12 PENNINGTON TO FLY From Chicago to New York in a Few Weeks, So He Says. THE-AIRSHIP IS HEARIY EEADY. A Peep at the Factory and the Pickle Shaped Air Speeder. THE INTEXTOR A FIRM BEIJEYER Pennington, the king of airships and aerial adventure, is again to the front. In three weeks' time a great human bird, it is claimed, will sweep over Chicago in the di rection of New York, with a great spoon wheel whirling in front, two twirling fans on either side, great fins on it,s back and to the side; at the back an air rudder that steers to starboard and port, and below it a wide, thin slab that flaps at will like the toil of a crawfish with the colic, and guides the ship up to dizzy heights or lowers it to the level of lumbering locomotives and con veyances of a slower speed. , The redivivus of the Pennington airship takes place at Chicago Heights, says the Inter Ocean. Here the airship company has 40 acres of broad, expansive meadow land, where there is plenty of room to boost the great artificial hawk, and to avoid any casualties if the wonderfulartifice should go darting about deliriously in the manner of a lop-sided kite. The Pennington Company has jnst finished its first building. It is a queer, lall structure, painted red and is the only building on earth devoted exclusively to the manufacture of airships. It covers 32, 000 feet of floor snrtace and has the most wonderful, stupendous doors ever con structed. These doors are 58 teet high and 33 feet wide. Spventy-fiv Miles an Honr Is the Gait. These gigantic portals will be swung aside and the grrat inflated cylinder, that is to Derloratc the atmosphere at 5 miles an lour and give the common fowl of the air in the hiccoughs as it rushes by, this great pot bellied flamingo will be ushered out and sent up into the air and headed tor New York City with a spirit of confidence that will make every railroad monopolist in the land declare himself insolvent forthwith. The airship factory is just completed and hns manv interesting sights within its walls. The main portion is the Gargantuan berth of the great buoyancy chamber, or in flated cylinder, which" is 125 feet long with a mean diameter of 38 feet In another shop is the car, which is aluminium metal, with cushion seats filled with hydrogen gas, and weighing altogether but 233 pounds. The same sized car constiucted of ordinary material would weigh 1,880 pounds. Every thing is relatively light The great fin on the back is hollow aluminium filled with hydrogen gas, and those to either side are similarly made. The horizontal rudder, which raises or lowers the ship, in the manner of abird's tail, and the perpindicular rudder which steers it, are also of aluminium and very light The Motor Power of the Machine. The motor power consists of two beauti ful little engines of alloyed aluminium. These engines each consist of four cylinders with four piston rods attached to a single center and acting with reciprocal power. Hydrogen gas is exploded by an electric spark. One engine weighs a minimum of 15 pounds and has a maximum capacity of 15-horse power. These engines drive the great wheel ot four spoons that bores through the air auger-like and draws the ship after it, while the little ians on the sides elevate the ship or lower it Everything is as light as possible, and all the different portions of the airship are at present in course of construction. "In about three or four weeks," said Edwaid J. Pennington in his office yester dav, "I shall have the ship completed. I will sail up to Chicago the first day and bind on the Lake Front Then I shall set out for New York City, thence to New Orleans and over to the Pacific coast, and from San Francisco back to Chicago." Mr. Pennington said this with the non chalance of a man who is talking about crossing the street There is absolutely no doubt in his mind but the airship will sail without a hitch or a falter. Air. Pennington Sanguine of Success. In his mind there are no "ifs" and "huts." The Bhip will sail. That is all there is about it Mr. Pennington has spent nine years of his life to make the ship as it will appear shortly. He has studied every vork, article 'and magazine nnder the sun en aerial navigation, and has combined all the superior points of others' machines and eliminated all the hindrances in the Pen nington airship. The hydrogen gas in the great bloated pickle is'not intended to raise the ship, but simply to render its weight nil The little tans on the side do the elevating, and the THE STORY OF REUBEN RTJTHYEN. . There was once a kindly old gentleman, a life-dweller in Aberdeen, and proud of his natie town with that pride which is in definite because it is intrinsic, who visited the baths of Germany for his health. "When he returned home he remarked with some heat to a welcoming friend: "Do you know, sir, that it actually came about that I was ahamed to register my residence with my name I, sir, who as man and boy have never known shame. And why? Because I would th n become an object of suspicion. Because Aberdeen, in the United States ot America, is an abomination to every hotel keeper of Europe. Because, like Nazareth, nothing good can come out of it. It is our young men, sir, our fast, vicious yonne men, who have out-Heroded Herod in their debaucheries throughout the Con tinent and have -given this bad name to oar good ly city. I