!3I3E .,- rvi.' 12 THE PEITSBUEG DISPATCH, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 24. 1892. T TALK WITH TEACHERS. Eminent Instructors From Abroad Tell of Advanced Methods IS THE PUIJLIC SCHOOL WORK. Kiss Coffin Lectures on the Eeal Eights of Children. TEOFESBOR BDSSELL TALKS OX MUSIC Instructing teachers in improved methods of teaching the young was the burden of the work done at yesterday afternoon's session of the Allegheny County Teachers' Insti tute at the Pittsburg High School. The large domed chapel, where the teachers convene, was crowded to the doors at both the morning and afternoon sessions, and the large body of auditors were closely at tentive. During the morning Miss Mathilde B. Coffin, ot Detroit, detailed her new method of instruction in reading, and Prof. Emory P. Russell talked on his new ideas regard ing musical instructions, as was published in The Dispatch yesterday in an inter 'wew with the eminent instructor. tounty Superintendent Hamilton in augurated his new method of holding the institute. There were four divisions ap pointed acd each of the instructors deliv ered their remarks in separate rooms, to those who were interested in the different class's. Prof. Russell on music. Hiss Coffin in reading, Prof. Deane on numbers, and Dr. Maltby on measures were the di visions at the morning session and the tame instructors with different subjects acted similarly at the atccrnoon session. The Klchta or Children. "The Rights of Children" was the subject of an interesting a-ldress by the Hon. A. S. Praner. ex-State Superintendent of New York schools, after the afternoon sessiqn had been assembled with prayers and music. The gentleman thinks every American child has as much right to be protected Irom the evils of the home and other in fluences as the American citizen has the richt to be protected from the evils of the land. "Een parents should not be su preme in the control of children," con tinued Mr. Draper. "There are home evils as there are other evils. The child should be protected from thesp. Every child is born with the inherent right to an elementary educa tion and is justly entitled to attend school in a proper building witn the proper facili ties. It is their right to be given a sound educational treatment without unnecessary experiments. The old system of teaching was by terrorizing the pupil. This must be eliminated. Every child has an equal right; their temperaments should be con sidered; a uniformity ot treatment should be inaugurated; favoritism should be abolished; punishments should not be inflicted to-day lor a misdemeanor committed yesterday; they should be allowed to act naturally, and when these necessary features do not obtain the child should be protected from his teacher. "Work corrects troubles. Keep thft Papll Hay. "The pupil should be kept busy. Engage their affections. ArouBe their enthusiasm. Awaken their energies and ambition. Do this to your pupil and he will live to call you blessed." The stirring remarks of the speaker aroused much enthusiasm and general ap proval was evidenced bvgenerons applause. The following nominations were then made for the Committee on Permanent Certificates: J?rof. E. B. McRoberts, Prof. Brooks, C. B. Cook, W. D. Brightwell, J. AV. Thomas, C J. Fisher, J. D. Anderson and Miss M. J. Marshall This committee is the most important one of the Institute and the election to membership is con sidered a high honor. The election will occur alter the morning adjournment to-day. The classes were then divided and the four instructors repaired to their class work. Miss Coffin addressed the teachers of the lower grades upon instructing pupils in the first branches of reading. She ad vised her hearers to bring into prominence the personality of the pupils to attract their attention to the subject "Also," continued the lady, "attract their optical attention by using colored chalks in black board work. Do not attempt to progress too rapidly. That confuses the little ones. Sentence Method Approved. "I approve of instructing by the sentence method. Have a variety of idioms. Select a subject and allude to it differently. This will dwell with a pupil, and will give them various methods "of expressing their thoughts." Prof. Russell talked of musical instruc tion, and advised teaching by tone instead of by note and rote. Prof. Deane discussed numbers and the proper gradation of prac A WAR MEMORY. It does not matter where it was. I do not want other people that is to say, thoss who were around us to recognize Sister or my sell. It is not likely that she will see this and I am not sure that 6he knows my name. Of course, some one may draw her attention to this paper, and she may remem ber that the name affixed to it is that which I signed at tbe foot of a document we made out together namely, a return of deaths. At the foot of this paper our names stood one beneath the other stand there still, perhaps, in some forgotten bundle of papers at the War Office. I only hope that she will not see this, for she might consider it a breach of profes sional etiquette; and I attach great im portance to the opinion of this woman, whom I have only seen once in my whole life. Moreover, on that occasion, she was subordinate to me more or less in the po sition of a servant Suffice it to say, therefore, that it was war-time, and our trade was what the commercial papers call brisk. A war better remembered of the young than of the old, because it was, comparatively speaking, recent The old fellows