ysm & ' THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH: THE .PrtTBBUEG DISPATCH, SUNDAY, JULY 24. 189E wmm ? VBHRHflHflnTfHHIHjBCStBB r" .. . jnrrvpr ?M second ?m PAGES 9 TO 20. "' J - 1- -;1 A HOMEJOLE BILL Bound to Be Urged by Mr. Gladstone "With the Least Possible Belay. DISTBUST ALREADY BIFE In the Minds of Many Who Are Being Imposed on by Liberals. FEW DOUBT GLADSTONE'S HOXOR, Lnt the Same Blind Trnst Is Xot Tlaced in His Colleagues. PROSPECTS OF BRITISH POLITICS tBT CABLE TO TIIE DISPATCH. 1 London, July 2a CopyrigJif The at tempt to eon- distrust between the Liberals snd their Irish allies has been vigorously continued this week by Tory and Liberal Unionist newspapers and orators. So far it has not met with much of a success, be-, cause sensible people prefer to wait until Jlr. Gladstone, from his place in Parlia ment, shall hare taken the country into his confidence as to his intentions. But suspicion does not take long to root in the minds of the Irish Nationalists, who know from history and experience how oltcn their country's cause has been be trayed by British statesmen, and if he is to receive the loyal support of the Irish mem bers it will be necessary for Mr. Gladstone to speak without ambiguity at the earliest convenient moment. This is the more de sirable, inasmuch as remarks in some Liberal newspapers are calculated to im plant distrust in the Irish mind. It has been urged in some of these organs of ad tanced opinion that Ireland should be persuaded to agree to a postponement of home rule until, by various popular elect oral and social reforms, or their rejection by the House of Lords, the Liberal party shall have been so strengthened as to insure its return to power after the next general election by an overwhelming majority. That of course aflords a most alluring prospect lor British Liberal', but it is not one which the Irish Nationalists can regard with satisfaction. Not 3lany People Doubt Gladstone. Few people doubt Mr. Gladstone's good faith, but the same trust is not placed in his colleagues, who, with perhans the soli tary exception of John Morlev, adopted home rule as a mere political expediency, and require the application ot the Irish spur to keep them going in the right path. It thec men had the handling ot the Lib eral majority, independent of the Irish vote, tliev could not be trusted to give Ire land a full measure ot justice, shouldMr. Gladstone be out of the way, and thus it is the obvious duty of th,e Nationalists to in sist that no delar shall now be allowed in pressing forward a home rule bill. Inionnation obtained by Disi'ATCJI re porters leaves no room for doubt that Mr. Gladstone is mot earnestly resolved to pro ceed with a home rule bill with the least posible delaj. A loteof want of confi dence in the present Government will be moved and pressed to a division as quickly as the forms ot Parliament permit, and as soon as a new Ministry has been formed Parliament will be prorogued in order that the Liberal members may have a much needed holiday previous to commencing, probably in November, the hard work of passing a home rule bill in the face ot the determined and unscrupulous opposition and obstruction of the Tories and Mug wumps. The Grand Old Man's Movements. Contrary to expectation, Mr. Gladstone proceeded direct to Hawarden from Scot land, and according to present arrangements he will not come to London before the middle of next week. There is really no need for him to come to town earlier, now that the Government has determined to wait until the assembling of Parliament be fore resigning. He does not presumably share the general curiosity as to the mean ing of the lrequent ministerial confer ences which have taken place in London this week, and of the long in terview which the Duke of Devonshire had with Lord Salisbury yesterday. Some people connect these movements with the monstrous suggestion to which the inspired Morning Fos! gave great prominence, yes terdav, that the ministers should hold on to ounce at least until next February. After pointing out that there is really no business lor tne new Parliament to do because, before dissolution, the House of Commons voted the necessary supplies for carrying on the business of the country, the .Port proceeds: In view of the fact that the Government now have not to deal with a homogeneous united opuosition, but only with a dis jointed horde of tactions in little or no sym pathy with each other, what justification lor a resignation of office can be found in the haphazard action of these !act!onson the basis of an abstract resolution? How can Lord Salisbury and ht colleagues con scientiously reconcile with their duty to theii sovereign, their rarty and their cause, the precipitate abandonment of their offices and of their power in consequence of the action of the hoi de which now disfigures the character and degrades the traditions of Parliamentary opposition. .Advice to Lord Salisbury. Advice which may well be offered to Lord Salisbury and his colleagues, in the event of a resolution of want of confidence being ar rived at bv the piesent House of Commons during the next few days, is to take on it no ministerial action beyond that of advising the soercin to prorogue Parliament till the normal period for its assemblage ar rives. Then the ministerial programme will be submitted. Then the ministers will in vite Parliament to proceed with