Newspaper Page Text
H A TALK WITH BLAINE.
■ . 7j]Br Was No Mention of the
' presidential
From the St. Louis Repub'oc.
K nr York, Sept- 5. —lt was Lscov; .-el
m the eariy part of last
t'tiris Magee cad gene to Bar Harbor
- lut'erence with Secretary Blaine. On
Bursday Hie Pittsburg PVej.v. the tier-
H nl ,rgau of tbe Western Peun
politician, anncincad authori-
tout tbe purpose of Magoe’sl
■ it to Bar Harbor was to find |
H ii passible, the intentions of BluiD re I
the presidential nomination nest I
It was stated that if Blaine signifikl j
intention of accepting the nominatim -
Hgee would give out an ••inspired" inttr-
H v . If on the other hand, Blaine abto
■ , declined to run, Magee would "ksip
and saw wood lor* some other aan
t I , rn him *’
. Bxsble to him."
B - Magee reached this cityflast nigtn on
home. The “inspired” interview
forthcoming to-day. It is very :on-
but it probably states the escre-
K,, po-ition accurately. Mr. Magee said
K t Mr. Blaine was in good spirits.
conversations were treats." sail the
nnsylvanian, “ecd be talked in his usual
imated way. He was not at od do
jaeil about bis health, although ho is by
means recovered from his recent ettack.
was intere-ted iu reciprocity and hail a
eat deal to say about the aitnis
-3D of the pork into Germany. And what
said was v>t only interesting but m-
He asked many questions about
i -f estarn Pennsylvauia, w here he uei to
Hrn. His memory was excellent, for he
people whom he inquired about
■ 1 know he has not seen for y>er* I
Hvr saw anything with a keener oppetite
H hear about the people and the bnunts he
Bpw in his early years.”
■“Pkl the conversation ever drift into poli
■ •'.Vo, not once. Mr. Blaine did rot seem
L I have any political cares whatever on his
Hi:id. u
■•‘Ho you think he would accept the nomi-
H'jcn for the presidency if it should be
■lull'red him?”
J 'Yes. In certain contingencies. Mind
H|m, be has said nothing to me on the sub
rt. I only surmise. Oue of the contin
jncies, of course, is his health. If he is as
rotig as be is now, I do not think he would
fuse the nomination if it was practically
■animous. But, really, Ido not think he
H' i anything ut all about it. He is inter-
Bto.i in his work os Secretary of State,and
Bbelieve ho prefers to remain where ho is.”
■ “It is said in several that you
Mere against. President Harriso 1, and weut
■irposoly to see Mr. Blaine and sound him
Ir the question of the presidency?” i
I “There is nothing in thut story. It is a
Beil known fact that President Harrison
Bud 1 are not thoroughly on rapport, owing
B> some appointments, but no o e can deny
■r>t the President has carried out all his
■lodges. As the President ho Is tho head
■f the Republican party, and natur-
Bllv the acts of his party in cou
■ress become a part of his adminis
tration. But somehow the peoplo do not
■ arm up to tiie President as thoy do to Mr,
■lame. The tide seems to be iu favor < f
B'i Blame’s nomination. Not that there is
■ny enmity toward the President; not that
■'• is no: an able man, hut because ho lacks
■|i magnetism. That is all there Is in it.
■ lie friends of Mr. Blame do not decry tho
Bresideut and they do not refuse to credit
Bim with giving the country oue of the
■nest satisfactory administrations. Blaine
Bolds tho people by his magnetism.”
I "Mr. Magee, do you honestly believe
lhat Mr. Blame will bo physically capable
M- going through another presidential cum-
Buignf 1 ’ askeu the reporter.
■ The Pennsylvanian hesitated a moment
Before replying, and then said: “Wall, you
Buow, I’m not a medical export. But from
Bltat i could see of the Secretary be is
■pidlv on the mend, and, barring unfore-
Bn developments, l think he will be lit fur
8.0 fight next year.”
M Congressman Samuel B. C"ek, who was
Bt the Fifth Avenue to-day, exhibited groat
■terest iu the interview of Christopher 1,,
■ages. Mr. Dick saidi “I certainly think
■r. Magee's utterances are significant. If
Blr. Magee said that Mr. Blaine, in his
Bplnion, would not refuse the nomination,
Bvhy, I am sure there is something In it. As
B understand it. Mr. Magea saw Mr. Biaine
fcnd afterward gave it as his opinion that the
Beomtary of fcirate would accept the nomi
nation it it is tendered him. Mr. Magee i3
B man who would not make a reckless
■tat meat. 1 think that he knows whereof
Ble speaks.” ,
I "It Mr. Blaine should be a candidate
■would the Keystone state send a solid dute-
Igatlou for him?"
| "Nothing iu the world could kosp the
jltate from sending a solid delegation to the
I republican national convention for Mr.
