- - MMB1MMIM. .vs.. - - ' ?L2atasss?HrBHl'HHM""isssssB COWBOYSJT WORK, A Eonnd-Up Day With the Picturesque Herders of the Northern Eange. CUTTING OUT TEE CATTLE The High Art of Catching and Brand ins a Yearling Steer. HOW HE MAKES USE OP HIS TOICE. Minute Description of the Beds Made intlw Open Meadows. DETERMINING OWNERSHIP OP OALTES nvKixi'EN- for rat disfatch.1 The Northern Eange is the Western stockmen's name for a large area of the grazing country in the colder Rocky Moun tain region. The area comprises Idaho and Wyoming, with adjoining strips of Northern Utah and Colorado, the western ends ot Ne braskaand Dakota,and the whole of Southern Montana. It contains more square miles than France; "Wyoming alone is larger than New York and Pennsylvania combined. The aggregate population of this great stamping ground ior cattle is not more than 350,000. Within its limits but one town Cheyenne can count as many as 10,000 in habitants. 'J.he development of the general resources of the range has hardly yet begun. Of all its productions, seven-tenths move on hoofs. Its actual governing power has for 15 years been the "Wyoming Stock growers' Association, under whose advice CUTTING OCT itocfc laws have been passed by the Legisla tures and under whose control the stock saen's herds have been annually gathered in. Given 200,000 unfenced square miles of the earth's surface, on which range at will 2,090,000 head of cattle, the property of thousands of men, and how may each owner garner his own harvest of beef? This is the grazier's problem on the Northern Eange. The round-up begins about the middle of June, often with mud, wet grass and freezing nights, to add to the other miseries of the tenderfoot then breaking in ei cowboy life. licupment of a Ifound-Up Party. The many round-up parties are numbered, and each has its own territory to look alter. In one round-up party may be 150 men; in another not more than 50." Each party has Kioreman, wiinmo or tnree assistants, in charge of general work, a ranch foreman having control only when working in his own herd with his own men. In a party of a 100 men perhaps SO will be in the em ploy of 12 to 20 of the nearest ranch owners. The rest of the partr. coining in ones and twos from more distant ranches, are on hand ' to look out for cattle far from home, it being j an ordinary thing to hnd strays 200 miles or even more from where they were turned loose the year before. To every 10 to 12 men in a party are a mess wagon and a cook. A cowboy on the round-up has a string of six to nine ponies, the men of each mess usual lv holding their animals together and tak ing turns at night herding. The day's routine of a round-up party at work on the range is, first, gathering cattle; second, separating them according to own ership; third, branding calves. As early as 3 a. sl the call "Roll out!" Is passed "through the camp. The night herders have already driven the ponies in ciose at hand. The cowboys, hastily rolling up their bedding and throwing it on the & -WkJU '.-,.' jXS-l tv- am BRANDING wagons, go in among the rcstles ponies and select their firn mounts. The sleepy cooks btir themselves preparing breakfast. Can'p fires are in a few minutes fiVhing red lights in the misty gray of the early dawn; cow bovs are here and there wrestling with t hvingand buckingbronchos; some men, try in:: to bridle up, are flying about at the end ot a lariat like the tail boy in crack-the-whip: others, in the saddle, are tossing up and down in the air with the motions of a bounding lootbalL Tli Itoatinn ot a Day" Work. Camp has awakened noisily, and the racket goes on until the riders stt off. The skirmish and scramble of saddling up over, the men shout and clatter during their hasty snack, and then off the troop of riders po. Camp is in a moment as still asagravc jard, no one left but the cooks. They are Catherine scattered tin cups and plates, and in itttnng imprecations at the careless cow brvs, u hone the cooks' province to growl. The loreman, leading the troop, makes di-ect for a point 10 or 15 miles from camp, tellmzotl men right and left by the way, so ill -.posing of them, up ravines and over piauaus, a3 to cover the grazing ground to be i.rked over during the day. Each man, thus pien his duty, goes ofl as far as some niuu'al dividing line between ranges a high dnidt, a mountain, a marsh, a sand wane or a s-trcam. Returning from these outfits, tic riders conjointly scourapor tio:i n . mir.ry into which outside cattle are not l.kelv soon to wander. The rendezvous Is ui.aliv at a spot about midway between camp and t'.e furthest point reached by the niost a'Hanced post ot the party. The conbov's drive-in is at times rich in ad Ttniu'c T'ie cattle, meekly obeying droiers' calls such as "Whoop-ee!" "Git along'" 'Hay-ho!" head the way they are diiven. B.it antelope, gopher, deer, and o'Ciionally catamount, bear and buffalo vav t'nipt the cowboy to turn sportsman lor the passing hour. A bout noon all the cattle on the day's ground- are gathered. They are held by inoun ed cunbois in herds numbering 200 or 3U" ea"ii Meantime the pony herds hae bicn diiven up. The tired little fel lows that have been ridden on the long morning's hunt are unsaddled and new mounts aie taken by the men. The Procrs of Cuttlns Ont. The reparation of a general herd of cattle Juto herds by ownership is called "cutting out." With grown-up and branded animals the task of lendering his property to each etockmnn interested is easy enough, but in the case of young calves ownership is often h a & kh. --,V -x5. VJ JL, ,y ft ". J "v-' . 1 W 4 i.l 4 1(1 Vifcsir-&" l &JZ&Yk$ f tosri 1 a nice matter to decide. When a herd is undisturbed a calf usually runs at the side ot its mother, and as she is driven out of the bunch the little one follows her. But ifan unbranded calf is tonnd estray the question of whose it is cannot be answered positively. In such cases it is customary to award the calf the "maverick," so called froma ranch owner in Texas who abandoned all his cattle on the ranee to the owner of the largest female herd in the locality. In cutting out, experienced cowboys ride slowly into a general herd, and, selecting an animal of a certain brand, gently drive it out to the guard line of mounted cow boys, where it is taken in charge by an awaiting horseman and driven to a spot a few hundreds yardi away. There, as the beginning of a herd of its brand, it is held by another cowboy. The men riding in among the general herds proceed quietly, having care to avoid a stampede When, however, a youusr steer has been urged to the edge of a bunch of cattle he is olten sufficiently excited to 6tart out on the prairie on a gallop lor liberty, and before heading him oti the cowboy in charge of him mar have a wild dash for a mile or more in pursuit. So the work proceeds, the gen eral herds dissolving, the individual herds gradually enlarging, until the former disap pear. Branding KotSIachots Snap. Cutting out finished, the round-up party disperses lor the day. The branded cattle on their home range, excepting cows with calves, are turned adrift. Estrays are held in a separate bunch from day today, and when something of a herd belonging in one localitv is collected thev are started oil in charged some men to where they belong. The bunch of cows with calves of each sep arate ownership are taken in charge by the cowboys of the firm interested, and are driven toward camp, which the cooks have moved up near the rendezvous. It is now well along in the afternoon, and all hands are glad to fortify themselves with dinner. Branding is rough and tedious work. If done in the open it is especially difficult, ropes then being necessary in handling the calves. In such a case a man rides up toward the calf to be branded, and looping up his long pony tether, skillfully throws one end of it as a noose either over the head or about a hind foot of the lively little ani mal as it trots or gallops away. On feeling the rope the calf increases its speed. The sWJSygfc3fcc-3a. 