blame that dare-devil Euth ven in particular. Now all this was true, though why might remain a problem, for Aberdeen, as every one knows, sleeps without tossing. Per haps a hence may arise from this very calm, for the stoutest spirits are distilled m the deepest cellars. But a posteriori is far more certain than a priori, and the fact stands that the young men of Aberdeen, as a rule, were wild and profligate. The kindly old gentleman, in his righteous wrath, had anathematized Buth ven, but even while doing so there had been a twinkle in his eyes. And here lay the pity of it; every one liked this young man; every one's censure was so enriched with sympathy as to be enviable. It seemed as if the fairy godmother, after her malig nant sisters had done their worst, had ap peared at the christening, and had endowed iiim with charm. As a child, his roguish blue eyes and ingenuous smile had con centrated interest, and their magnetism re mained a constant attribute. The children used to call him "Little Angel Pace," and the title seemed appropriate five minutes niter he had dashed a cobble stone througli a neighbor's front window or had attached phosphorus to a dog's tail. Beuben was left an orphan at an early age, in charge of the grimmest old banker in Aberdeen, one whose glance would bring terror to the soul of a borrower on Govern ment bonds, but bis ward would draw cari catures ot him and gleefully show them to him, and the guardian would be embar rassed instead oi angry. Buthven's father had so disposed of his ample fortune that his son would receive its income a wise and an unwise precau tion, for. while Beuben doubtless would have quickly outworn the strincs of Fortu- great wheel In front draws the ship forward. The present buoyancy chamber will lilt two tons and a half. The car attached immedi ately beneath will carry ten passengers. The airship theoretically is perfect Every possible mechanism to lighten it and to overcome gravity and to lessen the atmos pheric currents has been secured. Still, human credulity stands aghast when it is asked toput a simple trusting belief in the claim that any man has ingenuity enough to rival the feathery creatures of the air. Bat There Are Doubting Thomases. Mr. Pennington will have to blow up hii machine, get the wheels to going, and ascend up over the sky-scrapers and shoot off across the sky like a streak of greased lightning before a select few of the most daring minds will believe he can fly. He will have to cut figure eights in the sky, play tag with the stars and dance a can-can around the moon before the masses will cdnseut to crown him king of the air. Will he do it? Will the great patent bird, with a wheel behind and wheels to the sides, go spinning through the air and darting in and out among the clouds, leaving lurid streak in the midnight sky, with one end in Chicago and- the other in the out skirts of Shanghai? Mr. Pennington believes H will. He re counts that the steamboat, the steamship, the telegraph, the telephone, the steam en gineall had to battle with incredulity and the petty strictures of ridicule in their in cipiencv. But he does not ask anybody o accept his claims. Within three weeks he will give an actual exhibition, where the evi dence of the eye will be unanswerable. Meanwhile, it would be well enough for the humorously inclined to occasionally drop around to'the Lake Front and look out for a big, shining monster to come slip ping down among the park tramps and paralyze a half dozen on the spot LATE NEWS IN BRIEF. Gladstone has been re elected In.Mid lothlan. Supreme Justice Somerby, of the Iron' Ilall, is a fugitive. A protective taiiff bill has been passed by the Legislature of Hawaii. Chile has ratified the arbitration agree ment with the United States. French capitalists are negotiating for the privilege of establishing a new national bank in Uruguay. The entire Town Board, of Superior, Wis., has been arrested, on a charge of em bezzlement of school funds. Francis E. Gladstone, claiming to be a son of the British Premier, is stranded in Detioit and is begging forassistauce to go to Chicago. A hunting paity of four men have been found murdered on Caney creek, in the In dian Territory. All their valuables weie Missing. Six men of the Department of Publlo Works of New York were nearly suffocated by gas in a sewer yesterday. Three are in a Clitical condition. A mob at Josselyn, Ga.," captured Ben Howard, the colored murderer, from the officers en loute to jail, and riddled his body lull of bullets. Henry C Bissell, of New York, Treasurer of a theatrical company, has been missing from Boston forseveial days, and fears of foul play are entertained. Lord Charles Robert Carrington has been appointed Lord Chambeilain. Lord Car rington's original name was Smith, but he had it changed by loyal license. Chicago trades unions will probably pay the Dands who charge $7 per man lor Labor Day; but they are gruinuling hard. Gom pers is doing his best for peace Arthur Wines, the son of Dr. F. H. Wines, the special agent of the eleventh censns, turned up yesterday at Washington. He had beea missing for several days. Owing to quarantine regulations in Xew York, Lyons steamship lines refused to ac cept Russian Hebrew immigrants. They will go to Havre and embark lor Boston. Over 600 delegates have been appointed from Northwestern