seem to remember the old fights better those lights that were fought when their blood was 6till young and the vessels thereof un clogged. w It was, by the way, mv first campaign. but I was not new to the business of blood; for I am no soldier only a doctor. My only uniform my full-parade dress is a Ted cross on the arm of an old blue serge jacket Raid jacket being much stained with certain dull patches which are better not investigated. All who have taken part in war doing the damage or repairing it know that things are not done in quite the same way when ball cartridge is served out instead of blank. The correspondents are very fond of reporting that the behavior of the men suggested a parade which simile it is to be presumed was borne in upon their fan tastic brains by its utter inapplicability. The parade may be suggested before the real work begins when it is a question of marching away from the landing stage; but alter the work our work has begun, there is remarkably little resemblance to a re view. AVe are served with many official papers which we never fill In, because, on the spur of the moment, it is apt to suggest itself that men's lives are more important. We misapply a vast majority of our surgical supplies, because the most important item is usually left behind at headquarters, or at the seaport depot. In fact, we do many things that we should leave undone, and tical problems. Dr. Maltby delivered a short address upon food and clothing of pupils, advising bis hearers to attend to the material education incidental to the mental The meeting then adjourned until 9:30 o'clock this morning. A LOVE TRAGEDY. One Dead and Another Dylns; a Kesu!t of a Man's Passion. Cleveland, O., Aug. 2a A terrible tragedy occurred at the home of ex-Mayor Stephen Buhrer, No. 327 Franklin avenue, about 9:30 o'clock this morning. The re sult is that George Talcott is dead and Ed Hutchinson lies at St Vincent's Hospital in a precarious condition. Hutchinson, who lived on Birch street, arrived at the Buhrer home with the intention of calling upon Miss Eliza Jackson, a domestic em- j ployedjhere. Trouble was feared and Mrs. Hutchinson began to raise a disturbance, nf Tnp.A Tlfntt tfiA fnmilir pnarhmftn. was called to put him out ot the house. ' When the coachman appeared Hutchinson drew a revolver and shot Talcott in the neck and mouth, killing him almost in stantly. A physician was called, and he was put out of the house by the infuriated man. Hutchinson then threatened to shoot Mrs. Buhrer. He finally turned the re volver on himself and fired. He was taken to St. Vincent's Hospital, where he is still j alive. CABED FOE WIDOWS AND OBFHAK8. How an Indians Contractor Behaved to the Families of .Employes. HARTronD City, Ind., Aug. 23. At the recent accident here, at theglass works, four of the five men killed were married, Alexander Moore leaving a paralytic wife with three children. The contractor, J. V. Smith, was away at the time of the sad occurrence. He came home at once, and is almost broken hearted. He saw that all of the dead were properly cared for and buried, and then promptly sought out the bereaved widows and orphans and supplied their every want, and to make them comfortable in the future, gave to each widow $1,000, paid all expenses and placed them upon the payroll. The Coroner rendered a verdict of an unforeseen and un avoidable accident To say that Mr. Smith has exalted himself in the estimation of everyone, feebly expresses it He de serves the encomiums, good will and con fidence of the publio for this manifestation of manliness and a tender regard for his employes exhibited in this transaction. EOANOKE HAS A FLOOD. A Cloud Bursts and One or More Are Browned In the Deluge. Roanoke, Va., Aug. 23. A cloud burst visited Roanoke last night at 11 and within half an hour over $100,000 of damage bad been done and one life if not more was lost Iu the business portion of the city, which is in low land, were the principal sufferers. Every store on Salem avenue and Jefferson was flooded and their contents badly dam aged. A large sewer is being built along Salem avenue, and this ditch was soon 'flooded with water. Barney Smith, a blacksmith, at the Roanoke machins works, fell into it and was drowned. His body was recovered this morning. It is reported that two other bodies have been found, but it is impossible at this time to verify the report. Rain fell in torrents during the night and is falling now. Many sidewalks are washed away and the electric plant flooded. It Ought to Be Popular. Bakers as a class are not particularly pro gressive In a business way. Theie aro ex ceptions, however, and one of the most not able ot these is the Marvin bakery of this city. Mr. Marvin never lets slip an oppor tunity to please the public Even the issues of the Presidental campaign have reoeived Ills attention, and the result Is a "Grand father's Hat" cake that has made itsappear ance within the last few days, and which no doubt will bo found at all the leading gio cerr stores, it is said to be a delightful cake, and. If a name goes Tor anything-, it ought to bo Immensely popular. ISO Head of Horses at Auction. The Arnheim Live Stock Company, limi ted, at 82 Second avenue, -Pittsburg, Pa., will offer at auction Thursday, August 25, at 10 o'clock a, x. 37 head of single driving horses, pacers and trotters, without record, that can beat 2.W. 12 Kentucky saddlers, broke to do all traits. 9 teams of matched carriage horses." 