the ordinary business of the year. Then and then only, should Parliament reject their proposals, will be the time lor them to de cide upon the resignation of office. This was the very danger that Mr. Glad stone foresaw when the Commons was asked to grant a full supply instead of giving the customary vote on account and it v as under stood at the time that be received from Mr. Balfour assurances that the Ministers would not attempt to do that which their organ in the press is now urging them to da It is not likely, therefore, that the Government will follow the dishonorable advice ten dered by the Morning Foil, even though it has been indorsed by a Tory newspaper of less note. The Arbaler Zeitung, the chief labor organ in Austria, yesterday remarked that more significant than the turning of the Con servative majority into a Liberal one is the fact "that lor the first time in England the organized working classes, during the re cent general election, figured as an inde pendent party, under the flag of socialism, and gained victories." A Prevalent Misconception. A similar misconception prevails in other European countries, and a distorted view of the so-called labor party may have been taken in Auerica. As a matter ot fact, of 10 members who constitute the misnamed "labor" party in the new House of Corn Commons, only one, viz. John Barns, stood for election as a labor candidate, pure and simple. Mr. "William Austin was successful in "West Limerick because he was the nominee of the Nationalist party, and the other 13 men described themselves and were elected as Liberal sod labor candidates. Every one . &Zil -:- lisa-lfsalftrtiifsteis'lTMseWIslA sMliWnliliiim 'ft - iJtf-WWJffiffiibrrfiNii iiaslii1tfn ' "il'iA of them owed his election to Liberal as dis tinct from purely labor votes, and every labor candidate ho was not also a Home Ruler and the nominee of the local Liberal party failed ignominously, polling in most instances less than a hundred votes. These facts are aptly illustrated bv the case of Mr. Keir Hardie, member for South westham, who, as already stated, went to Newcastle and delivered a speech against John Morley because of that gentleman's opposition to the legal eight hours' day. Numerous meetings have been held this week in Westham, at which Keir Hardie's conduct has been vehemently denounced by bis constituents, and it is certain that if he should not mend his ways before then, Hardie will be thrown out at the next elec tion by those same Liberals and Radicals 'who put him m. Liberal! First, Labor Man Afterward. If the labor members desire to exercise any influence in the House of Commons thev will have for the present at any rate to be Liberals first and labor representa tives afterward. This is the opinion of Tom Mann, one of the shrewdest and most influential of labor leaders, who told a re porter yesterday that he did not think the time had yet arrived when it would be pos sible to form an independent labor'party in the House of Commons. The labor foroes were being rapidly concentrated in the various districts in London and the provinces, but would be able lor some time to come to work sectionally. The organization of the party would, he thought, be the work of some years, though the labor societies and trades unions which existed were making headway in the desired direction and ren dering the formation of a national labor rjartv more and more possible. The Executive Council of the Lancashire Cotton Spinners' Association has just de cided to recommend ali employers belong ing to the aasociation to insist upon a re duction of wages, and to run all the mills on short time for one month. It is pretty certain that the recommendation will be .ac cepted, and there is reason to believe that the men will not object to a 5 per cent re duction, in view of the undoubted fact that trade is extremely unsatisfactory. It is said in Bolton that one local joint stock has suffered a loss of 10,000 during the half year ended last June, and that many other firms in the district are working at a loss. Justification of the Fasiltm. The prevailing pessimism is jnstifiedby the annual report to the Board of Trade by Mr. Henderson, Superintending Inspector of Factories and Workshops, who states that it is estimated that more money has been lost in Lancashire cotton industries during the past 12 months than in any year yet recorded. In Oldnam alone it is believed the losses on the last three months' working will not be less than 100,000. The inspector says: An explanation is found in the fluctua tions which have taken place in the raw ma terial. In 1590 the American cotton crop was noor in quality, but exceptionally abundant. The result was n serious arop in prices, and spinners who had been accus tomed for several years in succession to do well by buying cotton early in the season have during the past vear been caught, and have had to face a falling moiket lor raw material and a stagnant market of the man ufactured article. But it will bo seen other canses are at work. The inspector declares that the condition of affairs in Lancashire at the present time is regarded by some who have nad lone experience in the trade as very critical. Pora Ion? period there has been a growing; tendency on the part of private capitalists to withdraw fi om the business. It is distressins to witness the havoc which has been made in some of the picturesque valleys of