ryjffMBili ) THE PITTSBURG- DISPATCH, SATURDAY, JULY 2. 1893. &eooo"3-4 FRANK G. CARPENTER IN Compares the Present Famine In Russia With the Great Ones of History. NOW IN THFDISTRICT And Will Send Tins Dispatch Illustrated Letters With all Speed, Here are Issue: Other Features of To-morrow's The Midnight San; An Interesting Astronomical Article by Camllle Flammarion. The Horn of Africa; Outlined by Young Chanter's Expedi tion to Unknown Lands. Buying Human Beings; How New York Doctors Pay fcr Suffer ers from Ear e Diseases. Talk on Live Topics; Editor Charles A. Dana Interviewed at Length by T. C. Crawford. Workers of Antwerp; A Letter Showing the Bearing of the Protective Tariff. Fame and Fortune; An Estimate of the Wealth of Some Well-Know n Public Hen. LITERATURE AND ART. SCIEXCL AND POLITICS. RELIGION AND PROGRESS. THE WORLD OF TO-DAY. With its Diversity of Human Interests Faithfully Reflected. BEST CABLE LETTERS. -X Elaborate Departments for Professional and Amateur SDorts. READ TO-MORROW'S DISPATCH. vtvoe- je Bigpaltjj. ESTAIJL1HED FEBRUARY 1846 Vol. 47. No. H9 Entered at riusourg Postoffice ovember. lfc-ST. as second-class matter. Business Office Corner Smithfield and Diamond Streets. News Rooms and Publishing House 78 and So Diamond Street, in New Dispatch Building. rAKTFBV AnVFtm-TVf; FFirE. ROOM 78. TRir.ITNE nt'II.TIIXG. NKW YORK, when- com plete lc orTHEniPATCH can alwars be lound. j-oreign .idTertlsei-b appreciate 'the convenience. Home advertisers and frlei'ds of TIIK DISPATCH. 1 hile In New "V ork. are also made welcome. TllF VISPATCJUt rrstdaTly mttaleat Urentanlt't. futon orare, 3ev ork. and 17 Ave deVOpera. rati. France, ichTe anyone ichn haw been disap jviiTiffrf at a hotel newt etand can obtain it. TERMS Or THE UISPATCH. rO'TAOE ntEK IN THE UNITED STATES. "Mi.T DiFPATcn. ne Year 1 Wl Pati.t Dispatch. Per Quarter 100 Daily Dim-atc-h. OLcVnnth 70 Dmlt Dispatch, including Snnaay. I year.. 10 00 2iftl. Disl'ATcn, 'ncludlng Sunday, 3raths, 150 j wi "isrtTCH. tnclndlng.-undaT, im'th.. BO trxDAi IipaTch. One Year M Wefkly Dispatch. One Year I 3 The Dmlt Dispatch Is delivered by carriers at Z cenisper week, or, Including Sunday Edition, at Ii e.-nls wr -week. ITTTMU'lttO. SATUKDAY. JULY 2. 18TC. TWELVE PAGES THE NEWEST SCHEME. The newest development of the Third party idea is a report published in current dispatches that the free silver men pro pose to capture the Omaha Convention and carry enough Western and Southern States to throw the election into the House. The Dispatch has often shown that this, if successful, would make the ejection of the Democratic candidate a certainty. But the political sensation manufacturers propose to get over that by having the silver Democrats in the House bolt the Democratic "party and vote for the silver candidate, thus electing him. To suppose that to be true shows a striking ignorance alike of political con ditions and political character. To sup pose that Congressmen owing their places to party organization would bolt the party nominee in large numbers is simply absurd. But this is not only required for the success of the reported scheme. It is necessary that a majority of these party men should bolt party lines in a majority of the States of the Union. This is to be done by a body which recently has pre vented action on the free silver bill and by the members of a party whose national convention with their counsel and coun tenance still more recently made an ex tremely conservative deliverance on the subject of silver. If the Democratic Con gressmen In all the so-called silver States, and those of Kansas, Nebraska and Min nesota in addition, should desert their candidate in a body it would only give the Third party candidate thirteen States. To secure success the remaining ten States would have to be named, from the solid South. But to suppose the Congressmen of ten out of fifteen Southern States would desert their Democratic allegiance is simply absurd. It may be a good scheme for some of the Democrats in the House to encourage for the sake of inducing the Western States to go into the movement But it may be set down as a certainty that if the election is thrown into the House Cleveland will be elected. Third party men who are op posed to Cleveland should bear that in mind, and not be hoodwinked by any such shallow devjee. THE DEMOCRATIC OUTBREAK. The Democracy of 1864, under the leadership of Clement L. Vollandigham, declared the war a failure and called for the abandonment of the efforts to preserve the Union. Vollandigham was an able man and a sincere one; but he was so blinded by bis impetuous attachment to pro-slavery and State's Bights heresies that he would take nothing less. His platform struck an answering chord in the Democratic heart, with the result that the Democratic party buried itself under a load of obloquy from which it did not re cover for nearly two decades. The Democracy have made other blun ders since then, but none of them have rivaled that famous declaration in magni tude until twenty years later, when an other Chicago convention of Democratic representatives declares itself in favor of business disaster and industrial prostra. tlon. Under the leadership of "Watter son as sincere, as impetuous and as deficient in judgment on tne tariff question as Vollandigham was on the warissues the convention rejected a profession of tariff reform with a cure against injuring business and industry. A proposition to regard the interests of labor and capital was overwhelmingly repudiated, on the ground that it "might as well have been written by Blaine and McKinley." Nothing less than bankrupt industries and idle workmen can appease the Democratic hunger for tariff reform. No less significance can be given to that impetuous rejection of the majority tariff plank in the convention and the enthus iastic declaration that the protective tariff, like the -war for the Union, Is "unconstitutional " This manifestation of the Democratic spirit Is the most significant of its class since the famous deliverance of 1864. It will onen people's eyes to what the Dem ocratic sentiment really is, and will rele gate the party to the same position it occupied from 1864 to 1884. THE STLYEB SITUATION. The stable common sense section of the American nation has hardly ceased con gratulating itself on the elimination of the silver question from the campaign ere it is shocked by "an undeniable victory for the fiee silver men by the passage of Senator Stewart's bill in the Senate yesterday. Of course the success now, as compared with the mine-owning party's failures in the Senate before the meeting of the conven tions at Minneapolis and Chicago, is due to some extent to the absence of incentives to hedging on the question. But there are other causes at work as welL The near approach of the People's Party Convention, and the amount of talK sug gesting Stewart as its nominee, have en couraged the silver men to make a special effort to attract its attention to their power. Again, Hill naturally came out from his seclusion and threw his influence such as it is into the silver scale in order to embarrass Cleveland. And furtfier, although the platforms of both conventions put the silver ques tion aside from the contest between