50 head of horses and mares that weigh 1,100 to 1,700 lbs apiece; suitable for all pur poses. 3 imported Percheron stallions and one impoited Percheron mare, legisteied in the American and Frenoh stud book. Pull ped igree given at the sale. 10 (three) 8-year old Percheron coits. Also consignment 50 head of bus horses and mares. All stock sold without reserve, to the high est bidder. The Arnheim Live Stock Com pany, limited, conduct their sales on pure business principles. Ko by-blddlng allowed at their sales. AH stock guaranteed as rep resented. Sale positive; no postponement on account of the weather. omit to do more which we are expected officially to do. Tor some reason presumably the absence of better men I was sent up to the front before we had been three days at work. Our hospital by the river was not full when I received orders to follow the flying columns with two assistants and the appliances of a field hospital. Out of this little nucleus sprang the larg est depot for sick and wounded that was formed during the campaign. We were within easy reach of headquarters, and I was fortunately allowed a free hand. Thus our establishment in tbe desert grew daily more important, and finally superseded the hospital at headquarters. We had a busy time, for the main col umn had now closed up with the first ex peditionary force, and our troops were in touch with the enemy not 40 miles away from me. In the course of time when the authori ties learned to cease despising the foe, which is a little failing in British military high places it was deemed expedient to fortify us, and then, in addition to two medical assistants, I was allowed three government nurses. This last piece of news was not bailed with so much enthusiasm as might have been expected. I am not in lavor of bringing women anywhere near the front They are, for their own sakes and for the peace of minds of others, much better left behind. If they are beyond a certain age they break down and have to be sent back at considerable trouble;' that is to say an escort and an ambulance cart, of which latter there are never enough. If thev are below the climacteric ever so lit tle below it they cause mischief, of another description, and the wounded are neglected; for there is no passion of the buman heart so cruel and selfish as love. "I am sorry to hear it,'' I said to light hearted little Sammy Fitz-Warrener, of the Naval Brigade, who brought me the news. "Sorry to hear It? Gad! I shouldn't be. The place has got a different look about it when there are women-folk around. They are so jolly clever in their way worth ten of your red-cross ruffians." "That is as it may be," I answered, breaking open the case of whisky which Sammy had brought up on tbe carriage of his machine-gun for my private consump tion. - He was taking this machine-gun np to the front, and mighty proud he was of it "A clever gun," he called It: "an al mighty clever gun." He had ridden alongside of it sitting on the top of his horse as sailors do through 70 miles of clear desert without a halt; watching over it nd tending it as he might have watched and tended his mother, or perhaps some other woman. "Gad! Dootor," he exclaimed, kicking ont his sturdy legs and contemplating with TROUBLE IN A FIRM. Keceiver Asked for the Lewis Foun dry and Machine Company. VOTING A DEAD MAN'S STOCK. Electric Light Inspector Entledge Sued for Heavy Damages. . THE HEWS OP TBE COUKTY COUBTS A hearing was had before Judge Collier yesterday on an application for the ap pointment of a receiver for the Lewis Foundry and Machine Company. The suit was brought by Isaao W. Prank and Ed ward Kneeland against the Lewis Foundry and Machine Company, limited, John L. Lewis, John Davies, Mrs. Annie O. Lewis, Mrs. M. A. Lewis Marshall, Annie O. Lewis, W. A. Herron,Mrs. Bella D. Herron, the executors of W. A. Richards, deceased;. Thomas B. Richards and Mrs. ( Mary Bich7 ards. The Foundry and Maohine Company, it was stated in the plaintiffs' bill, is a limited partnership association and was organized with a capital stock of 37,000. John L. Lewis was one of the largest stockholders, and at his solicitation the plaintiffs bought stock and Frank became Secretary and Kneeland Treasurer and Manager. Under their management, they say, it became a paying concern. John L. Lewis, they allege, then wanted to oust the plaintiffs and get control of. the concern. To do this he placed small Bhares with the various members of his family to admit them as members and voted the stock of W. A. Richards, deceased, for whom he was executor. The plaintiffs were then put out of office. The election of the transferees as members, it is alleged, is illegal because Lewis could not legally vote Richards' stock, and the vote would then have been a tie and no election. They as sert, further, that Lewis, as head of the concern, has not attended to the business, but by long absences has neglected it and the plaintiffs conducted it They have offered Lewis $150,000 for the interest held by him self and his family, but be has refused it, though the amount is in excess of the credit on the books. The plaintiffs ray the arti cles of the association are defective and their interests endangered, and they ask that the partnership be dissolved, a receiver appointed to take possession and administer and account for all property and assets and make a distribution; also to declare the election of Lewis' family as members of the concern illegal. At the hearing on the motion for a re ceiver, S. Schoyer, Jr., appeared for the plaintiffs, and