cities to the Interna tional Reciprocity Convention, which meets in Grand. Forks, S. Dak., September 1 and 2. Mrs. Greenbauny, near Saginaw, Mich., left her baby in a wagon while she went berrylnir. During her absence a lynx had eaten the child, leaving nothing but one foot The Dalton gang lias robbed the station of Nowata, Ark., on the Kansas and Arkansas Valley Railroad, of $1,600. The station agent, the traveling auditor and the traveling passenger agent wero all held up. William B. Cochran, Secretary of the Bushwhacker Manufacturing Company, of Aspen, Cot, and manage! of the opera house there, nas been arrested in ban 1 ran cisco for making way with 35,000 shares of the manufacturing company's stock. Stuart Ren'del, Gladstonian, Chaii man of the Welsh party, will introduce in Parlia ment a bill fixing a date alter which no vested interest can be created in Welsh dio ceses. This measure is a iorerunner to a bill disestablishing the olrarch in Wales. DO NOT DEL KY Advertising your vacant roomi, as those who did so last ifetk In the cent-a-word advertising columns of THE DISPATCH were satisfied with the result. One Dollar Will open a bank account at the People's Savings Bank, 81 Fourth avenue. Start now to save your money for the World's Fair nnd old age. tts natus' purse, still poverty often proves an adequate curb for Pegasus. The lad was sent to the famous Latin school at Armway and thence was expelled, the cause being certain anarchical sen timents which he had managed to interpo late among the Head Master's notes for his commencement sermon, which the purblind old doctor did not distinguish until he had stopped, horror-stricken, in their very ut terance. Then, as it to prove that he could do what he wouldn't, Beuben entered West Point, and at the end ot the course was graduated at the head of his class. His name is still famous there as that of the most daring horseman, the most skillful draughtsman, the most thorough soldier of his day. But aiter a sharp Indian campaign, in which he won a scar across his cheek to ever afterward bespeak his gallantry and the desperate recklessness ot the charge which he had led, Buthven ridiculed the boasting of a general officer who had been ill on the day of battle, and then discreetly resigned. The European trip, which had caused the kindly old gentleman to renounce his citi zenship followed, and at the age of 30 Beu ben Buthven returned to Aberdeen "to settle down," as he gravely assured the friends, and these were his acquaintances who greeted him. Fora while it seemed as if there might be a foundation to this assertion. He hired apartments, which he of course called "his den," and fitted them with all the nicety of refined taste. Their walls were lined with book shelves and adorned with curios and paintings, many of which latter were Beuben's own, for his long, slender fingers ncic cAucit nuu iuc ucusii uuu sometimes tantalizingly revealed the extraordinary figments ot his mind. He called demurely on the old exclusive set with whom his pa rents had associated. He attended morning service at St. Siraon's, aBd there was a distinct clatter of beads and whir of ribbons when his tall sitewy torm was Been languidly strolling down the aisle. He gave several decorous entertainments in his den, and soothed the matrons" with his albums while he en tranced the maidens with the dreamy music of his clear tenor voice accompauied by the mandolin. He even took part in a kirmess and posed as Sir "William "Wallace in tartan leaning on the crossed handle of a claymore. Perhaps it was this amazing variance which broke the back of his complaisance, for from that day he ceased to advance, and resumed his steps to one side. People began to whisper and nudge in his shadow. Matrons spread their, wings solicitously on his ap proach. The maniiolin rang out atiilarions warning even when the morning light was learning to creep. The "den" was now re t f if THE Pl'lTSBUEG AMERICAN PROGRESS. The Development of the Country's Educational System. COUNTY TEACHERS TOLD ABOUT IT. Dr. "A'insbip Speaks to the Institute on the Art of Teaching. DIEECT0ES WILL BE IS MARGE TO-DAY. Hon. A. S. Draper opened the general work of the afternoon session of the Alle gheny County Institute by an address on the "Development of the Educational Sys tem of America." He referred first to the educational system of other countriej and showed that all lands had done some thing for the education of the people. . He then traced the growth of the American public school system. "At first,"' said he, "the American schools were church schools. Then private schools sprung up as money making enterprises. But the circumstances of the country outgrew such schools and it became necessary to adopt the broader doctrine that all property of the people is pledged to the education of the people's children. Hence the necessity for disregarding sectarian and political differences. There must be nothing about our schools to which any can object New l'lans and Better Discipline. "The new plans have resulted in a new system of discipline and a new spirit All this was necessary because the circum stances of the country were changed. Busy times and great cities demand improved ad vantages. But the school system must grow to meet these demands. It must grow every day, and if it does it will make onr citizenship