THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH. Hf PAGES 9 TO 20. SECOND PART. THE PITTBITR& DISPATCH. SUNDAY, JULY 17, 1892. GLADSTONEGAINS GiTing Him a Majority in the lText Parliament of 45 or Thereabouts, ENOUGH FOE THE PURPOSE, According lo the Grand Old. Man, Though less Than Expected. THE LIBERALS K0T DISCOURAGED. llorlej's Bins Outlook in a Newcastle's TriaDfular Tight ALL COURJEST THROWN TO THE "WINDS CUT CABLE TO TIIE DISPATCH. Loxdok, July 16. Copyright. Six hundred and fifty out of 670 members who constitute the House of Commons hare now been elected, and the parties this evening stand as follows: Liberals, 266; National ists, 65; Parnellites. 9; Conservatives, 266; Liberal-Unionists, 41 Gladstone has gained altogether in Great Britain 80 seats, but against this magnificent achievement must unfortunately be set 19 Conservative and six Unionist gains in Great Britain and Ire land. The net Liberal gain, therefore, is 55. Of the remaining 20 seats Gladstone can scarcely win more tnan two, ana bis major ity in the new Parliament cannot exceed 45. This result, it must be confessed, is not equal to the sanguine hopes with which the Liberals went into the fight, but Mr. Glad stone is confident that it will suffice for his purpose. Not the least satisfactory feature of the struggle, which practically ends to-day, is the drastic manner in which the constituencies have treated the Liberal Unionist party, led by the Duke of Devon shire, and that most venomous of Mug wumps, Joseph Chamberlain. The party numbered 73 members at the beginning of the last Parliament, it lost several seats at the bye-elections, and to-day it can muster only 44 men, including six who accord ingly won seats during the present contest. Gladstone Not Entirely Satisfied. But this punishment, although to all an pearance sufficiently severe, does not sat isfy Mr. Gladstone and his more ardent fol lowers, who long ago made up their minds that the Mugwumps would not number more than 30 in the new Parliament. Mr. Gladstone displayed his disappointment in a letter published yesterday addressed to the Liberal candidate 4br Handsworth division, Staffordshire, in the course of which he said: "Of all classes of candi dates now before the country none is so hopeless as the dissentient Liberal. I can not help hoping tbat the Tories, if left to themselves, would have had good sense enough to restore harmony between Eng land and Ireland by settling ,the Irish ques tion, dui nere are a set oi gentlemen whose creed seems to be summed U)fcn their hatred of the Irish cause, and who, in their in dulgence of tbat unhappy sentiment, have foresworn, one by one, all their liberal ideas, and yet continue to maintain the name of a political creed of which they are the masked but not dangerous enemies." But, alter all, the reduction of this polit ical party from 73 to 44 is a striking piece of work of which the Liberals bavegood reason to be proud. Mr. Gladstone is now resting in tbe Scottish Highlands, but he will be in London next week in order to confer with his lieutenants as to the course to be pursued at the reassembling of Parlia ment on August 4. SalUboxy Tt aits to Be Kicked Oat. It is understood that Lord Salisbury has made up his mind not to retire gracefully, but will want to be kicked out He argues that the numerical strength of the Tory party still exceeds that of any other single party in Parliament, and that he is not bound to count labor members, Parnellites and anti-Parnellites among Mr. Gladstone's followers, until they have actually gone with him into the same Parliamentary division lobby. This, of course, s merely a device for postponing the inevitable, but at the most it will not delay Mr. Gladstone's return to power beyond a weelc or two. It will involve among other small inconveniences, a set debate upon the Queen's speech, in the course of which the Tories hope they will be able to force Mr. Gladstone's hand by compelling him prematurely to divulge the details of his home rule MIL They ought to know the "old parliamentary hand" bet ter than that. They are loredoomed to disappointment The Grand Old Man will beat them in strategy and tactics, and will carry a vote of censure in the way which teems best to him notwithstanding the Parliamentary filibustering which the Tories are already threatening. Of the 52 Irish seats which a year ago Timothy Harrington confidently predicted would be won by Parnellites, only nine have been secured by that taction, a result which speaks highly for the good Bense and patriotism of the people. Ilarrincton'e Offer That Was Spurned. A large Nationalist majority was never in doubt, but few people believed that the factiomsts would be so utterly routed. Upon the eve of the general election Har rington made what he described as a gener ous offer, made solely in the interest of Seace, thr.t there should be no contests In Nationalist constituencies if 33 seats were allotted to his party, but it that ofler were rejected he and his irien'ls "would make it not in every sense of the word" for the Nationalists all over Ireland. In order to avoid contests which would let in Tories, the Nationalists oflered the Parnellites 12 seats, but that offer, generous in the circumstauces, was contemptuously rejected, with the result that while proving to the world their own insignificance, the Parnellites have made a present to the Tories of five Nationalist seats. The Tories are as much chagrined as the Parnellites. They bad counted, in their ignorance of Ireland, upon the presence in the new Par liament ot an Irish party almost equally divided, and they would have been prepared to pay a high price for the Parnellite sup port against Gladstone, but that assistance is now scarcely worth purchasing. Meanwhilehowever, tbe Parnellites are gratuitously playing the Tory game by en deatoring to sow distrust between Nation alists and Liberals. The Independent, the chief Parnellite organ, cave Drominence yesterday to a ridiculous statement pur porting to emanate from London to the effect that Gladstone had decided, with the consent of the Irish members, to shelve home rule in order to give him an opportu nity of reforming the electoral system. A 5tatrmpnt Without Fonnila;Inr. The statement is an impudent and ma licious