the two parties there was a most notable pre ponderance of Democratic Senators among the supporters of Stewart's bill, and a still more marked minority of them among its opponents. This indicates that the bill may have a chance to pass the House not on its merits but as a matter of political chi canery and that it may be submitted to the President Harrison is so irretriev ably committed that he cannot do other wise than veto it if it should reach him. Herein is a gleam of hope for the Demo cratic forces, in that such a veto fresh in the minds of the voters would incense the silver element and so antagonize it as to detract from Harrison as a protest, even though by such action to any great degree there would be a risk of throwing the election into the House and so insuring the election of a man pledged as much against free coinage as is Harrison him self. The silver question is such as to be all absorbing to the men who advocate free coinage to an extent that they lose sight ot all other questions. The Democrats are in such straits that many of them will even violate their own principles where they really have any if by so doing they see a possibility of increasing their strength in November. As to the merits of the question itself, the opinions of The Dispatch have been so frequently set forth as hardly to need reiteration. The only sound and just so lution of the currency question lies in the establishment of a fixed ratio between gold and silver, and it is not to be found in a measure which would coin an unlim ited number of silver dollars having a bullion value thirty per cent below that of the corresponding gold coin, and scaling down all debts and liabilities in that pro portion. THE COUNTY SALARIES. The County Controller yesterday indi cated his acceptance of the situation under the recent decision of the Supreme Court with regard to county salaries by taking out a warrant for the sharply reduced salary allowed by the acts of 1861 and 1861. At the same time it is reported that some of the other county officials propose to try the question further by making a demand for the amount of salaries allowed by the recent acts. Of course they have the right to try the case over again, but it looks like wasted time. Although the Supreme " Court de cision did not directly rule upon the salaries of their offices, the declaration of the non-repeal of the old special acts is conclusive. The Supreme Court cannot without stultifying itself come to any oiuer decision man mat already an nounced. The only relief for the county officials, if their salaries fixed by the old special acts are inadequate, is by general legisla tion. The salaries are undoubtedly slender compensation for transacting the business of a county of this size. The duct way to remedy the matter is to seek legislation which shall allow fair compensation, but not of the extremely profuse character which was sought to be collected with the present recoiling result NOT MUGWUMP FALSEHOODS. A remark attributed to Judge Gresham in a recent interview, with regard to the use of money in elections, moves a party organ to remark that "if the evil had at tained anything like the.dimensions which he thinks it has, the conclusion which he draws would be proper enough." But the commentator goes on to assert that' this idea is entirely due to "Mugwump falsehoods." It is to be hoped that the representa tion of our organic cotemporary as to the limited extent of the evil is correct But one thing is certain, the general impres sion to the contrary has not been pro duced by assertions of the independent element commonly called Mugwumps. Statements as to the necessity and im portance of immense campaign funds have come from the most active partisans without even a taint of independence. Assertions that heavy contributions from the factor needed to carry close States, and that the States were carried that way, come from official managers of. party organization. The men who pro duced that famous remark about carrying Indiana by the use of "soap," or "frying the fat" out of the protected manufactur ers, were not tainted with Mugwumpfery. Nor, when Col. Elliott F. Sliepard, in exemplification of the fact that "children and fools speak the truth," asserted that an immense sum was.paid out before the election of. 1884 to purchase votes in New York, hut that the goods were not deliv ered, no party organ rose to accuse the ultra-pious Colonel of circulating "Mug wump falsehoods." We think the importance of money in elections has been very much exaggerated. But the people whose representations have produced the exaggerated impression are the professional politicians; and their purpose in doing it is to secure their own pecuniary enrichment out of the swollen campaign funds. SOFT MONEY LOGIC. One of the signal examples of the strange bedfellowships caused by political exigencies is presented by the New York Pott defending the plank of the Demo cratic platform calling for the repeal of the prohibitory tax on State bank notes. The Post finds even this demonstration of Democratic soft money tendencies palat able on logic which may be summarized as follows: First, it quotes the authority of Senator Sherman that the national bank circulation has got to go anyhow; second, it asserts: Any form of circulating medium tbat the States are likely to permit, and the general Government to authorize, will toe more to the advantage of the country than either greenbacks or silver certificates. "Wildcat banking" is a tiling of the past, and will never return. It must be borne In mind that State Dank notes riever can be legal tender, even In the States which authorize them. Therefore, nobody will be obliged to take them. They must go upon their own goodness if they go at alL Moreover, the general Government can prescribe condi tions upon the issne of notes having an inter-State circulation,and will undoubtedly do so. This is about as remarkable a specimen of monetary logic as was ever emitted from a journal which professes to base its views on solid principles. The assertion that State bank notes resting on a variety of securities from the nature of the case will be better than greenbacks or silver certificates resting on that pledge of the Government's faith, which has been the solid basis of the country's currency for nearly two decades, is simply fatuous dogmatism only rivaled by the assertion that "wildcat banking is a thing of the past and will never return." When the two principal cities of the country have recently displayed prominent and stu pendous examples of the desire to gouge the public by reckless banking, the guar antee of that assertion against the use of the far greater facilities afforded by the liberty of putting worthless notes in circu lation is very slight This remarkable argument is, however, cast in the shade by the esteemed Post's proposition that the general Government can prescribe conditions upon "the issue of notes having an inter-State circula tion." Our cotemporary should furnish plans and specifications of this brilliant idea. Will the inter-State notes under this plan bear on their face a notification by the Government that they can be cir culated in more than one State, and the statutes contain a warning that