safe and promote the ends for which it is maintained." Dr. Winship gave a talk on "What Is Teaching." He said: "The employments of people are divided into occupation, trade, office, calling, profession. Occupa tions are primarily for the earning of a living, trade for making money, an office for honor, and calling for duty. " A profes sion requires training. Its members must make a profession ot devotion to that em ployment The public must recogujze their profession. Teaching must not be allowed to be merely ' a method of earning a living. There is no temptation to money-making. It must not be allowed to become an ofiice to be received at the hands of politicians. It must not ad mit of people's claiming prominence in a eranky way, as though it were a calling. It must demand better training. TVlnshlp's iVlsn Words to Teachers. "Its members must be more distinct ively proud of their identification with the 343,000 teachers who are instruct ing the 13,000,000 children ot our land. Public recognition must not be catered to or demanded. It must come and will come freely wheh teachers are suf ficiently trained and are definite in their loyalty to the profession. We are not now ready for professional recognition. The sooner we recognize that the earlier will the public appreciate every effort to stand where there shall be a distinction between the professional and the crank which is the first evidence ot public professional recog nition." The institute was then divided for class,, work and Dr. Noss addressed class "A," on "Hindrances and Helps in the Teachers' Work." Among the hindrances DrNoss enumerated slackness of interest on the part of pupils. "A teacher teaches as mnch as the pupils learn," said he. "The pupil's learning depends upon his interest in what he learns. Feebleness of attention, consequent necessity for repeti tion also operates against the progress of the teacher's work. Waste of time and effort and the vague and unavail able character of the knowledge acquired bv the pupil who Is uninterested are among the greatest hindrances." How Herbart's System Works. He suggested as a remedy, the adoption of Herbart, whose methods of pedagogy are now being introduced into this country. Herbart being a German educator, who died halt a century ago, and who has many followers among the 8,000 teachers in Ger many who are full ot enthusiasm and well organized for aggressive educational work. He explained the beneficial features of the system, referring chiefly to the doctrine of apperception which emphasises the fact that the child should be able to comprelrend clearly all new facts presented. The sub ject matter of instruction should be ar ranged in the order of the child's mental development Concentration in the child's studies should be thorough and each sub ject should be divided into suitable lesson units. Prof. Bussell addressed class "B" on the subject ot music He discussed tone and garded literally instead of eccentrically. His followers and admirers, and the former were the latter, became the despair of parents and the rage of employers. The clatter of the hoots of his fiery black mare, irnncess, rang oni a cnaiienge to respecta bility at untoward hours, and children crept under coverlids, and the cabmen in front of the Exchange muttered: "There goes that wild divil Buthven agin." Now, Eeuben was iond of riding; indeed, it nas the least harmful amusement that he knew. But there was a careless dash in his going that seemed disreputable to the good ly inhabitants, and because his fancy guided his outings its vagaries were deemed vicious. One afternoon Beuben was galloping over the one pleasant road which led out of Aberdeen, on which, unfortunately for his reputation, the one pleasant roadhouse of the vicinity was situated. Preoerling him was a farmer on a load of hay discussing weather and crops with another farmer on a load of sand, and Incidental thereto these two farmers, with ruial contempt for all who do not pay a tnrnpike tax, were oc cupying the entire way. A light turn of the hand and the gallant black was in the ditch and out again in front But Beuben afterward remembered that he had Indiffer ently thought what a nasty barrier these would have made against a runaway. On he sped around the bend of the road and under the shade ot the twin rows of maples when a rapid rattle and patter at tracted him. A team of ponies before a phaeton had made a bolt of it, and were coming toward him at a rate which would be the despair of all ponies thereafter. A young girl with white face and compressed lips sat upright within, clinging to the reins bravely, but most ineffectually. It was all done so easily that no w onder Beu ben laughed away thanks. Black Princess was whirled around and plunged beside the affrighted pair. A long slender hand was outstretched and grasped the curb with a giant's grip. The ponies fell back on their haunches, the phaeton swayed and stopped within ten feet of the bncolie gossips. "Shol That's Squire Dalton's darter," quoth one. . "Trne! Be yer hurt, Mamie?" a'sked the other. This gave Buthven his bearings. He knew the old-fashioned mansion of the Dal tons on the lane a mile distant, so he turned the ponies and begged to assure the young lady that he would honor himself by rid ing at their head to her father's house. When they drew up before