'SeBa33SSg! atfVflE3?3S5sS- AND HOPING. cowboy then winds the hand end of the rope about the pommel of his saddle, the pony braces itself, the rope is stretched straight, and the calf falls. A second cowboy hurries up, nooses the calf at the head if it has been caught by a foot, or vice versa, quickly btretches his rope taut, and the animal, with head and one foot stretched as lar apart as possible, is unable to rise. Checking a Calf Willi tlis Itope. A calf six months old is no toy to play with. Wnen caught it viciously humps and kiclrs, and then scurries awav, raising a dust like a small whirlwind. The saga cious pony to which it is attached gallops after for 6ome distance, but at a slightly slower speed. When the rope, gradually straightening, is nearly straight, the pony suddenly veers sidewise, leans off, plants his hoofs firmly and receives the shock. At the cruel check the calf leaps upward, flops over, a riddle in heels, head and tail, perhaps turning a somersault while in the air, and drops as if shot. While it is held down by the two long ropes of the lariatcrs, a cowboy afoot ap proaches the calf and, twisting his helpless front feet under its stretched neck, sits on its head. Another man then squats on its hind legs. Next the brander runs up from the fire armed with a Ions rod, on the red hot end of which are welded the letters or signs forming the trade mark of the owner. The brand, applied on the lelt haunch of the calf, and sometimes over the ribs as well, sends up a cloud of vapor from fried fat, while there is 3n odor of scorched hair and burnt mutton chop. The calf's ears are also slit or clipped in a form common to its herd. It is then released. The Music or the Meadows. The bellowing of a calf while in the brander's clutches furnishes the cowboy's fancy with a wealth of descriptive compari sons. When the calf is a tender little fel low, only a few weeks in this cruel world, it seems plaintively to petition its tormentors A STEER. to have mercy because of its helplessness. It is so young, so weak, so tinv, so innocent why give it pain? It can but weep and pipe a tremulous, treble, lamb-like "B-a-a-a-ah!" iCot so the toughened year ling. He i3 a courageous, domineering buck, a rising warrior among the grazing herd. When the hated rone that curtails his liberty tightens about his head or leg, he vents a defiant bellow that echoes over the rolling plains and off among the foot hills. His freedom, that never felt halter, is being assailed. He is now apt to lower horns and rush madly toward his captor, whose pony is only too willing to obey spur and scurry aside from the young monarch of the meadow. When, however, the bud ding bull is roughly checked in his mad careening by the lariat of the second cow boy thrown from behind, he roars in impo tent rage and mortification. Recklessly hurling himself about, seeking vainlv to escape, he is now vehemently blatant. Thrown down, he bawls his defeat to the very heavens. Under the ignominy of hav ing its head sat upon by his ungenerous enemy, his sonorous lamentations, uttered in prolonged swells and cadences, proclaim the fallen hero. An Expression of the Wane of Dignity. His powerful baritone.at first masterfully clear, changes in timbre until it is hoarse, and then guttural, and at length wheezy. It sinks on in depth to a tragedian's whii per, and finally to a gladiator's dying groan. Lying prostrate, burned, cut, bleeding, his eyes a fire, he convulsively and faintly breathes desperation, but vengeance, too. However, released and all over, the great calf rises, blinks, shakes himself, with un steady steps walks away, and halting a quarter of a mile off, stands wilted, silently viewing the distant blue hilltops and chew ing the cud of steer philosophy, his woes already half forgotten. The work on one grazing ground is simi lar to that on all others. When two round up parties meet a mutual transfer is made of estray cattle belonging to ranches further ahead on the route of eacli. The main pur 3oses of the general spring round-up are the branding of calves and the restoration of estrays to their owners. AVith this work accomplished, every cattle raiser of the range is in possession of his hoof prop erty, branding signifying possession, and his animals are dotting the plains as near his rauch as the open range system of graz ing permits. When on the general roundup the cowboy lingers but briefly about the evening camp- L l i.Ji. I it VcSSS wtz t TTtrn t- - i :.m. " " , ' ' ' ' ' '" " .---. THE fire. He is mindful of the morrow's early start and lone stent. In the first month of j the roundup the nights are cold; all summer i long they are cooL now mo coirboy maicei uu isen. Preparing one's bed is something of a job. All hands," save perhaps the pampered cooks, sleep on the ground; a fe,w men have tents, many lie out in the open, under the starrvvault In going to bed the cowboy who knows how first smooths with a shovel n Vit of ground the size of a mattress, dig ging away the earth in a spot or two to con form with the curves of his body. He first lays a full size rubber blanket on the ground, lining upward. Over this he spreads a piece of heavy waterproof canvas, more than twice the "size of the rubber blanket Next, and even with the upper ends of his canvas and rubber blanket, he unfolds his woolen blanket, or, if he is rich. blankets. His overcoat and whatever cloth ing he takes off, if any, he folds for a pil low. Walking now to the foot of his great piece of canvas, he turns it up over the blankets and pillow, lapping it beyond them a loot or two at the head. Then he tucks in each side of the canvas above the rubber blanket, but under the rest of the bed, until the edges of the canvas meet Xastily, he works his wav jieet foremost from the top into his big improvised sack. If it is freezing weather, he tucks the overlap at the head of his bed down underneath the pillow. In there, tired, drv, warm, snug, in a moment he is asleep like a dog, not to awaken until morning. Before dawn a good kick from a kindly night herder carries to his understanding the fact thit the order has been issued to roll out and greet the coming day. Cowboys Do Mot Get Xtlch. What ranch life oilers to the cowboy is fresh air, canned food, outdoor exercise, a seat on a bucking