fabrication. Mr. Gladstone will proceed with his home rule scheme with the least possible delay. The Irih leaders had positive assurance to that effect before the general election commenced, and Gladstone could notbave gone back upon them had his majority been double its present size. But that majority now absolutely depends upon m Aiiou Yoie, ana mat tact, it there were nothing else, afiords of itself ample security; that no attempt will be made to trifle with Ireland's demands. The Tory leaders have not yet met to con sider their course of action," but the utter ances of their inspired organs in the press leave no room for doubt that their policy is tobe a fighting one. The home rule bill will be contested, clause by clause and line by line, and every device of parlia mentary obstrnctirn will be used lo defeat it Nor can there be anv doubt that when the bill reaches the House of Lords it will be thrown out The peers might have hesi tated to take such daring action had Glad stone obtained the majority in Great Britain, but with the T.ihernls in nn actual minority of British votes, it may be taken as absolutely certain that no quarter will be given to them by their hereditary foes. A Greater Straggle Yet to Come. In every quarter the general election now ending is regarded merely as prelim inary to a greater struggle to come, prob ably in the summer of next year. Tory and Libera! newspapers alike are already exhorting their partisans to take care that their names are placed on the new register oi voters which will be made np at the end of this month, and in many constituencies successful as well as unsuccessful candidates are making their personal arrangements on the assumption that a year of hard work is before them. In pursuance of their new fighting policy the Tories have resolved upon the usual course of opposing the re-election of mem bers of the new Cabinet Hundreds ot years ago the House of Commons, in its wisdom, decreed tbat any member accept ing a place of profit under the Crown should ipso facto vacate his seat and submit himself to his constituents tor re-elaction or re jection. The rule has long ceased to be of any practical value, because the Crown no longer dares to gain its way with the House of Commons by bribery and cor ruption, but remains in force. Usually new Ministers, by courtesy of their op ponents, are re-elected witfiout opposition, and almost invariably so when a general election has jut taken place, but upon this occasion tbe re-election of every man who accepts a position in Gladstone's home rule Cabinet is to be stoutly opposed. Newcastle the Seat or War. Preparations for these ungracious conflicts are being actively made, and especially in Newcastle, wher John Morley is to be op posed bv a labor candidate as well as a Tory. KeirHardic, a ybuu? labor leader who has just been made M. P. for West ham by liberal votes, has ungratefully gone down to Newcastle to take charge of the campaign against Morley, much to the de light of the Tories, who bail the incident as a timely proof of the instability of Gladstone's majority. Fortunately, how ever, there is not another labor member who would act as Hardie is now acting. They all owe their seats to Liberals, apart from labor votes, and everyone of them ex cept Hardie has sense enough to grasp the significance ot that fact Hardie, being young and vain, will probably not realize it until he has alienated the bulk of his con stituents and finds himself out in the cold after the next election. The probabilities are that even Mr. Glad stone will not be spared the ordeal ot an other election, for it is . ithoritatively an nounced to-day that, emboldened by their success in reducing the Grand Old Man's majority in Midlothian, "the Conservatives and Liberal Unionists have commenced an energetic canvass of the constituency, with a view, if thought advisable, of contesting the seat, in event of Mr. Gladstone accept ing office as Prime Minister." An Attack Uound to Fa I'. The proposed attack will certainly Jail, but the fact that such action should be seri ouslr considered is one of the many signs of the exasperation of the Tories at being defeated, and Colonel Kenyon Slaney, an aristocratic M. P., yesterday publicly denounced Mr. Gladstone as one of whom nothing -was more clear than that those who knew him best trusted him least," and Tory speeches and Tory- newspapers almost teem with similar abuse; 'showing that orators and writers have been severe ly hit For many years, however, Mr. Gladstone has been the best abused man in the United Kingdom, and has learned to pursue his way heedless of the snapping and snarling of insignificant enemies. He loves to fight well enough when tbe foes are worthy of his steel, and he will have plenty of it in the coming Par liament An idea has taken hold of the Tory mind that the Grand Old Man may be worried into retiring from public life, and the task will be undertaken by Balfour, Goschen and Chamberlain, assisted, in all prob ability,' by Lord Bandolph Churchill, who is about to reappear on the Parliamentary stage in the character of the friend of tbe distressed party. The result of the general election has converted the powerful daily Chronicle, which henceforth will give "an independent support" to Gladstone's policy. Expressions of tbe Kadlcal Feeling. It has transpired that Prince Christian of Schleswig-Holstein, one of the numerous German hangers-on of the royal family, and who is kept from the poorhouse by the generosity of the British taxpayer was, in some manner yet " to be explained, placed on the electoral register for" East Berkshire, aud recoraea nis vote tor the Tory candidate. Something more is likely to be beard of this matter in the new Parliament Meanwhile, the radical feeling about it is indicated by the London btar, which re marks to-day: "Boyalties, supported by the House of Commons, should not be allowed to vote at all. They will only vote for men who will keep Tip their pensions. We disfranchise a man who has received a little outdoor re lief from the people, or a little medical aid, but a royal pauper who draws s thousand a year is allowed to vote." In accordance with royal proclamation the peers of Scotland met" Thursday in the ancient Palace of Holyrood, near Edin