Lancashire by the pressure of modern emulation and competition. Factories and cottages closed and untenanted, many of them un roofed and in rnins.raet the visitorat almost every turn and they give some indication of the great sacrifice or capital which must have neen made before the present hopeless condition of things had been reached. The cotton spinner and manufacturer who owns his mills and machinery himself promises soon to become extinct, and we shall then be reduced to the positlon.whlch obtains In tlio manufacturing- districts of America. The only employers of labor will be limited com panies or corporations. Tho Present Volition Deplored. Mr. Henderson deplores the threatened extinction of the class of small capitalists and individual employers, and attributes their withdrawal from "the trade partly to causes already mentioned and partly to their reluctance to endure the increasing worries and annoyances arising from "the increasing demands made upon members by the Legislature and growing difficulties of dealing with work people and their repre sentatives." "Which is another way of stating that old-tashioned cotton magnates accustomed to lord it over their operatives resent the efforts of Parliament and trade unions to improve the condition ot the people, but if the future prosperity of the Lancashire cotton industries is to de pend upon the indifference of Parliament and the inanition of trade unions wherever the interests of employers and employed come into conflict, the outlook 15 very black indeed, seeing that organized labor is be coming more powerful every day and that the majority of the new House of Commons is pledged to further labor and social re forms. The Marqnis of Salisbury is probably the only living man who hax twice refused a Dukedom. The title, the Bighest the Brit ish sovereign can confer, was vainly offered him in 18SG, when he was thrown out of of fice by a vote of the House of Commons,and again'in 1887, the jubilee year. It is be lieved that the offer will be repeated and accepted next month, when the Marquis re tires into opposition. Then Joseph Cham berlain will have two Dukes as leaders, which ought to make him happy. Only a Thine or Yesterday. Lord Salisbury's Marquisate is but a thing of yesterdav, having been conferred on the seventh early in 1789, but the earldom dates from 1605, when it was given by James L to the famous courtier and states man, Robert Cecil. Judging by precedent, Lord Salisbury, before retiring from power, will distribute two or three peerages and several baronetcies among those of his fol lowers who have most helped the Tory cause with brain or purse. Englishmen have been reading with im mense satisfaction this week of the extra ordinary proceedings of Sir Charles Evan Smith, British Minister to Morocco, who was sent on a special mission to the Sultan at Fez. The tact that that mission has completely failed, owing to the superior diplomacy of the French and Spanish Min isters, is apparently .amply atoned lor by the spectacle of a British diplomat "bearding the lion in his den, that is to say, insulting the Sultan and his Grand "Vizier. The Tories in par ticular are delighted at this fine display of "jingoism." because the probabilities are that the Liberals will have to pay the piper. Mr. Gladstone inherited from his Torv pre decessors the difficulties in Egypt which eventually made necessary the bombard ment ot Alexandria and an expensive cam paign. It is quite possible that if Lord Salisbury's policy in Morocco be continued by Lord Eosebery it mav lead to a bombard ment of Tangier by the British ironclads, the Cardiff and Swansea. THE FBKHCH FEOHTIEE VIOLATED. German Troops Make Two Incursions Across the Boundary Line. PABIS, July 23. A Nancy journal pub lishes an unconfirmed report that SO Ger man soldiers recently crossed the French frontier between Oussey and Avricourton, passing along the road leading to the Chateau Salins and visiting a French fanfl, where theytayed for a long time. .According to the same report, a sqnadron of German cavalry crossed the frontier at the same point a lew minutes after the first incursion, although the boundary line was clearly marked by posts. HOW CHOLERA. BECAME XPIDEM1C. I he People or Baku Drank Sewage From a Hospital Jast Above Them. Vienna, July 23. Accerding to reports in Austro-Polish papers, a, workman ied of the plague at Baku July 2. The doctors declared it to be a case of the plague, but the Government denied it and forbade any mention of the matter in the newspapers. No preventive measures were ordered by the authorities. The plague spread and large numbers of the inhabitants have since died.- Tne disease came from Meshed. Three years ago the hospital authorities at Jarosslaff, on the Volga river.'had pipes secretly constructed to convey the hospital sewage into the river, just above where the town obtains its water supply, and the in habitants of the town have been drinking poisoned water ever since.. If a similar state of affairs exists in other towns, this pollution may explain the spreading of cholera along the Volga. TB0UBI.ES OF BXBVIA'S king. Rrrents Necotlatinc at St. Petersburg for the Tonns Man's Betrothal. fBT CABUC TO THE DISPATCH. LONDON", July 23. The young King of Servia is still enjoying at Ems the ques tionable advantage of his father s society. According to a well-informed correspond ent of the Standard, ex-King Milan is said to have forbidden the visit of Queen Natalie, the boy's mother, acting on the paternal rights guaranteed to him by the Servian Constitution. The news has excited great interest at Belgrade, where the Progressists, under M. Garashanin, side, with Queen Na talie, and nearly every respectable man has lost whatever sympathy he once felt for the ex-King. There has been a good deal of talk of late in the Servian capital about Milan's private life in Paris, origi nated by a letter from Paris forwarded to and published by all the Begrade papers, with the anonymous signature, ".a. xrue .friend ot Servfa," but believed to have come from the pen of Queen Natalie. 