Major A. M. Brown and J. S. Ferguson for the defendants. A decision was reserved. SUED FOE LOOKJHQ UPWABD. An Electric Ight Inspector Asked for Heavy Damages. Andrew Hanretty yesterday entered suit in behalf of himself and nine-year-old daughter, Margaret, against the Allegheny County Light Company for damages for in- i'nries to the daughter. He states that on unel Inspector Rutledge, employed by the company, was driving along Fifth ave nue in a buggy, looking np at the com pany's electric light lamps and wires. He paid no attention where he was going and was driving "rapidly. As a result he knocked down and run over Hanrettv's child. She was severely injured and flO, 000 damages are asked for her and f5,000 for her father. t Discharged From the Workhouse. A petition was filed yesterday for a writ of habeas corpus to secure the release of Charles Miller from the workhouse. He was committed July 15 by Magistrate Mc Kenna for 90 days on a charge of disorderly conduct. He alleged that it was his first offense and the sentence was illegal. Judge McClung heard his application and ordered his discharge from the workhouse. Executions Against Brewerand Buttermen. Wm. a Pier, receiver of the William Tann Brewing Company, yesterday issued an execution against .George Tann for (5,273, and one against Charles Manning for (3,195. An execution was issued bv the Pittsburg Beef Company against W. F. Scott and Blanche IC Scott, doing business as the Union Butter Company, for (554 22. Condemned for a Postofflce Site. United States District Attorney Lyon yesterday filed the report of the viewers appointed to appraise the Economy Sav ings Bank property, at Beaver Falls, con- demned lor a sue for a Government post- omce. xne viewers nxed the value ' ; some satisfaction the yellow hide top boots which he had bought at the Army and Navy stores. I know the boots well, and avoid them. Gadl Doctor, you should see that gun on the warpath, Travels as light as a tricycle. And when she begins to talk my starsl Click click click click. For all the world like a steam launch's engine mowing 'em down all the time. No work for you there. It will be no use you and your stalactites progging about with skew ers for the bullet Look at the other side, my boy, and you'll find the beauty has just walked through them. "Soda or plain?" I asked in parenthe sis. "Soda. I don't like the flavor of dead camel. A big drink, please. I 'feel as if I were lined with sandpaper." He slept that night in the little shanty built of mud and roofed chiefly with olii palm mats, which was gracefully called the head surgeon's quarters. That is to say, be Eartook of such hospitality as I had to ofler ini.' Sammy and I had met before he had touched a rope or I a scalpel We had hailed from the same part of the country down Devonshire way, and to a limited ex tent we knew each other's people, which little phrase has a vast meaning in places where men do congregate. We turned in pretty early I on a hos pital mattress, he in my bed; but Sam would not go to sleep. He would lie with his arms above his bead (which is not an at titude of sleep), and talk about that ever lasting gun. I dozed off to the' murmur of his voice expatiating on the extreme cunning of the ejector, and awoke to hear details of tbe rifling. We did not 'talk of home, as do men in books when lying by a camp fire. Perhaps it was owing to the absence of that pic turesque adjunct to a soldier's life. We talked chiefly of the clever- gun; and once, just before he fell asleep, Sammy returned to the question of the nurses. "Yes," he said, "the head sawbones down there told me to tell yon that he had got permission to send yon three nurses. Treat em kindly, Jack, for my sake. Bless their hearts I They mean welL" Then he lell asleep, and left me thinking of his words anjl of the spirit w.hich had prompted them. I knew really nothing af this man's life, bnt he seemed singularly happy, with that happiness which only comes when daily ex istence has a background to it He spoke' habitually of women, as if he loved them all for the sake of one; and this not being precisely my own position, I was glad when he fell asleep. The fort was astir next morning at 4. The bugler kindly blew a blast into our glass less window which left no doubt about it "That means all bands on deck, I take it," said Sam, who was one of the few men capable of good humor before tiffin tfme. By 6 o'clock be was ready to go.1 It was easy to lee what kind of officer this cheery sailor was by tbe way his men worked. 111,000, and the Court approved the re port. Foreclosing a jlallroad Mortgage. In the United States Circuit Court yes terday a bill in equity was filed by Wood bury & Moulton against the Allegheny and Kinxua Railroad, asking for the foreclosure of a mortgage against the company for fSO, 000 with a year's interest. TOOK ALL IN. SIGHT. New Brunswick's Defaulter Surprised His Brethren tn the Church, St. JOHN, N. B., Aug. 23. Develop ments in connection with the transactions of G. Herbert Lee, who disappeared Satur day, are the talk of the town. He had held many positions of trust and was supposed to be a model young man, being prominent in church work and vestryman of St. Paul's Episcopal Church. It is Impossible yet tr obtain definite information of the different estates which had been left in his charge but it is believed that all are very niucl depleted. It is said the Drury estate will suffer the most, the loss being estimated at from (30,000 to (40,000. The Hagen