burgh, for the purpose ot choosing 16 of their nnmber to sit and vote in the new Parliament as representative peers of Scot land. The Vtnal Protest Lodged. What is described as the usual protest was lodged against the Earl of Kellie voting as the Earl ot Mar, but the Duke of Mont rose, who presided, relused to accept it, although it was indorsed bv the Duke of Sutherland,. the Earls of Strathmore, Stair and Gallaway, and Lord SempilL The Earl of Mar and Kellie was trebly fortunate, Thursday, because not only did the peers refuse to abet the Earl of Mar's renewed at temp to rob him of half of his title, but they elected hira a representa tive peer at the very moment that he was being married in London to a sister of the Earl of Shaftesbury. The squabble about this title, which is to be re newed in the House of Lords next month, has called public attention to the anomal ous position of numerous Scotch peers who don't also hold English titles, giving them the right to sit In the House ot Lords. Scottish representative peers have to undergo re-election at the beginning of every Parliament, and no Scottish peer can sit in the House otCommons,but Irish repre sentative peers are elected ior life.and those not so elected may sit in the House of Com mons if they can find constituencies to elect them. The law so rarely gives the advan tage to Ireland that this instance is worth noting. 4 Effect or the Parisian Cholera Scare. IBY CABLE TO THE DISrATCH.1 London, July ia General Comstock, heedless of the cholera scare, bas gone to Paris. A good many Americans, however, have canceled their Parisian engagements and have gone to Eastbourne and other En glish watering places instead. A Russian l'xprillilon to the ramir. Sx. Petersburg, Jul f 16. An expedi tion Under the Command of rnntnin SaHnfT bas started ior tne Pamir, the country from which Captain Yodnghusband, an English agent, was expelled some months ago by Russians, and for which expulsion Russia subsequently apologized to England. POLITICS AND BUSINESS With a Little Religion or Several Kinds Mixed Cp In East Africa 4 Mm for English Politicians and Philanthropists to Clear Up. CBT CABLS TO THE DISPATCH. 1 London, July 16. Captain Lugard's tardy dispatches explaining his share in the fighting in Uganda, have come to hand, and they don't afford pleasant reading to Chris tian lovers of peace. Thestory told is an unedifying one of deceit and blood shed between Roman Catholics, Protestants and heathens, and the last-named appears to have come out ot it with the least discredit Lugard, of course, places the blame npon the Catholics, but it is certainly a case of six of one and half a dozen of tbe other. The Imperial British South African Com pany, which is composed of shoddy philan thropists and sharp capitalists, wants ths British Government to come to the rescue of Captain Lugard on the old ground that it the company's forces be with drawn Uganda will relapse into barbar ism, but the native Protestants and Catholics appear to be romarkably muscular Christians, well able to take care ol themselves against the heathens, and the people of Uganda generally, it they conld be polled on the question, would as likely as not vote in favor of barbarism rather than civilization and Christianity, plus machine guns and breech-loading rifles. Tbe fact is that the East Africa Company, having by its charter been given vast tracts of country in Africa, is anxious to de velop its possessions at the ex pense of somebody else preferably the British Government Had the Tories re mained in power the company might have succeeded, for it has already secured from the British Treasury a subsidy for the survey of a railway from the coast to the interior, but there will soon be a Liberal Prime Minister in Downing street who is not likely to be hoodwinked like his prede cessor. The Liberal position is perfectly straight forward. Either the East Africa Company must do its work without Government as sistance, or it mnst admit its incompetence and hand over its territory to tbe Imperial Government ME. ASIOS ABLE 10 SIDE OUZ Carriage Exercise Taken by the Rich Man 'Who TVm Reported Dead. BY CABLE TO THE DISPATCH. London, July 16. Mr. William Wal dorf Astor was able to take carriage exer cise to-day. It has transpired that the real cause of the trouble which set the painful rumors into circulation was a slight attack of pleurisy which followed upon a severe cold. The Astor family believe they have been victims of a cruel conspiracy, and their legal advisers are in correspondence with the postoffice and the cable companies, with a view to discover the man who, it is be lieved, sent a forged cablegram announcing the death to New York. Mr. Astor has bought the famous Henrietta mansion, in Carlton Hoose Terrace, by private treaty. The price paid has not been allowed to transpire. THE COLUMBUS ENCYCLICAL. Leo XIII. Enjoins the Bishops of Italy, Spain and America to Celebrate. Rome, July 16. The promised papal en cyclical, on the Columbns Celebration, was issued to-day. In it the Pope enjoins tbe bishops in Italy, Spain and America to cel ebrate the anniversary of the discovery of America by special services. In conversa tion with a number of cardinals to-day the Pope expressed himself as satisfied that he had every prospect of living to celebrate his jubilee. His Holiness requests that the French Government intervene by strong represen tations at St. Petersburg to persuade Rus sia to assume a more friendly attitude toward Catholics in that country, haR re sulted in no success, tbe Russian Holy Synod opposing any change in the treat ment of Catholics. FIGHTING THE CHOLERA. Russia and Spain Taking Extraordinary Precaution Against the Plague. St. Petersburg, July 16. The Medical Department is distributing disinfectants at cost price. The Czar presided to-day at a council which disenssed the question of ap pointing an official with dictatorial powers to combat tbe epidemic in the Volga prov inces. A telegram from Madrid says a commis sion has gone to Irun, on the frontier, to install a watch to prevent the introduc tion of cholera into Spain from France and to make arrangements for the disinfection of passengers' baggage. Precautions to prevent tbe disease entering Spain have been taken along the whole