they must not be paid out to anyone except in the State where they are issued? What will be the penalty for tendering to a grocer in Jersey City a note intended for circulation in New York, a mile distant? And after the grand idea of State and inter-State banks one possibly wildcat and the other presumably stable by the regulation of the national Government how will the reeulation of the latter differ from the national bank regulation which, according to the Post, has got to be abolished at the start? This is perhaps the best argument that can be made by a paper which has deter mined to swallow the soft money plank of the Democratic platform for the sake of its free-trade heresies. But it is a very weak one after all. A MUCH POSTPONED MEASURE. The usuai course of legislation is strik ingly and favorably illustrated by the statement that the Terry national bank ruptcyblll has been reported to the House by the Judiciary Committee and has been put on the calendar. At this late day in the session the chances are decidedly against its passage, and the probability is that it will meet its usual fate of going over to another session. This bill has now been pending in sev eral Congresses It is almost unanimously indorsed by business interests and its pas sage is greatly needed. But it is not a party measure, and therefore no majority has ever been interested in urging it to passage. On the other hand It offers no gain to any special private interest and furnishes no money for pushing It by means of a lobby. The consequence is that while there has never been any serious opposition to it, and while it has been again and again favorably passed upon by committees, it has dragged along from session to session, meeting the in variable fate of being postponed for party measures and private bills. It would be an agreeable and commend able variation if the House should break this record by fixing a day for the con sideration of the bill and passing it , But that would involve too radical a departure from the precedents of latter-day politics to permit any tangible expectations that it will be done. While colored 'folk in Arkansas indulge in the lynching or one of themselves for a crime frequently punished in the same ille gal fashion by white men, they weaken their case against those who dWegard the law. Lynching is barbarous and unseemly under every circumstance, no matter what the crime or what the color of its perpotrators or of the lynchers. The proposal to plant trees in Schenley Park on Discovery Day is excellent. Patriot ism and tree planting go well together, and we cannot have too much of either. A fbee-coinage bill having passed the Senate, notwithstanding its absence from the platforms of Bepnblicana and Democrats alike, its fate in the House and after if it live through that ordeal is a matter for speculation, though its sudden death should be undoubted. The Fourth of July is the birthday of American independence, and the Mayor should not be hampered by any lack of birthday presents for his ward. Tammany evidently believes that dis cretion Is the better part of valor. For the indictment found against Bev. Thomas Dixon for criminal libel upon Excise Com missioner Koch was dismissed upon the recommendation of District Attorney NicolL. After yesterday's defeats ini the boat races Harvard is in a fit frame of mind to appreciate the leellngs of the losing party in November. Springer's Information as to the politi cal situation In -Pennsylvania is marvelous. The novelty of .his opinions warrants the belief that he knows either a great deal more or a great deal less about the matter than the average Pennsylvanlan probably less. A taste of rope's end would seem a suitable punishment, if it could be legally inflicted, lor a man found guilty, of rope stealing. The troublous evils of Federal patronage have seldom been more conspicuous than In the unseemly squabble over the Collector bhlp of Internal Bevenue to which Miller was appointed long ago, and in which he has still not been confirmed by the Senate. Cloak rooms at the Capitol are the places where congressmen display their opinions unveiled. If the garment workers of Baltimore must strike against the sweating system, the summer season is an eminently fit time to do It. Moreover, the public is less incon venienced by a, scarcity of garments now than it wonld be later on. One realizes at this season that fireworks, like eligible maidens, are apt to go on" unex pectedly. Hill is no longer afraid to commit him self on the silver question. In fact his only importance now lies in bis antagonism to Cleveland, and his malice finds a natural vent in opposing the policy of the Demo cratic nominee. Now that it carries a cornet player the double-decker should he known as the tout ensemble. Fkee Teade versus Protection is the issue Oefore the voters in the campaign, and any attempt to force a fight on the desirability or otherwise of a Force bill is simply an effort to sink: essentials in inci dentals. It is a mistake to say that Clarkson was turned down. He was merely turned over. Science progresses as the world grows older, but there are still fools enough left to pay the penalty of their folly by hunting a gas leak with a light and blowing themselves and others up in their Ignorant carelessness. Best well to-morrow to prepare for patriotic exertions on the day after. I That the People's party is about to make a splurge at Omaha appears evident, but just what form it will take no one can foretell with any degree of certainty, not even the amorphous party itself. That man with a barrel Bidwell for the Prohibition nomination. Women must have learned a good deal about dress since the days of the Queen of Sheba, or so wise a man as King Solomon could not have remarked that "There is nothing new under the sun." Storms rising in Nebraska are to be ex pected next week. Haubxty has obliterated himself in booming Harrtty for the Chairmanship of the Democratic National Committee, and a reciprocal compliment from the latter gen tleman is now in order. MASCOTS EX MASS!!. Oliver Wendell Holmes, General Butler and Bisbop Brooks are the most pop ular men in Boston, according to a recent vote. Mr. Coolidge, the American Minister, has taken a fine, large furnished mansion In Paris on tho corner of l'avonue Marceau and rue Bassano. WALTER Damrosch is engaged in writ ing an opera whose subject is to be Haw thorne's "Scarlet Letter." Mr. G. P. Lathrop is writing thellbretto for bim. Congressman W. I. Wilson, the Chairman of the Chicago Convention, was offered the President's chair of the Missouri State University two years ago.but declined it. Mrs. French-Sheldon, the intrepid African traveler, has applied for space for exhibiting at the World's Fair the fine col lection of curios and trophies she has gath ered. Sir H. Trueman Wood, British Com missioner to the World's Fair, has arrived in Chicago. Sir Trueman wants an Increase In the allotment of space of Great Britain in the Exposition. Bocrke Cockran is an Irishman. He is short and stout, and has a massive head. He is one of the leading lawyers of Now York, but having married a rich wife is now devoting himself to politics. He is serving his second term in Congress. Whitelaw Keid will be