the broad portico the farm hands, startled by rumor, thronged abont the horses as if aiding in the rescue. Buthven assisted Mary Dalton to alight, and as her little hand rested within his grasp and lie gazed into her clear gray eyes, he felt that he had at last met his heart's desire. "I thank you," she said, calmly. "You must come in and let mv father thank vnn -also." And Buthven followed her as one may enter a temple after a weary pilgrimage. & time. He referred particularly to the age at which a child's voioe should be devel oped, saying that between the ages ot 6 and 17 years the voice gains in strength and he urged that the voices be not taxed nnder 6J years. MIm Coffin Opposed to HevUw. Miss Coffin spoke to class "O" on the subject of "Beading;" She urged the adop tion of apian of silent reading just previous to the oral recitation, by the class. She opposed review days, bnt said that all regu lar work should be kept up to the highest possible standard." Prof. Deane ocoupied the attention of class "D" by a discussion on the use of the decimal point and long division. The insti tnte'adjourned until this morning at 9:30. This may be the last year forMcKeesport to be represented in the County Institute. The law permits cities having 75 teachers to have their own institutes. Superintendent P. A. Shanor, of the McKeesport schools, said yesterday that they had 70 teachers elected for this term, and before the end of the term two or three more will be re quired. By next year he thinks they will have oyer 75, and they can then establish their own institute. This will be Directors' Day at the Insti tute. . At the morning session of the instltnte .Dr. Wlnship, Superintendent Draper, Dr. Maltby, Hiss .Edith Coffin and Dr. T. B. Noss were the instructors. The election of a committee on permanent certificates was held during the noon recess. The result will be announced to-day. The candidates were : JE. B. McBoberts, Prof. Brooks, C. B. Cook, W. D. Brightwell, J. W. Thomas, C. J. Fisher. J. D. Anderson and Miss M. J. Marshall, with five to elect BROKE IHE QBE BEC0KD. A New ake t-teamer Carries 4,808 Tons From Eicanaba to Chicago. Cleveland, Aug. 2i. Special. The Maritana, recently launched at South Chi cago and owned by the Minnesota Steam ship Company, which comprises the same capitalists interested in the Illinois Steel Company, has broken the lake ore record on her maiden trip. Monday she left Es canaba with 4,808 net tons of ore for South Chicago, drawing 17 feet 6 inches of water. The record was held by the Maryland, launched last year at Detroit, which a few weeks ago took down 4,103 net tons of ore to South Chicago. These great loads illustrate what could be done on the lakes if it were possible for boats to load to 17 and 18 teet between upper and lower lake ports. This load was possible only because there was straight sailing with no rivers or shallows to pass. The Maritana, for example, will probably bring down only 4,000 tons from Two Har bors whereas with deeper channels she could carry 4,800 and could afford to trans port ore for 20 cents a ton less than current rates, a reduction in transportation cost of nearly 20 per cent. An irritated throat is soothingly treated by Dr. D. Jayne's Expectorant, an old established curative, for coughs and colds and all bronchial and lung troubles. Saved His Child's Utr. A. N. Dilferbough, York, Neb., says: "The other day I came home and found my little boy down with cholera morbus, my wife scared, not knowing what to do. I went straightway and got a 25-cent bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diar rhoea Bemedy, and gave it according to directions. You never saw such a change in a child. His limbs and body were cold. I rubbed his limbs and body with my hands, and after I had given him the sec ond dose he went to sleep, and, as my wife says, 'from a deathbed he was up playing in three hours.' It saved me a doctor bill of about 3, and, what is better, it saved my rhild. I can recommend it with a clear conscience." For sale by druggists. WThsu Notice. Notice. To-day the P. a C. Colothters, will sell the balance of the goods bought of the "Big Boston Clothlnir Concern" that failed. Men's Bnits at $2 85, worth $10: men's plain and lancy coiksciews at 50 5 and $8 90, worth triple; men's finest black cheviots at $6 83, $8 90 anl $12 40: fine overcoats for men at $1 60, $7 and $8 90; men's fine pants at 93c, tl 17 and $2. Call to-day. We must sell this Boston firm's stock and turn it into oash. Onr 11 years of solid business reputation in this city is guarantee that you wilt set everything J use as advertised. No space to name more bargains, but we have plenty for all. P. C. C. C, Clothiers, corner Grant and Dia mond streets. Yncntlon Is Over. Your cloththg will need pressing or clean ing perhaps. Try Pfeifer, 143 Smitnfield street, 100 Federal stieot. Allegheny. Telepnone:i 1204. and 3469. rrsu Trotters, pacers, draught and general purpose horses will be sold at Am helm sale Thursday, August 25. Dx Witt's Little Early Risers. Best pill for biliousness, sick headache, malaria. Atgostcra Bitters, the celebrated ap petizer, Ib used all over the world. It was three months later that one even ing they again stood side by side on the broad portico. Up and down" the pathway a man was leading the fiery black mare. "And is your