frontier. GEEVY'S BAD SON-IN-LAW. Ho Is Convicted for Becoming AXayor of a Commune j Illegal Means. Paris, July 16. M. Daniel Wilson, son-in-law ot the late M. Grevy, whose impli cation in the traffic in decorations when M. Grevy was President caused such a scandal as to lead to the forced resignation of Presi dent Grevy, was a short time since elected Mayor of Loches, the commune in which his estates are situated. Charges were made that he had used Il legal means to secure his election, and he was placed on trial. To-day he was found guilty, and fined 1,000 francs for corrupt practices. Ninety-Six Bodies From the Wreck, Paeis, July 16. Two more bodies of vic tims who lost their lives in the disaster at St Gervais early Tuesday, have been recov ered at Salainchs, whither they were carried by the flood. This makes a total of 96 bodies that have been recovered thus far. Arranging for the Arbitration. PABI8, July 16. M. Eibot, Minister of Foreign Affairs, to-day had a conference with the American Minister and Mr. Pbipps, the British Charge d'Affaires, on the arrangements for the Bering Sea arbi tration. City of Chicago Inquiry. BT CABLE TO THE DISPATCH London, July 16.-The Bord of Trade inquiry into the loss of the City of Chicago will open in St' George's Hall, Liverpool, on Monday, and will probably last two days. Investigation of Immigration. Washington, July 16. In the Senate to-day,-Mr. Jones, of Nevada, from the Committee on Contingent Expenses, re ported back a resolution, which was aareed to, instructing the Committee on Immigration to inquire into the working of the laws on the subject ot immigration from foreign coun tries, the importation of contract labor, and tbe laws and prevailing methods of naturali zation since the ysar 1890. s Killed by a Woman In Self-Defense. Kingswood, July 16. Special Weston is credited with another homicide. One Bedbreg attacked a well-known and re spected lady in her room at the Bailty House. She did all in her power to defend herself, and finally succeeded in crushing her assailant's tkull, causing instant death. WOES OF THE KICH. How a Man Feels When He Has Sev eral Millions at His Beck. THE SAD STORY OP CYRUS FIELD. Elizabeth Thompson Thinks Her Gifti Dave Pone Only Harm. YANDERBILT3 PLEASURE AND PAIN WBITTXX FOB THE DISPATCH. 1 How happy are millionaires? Is "big money" worth the labor and anxiety which it costs? Is the owner of $50,000,000 really worth more than the owner of "51,000,000? I have interviewed several well-known millionaires asking answers to the above questions Cornelius Vanderbi't, Russell Sage, Cyrus Field, Chauncey 'Depew, Le land Stanford, Elizabeth Thompson and others and it seems as if their views might be of general interest, especially in the light of the sad business in Homestead, Pa. It was a week or two ago that I called on Mr. Depew at the Arlington, where he pansed while deciding whether to be Mr. Harrison's Secretary of State or not At the end of the business which indnced my call I asked, "Does it pay to be very rich?" "I don't know," said Mr. Depew; -"I have never been it; but! should imagine it did or folks wouldn't want to be it would they?" Mr. Depew is worth only a paltry million or two, and he is not "very rich," according to metropolitan standards. A Hundred Millions Worse Than One. "However," he continued,after a minute, "they may think it is going to pay, and afterward find themselves mistaken; man never is but always to be blest; perhaps that's what you mean." "Is a fortune of 5100,000,000 any greater than a fortune of $1,000,000?" I asked. "Yes," he said, "it requires more care and tires a man more to keep it, but it will not bny any more of the things aman wants. Whether it brings any greater enjoyment well, probably not Riches do not generally confer happiness or necessarily even com fort It depends on what a roan does with his money. I know a manwho has an in come of just about 100,000 a year and gets aheap of satisfaction out of it He spends it all, on others, of course, most of it Enlightened selfishness. He gets his pleasure from making others happy. But it must require a great deal of time and talent. To know how to give away money wisely a man needs to be inspired." It is about the most difficult trade there is that of philan thropist 'A. great many more people would work at it if they were certain that their money wonld do good." Cyrns W. Field's Vanished Treasure. Poor Cyrus W. Field died Tuesday his immense fortune squandered by his son and the fortunes ot several of his relatives engulfed also, immediately after tbe death of the two who were dearest lo him in life. Five years ago he was worth f8,000,000. I asked him about that time several of the questions that stand at the head of this paper. "The value of money can easily be exag- geratea," said Mr. Field. "It is really worth only what it will bring in the things we want; and for that purpose $10 a day is worth just about as much as $1,000 a day. In addition to this, there is only the grati fied pride which arjses from having made what men generally call a great success. "So doubt Mr. Gould his about tbe.same sort oi satisfaction Jbat his neighbor Gen eral Grant had the satisfaction of having' beaten the satisfaction that the boy has who swims the farthest, or the girl who stands at the head of her class. That's all there is to it" Mr. Field waB cheerful then, and even jovial; he lounged upon the leathern sofa and chatted and laughed, and perhaps he thought less ot money than of the plaudits of the world showered on him in 1858 when the first Atlantic cable hiccupped its feeble but significant benediction. Kindness That Was Not Kindness. A friend of mine stood the other day at Mr. Field's bedside, and he speaks ot his state being pitiful indeed. "MV Hlft is a. wreck!" said the Rinfc mnn bitterly. "My fortune is gone, my home dishonored! Oh, I was so unkind to Ed ward when I thought I was being kind! If I had only had firmness enough to compel my boys to earn their own living, then they would have known the meaning of money 1 ' And the broken-spirited man repeated over and over again his desire to die His visitor reminded him of many things re maining to live for, of the greet honors paid him by all the countries tor his work for civilization which moored