estate, it is thought, will also lose heavily. Lee is de tained in Boston. It is the opinion of some lawyers here that he can be brought back as an embezzler. No one seems to know just what Lee's difficulty was, but it is believed he has been speculating in pork for some time and lost heavily. STOLE A SET OF BALLS. Two Billiard Players Arrested at Rochester and Brought Back. For a week past proprietors of billiard halls in this city have been complaining of the theft of the ivory balls used in the game. The halls are costly, and the loss of a set of them is a serious matter to a pro prietor. The latest complaint came from No. 77 Fifth avenue and suspicion fastened on Abe Rummel and Harry Gill, two young well dressed fellows, whom the police say always seem to have money, yet never work and put in their time loafing around bil liard halls. They left the city Monday morning, but were captured at Rochester by Detective Lazarus, of Beaver county, yesterdav. Detective Robinson brought them to this city last evening ou warrants charging them with larceny. The police think they are guilty of all" the thefts re ported. DANCING THE MESSIAH DANCE. Otoe Indians, Joined by Other, Create Alarm Among Western Settlers. Guthrie, O. T., Aug. 23 Deputy Mar shal Lily came in this morning from Otoe, near Ponca, bringing in nearly a score of Indians. Lily states that the entire Otoe" tribe are at th'eir camp dancing the Messiah dance. He says that recently they were joined by the Ponras, Osages and other small neighboring tribes and that the dance was on in earnest, and that considerable anxiety -was manifested by the whites in the neigh borhood. t Excursion for Poor Children. The Association for the Improvement of the Poor will on Friday give a fresh air excursion on the steamboat J. M. Gusky. Between five and six hundred children of the poor families under the care of the association will be given a trip up the Monongahela river. The service of the steamboat is given free by Captain Harry Gould; bread, crackers and cakes" by Marvin, and the Monongahela Navigation Company will charge no lock tolls. The association would like to hear from some band that will play music in return for an enjoyable boat ride. The Jnry Scored the Railroad. Company. The Pittsburg, Virginia and Charleston Railroad Company was censured by the Coroner's jury in the case of Katie Johannes, aged 11, who was killed on Mon day while crossing r the tracks at South Twenty-sixth street. Safety gates and a watchman were suggested as life savers at that point. When Nature Needs assistance it may be best to render it promptly, but one should remember to use even the most perlect lemedies only when needed. The best and most simple and gentle remedy is the Syrup of FIRs, manu factured by the California Fig Syrup Co. A Sellable Man. M. J. Griuer, a Justice of the Peace at Print, Mich., says one bottle of Chamber lain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy saved his life. He had been down with bloody flux for three weeks when he com menced using this medicine. It soon eured him,'aud he believes saved his life. Ho also says it saved the lives of three railroad men in that vicinitr. 'Squire Griner is a reliable and conscientious man. and what ever he says can be depended upon. For sale by druggists. vrrhsa While they were getting tbe machine-gun limbered up Sam came back to my quarters and took a hasty breakfast "Feel a bit down this morning," he said, with a gay smile. "Cheap very cheap. I hope I am not going to flunk it It is all very well for some of you long-faced fel low's, who don't seem to have much to live for, to fight for the love of fighting. I don't want to fight any man; I'm too fond of 'em all for that" I went out after breakfast, and I gave him a leg up on to his very sorry horse, which he sat like a tailor or "a sailor. He held tbe reins like tiller lines, and in dulged in a pleasant smile at the effect of the yellow boots. "No great hand at this sort of thing," he said, with a nod of farewell. "When the beast does anything out of the common, or begins to make heavy weather of it, I am not" He ranged np alongside bis beloved gun, and gave the word of command with more dignity than he knew what to do with. All that day I was employed in arranging quarters for the nurses. To do this I was forced to turn some of our most precious stores out into the open, covering them with a tarpaulin, and iu consequence felt all the more assured that my chief was making a great mistake. At 9 o'clock in the evr ning they arrived, one of the juniors having ridden out in the moonlight to meet them. He reported them completely exhausted; informed me that he had recommended them to go straight to bed; and was altogether more enthusiastio about the matter than I personally or offi cially cared to see. He handed me a pencil note Irom my chief at headquarters, explaining that he bad not written me a dispatch because he had nothing but a J pen, with which instrument he coulfl nqt make bimself legible. It struck me that he was suffering from a plethora of assist ance, and was anxious to reduce his stall! I sent my enthusiastic assistant to the nurses' quarters with a message that thev were not to report to me until they had had a night's rest, and turned in. At midnight I was awakened by the orderly, and summoned to the tent ot the officer in command. This youth's face uas considerably whiter than his linen. He was consnlting with his second-in-command, a boy of 22 or thereabouts. A man covered