the ninth Vice President elected from the State of New Yoik, the other eight being, in order, Aaron Burr, Geonre Clinton, Daniel D. Tompkins, Martin Van Buren, Millard Fillmore,' Will iam A Wheeler, Chester A. Arthur and Tie vi P. Morton. The age at which a "child wonder" ceases to bo such has not yet been deter mined. But Josef Hofmann, the boy pianist, seems to have reached It. Late re ports say that his fingers are losing their suppleness, his ear its delicacy and his soul its love of music. Charles Henry Hart, of Philadel phia, who has for many years been recog nized as an authority on what might be called the historical and archaeological side of earlier American art, has been selected to take charge of the Department of Historic and Betrospectlve Art at the World's Fair. THE COWBOY DOWNED. Wyoming and Its Cattle Indtutry Under the Thumb of the Bustlers. St. Louis, July L "The condition of af fairs in Northern Wyoming Is now as bad as it ever has been." said Thomas Bowdan, a cattle dealer, yesterday. "I have just le turned from Cheyenne, where I talked with many of the leading cattle raisers, and they are all very blue over the outlook. Since tho defeat of the lynch law raids, for it was nothing else, the so-called 'rustlers' have bad things pretty much their own way. In the northern counties, which are most valu able from a cattle standpoint, the legitimate farmers and small stock breeders, whose aid was secured in repelling the raid, have in turn been obliged to knuckle under, and the wholo country is practically in the hands of the rustlers. The loss to the nock breeders during the recent Illegal round-up is reckoned by thou sands of head. The rustlers go around in gangs of from 5 to 20 and carry off pretty niuoh what they please. The cattle are driven to Montana or D.ikota nnd tbore sold for about $5 a bead. There Is no way of putttlng a stop to tins, as tne juries nave been found to 'avor the rustlers, and there is always difficulty in making proor. It Is generally admitted that tho present dis turbance means the end of free grass in Wjomlng and the breaking up of the great herds." W0BKING THE FAIR FOB POLITICS. The Novel Proposition Submitted by the Single Tax Clnb of Chicago. Chicago, July L The Single Tax Club, of this city, has decided to ask the World's Fair officials for the adoption of a system by which it is believed the American people can best be given a practical Illustration of the workings of the tariff. To this end the following letter will be sent to Director General K. Davis: The Chicago Single Tax Club respectfully petitions and requests that on foreign ex hibits or dutiable goods at the World's Fair the selling price in the country from which the goods aro exported, the transporta tion charges from point of origin to Chicago and the selling price in Chicago be stated separately, so that visitors may be enlight ened In reference to the Incidents of our present By stem of tariff taxation and find out who pays the duty. We conceive that neither political party can consistently be opposed to this, ns the framer of the exist, ing tariff confidentially asserts as the faith or his party that the foreign exporter pays tho lax, and the opposing party asseits with equal confidence that the American consumer pnys the tax. It is respectfullv submitted that the Exposition can confer no more important service to the American people than to aid in the solution of this vexed and most Important question. A WEDDING BANKRUPTS KENTUCKY. One Legislator Draws tbe Last Cent In Uie Treasury to Get Married. Louisville, July L State Treasurer Hale announced that no tnore payments could be made on demand for some time. Legislator Crow, of Hartford, drew out $300 of his pay in order to get married and uo money was left. About $1,000,000 of school funds and other S referred demands will bo due in No vom er, and tho money will bo allowed to ac cumulate to meet these. It will be three months, probably, before payments are re-' nmed. A LOOK AROUND. Booth & Flinn, or, rather, Senator Fllnn, for his partner does not always join with bim in business ventures, understands not only the art of putting two and two to gether and making four thereof, but also that of adding one and one, making throe of it. This applies to some of the real es tate operations' of the Senator. He sees a nice steep hill, unincumbered with aught save goats, perhaps a mortgage, and he pro ceeds to buy it at a bargain. Then he looks around and finds a big hole somewhere, whioh he soon has a deed of. He next cuts the top off of the hill and sticks it into the hole, and lo I verily he has two eligible loca tions for building sites, which are duly planned and put onto the market. It is a case where the mountain comes to Ma homet. I notice that Senator Joe Hawley, of Connecticut, soldier, editor and man of affairs generally, baa hltohed a Sunday dos ing resolution on the coat tails of the ap propriation "for the World's Fair. In con nection with this it is stated that Senator Hawley's influence had much to do with the closing of tho exposition of 1876. It hap pened that the Centennial Exposition was held in Philadelphia, where they have a Sunday, while the World's Fair is to De in Chicago, where thero is no Sunday. To remedy this defect it is proposed to make a Sunday by act of Congress, just as in Eng land they once tried to make gentlemen by act or Parliament. It is but a short time since Bishop Whitehead, in speaking of the advantages of keeping the Fair open on Sundays, alluded to the fact that in 1878 the exposition groundswere opened onSunday to those favored by the men In charge or who were eonnectedwith the exhibitors although to the public It was a die rum. The Bishop spoke from hearsay, he said. He was well informed, nevertheless. For more than seven months, from two weeks before and after its opening and its close, I was engaged in newspaper work at the big snow of 1876, and I have a very clear recollection of this Sunday sight-seeing and some of the circumstances connected with it. It was a very easy matter to obtain a permit to enter the grounds on Sunday, and a number of the exhibitions, notably the art gallery, were kept in condition to be in spected by the thousands of Sunday visitors, who took the place of the tens of thousands of week-day spectators. I have seen as many as 10,000 people most of whom were there tiom curiosity and a desire not to be jostled by the crowd within the Falrmount Pnrk Inclosure at one time. They not only had no real business there, but they paid no admissions yet the big show was not a paying one financially. In order to en ter the grounds It was necessary to have Bpecial tickets issued either by the local or national officials. The President of the Centennial Commission was in authority over the Director General, who was the first mate did the swearing at the ci ew and carried out the orders. All of the official were more or less amenable to the Piesldent of the commission. If be had desired It there would have been no favored Sunday visitors, no little excursions of notables from Washington or New York or other cities who could look and lunch in peace without dropping a silver half dollar into the slot to see the gate open. It was impossible for