horse, some little opportunity- for hunting, and perhaps an occa sional chance to act as target for an un tamed man's gun. Earelv does speedily ac quired fortune await the cowboy. After the harrowing experience of branding day the current ot the steer's life runs monot onously. Man interferes only to drive him back to his owner's range should he rove too far away. The elements, albeit cruelly testing his hardiness in winter, are for the most part not too much for his robust con stitution. The only event of importance after his birth except the dread ordeal of branding awaits him in a Chicago slaughter house when a bntcher looks him in the eye. After the general roundup, and until the approach of cold weather, the ranch force is kept at work on the home range rounffing up beef cattle for shipment The shipping season is at its height in September. The marketing of the cattle includes for the men a spell ot hard work in gathering beeves, a long drive of the herd to be sold to a rail road town and its shipment in cattle cars. Some of the cowboys then ride in a caboose to Chicago, a journey ot 1,000 to 1,500 miles, caring for the cattle closely packed in the cars on the way. Winter on a ranch is the dull season. Once in a while the cowboys may be dis patched out in a snow storm to turn back cattle drifting helplessly before the ever driving northwest wind, or they may have to pick up young calves from the range and carry them to the stable to save their lives, But much of the time the men sit in the bunk house, a wood fire roaring in the open chimney place.mending and making bridles, saddles and knickknacks, or losing small fortunes at cards. J. W. Sullivan. K0-AI CALLING F0S HEK SHOE. A Cnrloas Chinese Legend About the Cut in; or a Bis BelL Pearson's Weekly. 1 When the bell tower of Pckin was built the Emperor Yung-lo, of the Ming dynasty, ordered a great mandarin, named Kuan-yu, to cast a bell big enough for such a noble edifice. Time affer time Kuan-yu and the expert workmen in the country tried to cast a bell and failed; the casting was always honeycombed, and the Emperor said that if there was one more failure Kuan-yu's head should pay the forfeit for it Kow, Kuan-yu had a daughter, a beautiful girl of 1G, named Ko-ai; she went to a certain astrologer and asked the cause of her father's failure. Some demon, she was informed, required the blood of a maiden to be mixed with the metal, and unless this was done the next casting would fail, like the previous ones. Ko-ai got permission from her father to be present at the casting; and amid the dead silence which prevailed when the taps were drawn, and the molten stream poured down into the mould, a shriek was heard, and, crying out, "For my father!" Ko-ai threw herself into the seething metal. One of the workmen tried to seize her, but suc ceeded in getting hold only of a shoe. The father was taken home a raving madman, bet the bell was perfect in make and tone, and, when struck, its sonorous boom is to this day followed by a low, wailing sound, like the cry of a woman in agony, and when people hear it, they say: "There's Ko-ai calling for her shoe!" riQUEES ABE FUNST THINGS. Stranje Tricks That Can Be Flayed With Some Tfamerals. Pearson's TTceklv.l Figures are funny things. They may be manipulated in a most mysterious ana mar velous manner, so as to entirely deceive the uninitiated: but when we get at the naked truth we find them very simple. Of course, we do not refer to ladies' figures, but to com mon or garden numerals. Strange tricks may be played with figures again we refer to numerals as amusing and perplex ing as with those time-honored and indis pensable conjuror's confederates packs of playing cards. In most of these the figure nine is the most important factor. There are some peculiarities about this little bullet-headed gentleman which arc reallv startling. He has a jihoonix-like power of raising himself from nis ashes. Smother him up as you like, multiply him by any group of his fellow figures, un til his identity is completely lost, and he will bob up again, it not in shape, at least in spirit nay, substance as the sum of the result obtained by the process of multi plication. Thu3 twice 9 are 18; add the 1 and the 8 together and you get 9. So for example, 17 nines are 153, which added to gether, make 9, or 133 nines makes 1,242, and thus he pops up again in different form, but the same self-assertive little chap. The only exception is when applied to 11 or multiples of 11, when the little joker comes in pairs, as witness the following 33 nines giving 297, etc. TWO AHIMALS AT A SHOT. One Was a Panther and the Other a Deer Which Be Had Attacked. A friend of mine who lives In one of the wildest portions of Northern California came into town last week to purchase food supplies, says a writer in Forest and Stream. When down he always has something inter esting to say about his life in the wilds. He tilled 11 bears and 10 panthers last winter, and it was not much of a season lor wild animals cither. Once on his rounds (for he is on the range looking after his sheep every day with rifle and dogs), he saw a deer act ing in a queer manner. Being where he could see and not be seen, my friend quietly awaited developments. The deer was look ing in a certain direction, evidently very much frightened. On looking around my friend saw a pan ther coming from an entirely different direc tion, but seeming to throw its voice so as to deceive the frightened deer. All the time it kept getting nearer and nearer. At last being near enough it gave a leap, landing on the deer and gave it its death blow. Then the time came for mjr friend to interfere and he did so by drawing a bead and hitting his mark "dead-center,' thus getting two animals for one shot I must not forget to state that they were both so poor that it did not pay to save their pelts. PITTSBURG DISPATCH, A MM OF NATIONS On the Silver Question la the Onlj Practicable Solution. WE SHOULD STOP ALL COINING. This Would Farce Europe to Take ft of llntuil Advantage. Step AN AEGUMEHT FEOH BANKER CLEWS tWBITTZy FOB TITS DISrATCH.1 Of all current public questions, I know of none that so vitally affects the future of our financial interests as this one what shall be the status of silver among the world's currencies? At the present time about one half of the world's metallic money consists of silver and the other half of gold. It is clear that silver cannot maintain its neces sary function as money unless it is invested with stability of exchangeable value. Such stability it cannot possess without the in-, tcrvention of a conventional arrangement, which, with all the force of a uniform law, make a given weight of silver virtually ex changeable for a given weight of gold. This principle once established, and silver bullion being made convertible into silver coin at the Mints of the chief nations on demand, it follows that the bullion value of silver must constantly conform closely to its value as coin, and the stability of the value of silver coin would thus be insured. The difficulty has been that, owing to petty jealousies and prejudices, governments have hesitated to act with