answer final?" he pleaded. "It must be," Ttfary replied. "How could I trust my life in the keeping of such a man as you?" Buthven did not attempt to answer the question. In former days his sophistical assurances would have swept away every doubt, but love had made him both humble and remorseful. "Goodby," he said. Yet as he stood for a moment with bared head beneath the moonlight, Instinctively his bonny blue eyes and smiling lips urged her iavor. Ah, fairy godmother, tor once hast thy charm lost its potency! The girl paused irreso lute, with averted face, and then went into the house. Like a whirlwind through the night rushed Black Princess under unaccustomed spurandgoad; andliteawhirlwind through Buthven's mind rushed black despair. He had wildly and hotly made his wooing and failed; he who never before had been crossed nor thwarted. Ah, love mav well abide his time, for his darts grow sharper from disuse. Beuben had long been an adept in reading the contradiction ot droop ing lids and glowing cheeks to a cruel tongue, but then he had been all head and no heart, and now the converse was true, and in maidenly shrinking he saw naught save contempt and fear. He would not stand it, he, the invincible one, to be so up wrought. Yet what could he do? Do? Why, he would pack his traps and away. The world was as broad as Aberdeen was confined. The world was as gay as Aber deen was dull. But where would he go? Was it -not all a twice-told tale whose nar ration had lost its interest and whose climax its thrill? "And I would have tried to behave my self for her sake," he muttered. But no, that way was blocked, and along the old ac customed one the lights were out. Vanity of vanities! Whv could he not revive his enthusiasms? What was there that lie had not tried and proved unto satiation? Where were the fruits ot his vouthful days, so tender, so succulent, so refreshing -of juice' and flavor? Ah, that he might only find them! But these .apples oi Sodom, faugh! Even yet were his lips a-pucker from their ashes. Black Princess, true to habit, turned in at the foadhouse. Buthven leaped from the saddle and gulped a glass ot brandy that would have o'ertopped a toper. 'The man's daft the night, and the mare, too," muttered the groom as he pocketed a coin. Then away once more through the dark ness, down the clattering planks, over the rattling bridge, up the hillside thick with creeping shadows, and awayl Where should he go? Why had he returned to Aberdeen? Why rather had he not come back years before when he might have worked and prayed, when he might have ucuovcu nuu utc ueen ueueveiu iuuiu no DiSPATCp. THU"RSDY,v,f'' AUGUST - HAWAII CLAIMS IT. AT hen It Is 'Officially Known That the British Will Hang on to Johnson Island the Honolulu Government Will Kick Sandwich Island News. San- Francisco, Aug. 24. Honolulu advices dated the 18th say the Legislature is still in session and had on that date reached its sixty-seventh day. The Cabinet is still incomplete. ' With regard to the annexation 'of John ston Island by H. M. S. Champion, the Minister of Foreign Affairs states that the Cabinet has not been officially informed ot the occupation of tho island, but it is the impression of Her Majesty's Government that Johnston and Kaluna Islands are still a portion of Hawaiian territory. Not hav ing any official notification ot the seizures, the Hawaiian Government considered it un advisable to enter a protest, believing that Great Brltlan, on ascertaining the facts, will withdraw without a forma! protest The Minister of Foreign Affairs, reply ing to the question, "Is the Government doing anything toward selling or leasing Pearl Harbor to the United States?" said the Hawaiian Government has never sug gested a transfer of any part of Pearl Harbor or any part of the Hawaiian .Do minions to any foreign power. In the debate on the passage of the sec tion in the Hawaiian postal savings bank bill, the Ministry were charged with the present stringency of affairs. Minister Parker said that the present condition of financial distress was due to the McKinley bill. ' AH INSANE ASYLUM TRAGEDY. A Supposed Harmless Inmito Strangles to Death His Fellow Prisoner. Cincinnati, Aug. 24. In Long view Lunatic Asylum, near Carthage, Hamilton county, last night.George Goetz strangled to death Henry Gerwig, a fellow inmate. The discovery was made after midnight by the watchman, who found the victim dead and his murderer standing over him with glaring eyes and convulsive movements. The two men had been locked in the same ATM! Ill $2.90! FOR LADIES AND GENTS. THE FINEST BARGAINS EVER OFFERED. Worth $4, $4.50, $5 and $6. NOW ONLY $2.90. Men's Finest Calf, Finest Patent Leather, Genuine Kangaroo, Fine Congress Bals and Bluchers. Bargain Prices. Every pair fully'warranted. W. M. 433 AND 435 WOOD ST. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. YOUGHIOGHENY reenough Street and Gas Alley. OFFICE. 