1st this com munication the assistance of the Servian people is invoked to prevent the first regent, M. Bistich, from ruining King Alexander by placing him under his father's guardianship, "a man who spends his days between the gaming table, the turf and the boudoirs of his sweethearts." The regents are said to be negotiating at St. Petersburg to obtain the young Kjng's betrothal to an imperial Busslan grand duchess, but their success is doubtful, because the Servian throne is becoming a somewhat precarious seat. The present Government is afraid to compel the payment ot taxes, be cause the peasants, in resentment, would vote for the opposition candidates, and- a large proportion of money actually collected somehow finds its way into Mi lan's pockets. Civil and military officers have to wait for their salaries, and it is be lieved many of them have, In consequence, been won over to the interests of the pre tender, Prince Karageorgevitch, son-in-law to the doughty Prince of Montenegro. SB. HALE'S WOKK IN ENGLAND. Unitarians Crowding; the Church Where Be Is Now Speaking. fBT CABLE TO TOT DISPATCH. London, July 23. The Unitarians of England held a public meeting in Essex Hall Thursday night to welcome Rev. Dr. Edward Everett Hale, of Boston. The large audience included nearly every representa tive British Unitarian, and a number of Americans, among whom were Senator Hoar and Itev. C. A. Staples. Dr. Hale's style of oratory was keenly relished, and several Englishmen present expressed the hope that the eloquent Bostonian would find time to address a meeting of young ministers, in order to take the oratorical conceit out of them. The au dience particularly enjoyed Dr. Hale's references to the ritualistic controversies now raging in this country, and which, in fact, have never ceased for GO years past In this world, he said, too mnch force was wasted in discussing the .merits of this tin tack or that tin tack of ritual and arch itecture. It was all one to Unitarians whether sfeeples were Gothic or only Tudor, or whether there were any steeples at alL They only wanted somebody to ring a bell loudly,so that people should know when to go to ohurch, and they were not worried by such questions as whether they would have candles lighted in the mid dle ot the day or not. Dr. Hale's re marks are opportune just now, for disputes as to ritual or doctrine are agitating some non-conformists as well as Episco palian churches in this country, and within a few weeks the two great rival organiza tions into which members of the Church of England are divided, the Church Associa tion and the Church Union, will meet in an nual congress and hurl denunciations at each other. HEMBEBS OF THE NEW HOUSE. A Statement Showing Vf hat All of Them Do When Oat of Politics. fBT CABLE TO TIIE DISPATCH. London, July 2a The new Honse of Commons contains 21 bankers and finan ciers, 141 barristers in and out of practice, 18 brewers and distillers, 2 builders and architects, 15 colliery propri etors, 6 diplomatists, 9 civil and marine engineers, 10 farmers and agri culturists, 83 land owners, 10 iron masters and metal merchants, 15 labor representa tives, 57 manufacturers, 10 doctors, Co gen eral merchants and one ex-minister of religion, 35 newspaper proprietors and journalists, 31 peers' sons and brothers, 18 retired business men, 19 ship owners, 21 solicitors, i stock brokers, 9 university pro fessors, 53 naval and military officers and 13 members unclassed. Amerlc i' Demand for Tin pi ate. Br CABLE TO THE DISPATCH. London, July 23. The newspapers state that both in Staffordshire and South Wales satisfaction is expressed at the passage of the tinplate bill by the American House of Representatives. It is said that Stafford shire firms have received advices showing that American manufacturers cannot meet a fitth of the consumptive demand, and already important orders for tinplates are being negotiated for in "Wales and Stafford shire for shipment to the United States. Breakdowns in the Navy. BT CABLE TO THE DISPATCH. London, July 23. The British navy is preparing for the annual maneuvers, and the proportion of breakdowns promises to come up to the average; Yesterday seven war vessels went out trom Plymouth to try their machinery, and two broke down, THE DALTOHS SIGHTED AGAIN. They Are Supposed to Be Moving in the Direction of VlnlU, I. T. Vinita, L T., July 2a Interest in the train robbery was revived yesterday by a report sent from Big Cabin, eight miles be low here, that the Daltons were seen mov ing in the direction of this city. Nine armed men rode up to the house of a man named "Woods, three miles east ot Big Cabin, about sunset last evening, and in quired the way to Vinita." The outlaws have been in camp ever