the unanimity that is necessary to an efficient conventional arrangement Each one has preferred that others should take the responsibility of free coinage and the result has been that unre stricted coinage has been adopted only by those nations which happened to be most imperatively committed to the necessity of protecting their silver circulation. Silver in the Latin Union. Those nations were comprised in the inte national combination known as "The Latin Union." That union was found competent to take care of all the new supplies of sil ver, so long as the principle of free coinage was maintained and the value of the metal was kept uniform under its operation. In an evil hour, however, certain German theorists persuaded Chancellor Bismarck to commit Germany to the demonetization of silver. The large supply of the metal there by suddenly thrown into the mints of the Union nations alarmed the combination, first, into a limitation of their coinage of silver, and finally, into a suspension of it The coinage demand for silver being thus shut off, the price of silver bullion was cut loose from the relative legal valuation be tween silver coin and gold, and was left to drift with the variations in the commercial demand, and to decline in consequence of an excess of supply over demand. This is a brief explanation of the causes of the present depreciation in the value of silver. I know of no way of re pairing the value of that metal other than by establishing an international union sim ilar in its objects and conditions to the now virtually defunct Latin Union, but embrac ing a wider range of Governments than that combination did, the co-operation ot the United States, England and Germany being especially important Possibly existing stocks of gold in Europe and America might be sufficient to serve the purposes of banking reserves and for transmission in the international exchanges; "but it is impracticable to use such a valu able metal to the extent required for the purposes of active circulation, and this creates a necessity for a silver legal tender coin for the retail transactions ot business. For this reason I regard the use of silver, co-ordinately with gold, as an indispensable element in the world's currency. A Uniform Valno of Bullion. I regard an international union as abso lutely necessary for maintaining the joint use of gold and silver, if the relative value between those metals is to be maintained. 'If a uniform value of silver were adopted by members of such a unin, and if the Mint of each Nation were bound to coin all silver brought to it, and the coins were made a legal tender, it appears to me that this would establish a uniform value for silver bullion the world over, on a parity with the legal valuation ot silver com; and this conventional value of bullion would be preserved as long as the union should be continued. Even the limited international arrangement known as the Latin Union sufficed to keep silver at about 60 pence per ounce, until its members, taking frieht by the demonetization of silver by Ger many, slopped the coinage of silver; when, the conventional support being withdrawn and the coinage demand suspended, bullion fell to its value as a mere commodity. This shows how effective the union principle is and what becomes of silver without it If an international union were to 'fix the value of the two metals at 15 weights of silver to one of gold, the rate now general in Europe, and the members of the union were compelled to coin it on demand at that rate, then the free convertibility of bullion into coin would necessarily make the coin and the bullion of equal value, except the slight difference that might arise lrom coin age charges, which is tantamount to making silver worth about 60 pence an ounce, or its former value. In view of the differences of opinion in Europe on the standard question and the strong prejudices in England in favor of the gold standard, it appears to me more than doubtful whether any step will be taken on this subject until those countries are made to carry the burden of the large surplus of silver that we are now coining. But with 25,000,000 to 30,000,000 of bullion of our silver going thither every year, the effect would be so serious upon Asiatic trade and upon the immense silver circulation of the Latin nations that it seems certain they would soon become willing to assume their share in restoring silver. At any rate, it is a proper and necessary compulsion for us to apply. Gold Drlftlnc Toward a Premium. The Government is very closely threat ened with a suspension ot gold payments, if the coinage is continued. We have already seen a point at which the Treasury had to negotiate with banks for six millions of gold to avert that catastrophe; and it is only a thin margin of a very few millions that separates us from such a condition all the time. Ot course, if the Government sus pended coin payments gold would be apt to go to an indefinite premium; with the con sequence of a rush ot greenbacks into the Treasury for redemption and a depreciation ot such paper as is redeemable in silver to the purchasing power of that coin. In mv view these dangers are much nearer than fs generally supposed, and it is a most unjusti fiable policy that needlessly perpetuates this state ot things. For the reasons already given I regard the suspension of the coinage of the silver dol lars as to the last d egree imperative. And the suspension should be both total and un conditional. Either a partial or temporary suspension would fail equally to avert the home dangers with which we are threatened, and to bring about that European action which is indispensable to a sound and per manent settlement of the question. So long as there is no efficient conven tional arrangement for maintaining the value of silver, no nation can safely con tinue its coinage, because, in so doing, it is increasing its stock of currency, the future value of which cannot be depended upon, and which might easily become a source of em harassment and injustice between citizen and citizen, between doctor and creditor. In our country, however, such was the political influence ot the silver producing States that they easily induced Congress to order the coinage of not less than 21,000, 000 per annum of standard silver dollars. The effect of this has been, undoubtedly, to check the decline in silver bullion, but at SUNDAY, MAT 22.' the expense of the artificial addition already off230,000,000of badly depreciated lezal tender to our circulating medium. Our whole currency system has thus been viti ated; for 5680.000,000 of paper money may be redeemed in silver: and we are thus ex posed to the gravest dangers in the event of anything causing an important drain of gold to Europe. "VFe Didn't Need the Extra Coin. That the coin thus issued was not really needed for purposes of circulation is dem onstrated by the fact that it has been found impossible to get more than one-third of it into circulation. In order to obviate this difficulty, various devices have been intro duced for keeping the coin in the Treasury ana issuing against it paper certificates of small denomination. The