106 GRANT ST. Youghiogheny Gas and Steam 49-i'rompt service to manufacturers anil consumers generally. Hills suppled with river sand. Je7-7i-TT3 biame that pure young girl for reading in his face what time had written there? Ah, he loved her a thousand 'times more for an intuition which he would have wished a sister to possess. What was the sum of his experience? False faces, heated air, oaths, quarrels, the forced smile of the painted dancing woman, the throw of loaded dice, the bubble of adulterated wine! No, no! He could not go away aud repeat to nausea that which was alreadv nauseating. But what, then, could he do? He might die. Surely! The scar on his cheek tingled as he remembered that when he had swooned from his horse after that tremendous toma hawk sweep the last sensation had been one ot rest and peace. For a moment Buthven's thoughts clus tered cheerfully about this suggestion, and then wandered as if led by dreams. The strangest, most incongruous recollections flashed across his mind like pictures from the lantern of madness the lullaby that his aged nurse used to sing; the streets of Aberdeen as they had looked years before op a bright morning after a terrific snow storm; the conclusion of one of the old doctor's talks at Armway, to which he would nave sworn he had never listened; the plaint of a beggar whom he had re fused in front of the club at London; the simulacrum of a sweet, sad face which he believed must be his mother's. Such visions entranced him until he found him selfhe hardly knew how back in his den, seated in his great armchair, the droplight dimly burning, the windows open to the re lief of the summer evening. And what was that on the stand by his side? His revolver, loaded and cocked. Well, he might as well! It would, at least, be an ending to what had been a tortuous course from a Inir beginning. But, lacka dav. how sad, how melancholy to contem plate! He hod never intended to waste his life, no, indeed! He had had dreams of honor, but they had always illumined the clouds of the future. He "had waited. He bad dawdled with opportunity. Time had seemed so abundant when it had been so scant Like the hare he had slept, and the tortoise had passed him by. Ob, the anguish of it, to be a king of men without the king dom! To have every "is" a "might have been." Now he comprehended the smiles, theshrngs, the furtive glances of his asso ciates. He Had been their buffoon, whoie entertainment had been accepted in spite of, Jnstead'of because of, himself. Even his dashing sketches, his dainty verses, his fer vid paintings had merely aroused their pity, like the lair columns of an incom pleted and abandoned palace. How he hated them all, the rmug-tneed, sqnare-toed, stupid race, who had their homes aud wives and children while he was so desolate! Through the open window on the calm ness of the niglit came a plaintive spund. Buthven stepped forward and looked out. What a wondrous spectacle were the heavens! The full moon rode triumphant across the zenith, attended by a brilliant star, like a grand mistress followed by a beautiful maiden. . Myriads of lights shone cell under the supposition that both were harmless. Gerwig had been in the asylum about ten days. Goetz was committed only last Saturday. . "A woman best understands a woman's ills." Thousands of women have been benefited by Mrs. Pinkham's ad vice, and cured by her remedies after all other treatment had failed. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has been more successful in cur ing Female Complaints than any remedy the world has ever known. All Drogziiti sell it, ot trot fcy mall, in form of P11U ot Ltntnjti. on receipt of Sl.OO. LiTtr Pills. 25c. Correipondcnce tnelr minered. Addresi In confideceo " LYDIA E. HXE1IAM MED. CO- LYSK. HAS, WORTH $4, $5 AND $6. NOW ONLY $2.90. Ladies' Finest Cloth Top, The Fine Dongola Kid, Newest Style Tips, Latest Style L.sts, Common Sense and Opera, New York or Piccadilly, Every size, every width. LAIR 406-408-410 MARKET ST. anil COAL CO., LTD., S. KNAP, MANAGER 1 eplione 1070. White and River Sand. Goal. distinct from every quurter, or confused' within the bewildering radiance ot the milky way, and all joined in a gentle, tranquil beneficence toward the poor little world. How insignificant were human woes in the presence of sach amazing splendor! Even it one were a king among men, how petty must be his domain, a mere point of observation of inconceivable marvels. And yet, what was that plaintive sound? Buthven glanced down. On the curb sat a beggar woman crooning to a sleeping infant He could see the look of content on the poor waifs wan face as the little hand retted caressingly against her cheek. After ell, was this not a more astounding spectacle? Was not every mortal being a microcosm as pregnant with unrevealed truth as any star? How mighty, how mysterious, wa? this human heart that amid privation and distress' conld find such peace in natural ailection. Buthven leaned out on the sill and dropped his purse into the woman's lap. She looked up and smiled, and that smile said, "God bless' you." Possessed it a magic against bitterness ? In a changed mood surely, Buthven turned away, and strode slowly up and down his room. Why should he say amen to the forebodings of his lriends and prove the ruin that they predicted? Was not this beggar nobler in her endurance than a sui cide rotting beneath the crossroads with a stave through his craven breast? But oh. the poignancy ot frustration, and oh, the emptiness of life! So be had never achieved his manhood? He was still a pettish child bewailing the moon. Ah, was it not the truth that he possessed far more than he de served? With youth, wealth, health, was he not ungrateful to despair? What, then, did he know of life that he must prate of itsemptiness? He had indeed discovered the sawdust within his doll: but had lie ever worked ? Why should he not take his talents from their hiding place and bid them increase ? If lie must die, should he not wait until his death would be a dep rivation? Buthven looked around him at the pic ture on the wall. No critic's eye could de tect their iaults so unerringly as his, for he had realized them in the making, but had been too indifferent to try to do better. Suppose that now he should try? Could be not win an honorable fame for himself, and would not that fame be something in life? Again the plaintive strains ot the poor woman's lullabv attracted bis attention. Why had he always been, why should he now be, so selfish? 