, capitao tenente, a distinguished ex-naval officer, who has for some years been well and favorably known as the "gerente." or manager of the corporations controlling the immense tropeches or docks of the grand harbor of the capital city of Rio de Janeiro. In per sonal appearance he somewhat resembles Mr. Talmage. He courteously and unob trusively walked up aud down the deck with me, carelessly dresed in pajamas and slippers, talking freely but as conserva tively as a college professor about the gen eral condition of affairs in his conntry. This gentleman thoroughly understands the situation in Urazil. and his views as ex pressed herein may be accepted as those of a pessimist He says: Arrested for Favoring a Democracy. "I do not know why I was arrested. It was iiStimated that the action was taken be cause of my supposed influence with the mass of people employed about the docks.who will soon be called upon to vote for a legal successor to the present acting President I was given no notice whatever of the in tended arrest, and not permitted to make any defense. I did nothing illegally or secretly, but published my opinions as others did acainst the acts of the President in deposing the Governors of States, and re spectfully suggested that he should make provision for an election for President by the people. "You know," continued the Senhor Car valho, "that neither Deodora Fonseca nor the present Vice, Florianna Peixotto. were elected by the people. Our Provisional Congress elected them to serve until such time as arrangements could be perfected for a proper election by the people, and now that Deodora Fonseca is out, we think that the question of a successor should be left to the people, and the place not pre-empted, as yonwould say, by a Vice, to fill out the un expired term. The Congress, it is believed, will pass laws authorizing an election. There is generally a motive for every act, and one.need not look very far to discover what prompts the present Government to arrest members of Congress who are opposed to his usurpation or to discredit and to banish men who may be able, in a reputa ble way. to exerciseany influence on the voters who are to be sent to Congress." A Pensimistlc View of lSrazi'. It is well known that Sr. Carvalho took command of a gunboat at a critical venture. and assisted the present Peixotto by oppos ing Deodora's attempt to dissolve the Con gress so that it cannot be charged that he is influenced by any intrigue with Deodora's friends. The Senhor Carvalho is a gentle man of few words, which he expresses in a straightforward, business-like manner, very unusual in the indifferent easy-going Brazilian, and quite refreshing to a news seeker. In answer to the remark that if these military and naval officers were guilty of conspiracy, they deserve severe punish ment, he replied tersely: "To begin with, then, the President Peixotto should be the first to suffer, as he is the first and head conspirator against the Empire; secondly, against his leader, Deodora, and, thirdly, against the people. "Our people," he continued pensively. "have no proper conception of a republic." Then using his fingers to illustrate Jhese five propositions, he further remarked. "First, we have no political education; sec ond, we have not even republican ideas; third, we have not enough patriotism; fourth, there is too much personality and mercenary feeling; fifth, I am a Naval offi cer, but strenuously contend that the mili tary and navy should be subordinate to the civil. There is no discipline in our army and navy. All our troubles come from this source, and will continue until wo reduce the army to a peace footing, as it is with your army, and then put the belligerent ones on the frontier. They are the ones who should go out there-instead of the peo ple yon see on board this ship." Governors Anions the Exiles. The Governor of the State of Ceara, situ ated on the north coast, is a well-known Brazilian, who had been President of an Amazonian Province bv appointment of the late Emperor Dom Pedro IL He was a Republican au rigeur, but because he de clined to surrender his office to the arbi trary demands of Peixotto's appointee, and resisted the attempt to violently depose him, his palace was shelled for some hours by a gunboat, and himself made a prisoner and sent to Rio, where he was released. but subsequently arrested and now exiled. The late Governor of the State of Ama zonas, who made such a gallant resistance to the demands for his office, compelling the naval force and the appointee of the Presi dent to retire discomfitted, but who subse quently yielded, as he said, to prevent bloodshed, is also a prisoner en route to the frontier. There are among these exiles three of the most distinguished editors of Rio: Antonio Joaquin Bandairo, of A'ovidades; Jose Carlos do Patriocino, Cidada do Hio, and Carlos Pardal Madeiros de Mallet, Medacta do Combate. These gentlemen are amonir the jolliest of the prisoners, and evidently con sider their exile as a sort of a threat on the part of the