most ingenious of these contrivances was the one proposed by Hon. A. J. Warner, of Ohio, and pressed on the Government for its indorsement Mr. Warner's measure virtually concedes that the coinage of the silver dollar has already been carried to a point that threat ens serious danger to our currency system. It first proposes to discontinue the cur rent monthly coinage of silver dollars re quired under the existing "Bland act" Second, this Warner measure providefl that in lieu of such coinage holders of silver bull ion may deposit it to anv amount in the United'States Treasury, the Government to issue to such depositors "bullion certifi cates," expressing an amount of money equal to the market value of the bullion at at the time of its deposit These certificates are to be a new form of currency, employ able by the Government in liquidation of all its debts not expressly made payable in gold, and it would be required to accept them in payment of customs duties, taxes and public dues generally, the national banks being required to accept them in pay ments between themselves. The measure further proposed to make these certificates redeemable in lawful 'money gold, silver or United States notes or at the Treasury s option in silver nuii ion at its current value at the time of re demption. There is a very positive doubt of the con stitutionality ot'tnis plan. The Constitu tion does not convey upon the Government the right to receive silver bullion deposit To become the custodian of bullion and to issue especially prolonged receipts would be a breach of the true functions of govern ment and of the constitutional limitations of federal authority. Forced Exchange of Gold for Sliver. The provision made for the redemption of such certificates would be to the last degree objectionable. If the Government redeem them iu lawful money, it exposes itself to a new demand upon its legal tender notes or its gold, and as the amount of greenbacks owned by the Treasury now runs so low as to prohibit their use for the purpose, the redemption would have to be made with the Treasury gold, thus exchanging Govern ment gold lor silver bullion, what could silver men desire more? What could all other interests dread more? The Govern ment would be ultimately driven to redeem the certificates in silver bullion. What does that imply? First, that the Treasury would have to stand the loss upon the de posits of bullion that might arise from a fall in its value. Take a case for illustration. A deposit is made of 1,000,000 ounces of silver when the current price is $1 10 per ounce, the Treas ury being required to issue against it 51,100, 000 of certificates. Later, when the price of silver has fallen to say $1 05, the 51,100; 000 of certificates is presented for redemp tion, and 1,047,619 ounces of silver have to be delivered, as the bullion equivalent at the current market value, the Government losing 47,619 ounces of silver. Seeing the profit made by depositing bullion at a high price and withdrawing it at a lower, will not all who can do so work this Treasury silver mine to the utmost? Unprincipled specu lators would mulct the Government out of millions of dollars. Speculative combina tions would be formed with London bullion dealers. European bullion would be secured, and sent to our Treasury after its price had been advanced. The price would then be forced down and.the certificates presented to be redeemed by a much larger quantity of silver than that deposited against them. The Government would lose in every deal. No finer scheme for speculators conldbe conceived, but for legitimate interests, in many ways dependent upon the value of silver, nothing could be more serious. Onr Gold Would Go to Europe. There is nothing in the measure offered by Mr. Warner that would prevent the United States Treasury from being saddled with as much of the European stock of silver as speculators find it to their interest to send here in addition to the product of our own mines; and for such deposits the Treasury would be compelled to pay what ever aruucim price it suiieu me operators to determine. And what does such a trans fer involve? First, that we should have to ship so mnch more gold to Europe, making the operation a virtual change of Europe's silver for America's gold; next, that the United States Government would thus be made to bear the sole weight and responsi bility of carrying the world's surplus of silver; next, that, as a consequence, Eng land, Germany and other nations would be come still more reluctant than they now are to negotiate for an international settlement of the silver question; next, that the Gov ernment would be so handicapped with its enormous load of silver as to place it at an utter disadvantage in such negotiations; next, that the Government would be ex posed to immense losses in assuming such vast responsibilities; and, next, that the large issues of certificates to be made against this mass of bullion would be a forcible and artificial inflation of the currency, which could not fail to produce disaster to all the material interests of the countrv. Of course such an arrangement would be all that the silver interests could desire. For them, indeed, it would be a far better protection than the Bland act. But this advantage would be only temporary; for when the scheme broke down of its own weight, as sooner or later it must, the miners would be exposed to ruin from the consequent commercial derangements. The only wholesome treatment of this qnestion is to repeal the silver coinage act That done, we should add 525,000,000 to our yearly exports, instead of locking up so much of our national product as dead cap ital in the Treasury, while that increase of exports would give us a greater command of European gold and thereby strengthen our international position on this question. Europe, and especially England, would then be compelled to earnestly consider meas ures placing the double standard upon a broad and lasting international basis; and as such a disposition began to manifest itself the silver market would so far sympa thize as to amply compensate producers for any losses they might sutler from a temporary fall in bullion. Henbt CLEW3. TOTAL ABSTINENCE NEWS. The union meets next Sunday at St John's, Thirty-second street. There arc several societies that might Join the union before the Scottdale convention. Kev. Prks Lambixo has had a mission at his church at Scottdale. Many total ab stainer recruits were gained. As this is the last monthly meeting of the union for the fiscal year dclesates should come prepared with their final roports. The new edition of the pledge cards are nov ready, and as the school year is draw ing to a close orders should be sent In promptly. A railroad rate of 2 cents a mile to Scott dale, Juno It, from all statious, has been se cured. Uembors must obtain an order from Secretary Joyce, 17 Crystal Kow, Southside. Tee May bulletin asks societies to report how many pledge car Us thoy will take if a form Is devised after the style of the school children's pledge. These reports will be re ceived next Sunday. A body at the pole would, in conse quence of the shape