with sand and blood was sitting in a hammock-chair, rubbing his eyes and drinking something out of a tumbler. "News from the front?" I inquired with out ceremony, which hindrance we 'had long since dispensed, with "Yes, and bad news. " It certainly was not pleasant hearing. Someone mentioned tbe word disaster, and we looked at each other with hard, anxious eyes. I thought of the women, and almost decided to send them back before daylight In a few moments a fresh man was rousea out oi nis oea ana sent lull gallop through the moonlight-across the desert to I headquarters, and the officer In - command ' LATE NEWS IN BRIEF. Buok Vf ilkerson, wifemurderer, has been sentenced to hang on September 30, at Belton, Tex. The terrible heat now prevalent in Ger many has dried up grapes in JRbenlsb, Aus trian and Baden vineyards. The Paris correspondent of the London Ttma says that the French wheat crop is estimated at 102,000.000 hectolltro, and that the high weight, 80 kilos per hectolltro, will bring the production nearly up to the decen nial average. The London Standard's Shanghai corre spondent says: "In reply to the Chinese protest Bussla declares that the Russian expedition under Colonel Tan off is simply exploring, and does not Intend to occupy the Painters." The biggest strike in the history of the Jimtown, Col., camp has Just been made In tbe Shallow Creek (list lie ton the old Judge Boy property. It has a lead of quartz, rich in Bulphurets, which assays from 865 to 1,000 ounces In silver. ( Tlp-o-Tip, who claims to be a Zulu Prince, 'ut who is wanted In several oities for viola ions of the laws, was arrested at Louisville, 'ty., Monday. The last place he operated i as in xoieao. v.. wnere. with two wnlte I confederates, he bioke Into and robbed several nouses. Another murder is reported in Perry county, Ind. At Derby, a small town In tbe eastern part of tbe county, Jim Carr killed Cal Bryant by stabbing him four or five times with a knife. Carr and Bryant bad been old enemies and while at a dance en gaged In a light. Aflght occurred near Kennedy, Tex.,Mon day between John Pace and Ambrose Col lins, in which Collins was Instantly killed. Another light occurred near Komes City be tween Felix Burrls and Sam Henton and Burris was shot through the bowels and ill die. Henton was Instantly killed. Eev. John Jayne.of Cincinnati, Is back in tne .baptist pulpit, no was originally a tanner, became an actor, and then entered came an agnostic, married a lady possessed or $100,000, and entered the publishing busi ness. Recently no declared his faith re stored. Tbe whaling bark Northern Light, whose orew of 26 men mutinied at Oun, Alaska, has arrived at San Francisco. Tbe bark was ordered to San Franoisco for repairs, but the crew claimed she was unseaworthy and refused to go. They wero placed in irons for three days, and then they gave in and the whaler put to sea. W. S. Daboll, the well-known actor, com mitted suicide yesterday afternoon by tak ing poison at the residence of 6. W. Slocum, at Ilolliston, Mass., wheie he has been resid ing with bis wife a good portion of the season. He was under engagement to ap pear at the Tremont Theater, Boston, last evening, in "Purltana," and had been in Boston rehearsing his part for the past few weeks. Pxbtxot action and perfect health result from the use of De Witt's Little Early Risers A perlect little pill. Vary small: very sure GOOD PIE is much prized, but many people can't eat pie because of dyspepsia or dyspeptic tendency. Everybody CAN EAT PIE if it is made with Cottolene, the new pure substitute for lard. Cottolene is simply pure 'cottonseed oil' and pure beef suet, two of the healthiest foods known. Properly combined they are better than lard for all kinds of shortening, and everyone can eat, digest, and enjoy food cooked with it Food that was indiges- tible when cooked with lard is easily digested when cooked with Cottolene, and many of the leading house keepers of the land say they can make nicer bread, rolls;biscuit, cakes, cookies, gingerbread, pies, patties, tarts, griddle cakes, cro quettes with Cottolene than with either lard or butter. Get itofyour grocerand try it Beware of imitations. Manufactured only by N. K. FAIRBANKS. CO., CHICAGO. PITTSBURGH AGENTS: F. SELLERS & CO. began to regain confidence. I'think he ex tracted it from the dispatch-bearers tumbler. ' After all, he was not responsible tor much. He was merely a connecting link, a point of touch between two greater men. It was necessary to get my men to work at once, but I gave particular orders to leave the nurses undisturbed. Disasterat the front meant bard work at the rear. We all knew that, and endeavored to make ready for a sudden rush of wounded. The rush began before daylight As tbey came in we saw to them, dressed their wounds and packed them as closely as pos sible. But the stream was continuous. They never stopped coming; they never gave us a moment s rest At 6 o'clock I gave orders to awaken the nurses and order them to prepare their quar ters for the reception of the wounded. At 0:30 an Army Hospital Crops man came to me in the ward. "Shockin' case, sir, just come in," he said. "Officer. Gun busted, sir." "Take him to my quarters," I said, wip ing my instruments on my sleeve. In a few minutes I follow ed, and on en tering my little room the first thing I saw was a pair of yellow boots. There was no doubt about the boots and the white duck trousers, and although I could not see the face, I knew that this was Sammy Fitz-Warrener