President, of which he will s6on repent They expect to be pardoned before they reach their destination. This seems to be the general expectation, but it is liable to be delayed until after the election. AN EL'ECTKIC METER. Simple Principle Upon Which the Amount of Current Is Measured. ASSISTANCE FOR TEE SCULPTOB. An Underground Conduit of Xon-Conduct-in Haterials Is Jfeeded. IHPORTAXCE OP IJGIITIXG IX WAB I WBITTEX FOR THE DISPATCH. Many people find it difficult to conceive how electricity can be measured. The pro cess is not hard to comprehend. In an or dinary Edison meter two compartments will be found, in the upper of which is a thin piece of German silver running across in a zigzag line. In the lower compartment, separated from the upper by a bar, which is part of the castiron construction of tho meter, is a spool of copper wire and a bottle. The bottle contains two pieces of zinc, separated by a piece of rubber. These thrca things constitute the meter. The principle underlying the measure ment of electricity is that of electro plating. This is done by means of an elec tric battery, a piece of copper being placed in the battery on the positive pole or wire, and the object to be plated being placed on the negative wire. The action of the cur rent eats away the copper from the positive wire and deposits it on the article fastened to the opposite wire. In the electric lighfr meter two pieces of zinc are used. On the chemical purity of this zinc the accuracy of the measurement depends. These two pieces of zinc are separated by rubber and joined by rubber bolts, so that they may be near each other and still not allow' of the inter-passage of the current One piece represents the positive pole, the other the negative. The more electricity passes through these pieces of zinc the more zinc will be transferred from the positive to the negative pole, so that if enough cur rent be used in course of time all the zinc will be on one pole. This is is the princi ple ot nieasunnc electv'city. After the pieces of zinc have been used for some time one will weigh more than the other, and the amount of the customer's bill is exactly in proportion to this difference in weight, which is arrived at with mathematic3l"ex- actitnde. Bnt if the bottle were all that was used in the measurement of the current it would require a bottle of immense size to measure the electricity used in the average residence or store, and the consumption of zinc would be enormous. Here the piece of German silver comes in useful. This piece of metal is called .a shunt, because it shunts off most of the electricity.and prevents it from going through the bottle. This strip of metal is so accurately adjusted that it takes just 999 parts of electricity to one that passes throngh the bottle. The current from the electric light wire, before it goes to the lamps, passes throngh the meter; here the one-thousandth part passes through the bottle with its pieces of zinc, the rest being shunted of through the German silver. The weishins of the zinc plate is a very- delicate operation. The bottles are col lected by the agent of the electric light company, the pieces of zinc are separated, and the negative piece is carefully washed and hung up to dry. After this theirrecord is looked up, and the operator knows to a millegramme how much each piece of zino weighed before it left the works and was put in the meter. The zinc is weighed on mo3t delicate scales, and the difference in weight is noted down. The decrease in weight is multiplied by a figure known as the constant, and the result is the bill of the consumer in dollars and cents. Before the weighing is begun every door and win dow is closed, although the operation is carried on in an inside room. The least movement in the air would add several hundred dollars to some consumer's bilL The Richest Man In Brazil. Perhaps one of the most interesting as well as entertaining characters among the prisoners is that ot an Enclishman, long a citizen of Brazil, the well-known Count Leopoldina. He is not at all an adventurer, but is a well-born and bred gentleman, bear ing a genuine title from the King of Portu gal. In appearance he is the opposite of the' average Brazileiro, round, ruddy and jolly. He is reported to be the wealthiest man in Brazil, yet when I talked with him yester day he wore a shabby seersucker suit and soiled linen, although in his shirt front were studs worth thousands, and his cuff buttons would have paid his way out of any prison. He sent on shore a diamond ring for deposit, valued at $15,000, and ordered any quantity of champagne for the excur sion. This gentleman was formerly known as a clerk in Para, named Henrique Lowndes. who was without any means beyond his meager salary. -Ha failed in some business ventures here, and went to Rio several years ago. Though lame and not at all handsome in personal appearance, he mar ried a beautiful and accomplished lady who had a fortune, which he has by judicious management increased until he is now the recognized leading speculator in Rio. The