of the earth, be 13 miles nearer the center than it would be If placed on the eqnator. Therefore, the at traction would be greater and tho body heavier. The increase amounts to one-five hundred and nintietu tmrt ot the equator. CnjLMFLAnr Awkixos, latest out, at Mamauz & Son's, 630 renn avenue. Thsu 1892.' EVENTS OF THE DAT. A Musician of Hanover Winning Praise From London's Critics. ANOTHER SIDE OP THE MONGOOSE. Pigmy Savages Who Are Giving Indian Authorities Trouble. BOOTS OP 0SEI0 OP N0BTHUMBBIA PTBITTEX row TOE DISPJlTCH.1 Another pupil of the great Liszt is creat ing a sensation in London. He is Heinrich JiUtter, a Hanoverian, who has al ready achiev ed consider able fame in his native land. His first performance in London appears to have satisfied many critics that he is an artist of rare talent, and he bids fair to Serr Lviter. command general popularity with English audiences. Nowaways the musical public has a far greater number of gods to worship than people had 60 or a hundred years ago. Where there was one supreme and dazzling star then there are dozens of rival masters now, and without going into the difficult question of how great the increase in ability in the individual has been, it is f atent that in numbers expert musicians have multi plied wonderfully in the last 50 years. Heinrich Lutter's place is not yet deter mined, but the best critics in London say that he has a superb style, combining breadth, dignity and .simplicity in expres sion, and a mastery of technique that enables him to render the most difficult of his mas ter's (Liszt's) works with ease. He first of all studied the violin, from that went to the organ, and last of all turned to the piano forte, upon which his triumphs have been made. Good Words for the Mongoose. A curious warning against a too great confidence in the mongoose as a remedy for gophers and other pests in California comes from the remote island of Hawaii. In the sugar plantations of Hawaii the mongoose has been used to good effect; and the little animal has proved to be an excellent police force against the rats which used to commit fearful ravases upon the sugar cane before the mongoose was introduced. In 1880, for instance, on a large plantation in the Hilo district, owned by Captain Obed Spencer, it was fonnd impossible to bring a crop of cane to maturity, the rats simply moving over the property like an army and clear ing off the cane. Since the introduction of the mongoose the plague of rats has abated, and thousands of tons of sugar are obtained from lands that yielded hundreds a few years ago. This showing has set the Californians longing for the mongoose also, that they may rid themselves t gophers and other rodents. And it is the announcement of the prospective importation of the mon goose into California that has evoked the warning from Hawaii that the animal de stroys poultry as willingly as it does rats or mice, and for that reason is unpopular to a certain extent. The mongoose, or ichneu mon, can stand all such insinuations, for in two countries at least it is, and has been for thousands of years, esteemed almost divine. In Egypt the mongoose's pleasant habit of hunting up crocodiles' eggs and devourine them made it an object" of veneration to Cleopatra's countrymen, as thereby a dan gerous increase of crocodiles was prevented. For like reasons the mongoose is beloved by India, where it not only devours snakes' eggs and youthful serpents, but attacks the oldest and most venomous snakes without fear, and also commonly without hurt to itself. One of Victoria' Grandchildren. Few of Queen Victoria's grandchildren have such a reputation lor brightness and amia b 1 1 1 ty as Princess Marie of Edi n burgh. Her parents. Prince Al fred,the sail, o r Prince, and Marie of Bussia, are neither of them re markably popular, but everybody seems to like the Princess Marie, who Princess Marie. is a tall girl with light brown hair and dark blue eyes. She is getting lots of warm congratulations these days from her grand mother's loyal subjects, for she is shortly to be married to the Crown Prince Ferdinand of Boumania. The match is not a very brilliant one, for the succession to the throne in Boumania is not as certain as it might be, if two at least of the great powers were not always hoping to find a pretext for annexing the small kingdom. In fact, Boumania is too near the center of that ever-vexed Eastern ques tion to be a comfortable home for an En glish Princess. Still Prinsess Marie has the old country to fall back upon in case of trouble, and doubtless the King of Bon mania appreciates the backing his son's al liance with England's give his throne. reigning family will Facts Abont the Andaman Flmles. The pigmy savages who inhabit the An daman Islands continue to give the Indian authorities who maintain a penal settlement there a great deal of trouble. This strange race of people, about whose origin the an thropologists can tell us nothing, refuse to be civilized, and decline to be exterminated. Though the Andaman Islands are close to the Indian coast their inhabitants have not profited by intercourse with the natives of the main land. They are as savage as they were when first western voyagers made their acquaintance. The convicts kept on South Andaman Island do not dare to ven ture from their stockades, for fear of the Andaman's powerful bow and relentless spear. For although the Andaman islander is seldom more than five feet tall, while his wife is often shorter still, he has enormous strength, and can run, throw and swim, especially swim, with wonderful power and endurance. The chief Andaman weapon is the bow, which is of odd shape and six feet in length. With this a pigmy warrior can kill an enemy at 70 yards, so that even armed Europeans must approach these ferocious dwarfs cautiously. They have not yet learned to wear anything more than a little red ochre or oil by wav of clothes, and they are so hideous naturally that some sailors who landed on the Andaman Islands a few years ago refused to leave them any mir rors lest the sight of their own looks should torment them. Not so their handiwork, for their weapons and canoes are as beauti ful as they are efficient They chisel with stone adzes the 'canoe from a tree trnnk until its sides are as thin as paper, and in this vessel, with their odd spoou-sbaped oars, they can outship the swiftest oarsmen among the crews of the ships that call at Andaman. The English administrator of the Anda man Islands says that no amount of kind treatment will make reliable friends of the pigmies; probably, the recollection of cen- turies of inhuman treatment by more civil ized races keeps alive their hostility to all visitors. So tbey'pres'erve as perfect a state of savagery as the world knows. Some of their customs are humorously horrible. A widow, for instance, is forced to wear as long as she liv.es the skull of the late la mented hanging from a cord about her neck. They have never intermarried with neigh boring races, and the Andaman Islander is exactly the same dwarf, with a black skin but nothing else in common with the negro, that he was hundreds of years ago. The Discovery or Dean Spenc. In this supremely live country the sensa tion caused in the quiet Cathedral town of Gloucester, England, by Dean Spence's dis covery that the body of Osric, King of Northumhria, the royal founder of the abbey which has since grown into a Cathe dral, really rested beneath the shrine built in his honor by pious Abbot Malvern, is hardly comprehensible. The shrine has been thought till now to have been a polite monument erected in honor of the legend ary patron of the great church in Glouces ter by the last abbot who presided there before Henry VIII. 