tho head of the commission not to know that large numbers of persons visited the grounds on Sunday, because I have known him to Issue admission tickets or cause them to be Issued himself. This President of the commission to whom I re fer was General Joseph G. Hawley, of Con necticut, memDer of the United States Sen ate. This is a watery summer, despite the threats of Prophet Hicks, who foretold a notable and destructive drought. The skies are watery, so are the vegetables, the ber ries, the early fruit and the mouth of the man who hears that somebody else is going to spend three months abroad and cannot go himself. Yesterday morning a woman got off a Fifth avenue car in a hurry and dropped in so doing a small piece of paper. The other passengers saw but heeded not. The car started again and the Ionian entered into a chase, waving a gingham umbrella and both hands. The conductor pulled the bell, the woman re-entered and looked on the floor. "Good thing I found it," she said, triumph antly, seizing the morsel of paper. "Didn't know where I was going. Going to see my son. Don't know where he lives. Address on the paper. Might have had to go home 'thout seeing him. Good morning" These are dull days for the iron broker, ne waiteth not in tho office for the tele phone to jingle, but ho hustleth about the streets, and If a report getteth abroad that a man deslreth a stove lid, straightaway seven brokers fall upon him at once. Somebody ought to invent a powder or an adhesive paper to catch tempusuaU That distinguished citizen of Pittsburg, Major Montooth, is having a remarkable run of bad luck in his trip to Europe. First his baggage goes west to Chicago City In stead of east to New York and the steamer City of Chicago. Then he purchases sup plies In New York and forgets to carry them abroad with him. And now, to crown all, the vessel has run ashore on the coast of Ireland. I wonder what they will build houses of next. Some of the latest seem made of blocks of maple sugar, and others of bread containing raisins and a superfluity of sal eratus. I suppose the time will come when a residence, with its furniture and a pug dog sitting on the front steps, will be mod eled and cast in a mold on the spot where it Is to stand, by some enterprising steel or Iron manufacturer. Walter. Might Like a Game of Poker. Chicago Mall.I Governor Boles dreams every night of the United States Senate, and he doesn't eat mince pies either. DEATHS HERB AND ELSEWHERE. Dr. L. D. Kadzlnksky, McKeesport. Br. L. D. Badzinsky died at his home this morning Irons pneumonia. Dr. Eadrinsky a short time ago was tried in the Pittsburg courts with William Berwick for attempting to perform a criminal operation on May Wampte, bnt the Jury disagreed. Tbe strain and worry of tbe trial are thought to have been partly responsible for his sickness. Deceased was a veteran or the late war and belonged to several secret'societlcs In the city. He was also pension agent for McKeesport. Austin TV. Gulp. Austin W. Culp, one of the best known letter carriers In Allegheny, died Thursday at his home, on Marquis street. He came here from Car lisle. Pa., ten years ago. Ex-Postmaster Swan appointed him as a carrier and he was so efficient that Postmaster Gllleland retained him. He leaves a wife and three children. Burgwla Brokaw. Burgwin Brokaw, who died of paralysis at 20 West Carson street Thursday afternoon, was a brother-in-law or Nathan Brokaw, formerly po lice magistrate. Burgwin Brokaw was St years old and had for many years been an Invalid. Obituary Notes. MAX Rapicke. a pianist or some note in the South, died recently In Norfolk. Va,, aged 44. He was a native of Berlin, and came to this country In 1877. Peteb Martin, an old Inventor of Eastern Con necticut and Rhode Island, died Thursday at the home of his son. Lawyer Richard Martin, In Paw tucket, R. I., aged 98 years. IioBEKT Watts, a well-known detective or Buffalo, formerly connected with the Buffalo police force and for several years at the head or a private agency, died Thursday morning, aged 60 years. F. H. Allen, who died Wednesday in Akron, was an old and populaa member of the New York Produce Exchange. Be was about SO years old. He came to New York from Akrou many years ago and became identified with the trade In Ohio flour. James F. Joyce, whose death is made known from Washington, was a native of Baltimore. He became Interested in theatricals about 1887, and acted asadvaoceagentfor Joseph Murphy. Charles Erin Yerncr and other stars. In bis youth be was an amateur actor. JOHN Oallaoheb, an old-time member of the stock company at the Arch Street Theater, Phila delphia, is dead, aged SO. He was an originator and at one time the President of the WheaUey Dramatic Association, in Philadelphia Republi can politics he was always conspicuous, and had held several offices. ODE HAIL POUCH. Precocity Not a Blessing. To the Editor of The Dispatch: t In a late issue of your paper an artlole headed "A Class of Bright Tots" at tracted my attention. I read it over care fully, I confess with some surprise, not at the precooity of the children, but at the lack of judgement of our high-pressure educators. For the best interest of these unfortunate children, precocity should be greatly re strained and not fostered. Their physical development counts for more In the makeup of good men and women than their mental acquirements. "It is the greatest class in the world. The little ones are not yet 7 years pld. They have advanced in training beyond an or dinary class of 12-year-old children. We think our class will surprise the country." We think so too, especially 15 or 20 years hence, but not any more than does the mis guided judgment of both the parents and the teachers who would rush these SO or more innocents Into this "experiment" so fatal to their best physical interests. Had we a child in this wonderful class we would promptly withdrawn. Though John Stewart Mill read latin at 6 and General , Grant grad uated in that hair of his class, technically known as next the foot, Infantile precocity is not an unmixed blessing. Mens sarv in corpore sano is more to be de sired at the Bge ot maturity and later in life than a parrot smattering of what they cannot understand at the age of 7 years.no matter how precocious the child. Does Mr. Luckey think that all these bright chil dren will escape the dangers to which the brain and the nervous organization gener ally is subject under this hothouse system of training, this goose-liver enlarging bar barity? Physique, Mr. Luckey, is of vastly more Importance In acquiring the means neocwary to a livelihood in the after years of thesa children. You should read and heed Herbert Spencer, whose insomnia makes life anything but pleasant for the greatest philosopher of the century. Not one of these SO or more precocious children but would be better physically and brighter mentally a dozen years hence, in deed, all their lives if they never saw Inside ot a schoolroom till they were fully 10 years old. a We respectfully call the attention or the Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Ani mals to this case. A. D. BiiTKXitD. West Mohtxebt, Jnne 30. A Complaint From Hazelwood. To the Editor of The Dlpatcb: I am and have been a resident