come back again. A woman one of the nurses for whom he had pleaded was bending over the bed with a sponge and a basin of tepid water. As I entered she turned upon me a pair of calmly horror-stricken eyes. "Ohl" she whispered meaningly, step ping back to let me approach. I had no time to notice then that she was one of those largely built women, with perfect skin and fair hair, who make one think ot what England must have been beiore Gallic blood got to be so widely disseminated in the race. "Please pull down that mat from'the win dow," I said, indicating a temporary blind whioh I had put up. She did so promptly and returned to the bedside, falling into position, as it were, awaiting my orders. I bent over the bed, and I must confess that what I saw there gave me a thrill of Horror which will come again at times so long as" I live. I made a sign to Sister to continue her task of sponging away the mud, of which oue ingredient uas sand. "Both eyes," she whispered, "are de stroyed. " "Not the top of the skull," I said; "yon must not touch that" For we both knew that our task was without hop As I have said, I knew something of Fitz-Warrener's people, and I eould not help lingering there, where I could do no good, when I knew that I was wanted else where. Suddenly his lips moved, and Sister, kneeling down on tbe floor, bent over him. I could not hear what he said, but I think NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. "'" i tsNi FRECKLES Removed in Three Days With MME. 91. YALE'S La Freekla Onaranteed or Money Refunded. Ladies and Gentlemen, Physicians and Chemists: ATTENTION While I tell you of the most .ni. ijmnun wonderful discovery ever made in chemistry. lime. II. Yale, that wonderful woman chemist, has compounded a medicine that will remove tbe roost stubborn case of FRECKLES in three davs. Hark, va doubt ing Thomases: IF YOUR FRECKLES ARE NOT gone In one week after using this won derful medicine Mme. Yale will refund your money. Tan and sunburn removed in one application. $1 PER BOTTJLE Until Sept 15, after that J. Madame IT. Yale Is desirous of giving out-or town ladles the time Chance she rave to the Chicago ladles -that Is. to remove their freckles fort!. Sold by yourdrue glsta, or shipped to you from Chicago on receipt ofSl, Mme. Yale's valuable book. "Beauty and the Complexion," wilt be sent free upon receipt of 4 cents postage. Gives rull Instructions and prices of all Mme. Yale's comnlpTtnn rpmpfftH nrmt the Freckl" Cure, Ladies out of town, send in your orders before tbe ISth or September after that time the full price Is charged. Use Mme. Yale's Excelsior Skin Food. Guaran teed to remove the deepest wrinkles. Price S3 per Jar. 13y mail or at all druggists. 3IJIE. M. YALE, Beauty and Complexion specialist, oftheMme.M. Yaw Co. Temple of Beautr. IIS STATE ST., CHICAGO, 1XL. A full line of Mme. Yale's preparations can be had In Pittsburg at Joseph Fleming St Son's. Drug gists. 412 Market street. Christy's drugstore, cor ner Smlthfield street and Fourth, avenue. E. C. Btlefel ft Co., successors to J Klmmel ft Co , Penn avenue and Ninth street. Vf. P. Martsolf Drug Company, corner Penn avenue and Sixth street. S. a. Holland, Druggist, corner bralthfleid and Liberty streets. In Allegheny City at E Holden 4 Co. '. Drug gists. 63 Federal street. G. Eisenbels. 113 Federal street, and Kaercber's, 62 Federal street. "" au24-wsu After 19 Years of Trial, B L A I 3ST E, -THE FAMILY SAFEGUARD OIL, Is Conceded to Be tbe Best and Safest Oil Known. ELAINE NEVER VARIES IN QUALITY. Cannot Be Exploded. It is the very highest grade or reflned pe troleum. Irom which In the process of man ufacture, every impurity has been elim inated. Elaine is free from benzine and paraJHne; It will never chill in the coldest tempera ture known on this continent. In color, Elaine is spring-water white, and its "fire test" Is so high as to make it as ab solutely safe as any illuminant known. Having no dlaagreeuble odor, Elaine Is a pleasant oil for family use. Can Bo Burned in Any Petroleum lamp. A POSITIVE PROTECTION FROM LAMP EXPLOSIONS. MAKES THE SAFEST AND BEST LIGHT KNOWN. ELAINE! Tshair OIL. 100 Million Gallons ELAINE Sold in IS Years From 1873 to 1892. Elaine Cannot Be Improved Upon. WARDEN & OXNARD, MANUFACTURERS, fol PITTSBURG, PA. PURE BUTTER, SOLD BT GEO. K. STEVE.VSO.V 4 CO., Fine Groceries and Table Delicacies, Sixth avenue. Jy20- x she did. I saw her lips frame the whisper "Yes" in reply, and over her face there swept suddenly a look of great tenderness. Alter a little pause she rose and came to me. "Who is he?" she asked. "Fitz-Warrener of the Naval Erigade. Do you know'him?" "No, I never heard of him. Of course it is quite hopeless?" "Quite?" She returned toaher position by the bed side with one arm laid across his chest. Presently He began whispering again and at intervals she answered him. It sudden ly occurred to me that, in his unconscious ness, he was mistaking her for someone else?; and that she, for some woman's rea son, was deceiving him purposely. In a lew moments I was sure ot this. I tried not to look; ut bl saw it all. I saw his poor blind hands wander over her throat and face, up to her hair. "What is this?" he muttered quite dis tinctly, with that tone of self-absorption which characterizes the says of an uncon scious man. "What is this silly cap?" His fingers wandered on over the snowy linen until they came to the strings. As an aspirant to the title of gentleman, I felt like running away many doctors know this feeling; as