the continents together, of the fame which he has won and would never lose. All In vain; he was sure he nad'nothing to live for; and the decora tions given him by sovereigns and now hanging on the wall were meaningless baubles to him. I called and asked Bussell Sage about this matter. It is no more difficult to get at him to-day than it was before the dyna mite crank sought to effect a loan without security. He is worth a good deal of money, and they say he has recovered the $10,000,000 he lost in tbat scramble fn the street one morning ten years ago. Proba bly "he could foot up $50,000,000 or $60,000,- 00U it isn't wortn wnue to be too exact Itusti-ll Sage Still Works Hard. It was a very warm day when I called, and he bad his coat off and wiped the high receding tront of his business occiput with a red silk handkerchief as he handled the marked envelopes of pnts and calls on a little table before him ana replied, "Yes," "No," to the clerk who came in every minute or so and asked him a question in figures and symbols which were all Greek to me, "You seem to work hard to keep ahead of the boys, Mr. Sage." I said; "there is a prevalent idea tbat millionaires don't have to work at all." He uttered a significant but inarticulate sound of disapproval from the upper part of his throat a kind of chuckle strangled in its birth and added: "They have to work, I guess, it they keep anything. Everybody clutches to get It!" "Xou have enougti money, haven't you? I asked; "as much as you can use?" "Yes, as much as I can use," he answered turning toward me; "yes, I have as inuoh as I can use. I suppose. "Then why don't yon stop work?" I boldly continued; "vou 'haven't a child in the world; you are 75 years old; you are worth, they say, $75,000,000, $1,000,000 for every " Works Because He Likes To, He interrupted me once more with the same old sound ot dissent, and repeated Ironically, "Ihey sayl" After a minute be added: "You ask me why I don't stop work. I'll do it if you will answer me one ques tion: What else can x go at that will do as much good and give me as much satisfac tion? Well, you can't answer it' Nobody can. I have thought it over. This is my trade. Another thing: Every man likes to excel. He likes to prove to be worth as much as folks say he is worth. Hardly any man sold out suddenly would measure up equal to his reputation. Men take tbe same pleasure in accumulating that boys do in running races and climbing trees. I shouldn't be happy if I left the street And there are a thousand men depending on me for work what would they do?" Asl took my leave the old gentleman turned and said "no" to an offer to purchase a "privilege." It then occurred to me that his face had not taken 0Q wrinkle in 10 years, and tbat his clothes had improved mffLmf: f r$mr. """ "' ' StmfvllimfaW jj" " f"""j mzZiSm- J - 4 G? i Vis? laBSm mill - -ar- ' i" n',P Ii i " T?ffffnP " - UNDERTAKER REED the latter fact perhaps indicating a weaken ing of his financial ability. Nearly 50 years ago, when be was not worth $5,000, Bussell Sage, M. C, advocated the passage through Congress of the bill to purchase Mt Vernon. Now he is worth scores of millions and he does not spend a hundredth part of the interest on it; he never saw his money and never had it, and, excepting a bare pittance, it is wholly in the bands and coffers of others, used by them for their own benefit! But he thinks that fortune is his. A Woman Tries to Give Money Away. It is eight years, perhaps, since I last saw Elizabeth Thompson.'though before that time I had had the privilege of her pleasant acquaintance. She is a million aire, and bas an income of $50,000 every year. She was the daughter of a poor farmer of Vermont, and at 9 years old she hired out as a servant at 25 cents a week. She grew up in that humble place very handsome and very studious, attractive and intellectual, and at 20 she married the millionaire .Thompson, who died 25 years later and left her his fortune. The last time I called on her, she had "just gone up stairs," the maid said, but would be down in a minute. I waited in the parlor. When at last she appeared it was obvious that she was distressed about something, and I rose and tried to take my leave. She stopped me and said: "Not no! I am sorry I cannot conceal that I am in trouble. The plain fact is that I have been crying. You see that pile of letters on the lounge. I have just opened them. Most of them are begging letters, asking gifts, askiug 'loans,' and they have set me to thinking. O! I believe my money has never done anybody any goodl The Evil of One Sort of Giving. "For twenty years I have -sown it like chaff given away $40,000 every year, and it seems to have produced only misery. It sent to a drunkard's grave a'member of my own family. It has alienated my best friends. It appears to have helped nobody for more than an hour. I hardly now hear a word from those I have helped except when tbey tell me it is all gone aud tbey want some morel I don't know which way to turn. I am at bay. I have money and am afraid to bestow it in answer to any of these letters. I tried to plead for her philanthropies. "You must have brought immense relief to many poor people," I said. "The $150,000 you have spent to provide heads of families with work" "Doesn't seem to have done much good," she interrupted. "It is skill and industry and steadfast qualities that win permanent situations help from within rather than from without I have found that out from these letters, partly." "Your gift of $500 to every settler in Saline county, Kansas " "Better," she said. "But you would be amused and saddened by the strange letters I get from there." "The Vassar College telescope, the song service ior the poor, the great science fund, the Carpenter's'5" 'Emancipation Signing,' hanging on the walls ot the Senate Chamber in Washington, all speak for the wisdom of your benefactions," I insisted; "and no woman in tbe world but you, not even the President's wife, has the freedom of the noor of Congress. Is not that something?" The Problem of Philanthropy. "Yes, yes," she answered; "but all falls so short of what I meant It I only knew how to give away $100,000 this year, and have every dollar do good I So much of my money has disabled and crippled honest men, made them lazy