and tax payer ini the Twenty-third ward for a number of years, and have been muoh an noyed at times by horses, cattle and other animals that are allowed to run at large. They have Injured my trees, as well as those of many of my neighbors. When owners of said stock have been complained to they invariably find some plausible ex cuse, suoh as we are aboat to sell, etc. Now, I know the owners of such stook can be sued for damages. But what is the amount recoverable oompared to the value of a tree that has been planted to adorn a borne and the publio streets generally .when you take into consideration a few years' growth? The question I wish to ask is. Have wo no public officers paid out of the hard earnings of the taxpayers who are in duty Dound to impound said stock? ' In my opinion the police officers can arrest such stock. But they pay no attention to it in this part of the olty. I may also add that they do not patrol very mnoh of this ward. It Is no uncommon thing to see two or three of them congratulating one another between the fire engine house and the depot. But it is a very uneommon thing to see any one of them in any other part of Hazelwood. I have refrained from calling attention to this matter from a dislike to enter com plaints. But an Incident occurred recently whioh called forth my sympathy, and I de termined to postpone this letter no longer. A child of one or my neighbors playing on the street was run over by one or the horses referred to and had her leg broken. What ever the result may be the above states the cause. D. L. Hazelwood, July L A Good Suggestion To the Editor of The Dispatch: I think it would be a good thing, and to the interest of a large class of people, both rich and poor, fox the city to employ a corps of trained nurses to be sent wherever their services may be needed in cases of malig nant diseases, which deter neighbors from rendering assistance through fear of con tracting the malady. A case illustrating this necessity occurred on Mt. Washington last week. One of a family of four children died of black diph theria and the rest wero down with the same disease. Neighbors were afraid to go to the house, and the family bad to face the terriblo affliction the best it could. Help was necessary, but there was none. In this instance a trained nurse would have been Invaluable The expense to the city would be light compared with the benefits to many unfortunate families directly and to the en tire community indirectly. Many lives might be saved in this way. Geokoe Okxoxd. Southside, City, July L HE. BLAINE'S SUCCESSOR. The appointment of Goneral John W. Foster as Secretary of State is commenda ble. He is well fitted for the place. New York World. Me. Fobteb will not prove as strategic and brilliant as his illustrious predecessor, but he is a safe and conservative man. Grand Rapids Herald. It would be difficult to name a publio man so perfectly equipped for the management of tho State Department as General Foster. Baltimore American. The advancement of Hon. John W.Foster, of Indiana, to tbe Important position of Sec retary of State will meet with general ap proval. It was the natural thing to do. Cincinnati Times-Star. Mb. Foster can take up the work without any real break in its continuity, and will condnct its pending affairs intelligently. Judiciously and energetically. He is a thoroughly equipped diplomatist. Chicago Inter-Ocean. President Hahrisox has named as Secre tary of State one of ,the few Americans in active public life enjoying intimate techni cal acquaintance with diplomatic experi ence and possessing long diplomatic experi ence. Philadelphia Prtss. In the appointment of Hon. John W. Fos ter, of Indiana, to the post of Secretary of State left vacant by Mr. Blaine's abrupt resignation, the President has honored an official who has had a lopg career in diplo macy and the public service. Boston Globe. Tbebe aro now two Secretaries by the name of Foster in the Cabinet, both holding leading positions. The nomination and speedy confirmation of Mr. J. W. Foster as Secretary of State is a deserved recognition of the ability shown by him throughout his diplomatic career. Washington Star. No man is better qualified to succeed James G. Blaine than John W. Foster, whose success in tbe field of foreign affairs has been most phenomenal. President Harrison has mado this appointment with a view to tbe interest of publio business only, and it Is In accord with his faithful administration. Ohio State Journal. The promotion of Mr. J. W. Foster to the head of the State Department is fully do served, and Is in the line of a reformed civil service. He has been in diplomatic work for over 20 years, and is thoroughly lamlliar with treaties, with reciprocity and all tho affairs of the foreign department. Detroit Journal. A True Criterion. Hew York Recorder.) The new bead of the National Republican Committee has one of the finest heads ever reproduced in newspaper Illustration. And when a man is handsome In a newspaper cut he may well be proud of himself. A Burnt Child Dreads the Tire. Indlana-jolls Journal. The Republican party shows its faith in Republican principles by a purpose to fight the campaign upon the tariff as the leading issue, but their opponents of various sorts seem not to have that confidence. Too Big to Swallow. Philadelphia Press. Uncle Dana is still busy swallowing the whale or Democratic ticket; but up to date he has got no further than the tall. Adlai is all right. But Grover, well The Grease for the Machine. New York Advertiser. Mr. Whitney is propared to furnish ooal oil for the lamps of the Tammany panders this year. CHARITY WAS SHOCKED. Sad Tale of a Lady and a Lover, to Say Noth ing of Million Sunday School Class Organ Beeltal at WllklDsburg Gossip of Society. A lady, a friend 'of mankind's in general and little children in particular, had an ex perience on Thursday that has slightly chilled her universallst doctrine of affec tion. Possessing a lovely lawn, she though t she ought to share Its pleasures with some small Sunday sohool people of , her acquaintance. Little angels she probably thought tney were; other people behind her back were more likely to call them "ragamuffins. The B. S. V. P.'s were made in person, and no refusals being received the hosts of youngsters on the lawn was only outnumbered by the blades of its grass. Then it rained, and the rising generation was obliged to be taken Into the house. The sight of the tracks left by their feet was not a palatable one. Tbe worst came after. A freezer of Ice cream hud been set on the side porch awaiting a de mand on Its contents, and was stolen by several degenerate boys, either related by blood to the picnickers, or who being powerful of nose, had scented the picnic afar off. They went over to the park and took pot luck with the cream, adding Insult to injury by not returning the freezer, which was of no nso to anyone but its owner. Next morning the freezer as well as the cream was paid for bv the hostess and also half the price or an umbrella lost by one or the chil dren. This last was doubtless done under nrotest, due largely to a viiit from the mother of the owner of the umbrella. No question was raised as to the Justice ot the claim of half damage.9, because