Count suggests as a remedy, first to elect by the people a President who is a Civilian. This President must call to his Cabinet members of the former monarchial government, who are recognized at home and abroad as honorable and competent men, who can manage finances successfully. This would establish confidence all over the world, and exchange would soon advance. J. Out ok" Kerbey. Electric I.I;h tins In Tim e of TVmr. The immense advantage of the prompti tude with which powerful electrio lights can now be installed in commanding posi tions was exemplified in the recent Civil War in Chile. An electrician was sent ont to Chile by a French firm of electrical en gineers in charge of an electric light and power plant for the Santiago Exhibition. Jnst as the exhibition was about to close the Civil War broke out, and one Sun day morning the electrician received a telegram from the Minister of the Interior at Valparaiso order ing him to betake himself immedi ately to that city. On arriving the electri cian" was told to install, without delay, at Fort Boreas a projector which would com mand the Bay of Valparaiso. After an hour's search in the arsenal a Siemens pro jector was unearthed. A 12-horse power threshing machine engine was then bor rowed and a dynamo was brought up from the exhibition at Santiago (140 miles dis tant) by special train, together with a sup ply of posts and wires. Thirty-two hours after the receipt of the telegram the plank was at work. It ran well for six months nntil the projector was blown to pieces by a shell. Search IJghts Versus Torpedo Boit. It is stated that one of the most effective means of protecting a ship in these days of torpedoes, the grouping together of a num ber of stationary search lights, each illumi nating its own section so that the ship is surrounded by an unbroken circle of light, is to be adopted in the new American war ships. This has been suggested by a very pronounced defect in the usual search light practice. In order to afford sufficient time for a careful examination of the water's sur face at points removed from the ship, the beam of light must be revolved very slowly, and hence during a great portion of the time any particular section of the water is left in darkness. As it takes only fi7e min utes for a torpedo boat to run a distance of two miles', it will be seen that the condi tions are all in favor of the attacking force. Before the revolution of the search light is completed there is plenty of time for the torpedo boat to run up and discharge her deadly weapons. A. Suggestion for Electrical Conduits. W. H. Preece, who is well-known la England as the electrician in charge of the Government postal telegraph service, in writing on the retardation due to iron pipes, comments on the tendency of engineers to put wires in iron pipes underground, to secure safety from wind and snow. This is done at the expense of effectiv eness, and long lines of iron piping will probably be death to fast speed telegraphy. Of course, in telephony iron piping is seriously detrimental to single wire working, but then no one would now dream of using any but the metallic circuit sys tem in any underground work. Bat Mr. Preece offers for the serious consideration' of electrical engineers another point He says: "May not wood or earthenware or cement replace iron as a conduit for elec trical conductors, and be made equally effective lor the mechanical and economical point of view? There is no doubt that this question will presently be answered by the production of a conduit that will entirely supersede the iron pipe, which now is the nearest appliance to the hand of the en gineer." Carrlnc Stone by Electricity. The elaborate stonework which adorns the exterior of some of oar finest buildings public and private, is the result of slow and tedious working by hand. The carving of stone can now be done in less than halt the time formerly occupied by the use of an electrical reciprocating tool. This can be regulated to strike a series of blows at any speed and with any degree ot force, and thus the physical labor hitherto necessary is done away" with. The instrument is also coming into use in the studios of sculptors, who arc much hampered by the material restrictions involved in the working out of their ideas. J.he sculptor can now devote his entire attention to the lines the instru ment is to follow, and the cutting of the marble is done far more rapidly and accur ately than it would have been by muscular power. Salaries of English Governors. The salaries paid to Colonial Governors are worth recalling. Bermuda, with 15,000 parti-colored inhabitants, and 2,000 acres under cultivation, pays $15,000; Jamaica subsidizes to the tune of 530,000; Feejee, with its handful of white settlers, pays its Governor ?25,000 a year; and British Guiana has a Governor", $25,000, a Lieu tenant Governor at ?;o00, and an ad ministrative entourage, whose collective pay is elope upon 5100,000 a year, its total revenue being considerably' under 500,000. 1 ..i.'itfi'tfihngfiin ilium 1 1 -