a doctor, I could only stay. ' , His fingers fumbled with the strings. Still Sister bent over the bed. Perhaps she bent an inch or two nearer; One hand was beneath his neck, supporting tbe poor, shat tered head. He slowly drew off the cap, and his Sn eers crept lovingly over the soft, fair hair. "Marny," he said, quite clearly "you've done your hair up, and you're nothing but a little girl." I could not help watching his fingers, and yet I felt like a man committing sac rilege. , "When I left you," said the bralriless voice, "you wore ft down your back. You were a little girl you are a little girl now." And he slowly drew a hairpin out One long lock fell curling to her shonlder. She never looked up, never noticed me, but knelt there like a ministering angel person ating lor a time a girP whom we had never seen. "ily little girl," he added, with a low laugh, and drew out another hairpin. In a few moments all her hair was about her shoulders. I had never thought that she might be carrying such glory quietly hidden beneath tbe simple nurse's cap. "That is better," he said; "that is bet ter." And he let all the hairpins fall on the coverlet "Now you aro my own Marny," he mur mured, "are you not?" She hesitated one moment "Yes, dear." she said, softly, "I am your own Marny." With her disengaged baud she stroked his Mn-himr cheek. Thera was a certain science about ber touch, as if she had once I Known something ox inest matters. ITETv AD V EUTISEHISNTS. wift i! ! Oj 'tt i vmriLMH.cMtt m. Would fill a good-sized vol ume if written out. What he can do at Jacksons' in the way of bargains in fine Home-Made Clothing would fill an entire library. We have placed on sale this week, to make things hum, about 40 new styles of good All-wool Cheviot Pants, called "The Favorite," at $2.25. Now, two dollars and a quarter is btit a small stmt, and some people may think it isn't enough for them to spend for Pants, bid we say to you if $2.25 will do the work with us that it will take $4. to do m elsewhere, why not take ad vantage of our Pants sale. Ask for our $2.25 "Favor ites" In our suits: Well, every other man in town wears otir Home-made Suits, and for good reasons. First, we guarantee them in repair free of charge for one year; sec ondly, you can save from $3 to $5 on every suit. 1 Why not try us? It's to your interest. See the ad vance styles in our Hat De partment. 954 and 956 LIBERTY ST. au24-l Why Suffer From Annoying, Itching, Scaly, Sore, Ichorous, Loathsome SKIN DISEASES, when you can obtain Immediate relief by using Heiskell's Ointment ThiS'famous and infallible remedy thoroughly teals all those distressing conditions of the skin, wlthontthealdofinternalmedicine.Italso removes Pimples, Freckle and Sunburn from the face and hands, leaving the skin fair and healthy. Sold by all Dmceists, or. sent by mall. Price 50 Cents per box. Send for that valuable book, " Hints for Kitchen and Sick Room," Free. JOHNSTON, HOLLOWAY ot CO., S31 Commerce Street. Philadelphia. Lovingly and slowly the smoke-grimed fingers passed over the wonderful hair, smoothing it Then be grew more daring. He touched her eye, her gentle cheeks, the quiet, strong lips. He slipped to her shoulder, and over the soft folds of her black dress. "Been gardening?" he asked, coming to the bib of her nursing apron. It was marvelous how tbe brain, which was laid open to the day, retained the con sciousness of one subject so long. "Yes dear," she whispered. "Your old apron is all wetl" he said re proachfully, touching her breast where the blood bis own blood was slowly drying. His hand passed on, and as it touched her I saw her eyes soften into such a wonderful tenderness that I felt as if I were looking on a part ot Sisters life that waa sacred. I saw a little movement as if to draw back then she resolutely held her position. But her eyes were dull with a new pain. X wonder I have wondered ever since what memories that poor senseless wreck of a man was arousing in the woman's heart by his wandering touch. "Marny," he said, "Marny. It was not too bard waiting for me?" "No, dear." s "It will be all right now, Mamy. The) bad part is all past" - "Yes." "Marny, you remember the night I left Marny F want no no, your lips." "I knelt suddenly and slipped my hand within his shirt, for I saw something in his face. . As Sister's lips touched his I felt his heart give a great bound within his breast, and then it was still. When she lifted her face it was as pale as hi. I must say that I felt like crying a feel ing which had not come to me tor twenty years. I busied myself purposely with the dead man, and when I had finished my task I turned and found Sister filling in the Eapers ner cap neatly tied her golden air hidden. I signed the certificate, placing my name beneath hers. For a moment we stood. Our eyes met and we said nothing. She moved toward the door, and I held it open while she passed out Two hours later I received orders from the officer in command to send the nurses back to headquarters. Our men were fall ing back before the enemy. BlacJacood't. Everyone in Town .Would prefer being excused from a surgical operation when they could be positively cured of pile! by using Hill's Pile Pomade. A printed guarantee with each package. Price, SI: sir packages, tS. By mall, for sale by Joseph Fleming Son, 412 Market street. DO NOT DELAY Advertising your vacant rooms, as those who did so last week In tbe oent-a-word advertising columns of THE DISPATCH were satisfied with the result. JSviAVWoi rjr