since the robbery about six or eight miles east of Pryor Creek station. Oar New Coaling Station in Samoa. San Francisco, July 23. Among the passengers on the steamer Alamandis, which sailed yesterday for Australia via Honolulu, Samoa and New Zealand, was Lieutenant J. H. C Coffin, United States Navy, who is going to Pago Pago, in the Samoan' gronp, to locate the coal wharves on the coaling station ceded to the United States. ; ' Rooms Soon Rented. Don't fall to send injrour adlet to-day for the Sundav Cent-a-Word Columns, JOYS OF THE PLAINS. Adventurous Alice MacGowan Takes a Band in a Cattle Kound-Up. HER FIGHT WITH A YEARLING. Exciting Chases on Spirited Texas Pony Called Telephone. AN OtJTISG DINNER OP FRESH BEEP tCOBBESrOTDXltCX OP TBI fiMVATOH.l Quita QUE Ranch, Tbxas, July 18. IFE? Ah, but this is the life; and this is the country! It was known in the be ginning, I take it, that people would make much un hap piness for each other; that they would build cities, for the cramping of the free limbs and the free indi viduality, and the soiling of the free air; places where the brain might be wearied out and the heart made sick in the shortest possible time, by divers great and Ingenious engines of man's contriving; and so the plains the great snn lit, wind raked plains and horses and sad- dies and cattle were arranged as a sort of antidote and here they are, all ready f or hlwa Wil. annHivh fn vnnwvttt ra tnfl avail those wise enough to recognize and avail themselves of them. Land! "Why, there's almost more land in Texas than the State big as it is can hold; horses, about the same; and as for cattle, there's still something to be done in the maverick branding line for the beginner with no capital. I am sitting here gingerly on a light, cool rattan rocker, my faoe bathed in sweet cream, while my head aches a little, and I am the happiest mortal the biggest Injun in the Texas Pan handle I attended my first round-up yesterday. BETTER THAN A I There is a horse about the ranch called Telephone, with whose gait and behavior I was struck at first sight; a good-sized horse, not a pony; quick, nervous, spirited; alto gether much like a thoroughbred. I asked and was allowed to ride Telephone (some reference to lightning, I guess) to the round-up. The day was an awful one, such as they don't often have down here in the Panhandle,- the mercury was above 100, the sun blisteringfand the wind, which is ordi narily our salvation, was hot and dry. Our party consisted of two of the ladies of the family in a buggy, and "three of us horseback, Mr. D , one of the ranch pro prietors, a yonng fellow of 20 visiting here from a young city of the Panhandle, and myself. We went along gaily, not giv ing a cent for the weather. The horse was all I believed of him, and more; I was never on a thing with more delightful and varied gaits. "We got to the place about 12 o'clock; the cattle were pretty well gathered in from the different pastures; the men had killed and prepared a beef, and were about to have dinner and do the rounding up, cutting out, branding, etc., afterward. A Core for Chronic Dyspepsia. I would recommend to the jaded palate and captious fancy that cannot be pleased at THEY BRANDED Delmonico's, beef killed an hour since and fried in grease in a skillet, or broiled on a stick in the smoke and flames, cafe noir out of a tin cup, biscuits, butter and pickles. I offer this out of the fullness of my experi ence, as the most satisfactory, not to say luxurious, meal imaginable, when eaten un der the proper circumstances and amid its legitimate surroundings. The ladies drove bacs home after dinner, but Johnnie and I followed Mr. D over to where thev were rounding up. There were 2,000 or'3,000 cattle and 10 or 12 men. Two ot these were great, tall, heavy, black bearded, spleudld looking men of 38 or 40; the rest slim, sinewy yonng fellows, all that I happened to notice blondes, with their eyes and teeth, too, when they laughed glaring vthitely out of their sun-burned faces. The last stragglers were just being round ed in as we came up. Johnnie drew his horse up quietly to one side and eat there; but I uent up and began riding round the herd sort of casually like, the rest were doing, turning back any cattle that Here disposed to bolt. The animals were all bel lowing and shaking their heads, and making occasional breaks for the open plain; the horses were all alert and dashing about to keep them massed, and only the men seemed nonchalent and unconcerned. And there was a tickling in my muscles, a short ening of my breath, a quickening of my heart, and a sort of glorious lightness in the top of my head. She Pick Oat a Muley Victim. "Well, I herded around awhile, all the cowboys regarding me with serious ap proval, or with that well-bred unconscious ness which refrains from observing too closely for fear ol causing embarrassment When the cutting out began I was as car ried away with enthusiastic admiration as I knew I should be when I finally came to see this process of which we read. Such riding! Such skill, and quickness, and ad dress! It was a hand to Hand struggle and a wild race with almost every animal before it was finally landed in the outer bunch. But now the impulse to take a hand waxed irresistible. Positively my breath came in gasps, the blood jumped through my veins like quicksilver, and the noble recklessness in the top of my head flew all over