and spiritless and de pendent multiplied beggars instead of di minishing them I arraign myselt at the bar oi conscience for my bad stewardship." Mrs. Thompson has done as well as the most of them. She is a constant student ot economics, mainly progressive, reform atory, an agnostic, t believe, brilliant in conversation, gifted in apt quotation, and if she bad been "in the swim" 50 years ago her square intellectual face would have been seen with those of Emerson, Margaret Fuller, Charles A Dana and the transcen dentalists at Brook Farm. Here Are Two More Opinions. I talked with Peter Cooper during his very last days on the relation of a million aire to the public "I have been luckier than most of 'em," he chuckled, "for I have been the executor of my own will. I have seen the Institute finished aud at work for good; but there are so many other things I want to do for the relief of wage-earners " and he gave to me a great bundle of his printed schemes for bettering the condition of the poor. Another "magnate" whose name I do not feel at liberty to mention, once said to me: "The men who do tbe most good in this world are not the professional philanthro pists, but the great capitalists who keep their money busy in processes of reproduc tion. The man who equips and keeps going a great factory does more good than he who builds an alms-house; and he who launches a steamship or establishes a railroad confers more benefit on 'the world than he who endows an asylum that will keep thousands from starving. He who teaches men to help themselves he is the real benefactor ot his kind." W. A Cboffux. EVIDENCK OF A FBIOHTFUL CRIME. The Corpse or n Berry Picker Found In the Woods With Two Bullet U onnda. Yokk, PA., July 16. Mrs. Michael Clemens, aged 32 years, was found dead in the woods near Pleasnreville, about four miles from this city yesterday evening. When found she was on her hands and knees, and her dress over her breast was on fire. There were two bullet holes in'her neek and cuts on her head. She had been out in tbe woods gathering huckleberries, and had been gone some time when search was made ior her. Near the body a man's hat and pair of suspenders were found. Dx Witt's Little Early Blsers. No griping; no pain, no nausea: easy pUl to take. Save yonr tear, old nvm; we're going to box THE HITTITE CIPHER. A Tonng German Has Discovered the ley to the Nation's History. IT BI7ALED EGYPT AND ASSYRIA. for a Thousand Tears Its Soldiers Held Its Neighbors at Bav. RECORDS CARTED IN STON'E BLOCKS rSFECIAt. TELEGKASI TO TIIE DISFATCH1 Balxbiokb, July 16. News has just reached the Johns Hopkins University through private sources that the hitherto unfound key to the Hittite inscriptions has been discovered by a clever young scholar in Germany, whose name is desired to be withheld for the present Similar achieve ments of not less importance have been made before this by persons no mo-e con spicuousas for example the unfolding of the Lecret of the Assyrian hieroglyphs by a schoolmaster at Hamburg named Grote fend, who accomplished the task on a wager which had reference to his skill in working out ciphers. This if the information quoted is cor rectis the third great riddle of this sort that has been solved during tbe present century. The successes obtained in de ciphering the Egyptian inscriptions and the cuneiforms of Babylon have already thrown a bright light upon a third mighty empire of the past, which now bds fair to leap into historical view from out of the darkness in which its memory has been shrouded. r - The Bittltes Ware Once Great. Bespecting the empire of the Hlttites, about whom so much is said in the Bible, practically nothing was known until within a few years. The Egyptian and Assyrian inscriptions, however, when they came to be read, were found to be filled with refer ences to them and accounts of their doings, together with many portraits of them, both painted and sculptured. From these data it has been learned that they were a great military power, a nation of warriors, whose country extended lrom the Euphrates river to the -gean sea. So strong were they that the Pharaoh who ruled Egypt at the time of the Exodus was obliged to treat with them on equal terms and to respect them as an equal. They were of light complexion and shaved their heads partly, wearing pigtails and having long, thin mustaches like the Chinese. Their eyes were slightly slanted and their facial angle was oblique. They wore queer peaked .hats, fingerless gloves and boots with exaggerated points that cuiled upward toward tbe knees. Curiously enough, precisely such boots and gloves are worn to this day by the people in parts of the region which they Inhabited. Abraham Bought a Lot of Them. The first purchase of land mentioned in history was made by Abraham, who, ac cording to tbe Bible, bought a bit of ground for a cemetery at Hebron from the "sons of Heth" i.,e., tbe Hittites. It is interesting to know 'that at so remote a period silver was employed as currency the cash equiva lent given being 400 shekels of that metal and that it was weighed out in a balance. A notion of the geographical extent ot the country occupied By this nation, which was for a long time ahead of its Assyrian and Egyptian neighbors in the arts ot war and peace, is obtained from the. fact that in the Assyrian inscriptions alone mention is made of not less tban 300 Hittite geographi cal names. Yet this great empire of the past has been historically ignored until lately, and it is only since 1870 that scholars have attempted to 'decipher the strange hieroglyphs left ueiuau as us uuiy auryiviiiK uiciuunais. .in these investigations Americans have been conspicuous, the actual beginning having been made by J. Augustus Johnson, ot the United States Consular service, and the Bey. S. Jessup, a missionary. The Mohammedan Blocked Invefttlfiition. These two gentLjmen, in 1870, came across some Yery extraordinary Hittite in scriptions at Hamab, in Syria, which at once aroused the attention ot archtcoiogists everywhere. Some ot tbem were carved on stones tbat were built Into the walls of dwelling houses. Bepeated efforts nere made to secure them, or to get copies iu the shape of "squeezes," but the superstitious Mohammedans, regarding them a sacred, would not permit