the visitor looked like a fighting Englishwoman and dropped her h's." The handsome new edifice of the Wil klnsburg Methodist Episcopal Church, on South street, was crowded last night with a, sympathetic and enthusiastic audience sympathetic, because tbe occasion was the first musical event in the new church, and enthusiastic because tho entertainment was unusually good. The now organ, ofa char acter worthy or tho building, was formally dedicated in a recital by Mr. Theodore Salmon, who satisfactorily tested the in strument in a wide range of music. The en tertainment commenced with an organ number consisting of Bach's "Prelude" in E minor, Handel's "Larghetto," D minor, and the "Grand Offertoire de St. Ceclle," by Batiste. Mr. Salmon played in a masterly stvle, and brought out all tbe beauties of the compositions, as well as the merits of the organ. Miss Carrie Beall sang "Best in the Lord." from the oratorio of "Elijah," and did full Justice to Mendelssohn's magnificent work. Then Mr. Salmon took the organ ugaln with a "Reverie," by Saint Saens, and' "Vesper Hymns and Variations," by Whitney. The style or these works was altogether different frcm those played first, but the organ was equally respouslve. and the audience was delighted. W. A. McCutcheon's rich voice was neat d to advantage in two solos, "In Sheltered Vale" and Lecoq's "By Thee I Swear." The second pan opened with tho two jrgan selections, "Pilgrim's Song of Hope," by Batiste, and "Fanfare," by Lem mens, in which Mr. Salmon and the organ both did splendid work. Miss Beall rendered Goetzo's charming ballad, "O. Happy Day," with great taste and expression, follow ing it with "A Winter Lullaby," by DeKoven, of "Kobln Hood" fame. The next number was the organ again, consisting or an "Offertoire in D Flat" by Salome, a "Grand Chorus in B Flat" by Dubois, and a "Serenade In F Ma jor" by Gonnod. Mr. Cutcbeon gave the aria, "Lord God of Abraham," from "Ell Jab," and Mr. Salmon brought the enter tainment to a close Dy pinying itossinrs ma jestic overture to "Tancred," which brought out the full compass of the organ. Con gratulations were exchanged among the members or the congregation, and Mr. Sal mon was warmly complimented for the manner in whioh be had proved to his list eners that the instrument was one of the best in Western Pennsylvania. Miss McOamdless as a stockbroker is proving a success. She is holding for the Women's Dormitory Association of the the Columbian Exposition 500 shares which represent one-half of tbe 1,000 allotted to Pennsylvania, and of which Miss Lucas, of Philadelphia carries the remainder. Tho rendering possible a visit to Chicago in 1S93 for the great mass of women me-igerly sui plled with money for vacation needs, will attract nuuureus iu a ijihm nfacturing city like Pittsburg, the only fear being that many will delay making arrange ments for the purchase or stock until It is all bought np, when it will be impossible to have redress for their own negligence, as there Is no reserve stock. Something more definite concerning the size of the buildings, the pi tn and their lo cation and the style of their architecture is very much desired, and Miss McCandle3s has telegraphed for information. It is also expected that In a few days tho bcheuie for a restaurant either will be fully developed or aDandonod, according to wise dictation. Thursday, Friday and Saturday or next week, and from 11 to 3 each day, will be de Voted to negotiations for stock. The third annual lawn fete for the benefit of St. James' B. a Church, Wllklnsburg, which began on Wednesday evening, will come to a close to-night. The church grounds are decorated, and the smoothness with which the whole entertainment has been managed reflects credit upon Commandery B. C. U., Kniahts of St. John, nnder whoso general direction It is held. Thursday night the rain drovo the merrymakers Into tne lecture room or the chhi ch, but with this ex ception the exercises were all conducted outside, ana in very ltui.ii uuuaukuicuamnu fete. The tables are In charge of tbe follow ing ladies: i efreshmento Mrs. John WoKe. Mrs. Adam Kesslcr. Mrs. DIemer and Miss Catherine Hines. ice cream table tn light blue Mrs. C. 8. Madden: aides. Misses Jessie Whalen, Mary Wbalen and Mary E. Madden. Ice cream table In red and green Mrs. L. W. ilagley; aids. Misses Genevieve Doran, Kellie Corboy and Annie Kessler. Ice cream tahle In pink and blue Mrs Fry: aids. Misses Lizzie Flonse. Mary Fry, Brlgey Bntlerand Aggie Flouse. Cgle i louse. ce cream table in pnrpje Mrs. Steffens; aids, Mpa Wolfe. DIemer. Stumor and Madden. Misses Wolfe. DIemer. Stumpf and Madden. I.... A-aqm thlA In nlnbrrr Jlmn Vr Ice cream table In pink Mrs. Agnes Kravney; aids. Misses Maggie McC'allUter, Mary Campbell. Mary Murphy and Ella Dunnlgan. Fruit, candvand flower booth Mrs. John Lamb ing and Mrs. T. J. Moore; aids. Misses Katie Brel man. Agnes Lambing, Louise Seine Imer and Katie McGnlgan. Lemon booth Miss Jennie Walsh: aids. Misses Tere-ssa Bonner. Jennie Kuan, Mary Kuan and Jennie Lambing. The officers of the Knights of St. John, who were active in promoting the comfort of the guests during the three nights or tho fete, were Chairman, L. W. Xagley; Secre tary, G. Snider; Treasurer, F. Madden. The patronage has been large enough to make sure of a good round sum being added to tbe treasury of the church. The feto Is being continued to-night in response to a general request. Admtbees of the Bohemian Club predict its becoming tbe club of the city and even compare its future to the celebrated Clover Club, of Philadelphia. Like this great pro totype, the Bohemians intend to master the art of after-dinner talking, n not impossible feat, with men like Sinjor Montooth on Its list of membership. H. S. Stephenson, tho artist, is said to have been the sponsor of the club, and now he Is one or Its most ar dent supporters. There was some thought at tho time or its formation of admitting women in what might be described as a semi-deml-seml fashion, which would give them certain privileges and debar them from others; but probably it fell through from sheer lack of nurture. Social Chatter. The Iron Qneen left its docks last night with the largest party or passengers It has vet carried. The growth or tho fad to go to Cincinnati bv boat is phenomenal, and a view of the mass of eager people trying at the last moment to obtain state rooms proves chat water parties on the Ohio river are neither "a delusion nor a snare." Several clubs talk of golnj on masse, and the next one most probably to make the trip will be the Tennis Club of Bon Venue. Societt In England Is talking a good deal about the World's Fair, and the possibilities for visiting it. One young Englishwoman writes to a Plttsbnrg friend about our Re publican notions of "the world for we, the people of the United State-, and heaven thrown in." "We think," she writes, "of coming over to see your great Chicago Fair if they don't make it too cheap and too nasty." Vft. and Mbs. John G. McElveen have re turned from tho honeymoon. The "at homes,'' arranged for Thursdays during July, will be given at Neglev street, corner Banm, the house of Mrs. McElveen's pa rents, where the young people will live until their establishment is fitted