me. I had noticed they cnt ont and E laced in the separate bunch only the year ngs; and seeing a promising fellow of this class a strawberry-roan muley near me, I put my horse In qnietlv among the herd, cut him out, and started him toward the outer bunco. Be escaped me, ilfiiiii after a dozen hot tarns, and regained the fringes of the herd, shaking his muley head and swearing in a hoarse undertone. Bather hoping nobody had noticed my per formance, I was preparing to rejoin the ranks of the herders as unostentatiously as pestible, when one Of the big, black-bearded men sheared his little cat ot a ponv in close to me and said, encouragingly, "You'll get him yet," waving his hand toward the calf. The Horse Was a Little Too Big. This was enough. I wheeled Telephone toward the "herd, dug my left heel Into him till he jumped like a kangaroo, we shot in between the calf and the other cattle, cut it out, and the fight began. My horse was rather large for the work; then, too, though he is light, fast and spirited, he has never been trained as a cow-horse; and I couldn't turn him like lightning, as the regular cutting ponies do. We tore back and forth, back and forth, between the herd and the other bunch; the roan calf broke into the open plain, Telephone and I after him; we headed and brought him back. O, we flew I The horse wanned to the chase I As for me, I was aflame; I forgot -that life had held some disappointments; that a lime had been, and will come again, when teeth must be filled, or duty calls made. I forgot that I wanted fame, wealth, wisdom and a sun burn specific. Hope, fear, love, ambition, were unremembered dreams. Life was a roan yearling of diabolical swiftness and perverseness, fleeing between the level plain and the burning sky; and I, with neither flesh nor bones, nor anything out a blind, consuming passion to outrun and outgeneral him, and land him in the bunch of yearlings. No captive or condemned criminal of old Borne ever drove his tearful chariot race in the great hippodrome, for the prize of his own fife ransomed from the lions or the executioner, in a finer ecstacy of rashness than that which inspired me to the chase of my roan calf; nor could he nave -"c been iof th eTece V ., .. . . A .1 neara wnen at last he passed the goal a a more utter swoon of triumph than that through which the hurrahs of the. cowboys reached me, as I turned and left my year ling with the bunch of his kind. None the TO orse for Bard TJsige. Success is the most seductive of intoxi cants, ambition the keenest spur and in citement. I had cut out and gotten over to the yearling bunch, unassisted, three ani mals, had been helped with a fourth, and helped another fellow with a fifth, when Mr. D rode up to me and asked if Johnnie and I could' find our way home alone. "Yon mustn't forget that "you've DKLMONICO FEAST. got that nine miles Sto ride yet, through this beat. You'll be; in bed to-morrow if I don't send you home right away," he said. So we came tne final mile was a mere matter ot endurance. My face was burned a uniform flaming scarlet, which light and cheerful tint, deepened in the course of a few hours to a rich maroon; so that, to the casual observer, the only distinguishing mark between me and an Apache squaw is the whiteness of my hands, made more conspicuous from their long drenching with perspiration inside heavy gloves. And, lo, after a "bath and a two or three hours' rest, I am as 'fresh and brisk as possible, and again as unconscious of my body as a man is said to be of a healthy, well-behaved stomach. "When Mr. D came home he told how the men had commented on his "new hand." "You got her trained mighty quick," they said. "The first thing she cut out was a maverick." So my roan yearling was a maverick; and that was partly why the boys all cheered and laughed so! I demanded it of Mr. D at once, as findings of this sort is keepings. But be said I came away before the brand- HER MAVEBICK. Ing was done, and the "D" brand was on its speckled side now. It don't seem so strange to me now that people's boys have been known to run away from college and from business positions in the Easi, to come out here and be cowboys on the wild and wind; frontier. Alice MacGowan. A FEB0CI0T3 BOOST EOBBEE. A Fiery Owl Beheads 40 Chickens and ' Glvrs nattle to a Man. Kingston, N. Y., Jnly 2a James Met calf, of Mt. Upton, fonnd a new tenant in one of his hen houses the other morning, in which a large family of chicken; were keep ing house by themselves. Mr. Metcalf had left the drop door of the coop propped up with a stick, which had been knocked down, and inside, neatly trapped, was a monstrous owl of the hoot variety. The brood of fowls were either inside the owl or lying about with their heads bitten off. Upward of 40 headless chickens lay scattered in view. Metcalf entered the coop and manaeed to kill the on after a lively fight, which caused his face and arms to bear bleeding evidences of the sharp claws of the owl in its fight for life. Gabbled, In en the Border. Fbontenac, Thousand Islands, July 23. Special. The.managtrs of the Thou sand Island Park Methodist Assembly, on the St Lawrence river, are in conflict with the Federal Government on the contract labor question. The association is doing considerable work back of the Tabernacle, and in order to obtain workmen as cheap as possible, sent to an agent at Kingston, Ont, for men, intending to save 51 