this. Scholar irhn made the attempts were mobbed by angry crowds and their lives were even threatened. Finally, with the assistance of a Turkish official ot unusual intelligence and honesty, the stones uere obtained by purchase anil carried away, one of them being to largo that fifty men and four oxen were required to drag it a mile in a day. Two sets of "squeezes" were mai!e lrom the inscrip tions, one of which, is at present deposited in the British Museum. Many attempts have been made to decipher them. VtoI'. Syce, oi Oxiord, the Kev. Dr. William Wright, and Major Claude Conder, of the Boyal Engineers, have all claimed more or less success, but their claims are not recog nized m established. A War That I-l.trd COO Yean. According to Dr. Wright, to whom the writer is chiefly indebted ior the following information, the early Egyptian records, inscribed on. their monuments and on papy rus scrolls, refer to tbe Hittites, as heredi tary foes on the northeast frontier. For century after century wars with them were carried on with varying success. In the year 1650 B. C., Thothmei L ascended the the other one In November. .throne of the Pharaohs and began a strug gle with the Hittites, which was maintained for nearly 500 years, with occasional Inter vals of peace, by his successors. When Thothmes III. became King he found things in rather bad shape. His pre decessor was a Queen, and during her reign the neighboring peoples, of which the Hittites were most important, had declared themselves independent of Egypt, refusing to pay tribute. Thothmes ILL was a great warrior. He has been called the Alexander the Great of Egyptian history. Adopting an aggressive policy, he began a long series of campaigns, of which 13 are sketched on the monuments of that period, describing the lines, of march, the rivers crossed, the cities stormed, the booty taken, the tributes im posed of silver, gold, weapons, horses, wine, (pice and so forth. Two Mighty Nations In Mortal Combat. At length he led an army against the strong city of Megiddo, on the Kishon, where, according to the historical account, the Hittite king of Kadesh had gathered to gether "the kings and their peoples from the waters of Egypt to the river-land of Mesopotamia, and they obeyed him as their chief." Then there was a great battle. Tbe confederates were arrayed near Megiddo, ant" against them the Pharaoh drew out the might of Egypt Fighting was begun on the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Pha raoh's coronation. He beat the confeder ates at every point, and they fled, leaving their chariots behind and a vast amount of plunder, upon which the victorious army fell, permitting the enemy to escape into the city, which they defended with snch de termination tbat, after a long siege, they were permitted to surrender with honorable conditions. The inscriptions record in detail the booty captured, which included a chariot plated with gold belonging to the Hittite icing and 924 other chariots; tbey also men tion the tribute imposed and'give a list of 110 towns and nations represented by the confederacy. Nevertheless, during after years the Pharaoh was obliged to renew the -fight against the Hittites aiain and again. On the death of Thothmes IIL, in the year 1566, B. C., this Hittite power, which had been checked during his reign, became formidable again, and 50 years later a formal treaty of peace was concluded between Barneses I. aud Saplel, the Hittite king. The Oldest Heroic Poem Known. In the year 1356 B. C, Sati L came to the throne. He was the father of the Pharaoh of the Oppression, and he renewed the war against the Hittites, His son, Barneses IX known as Barneses the Great, tbe "Sesostris" of tire Greeks carried on the fight and led a mighty army against the Hittite city of Kadesh, on the Orontes. He took with him on the campaign his poet laureate, named Pentaur, who celebrated the achievement in an heroic poem which has come down in several editions, being found inscribed on an extant papyrus roll and also in conjunction with splendid battle scenes on the walls of temples at Abydos, Luxsors and elsewhere. This work in verse is the oldest heroic poem known, hav ing been written 3,200 years ago. Thus far the Hittites have only been con sidered from the Egyptian point of view. Tbe inscriptions left behind by the Assyrians show that they also were con tinually at war with this martial people. But the empire which had tor so long a time successfully fought against such power ful neighbors, maintaining itself upon an equality with them, was at last on the verge ot final dissolution. In 1721 B. C. the Assyrian king, Sargon, came to tbe throne, and four years later the long conflict was brought to an end by the overthrow of the Hittites at their Eastern capital, Carchem ish. Thus fell the mighty nation which had supported existence for a period of longer duration than the empires of Babylon or Assyria, Greece or Borne. The Bistorlc Value ot the Key. What has been ascertained from these outside sources of the history of this re markable people is sufficient to make the world eager to learn their account ot them selves, doubtless very fully given by the sculptured and painted inscriptions which they have left behind them in great num bers. Such memorials of the Hittites are scattered all over Asia Minor. Many. either tbe originals or reproductions, are now in tbe possession of museums and other scientific institutions. It has only rmained to discover the key for decipher ing them, and it is to be hoped that the news of the discovery of this ' long-sought secret will prove to be correct There is no doubt tbat much of the art which until recently was attributed to the Assyrians is actually of Hittite origin. Mr. Gladstone not very long ago pointed out tbe fact, until then unknown, tbat there is to be found in Homer a reference to the Hittites. They are mentioned all through tbe Old Testament King David and King Solomon are both spoken of as having taken Hittite wives in the eleventh chapter of the first book of Kiugs, and it is recorded pa the same authority that Solomon imported horses from Egypt and sold fhem to the Hittites and the Assyrians. It is rather curious to observe that the patterns ot the priests' dresses on the Hittite monuments are in