's heavy hand came down on the Church and carved ont the diocese of Gloucester from the bigger one of Worcester. But now Dean Spence, whose zeal and affection for the grand old church of which he is custodian are proverbial, has discov ered that bevond all doubt the bones of Osric of Northnmbria lie beneath the stone shrine to the right ot the high altar, just as recorded by Leland, the historian, 350 years ago. At this discoverythe demure Cathe dral city is overcome with elation, and the county papers are just briming overwith learned articles about Osric, and it is claimed for Gloucester that she can showthe nearest to a whole Saxon monarch known in England. Pieces of other Saxon kings, some of the ashes of Kynegils, King of the West Saxon, for instance, at Winchester, the skull of King Oswald at Durham, are to be found In various parts of England, but Gloucester has the proud distinction of own ing the only complete skeleton in this cate gory. But if the American traveler wants to know why he should go to Gloucester, this summer maybe, he need be told noth ing of a Saxon - monarch, silent beneath the marble, but will find enough to reward him in the qnaint old town within hailjng dis tance ot the sea and yet enmeshed in flow ery meadows, and in the thoroughly English beauty of the cathedral, The Great Men of Italy. Very few Italian statesmen are known to day in America; even the New Orleans in cident did not pro voke much in quiry here about King Humbert's advisers. Signor Crispi, who has just retired for a time, is tolerably well known here, but Giolitti, who succeeds him, is not Giolitti, it is understood, owes his selection large ly to the influence of Zanardelli, who was summoned with Crispi to con- Signor Zanardelli. fer with the King before the latter asked Giolitti to construct a cabinet. Zanardelli himself is a remarkable man. He is one of the ablest lawyers in Italy, and has been in Italy's service since her unification in and out of the Cabinet He is a member of the famous Pentarchy, which, for many years, dominated the councils of the Left in the Italian Chamber of Deputies. Five years ago when the massacre of Dogali, in which 15,000 Abyssiniaus slaughtered a band of 500 Italians, over threw the GovernmenSof the veteran De pretis, Zanardelli and Crispi joined with the. valiant old statesman to reconstruct the Cabinet Since then Zanardelli's share in directing Italian affairs has been larger than ever. . ' New Light on Captain Cook; It is now more than a 100 years since Captain Cook discovered Hawaii, where he met a violent death, and sing'ular to relate some interesting facts have just come to light about the great explorer's connection with the island. A Mr. Davies has for warded to the Bishop Museum in Hawaii extracts from the journal of Captain Charles Clarke, who succeeded to the command of the ship Besolution after Cook's death, and lrom the pocket diary of one of the junior officers aboard that vessel. These historical documents, which are now published for the first time, make these points clear, it is claimed, namely: That Captain Cook was not killed treacherously by the Hnwaiians but accidentally in a scuffle between the natives and some misbehaving sailors on the beach, that the Hawaiians were not guilty at that time of cannibalism and that Captain Cook never pretended to the na tives to be a god. W. G. Kaufmaxx. THE MAMMOTHS OF SIBEBIA. Mr. novrorth Ha a Theory as to the Manner of Their Fref rratlon. St. Loaii Republic Mr. Howorth advances a new theory with regard to the remains of mammoths and other large animals in the soil of Siberia. All over this great plain, wherever the ground is frozen hard, are found mammoths and other animals nreserved very fresh, so that the wolves and bears can feed upon their remains. These mammoths have been found from the eastern border clear to the Obi Biver. They have been fonnd under conditions which make it certain that they could not have lived, unless the surround ings and climate had, at the time they ex isted, been entirely different from the present conditions. ; The remains of the plants on which they fed are also found, and southern cotemgorajy shells are discovered with the remains, pointing to climatic con ditions which no longer exist Mr. Howorth believes that this vat plateau Is one of the most recent features in the physical geography of the world, and that its rapid elevation caused the tre mendous change of climate which has enabled the bodies of these great beasts to be preserved intact as we find them. He says that unlpss these animals bad been frozen immediately after they died, and re mained frozen to this dav, they would certainly have decayed and disappeared. A single Siberian summer sun would have de stroyed them completely. It is known that" further east the bones of great animals have been found 17,000 feet above the sea under conditions which Falconer declared to be absolutely incompatible with their mode of life. WHY A LOBSTER TUBUS BED. The Heat of the Rollins Water Oxidize ths Iron In Its Shell. Gloucester Times. In all crustacean?, as, indeed, in almost everything in nature, there is a certain per cent of iron. Upon boilinc, the lobster is oxidized; the effect is largely due also to the percentage ,of muriatic acid which ex ists naturally in the shell The chemical change which takes place here is almost similar to that which occurs in the burning of a brick. In boiling a lobster its cost ceases to be a living substance, and to a certain extent it takes a new character. It is as a brick would be alter burning. The effect can also be produced by the sun, but necessarily not so rapidly, as the heat of that luminary, although more intense, is not concentrated sufficiently to produce the result The sun also exercises a bleaching influence, which consumes the oxide- almost as fast as it is formed, leaving the shell white, or nearly pure lime. frrp tiPSFi e 19 CAUSES FOR diyoece; The Great Diversity Between the laws of the Various States, POINTERS FOR THOSE NOT MATED. A Summary of the Queer Allegations Hade by the riaintifls OP BOTH SEXES 15 ACTUAL CASES The divergences of the divorce laws la the United States are as varied as those re lating to marriages. All the States and Territories, except Georgia, Louisiana and " Delaware, specify the necessary length of time during which the plaintiff must havo lived in the State in order to be able to bring an action for divorce. This period varies from 00 days for Dakota to five years for Massachusetts. Time in these days often means a great deal of money, and that is why