'There was a beggar be fore his door; there were beggars outside the doors of the world. He recalled the in describable squalor and wretchedness he had coldly witnessed as one of the sights in different cities. Had he tried to ijive re lief? Was there not work for his ample means, not far away among strangers, but here in Aberdeen among those who might well be of his blood? Would not charity be something In lite, and should he not oner it, since ne so soon wouia jc ivi Ana did It not return a blessing, since even his AT 12 90 ' HI iJL.UUi tw. HEW AD VKKT1SEJIENT3. " Vj ""44to mrrNu.cwtr no. Would Jill a good-sized vol ume if written out. What he can do at Jacksons' in ihe way of bargains in fine Home-Made Clothing would Jill 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 but a small sum, and some people may think it isn't eno7ighfor thetn to spend for Pants, but we say to you if $2.25 will do the work with us that it will take $4 to do elseiuhere, 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 our Home-made Suits, and for good reasons. First, we guarantee them in repair free of charge Jor one year; sec ondly, you can save from $3 to SS. on wery suit. Why not try us? It's to your interest. See the ad vance styles in our Hat De . partment. a. Si'fiy.S' .yMPfci JImM 954 and 956 LIBERTY ST. au24-l GERMANIA SAVINGS BANK,' Cor. Wood and Diamond at 3. Deposits of $1 and upward received and interest paid thereon, commencing from the 1st and ISth of each month. Jos. Abel, President: A. E. Succod, Vice President; A, E. Niemann, Secretary: W. H. Wilker, Xreasuier; Geo. W. Guthrie, Solic itor. Directors: Jos. Abel, A. Groetzinger, J. F. Havek-otte, Chas F. Scliwarz. Christian Sie bert. Wm. Neob, Peter Kiel, H. II. Niemann, A. E. Succop. Open daily from 9 a.m. to 4?. St., and on Saturdays trom 9 a. m. to 6 r. a. . STRAYED. Bay horse, a little lame in front foot. Liberal reward for information of his where- l abouts. W M. GUNNING, au-i-TTJ 437 Penn avenue. chance gift of the night had brought him a thrill of joy? Up and down the room the faiter strode Buthven as his imagination revealed a happy future. He saw himself going about among men doing good. He heard the prayers, lie felt the tears of gratitude. He recognized approbation in the glances of his fellow-citizens, and these filled him with an honest pride. His heart was always light because he never considered its pangs. And then the day came when fair hands were stretched toward him, when a tender voice said: "You have proved your worth, dear est. I can now trust you, as I have always loved you." Oh, vision of joy supreme! He saw him self seated within the cozy inglenook of home. About the room that form so dear to him was flitting, on wifely cares Intent, while around his neck tiny arms were en twined, and his cheek was caressed as that of the mendicant had been. Buthven stopped short and stood for an instant in a state ot exaltation. "Thank God!" he cried, "I am saved from myself. I see the right, and I shall pursue it" In his fervor he brought his clenched fist down heavily on the stand. There was a sharp report, a moan, and Beuben Buthven lay dead in his great armchair. And through the open windows came the plaintive strains of the poor woman's lull aby. The next morning, even while the care taker was fleeing terror-stricken from the awful stare oi death, Mary Dalton sang blithely as she culled flowers for the break last table; for her heart was bounding with rapture. 'He will surely come to-day," she mur mured. "And we shall be so happy. It was better for me to seem reluctant at first; but you shall know "how tenderly I love you, my hero, my darling." STECIAI. ANHOnNCEalENT. Great Eeductlon for a Ten Days. On account of an overstock of the finer Styles of the various makes of organs which constitute our regular line of goods, and which will soil legularly at prices from $123 to !50, we have placed a lot of them on the floor and offer yon your choice from among them at $35. $S3, F0EMEEI.YJ125 TO $150. Remember, these are H new and bright and the latest improved jnitrnments from onr regnlar stock and fully guaranteed. There are comparatively only a lew or them, and now is the best opportunity you have ever had to get a fine Story & Clark, Sterling an'' Farrand A Votey organ, and, as thoofTer holds good during this month only, you had btter call right away and get one. Remember, you have your choice from the lot regardless or former prices. $123 ASD $150 01M3AH3 RIDUCXD TO $85, THIS MOSTH OV AUGUST OltLY. S. Hamilton, 91 and S3 Fifth avenue. Caiit's comfortably fitting shoes. 803 Ma tec street h ",