fashion to this day in Cappadocia. -NO HOBS UNION MEN. Bushes & Patterson, of Philadelphia, De clare Aealnit the Amalgamated. Philadelphia, July ia Hughes & Patterson have posted notices in their roll ing mills here, stating that they will take back any of their striking employes as indi viduals, but not as members of the Amalga mated Association. The firm say they are procuring men in other cities to run their mills. Several hundred men employed by the firm have been out since July 1. . July Clearanoe Sale Of fancy silk parasols, silk and gloria um- Dreuas ana eiuiaren s parasols at prices to close them quickly, at H. J. Lynch's, 43S-U0 joarsei street. Thssu m rummy France Means Business, While King Behanzin is Proud and Defiant. HAED FIGHTING TO COME. A Fine Battle Ship Made for the French in Twenty-three Daya THE AMAZONS IN READINESS. How the Army of Women Warriors BehaTB in Time of Conflict ACTUAL SACRIFICE OP HUMAN BEIXGS. rWHTTTEN TOR THE nUPATCn. t Among all civilized nations the whits flag is the emblem of truce or of defeat In Dahomey, the most warlike of all African1 States, it is the national emblem, sym-. bolical of the power of the king, a standard' to be upheld or the glory of the land will' fade. The white flag of Dahomey is again assailed by a European power. France is ready at last to push forward with energTi her war against tbe proud and reckless' young King, Behanzin, whose violation of, pledges and invasion of French territory are no longer to be tolerated. The French Chamber voted $600,000 to carry on the war. On June 17 France de-, clared the blockade of the coast to prevent ' the importation of firearms. Reinforcements I from Senegal have arrived at Kotonu, and 4,000 French troops have occupied Whydah, i Dahomey's only port. France would have taken the offensive earlier if she had been prepared. The regular rainy season of the past four months, however, would have rendered aggression difficult; and the French have improved the interval to complete' their preparations. A Gunboat Made In S3 Bays. A Scottish ship building firm beat the record in the celerity with which it turnedt ont a large gnnboat for France's use on coast lagoons and the Wheme river. This iron vessel, the Opal, was completed in1 23 days after work had begun. No; French firm would" agree to build it o --? S3P.u"Vedou y jEsaivnp- , - t I A r I X ' p'iX JassavJ7 ia h V "V r-N Sctta-. U.&TEX7 U I NBA g.rn.fc kt I Map of Dahomey. in less than from four to ten months. It I will carry 400 soldiers, and its armament consists of three revolving cannon mounted on the bridge and four rapid-firing guns on the spar deck. If France decides to capture tbe capital, Abomey, this light draught gunboat can approach within a few miles of the big town. This war has been brought about by vio lation of pledges on the part of Behanzin. At the close of the war of 1839, France made a treaty with tbe King by which, in consideration of nn annual pension of 20,000 francs, he recozu.zed France's rights along the coast, and agreed to stop his raids into the French protectorate of Porto Novo, long the favorite hunting ground of Daho mey an rulers for slaves and victims to sac rifice in their fetich rites. Late last fall the King violated his agreement by sending expeditions into Porto Novo, where they surprised several unsuspecting towns and dragged hundreds of people to Abomey. Thinks He Can Beat the French. When the Lieutenant Governor of the French colony protested, the King sent an insolent letter declaring that he recognized no treaty, that he had a right in Porto Novo because his fathers for ages had been the suzerains of that country, and that heshould continue his forays if he chose, because all the region occupied by the French belonged to him; and yet, a he knew very well, his grandfather. King Gelele, 14 years ago gave up to France all rights to the port ot Koto nu, and he himself had recognized France. y claims in Porto Nova The young man has since sent word to the French that if they touch one of bis toilns in the interior he will at once destroy Porto Novo and all the French posts. He is carried away with an idea of his power and the prowess oi his Amazons, and nndoubtedly believes he can drive the French into the sea. It has been characteristic of all rulers of Dahomey to entertain unduly exalted opin ions of their importance. When King Gelele, for instance, heard that Germany had defeated France, he remarked: "Why did not my brother, the Emperor of France, ask me ibr aid? I could have sent him soldiers and then I am sure he would have won." Behanzin is the great grandson of Gese, the most powerful ruler Dahomey ever had, who reigned between 1818 and 1838. Behanzin Is a Tain Ttatrr. The present ruler is a most extraordinary mixture of civilization and barbarity. The dominant note in his character is unlimited vanity. While a boy he spent some time in Paris, where he learned to read French 1o this day he receives his copy of the Qfflciel, which is brought from the coast to his capital by a special messenger. His vanity was greatly tickled when he heard that a session o? the French Parliament, last winter, was devoted to a discussion of his august person and kingdom, and he dis played his gratification by dancing around the copy of the Offlciel which contained the news. In ordinary times the army ot Dahomey is composed of 2,000 Amazons and 4,000 to 5,000 warriors. This is tbe well drilled, standing army, whicb, in peace, is kept at or near the capital, ready to march any where at a moment's notice. When an im portant war is on hand the King calls out the reserve, which increases the strength of his army to 12,000 or 15,000. The mest nnique features of Dahomey are its large force of women-warriors and its terrible system of religions sacrifices in which hundreds of human victims are butchered at the capital every year. The Only Place Where Women Tight. Dahomey is the only country in the world which makes women part of its military .... Y- l. -.. 1TOO At.- TT-:- 1 1 pressed by enemies, placed a large nuinbtr i I t a l I t 7pJ "' c y i i a h ) DotoT p (AB0MEYgsalc0n )C -A Camm "k""" (Vlliaoa0 m O x GULF OF O U I NFA I i &jil?iii..AittaaanM,: ..2M&&L f -tjlniSL hA ? . -iii ...--' EStsusk xEZtMkt-$mMl KBlelsI WlllISBmJSWWSBWKi ?.;