50 a day per man. Pour men were sent, and the cus toms jifijcera caught them. Excursion TIa the Picturesque B. A O. R. B. To Atlantio City, via Washington, Baltimore and Philadelphia, on Thursday, July 28, 1892. Rate 10 the round trip; tickets good lor 11. days irom day of sale, and good to stop off at Washington City returning. Trains with. Pullman parlor and sleeping ears will leave E. 4 O. depot, Pittsburg, at 8 a. x. and 9:30 ic Beam eosts yon but 25 cents a bottle. It costs any roaches, bedbugs, etc, that come near it tbeir lives. vSSSSmSStWJSSS " 1 . KOCH WAS ALL BIGHT. The German Doctor's Cure for Con sumption Correct in Principle HE K0W HAS IT PERFECTED. Expert Bacteriologists Seeking Remedies for Other Diseases. ' PRETENTION THROUGH VACCINATION SPECIAL TELJEOItAM TO TIIE DISPATCH. "Washington, -July 23. The Govern ment bacteriologists at "Washington, Drs. De Schweinitz and Kenyon, are actively engaged at present in following out a line of experiments now being pursued by science in all the great centers of human knowledge, which are destined soon to bring forth most astonishing results. All mankind must needs be interested in the subject, because it signifies the discovery of means for preventing and curing many of the most fatal diseases to which the ffesh is heir. The investigations are being conducted very quietly, lest the public mind be pre maturely stirred up over the matter, thus doing more harm than good, as was the case with Koch's famous "lymph." The trouble with the lymph was that it was brought out .before it was ready. Other physicians were so afraid that Dr. Koch would anticipate them in the field of discovery that tmSy ex torted his secret from him and forced him to make his achievement public before it was fairly accomplished. Immediately there was a cry from all over the world for the new remedy a cry of despair freshly inspired by hope, which could not be re fused. Beluctantly the inventor was com pelled to set to work and manufacture his imperfect preparation in quantities for dis tribution everywhere. That it failed to ac complish the wonders expected of it is not surprising. Koch Has His Care Perfected. Profiting by this experience, Dr. Koch and his assistants have been pursuing their - investigations secretly in the same direc tion, publishing nothing on the subject and saying very little. It can be stated with authority that they have obtained some great results. The statement may even be made that they have found out how to cure consumption, if it shall not have progressed too far, as well as other complaints of a tubercular nature, like lupus. But nothing about the matter will be made formally public until evidence that is beyond dis puting can be pointed to fn the shape of sick persons restored to health, with the history of each case in detail accompanying! Experimental researches in this line have been carried on for more than a year past by many baoteriologists elsewhere than in Berlin. It has been recognized from the first that the lymph was a great discovery, but it was valuable rather in theory than in practice, because it was too crude. Besides the curative agent, it contained a fever producing poison that was in itself danger ous to life, as well as other undesirable in gredients. Therefore the experts have directed their efforts to separating the actual remedial substance from the other parts. Injections of this will destroy the tubercle bacilli in the lungs or elsewhere without causing any reaction in the shape of fever or otherwise doing any harm to the patient The Gumi Kill Themselves. To make all this perfectly understood it is only necessary to explain in a few words the idea which is at the bottom of the lymph, and also of similar remedies for other troubles which will soon be embraced in ordinary medical practice. "Why do people ever recover from such complaints as pneumonia, typhoid fever and diphthe ria? , Oue would think that the disease germs' would always go on multiplying in definitely until they killed the patient Luckily, however, in feeding on the tissues of. the body and thus causing various mor bid symptoms they secrete incidentally a poison that is fatal to themselves. "When enough of the poison has been produced it destroys the germs and the victim gets well, supposing that death has been kept off Ion;: enough. Each species of "pathogenic germs secretes its own peculiar poison. Now the bacteriologists believe that if they can isolate these germ-destroying poi sons they can utilize them to kill the germs in the human body by injecting them into the circulation. Precisely that idea is the basis ot Koch's lymph, only that this prep aration was not properly made, as has been said. 