Dakota divorces occupy so much attention at present, and it is solely for this reason that she has the advantage over a number of other States and Territories. A six months' residence will entitle the plaintiff to sue for a divorce in Arizona, California, Idaho, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas and Wyoming. A large number of States fix the term at one year. The best of these are: Colorado, Illinois, Kansas, Missouri, Montana, Oregon, Bhod Island, Washington and Wisconsin. Many of these States make the threat the decres shall be invalid it the plaintiff removes there simply for the purpose of getting a divorce, but the State pays no further at tention to him after the decree nnless tiers is a vituperative defendant to follow him up. Iteasons Deemed Snfuclent for Divorce. In Dakota the following reasons ars deemed sufficient ground for divorce: Mar ital infidelity which will secure absolute divorce in every Stale and Territory ex cept South Carolina, where divorce is not allowed for any reason excessive cruelty, willful desertion and neglect for one year and habitual intemperance. The glorious climate of California is excellent alike for the body and for divorce. Absolute separ ation is granted there for one year's will ful desertion, neglect and for habitual in temperance. Extreme cruelty is also a cause. The courts of Arizona grant a di vorce for six months' intentional abandon ment, for crnel treatment, habitual intem perance and neglect on the part of the hus band to provide the necessaries of life for his wife. In Idaho a plaintiff may secure a divorce for extreme cruelty, deser tion, neglect and intemperance, con tinuing for one year. In Nebraska the sufficient causes for judicial separation are desertion for two years, habitual drunk enness, extreme cruelty and failure to pro vide for wife. Nevada severs the marriage tie for one year's desertion, for gross drunk enness, if contracted since marriage, for extreme cruelty, and for a year's neglect on the part of the husband to provide for his wife. New Mexico dissolves the marriage partnership for cruel treatment, aban donment, habitual drunkenness and husband's failure to provide. Some Sensible State laws. Of these, Washington has been regarded as the banner State for the sensible view her courts take of divorce. Sufficient causes are crnel treatment, personal iniquities, habitual drnnkenncs refusal to provide, one year's abandonment, and any other cause seeming sufficient to the court, and when the court is satisfied the parties can no longer live together. Colorado and Montana both grant di vorces for one year's drunkenness or deser tion and extreme cruelty. The causes in Oregon arc cruel and inhuman treatment, personal indignities rendering life a bur den, and gross drunkenness contracted since marriage. In Illinois it is necessary for tha plaintiff to show the existence of extreme and repeated cruelty, two years de?erion ... . or habitual drunkenness for a like period of time. The laws of Kansas give a divorce for habitual drunkenness ono year's abandonment, extreme cruelty, fraud in the marriage contract and gross neglect of duty. Missouri will gram separation for indignities rendering the life of the other intolerable and for a year's de sertion or drunkenness. Wisconsin has ex cellent laws, for they dissolve the bands of matrimony not only for a year's desertion or drunkenness and cruel and inhuman treat ment, but also when the husband and wife have lived apart voluntarily for the space of five years. The statutes of Bhode Island call lor five years' desertion, unless the court decides that a shorter time will answer. Habitual drunkenness, extreme cruelty and refusal to provide will also annul the marriage contract in the courts. The Government has recently made out some statistics which show that Connecticut has about 11 marriages to one divorce; Massachusetts, 30; Ohio, 20; Bhode Island, 11; Vermont, 10; New Hampshire, 10; Maryland, 62; Kansas, 17; Wisconsin, 21. How Women Have Won Their Salt. The Government "Beporton Marriags and Divorce" pive3 many curious causes as having been held vali'd. The following cases where divorce has been granted tha wife are quoted verbatim: Defendant docs not speak to plaintiff for months at a time, thereby making life a Uurden. Defendant got drunk day after the mar riage, causing this plaintur to conceive a violent disgust for him. Divorco proceed ings beaun on day after marriage. Plaintiff says that when she was sick in bed the defendant, for the sole purpose of liarrassing her, said ho meant to suicide, and did then and there drink a bottle of paregoric, which said action of defendant sorely Tieved plaintiff In body and mind. Plaintiff says sho is subject to sick bead aches that crow worse when she smells tobacco. Defendant uses tobacco and aggra vates her headaches. Plaintiff says Immediately after marriage defendant began importunin-t her to deed him her property, which said importunity caused plaintin menial hhkuisu. Defendant threatened to knock plaintiff cold as a wedge," whereupon he did clutch her by the throat and pound her head against tho wall. Defendant quotes verso from the ew Testament about wives obeyinz their hus bands. Ho has even threatened to mash plaintiff and drew back his hand to do it. In the decree gran tinjr this divorce ap pear the followina: '! find that when plain tiff was sick and unable to woik, defendant told her tho Lord commanded her to work; that he was also In tho habit of frequently quoting scriptural passases In order to show her she was to bo obedient to her husband." Defondant cut off my bangs by force. Defendant was cruel in this: He caused a letter to be written saying he was dead. Plaintiff ordered a mourninir garb and grieved a long time, bnt at last learned tho letter was a fraud and that the defendant was not dead. Causes of Masculine Rejoicing. In these cise3 the husband secured hii divorce: Defendant violently upbraidod plaintiff nnd said to him: "You are no man nt aiy thus (.ausing him mental suffering and an guish. Husband says: "My wifo revised to keep my clothing In repair; she refused to cook and never sewed on my buttons." A wit ness testified that ho had seen tho plaintiff with only one button on his vest. Plaintiff lurther alleged that his wife would not let him go to ee flres at night; that If he wont she would keep him awake till 3 o'clock quarreling. Defendant pulled plaintiff out of bed by his whiskers. Defendant took all tho covering off the bed, leaving the plaintiff to shiver nntil morning. On ono occasion sho Jumped on him with her knees and ran a knitting nee dle four inches in his arm. Defendant struck plaintiff a violent blow with her bustle. Husband say?: "My wife wonld not walk with me on Snndays. Once In a tantrum she heaved a teapot at me. She hit me on the side of tho head because I refused to bo worked into a passion; once she pulled out quite a quantity of my hair." Among tho papers was a tuft of hair marked "ExhibU A." Italiax Awitraos, perfectly Vast colors, at Mamaux & Son's, 539 Penn avenue. Thau A iyff----liirir"-nirJ uJuMbi&u&e& -- " '--fiHfaH;y n i tiff .... -5.