out. ' Mbs. William H. Daly, of Howe street, East End, has a cousin, Miss Virginia Deaver, visiting her from Baltimore. She is en route to Dakota, where she will spend tbe coming year. Mb. and Mbs. Albert J. Barb chaperoned a party of small children on tbe "Double decker" into town last night. A NUMBEB of parties are on tbe tapis for the musloale at the Kenmawr Hotel this evening. CURIOUS CONDENSATIONS. The Chinese like to sleep well, but not high. "Women shoplifters in Paris are on the Increase. In Tennessee there is a 15-year-old girl preacher. The decimalists say that the 24-hour day is doomed. Valparaiso, Ind., has a horse thief who shut 7 years old-j In Paris water proof umbrellas made of paper are en rlgeur. Austria has only two works making cast or rolled plate glass. Eighty-five hundred churches were built In America last year. Ancient Greek women had larger feet than men nowadays. , A postage stamp worth f5,000 has been discovered in New York. A lady 21 years of age has opened printing office In Boston. There are 10,000 parishes in England with only church schools. . It requires $1,000,000 every 24 hours to run Uncle Sam's Government. Seven-eighths of the bread used in Lon don is made of American wheat. The Chinese gardeners are the most expert fruit growers in the world. In 1325 there was but one represent! tive or homeopathy in this country. In Ijogan county, Kentucky, no coot has been held for twenty-five years. Ten thousand lead toy soldiers are turned out at Nuremberg every day. Tbe Manhattan elevated road, KW York, carries 500,000 passengers daily. In the Indian Territory the yonjg women recently gave a leap year party. A man was arrested at Lawrence, Kai., the other day for stealing a street car ride. On account of its monosyllabistic quality, Chinese is the easiest language for .tee phoning. The railway dining cars in this country earn more than the sleeping and baggags cars together. It bos been demonstrated tbat there ii gold in the worlds of space as well as nponi our own globe. In Denmark it is proposed to stamp out tuberculosis In cattle by vaccinaticja with Koch's lymph. New York City" has fewer alleys than any other dry in tbe world, notwithstanding it is one of tbe largest. The lands in Germany devoted to tbe growing of Grain for beer production would support 50,000,000 people. In the French army there are four liy ing generals on the retired list who wers born in the lost century. The total value of unclaimed mail mat ter in the London postoffice amounts to something over $30,000 a year. A lady in Buckport has sold $30 worth of braids made from her own hair, and yet she has plenty of hirsute growth left. In tbe Kalahau desert, in South Af rica, the Bushmen are able -to discorer water by digging in the bottom of dried-np river beds. w In New South "Wales twelve banks and financial syndicates own about 45,000,000 acres of land, one institution alone ownln j 8,500.000 acres. 3?ive States are represented in Congress by persons not born within their limits: Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas, New Hampshire and Minnesota. The percentage of net dividends returned to the stockholders of street raflways in th United States is three times as great as tha of steam railways. Free baths are advocated in SL L"" as a means of preventing the loss o' Mboyswbo annually drown In thii. sippi at tbat point. According to information from C stantinople tho Turkish Government bos de cided to make vaccination compulsory throughout tbe Ottoman Empire. London society is somewhat' startled over the news that the portrtts o'r Pa derewskl in the Eoyal Academy is the work of tbe Marchioness of Lome. In Australia some jewellers advertise that they will gladly exchange duplicates of wedding presents of young married people; and are willing to give articles of equal' value. An Arizona paper announces the find ing ofa U-pound nugget In tbe Planchez placers, Sonora, Mexico. This Is said to be the larsest nugget of gold on record. The percentage of pure gold was 87 fine. Aneut the chance of death in war, a carefully deduced calculation at the battle of Solferino, a bloody engagement, shows that 700 bulletswere expended forevery man wounded and 4,200 for each man killed. Belgium now has 133,000 voters; a household -uffrage would raise the number to 900,000; giving the suffrage to all who can read and write would raise It to 1,100,000, and universal suffrage would mean 1,500,(X voters. Ye as well as the Europeans, sit with hats off in houes of worship, while the Turks consider the uncovering of the head an indecent familiarity, and doubtless the Hebrew custom or wearing hats in the synagogue is an Oriental law. The Marqnis of Dnfierin, Britain's new Ambassador at Paris, ha3 a collection of water-colors painted by himself on view there, and the Marchioness lately charmed everybody by her bright and spirited aoting in "A Happy Pair" at the Austrian embassy in Borne. There is now on exhibition in Philadel phia a gigantic tarpon and a splendid speci men of the silver king about six feet in length and weighing 125 pounds. The fish Jumped clean out of the water six different times and took 1 hour and 25 minutes to bring him to gaff. Alinco pie is emphatically a New Eng land Institution, but it is a Saxon Invention. Before their conversion to Christianity they used to make a stow or porridge con sisting of everything held sacred to their gods, as the flesh of birds, animals, grains and dried herbs which had been gathered at the full of tbe moon. The invention of making paper from linen rags has been brought home to Suabla, and it was first put Into practice by the Bol beln family of Bavensburg. Tbe oldest document or this kind or paper is dated A. D. 130L Now, as the Holbein arms bore a bull's head, we find this symbol Imprinted as water-mark In all the paper from, the old Bavensburg mill. The healthiest children are thoso whose mother has not reached 35 years. Those born of mothers between 35 and 40 years of age are S per cent weaker, and those, or mothers or over 40 are 10 per cent weaker. The children of aged fathers and younse mothers have, as a general thing, a strong constitution; but If the parents are of the same age tho children are less robust. PEBT POINTEBS FBOM PUCK. "Confound that woman and her hati" "Never mind, old man. Her halo lq heaven will not be big enough to get In any one's way." "There is a new attraction at the museum this week. Itlsanosslfledflsn." A shad. I presume." "Don't be angry, old fellow it's only my way." Well. I wish you'd emulate the babes In tin wood." "How?" "Lose your way. It's no good." Aided by the moral I npport of a new suit of clothes, ereu a weak man may rise to great ness: but It takes a strong man to maintain a respectable arerage when his trousers begin to bag at the knees. "So yon wrote her a poem?" "Tes." replied the young man, sadly. "AYhat did she say?" "She said she admired my letter; bat she didn't) qntte understand my method of using capital letters." "I hear that South Dakota will exhibit a cyclone In operation at the World's Fair." Pshawl It will neverbe noticed In Chicago." First Lawyer. Married now, eh? So you, have won a case In Cupid's court. Second Lawyer. Yes : but I have to par the com. ?