'It contained at least one undesirable poison in addition to the one that was wanted. When the true anti-tnbercn!ar poison is obtained in a pure state by itself, as has probably been done already bv Dr. Koch, a sure remedy for consumption in its early stages, as well as lor lupus at any stage, will have been secured. Experiments on Babbits. Before very long other lymphs, which are now being experimented with in laborator ies here and abroad, win he employed in the treatment of scarlet fever, lockjaw, diphtheria, carbuncle, typhoid fever, typhus, an,l pneumonia all ot them com plaints caused by bacteria, From nearly all of these it is found that n.bbits and guinea-pigs can be rendered immune that is, incapable of contracting them by the peculiar poisons above described. It is reasonable to suppose that the latter will operate with equal eilectivencss in the case ot human beings. Toward the ouring of the came diseases by like means, when they have been ac quired, important steps have been taken. At a lectnre delivered in Washington the other day, photographs were exhibited of rabbits which had been made very sick by inoculation with tuberculosis of the eye. To show how efficacious the remedy em ployed had been, the animals themselves were displayed in their cages, perfectly re stored to health. Bow the Poison Is Separated. The method by which these poisons are I Hhlalnart eaniMtsi V If tftrt althnpstsi A1 rise- " s in..fMriiii.ft ... V.... . - ..- . . i .if KUmirfiiaift-i ?-"-' A jaMasasjiyigi THEY'VE UNDERTAKEN A BIO CONTRACT. a person or animal that has died of a bacter ial complaint is touched with a platinum needle that has been previously heated for the purpose of destroying all other germs noon it The needle is then introduced into a glass tnbe partly filled with gelatine that has been sterilized by boiling. On this nntritious medium the bacteria at once feed and multiply with great rapidity, so that within a few hours there is a discolored patoh composed of myriads of them on the surface of the gelatine. ' These artificially-propagated microbes are taken and put through a complicated chemical process, so as to get rid of the germs themselves and secure separately the poison which they have secreted while feed ing on the stuff in the bottle. And this poison is the curative agent elaborated by nature for the purpose of annihilating the germs and killing the disease they cause. CAHADA "WILL BETAIIATE, What Its Government Proposes to Bo If the New Canal Toll Act Is Enforced. Ottawa, Ont., July 23. It is reported to-night on good authority that the Dominion Government, in the event of President Harrison's enforcing the act im posing an equal tax on Canadian vessels passing through the "Soo" canal, will pass an order in council imposing an equal tax on American vessels passing through the "Welland canal. This, it is declared, will not be any more of an evasion of the treaty of "Washington than the threatened American decree, as the United States Government, by the same treaty, agreed ,to secure for Cana dians on the same terms as Americans the use of the "Soo" canal, at that time owned by the State of Michigan. IN THE RACE rr; PICKERING has long since distanced all competitors. The volume of business done by this house is at the present day equaled by but one concern in the city. The LOW PRICES and EASY TERMS which PICKERING offers on Furniture and Carpets AND REFRIGERATORS Are not equaled by any firm in the world. PICKERING guarantees satisfaction on every sale. PICKERING'S terms are the best offered by any firm in existence and will suit all. IF YOU WANT TO BUY FURNITURE, CARPETS OR REFRIGERATORS, "SCv (SAVE MONEY CASH Complete PICKERING jr. PICKERING Furnishers. CREDIT TENTH ST. AND PENN AVE. mpM mmW4iw ffltPmimm LOW PRICES sixth SSfSUM TSAVE HONEY MANUFACTURING RETAILERS. WE ARE THE LEADERS. GRAND CLEARING SALE THIS WEEK! 1,000 WORTH CLOSE, BLAZER AND RUSSIAN BLOUSE SUITS, $15, GIVEN AWAY AT HALF PRICE, TO ONLY THE PARISIAN CLOAKS ARE THE BESTI THE PARISIAN SUITS ARE THE BESTI THE PARISIAN SILK WAISTS ARE THE BESTI THE PARISIAN STYLES ARE THE BESTI THE PARISIAN PRICES ARETHE LOWESTI THE PARISIAN GARMENTS HAVE NO VISIT THE Vfejl ALICE MITCHELL'S MANIA. It Is Described by a Medical .Expert, Who) Says the Girl Murderer Is Undoubtedly Insane She Was Afflicted With Brain I.ove and Jealoay. Memphis, July 23. At the Alice Mitch ell trial this morning Dr. P. L. Sim, a med ical expert, testified that he had made a specialty of diseases of the brain and nervous system, and had examined into Alice Mitch ell's mental condition a few days after the homicide. He said, when he alluded to the relations between her and Freda "Ward, she broke down in sobs and tears. The im pression made on witness' mind was that, delendant had undergone a marked change and was net responsible for her actions. She made her relations with Freda very clear to me. It was that there was a mutual love between them as between male and female. Such cases are rare, but are on record and are recognized by the profes sion. Interrogated as to his opinion of Miss Mitchell's mental condition, he replied that she was undoubtedly insane, and that her' form of mania was rarely recovered from. He believed the love between these girl was' brain love. In speaking of the thwarting of the plans of such an insane person and the separation of her and the object of her affection, the witness explained that insane jealousy wonld ensue, and the illusion that she must remove the object of her love be comes imperative in hcr."Witness's opinion was that defendant's face did not show the intelligence to be expected in a girl of her years. He was -convinced she was insane Irom the examination. Bcoise will banish roaches, bedbugs, etc from your nouse forever. 25 cents. FOR BUSINESo BY TRADING CASH CREDIT $7.50. EQUAL PARISIAN. ssHsU i r y ifithiiriBn AsssssVssVSSMCskIss&sssssisBssIv St' X3 Si jIMMWpTlMMITTIffWwIi Kifm?m&emA 1 ,.. --. J-. . . .. ---r . -,. .-w-j. -J a.. ., -...-i aiiisssssw&MisBM'i?-,Hleisseasj3itjs ffi ffi TsmstTi i sHiflsffl slWlBi ill ii iWfifT.slsfMBWTTTllBfT 73aK34KKiUBr