IBlaine if ha consents to run. There would
loe no divided delegation os there was In
I IBss in Chicago. Iu 1884 Pennsylvania
rav, him over 80,000 majority. If he runs
| In 189” his majority will be greater."
"HKKft'S LOOKING AT YOU."
TLo Drinking Habit Is Losing Itf Holt!
on People tc America.
AVo?*. the Cincinnati Cornmercial-Uazette.
I hort* Is ihms (llssipatiuu among tliH men
u watering places tban i generally sup-
Iu fact* it may be broadly asserted
-iiiit there i.s less dissipation among Ameri
can uieu than there wai in the past, and,
urtheriuore, it grows less and less year by
four.
All the work of temperance fanatics and
prohibition cranks who wo Id revolutionize
luamuity by n legal enactment is as noth
kig Compared with the* lullueiioo of grow
self lea pact, education and better
breeding.
No one but th* professional pessimist or
.he demagogue fails to recognize this fact,
ind it comes about through a higher aver
> goutility. in the better souse of the ill
•routed word.
As long as men are rneu they will eat and
rink and have some fun, but there are all
gradations m the prom**, from the bummer
To °. r . h * 8 Ihto the gutter or the savage who
s himself with hie water and raw dog to
he gentlemau who, in a cate, takes a drink
good fellowship with some friends, or in
s club or his tome eats his dinner and
touifoUs himself with a glttSb or two of
"iu© in pleasant companionship.
nioxication Leoomee moie and mote die
V* ti i AixjWj ß better classes of rnm
9 Mi public saloon* and the stand
p drinking ai t> U i u> lulllnk more and
a,ljr ” into disrepute.
Another strong Influence to tin* end te
at the dnoklDg hulitt, even in moderation
wuuta so snarply ogulost . ouau in the bast-
Ices affaire of life.
Is he . drinking uiauf” Is on. of the first
lua mum questions pm i,j o ue man of mi-
JUier with whom any bosiuess relation is
proposed, ud "1 he a drinking man®”
t he a married mani” are the t .vlj quas -
ons always asked by any buslueee man or
Jj|^^’ uo * r hing a proposed employe or aa
, fills uo doubt tends to hold many a man
•° paths of sobriety who, perhaps, has not
inough self-respect to do so. They can’t
naulg. because, lu a business sense, they
can’t afford to.”
In olden limes drunkenness was not con*
erea disreputable among the ''gentry.”
u o, fe< t t a,au '*“■ the "four-bottle man,’'
th. hero of *be occasion at a drinking
out was the one who could "put all the
in.r. uuaer the table.” All this has not
, r e y disappeared —not by any means—
lahltsand human nature do uo ct/ange
1 ay. Mat there certainly has liven
‘marked fflteration for the better. • The
ist! .bo. In an assembly of gentlemeo at
-,, °r elsewhere, gets drunk, makes hiio
” ’hosioua He is out applauded, he Is
* veu pltieil, fie Is ooudeuiued auil his
i“‘ pn “y fought shy of ttiereolter.
. 0 '* r r ospects meu's habits orelmprov
-Bos the oouutry gets older and richer
me fur travel and cultivation
ir the amenities,
aase If they lilii dliuiueu* Ulli Regulator.
-Ad.
MCRDZrS AVD KU3DKRSRS.
ftaris-.'cs show That Sudan Life is
L,ig„t!y Begardeain This Country.
From the Philadelphia Press.
No civiilzxi country in the world Is as
Amentably careless in the collection jf
jrimlnal statistics as the United rotates, ind
tn a few cities of 1,090,000 or over are statis
tics of all kinds as loosely recorded and as
jcarelessly collected. It is omsequentiy dif
ficult, if not impossible, to say accurately
| w hether the fact that in the last ton years
there have been fifty-four murders whose
perpetrators are uukuown, and tirtceu where
the flight of the murderer prevented a trial,
indicates either a relatively large number of
murders In this city compared with the rest
of the country, or a looser administration of
justice than exists In other states and cities
la alt probability it indicates neither.
The showing made of the “unavenged mur
der t* in Philadelphia of the last ten years
gives an average of about six murderers a
year who have goue altogether free of
justice. Some of these would undoubtodly
prove not to be “murderers,” even in the
loose popular use of the term, and on the
other hand tbe number would be Increased
if all the cases in which a trial has failed to
aouvict a murderer were added. Taking
six a year, this is about one-soventh of the
total number of homicides and abortions
followed by death discovered in this
city by the coroner. In the last four
years inquests were held on 135 homi
cides and 32 abortions, in all 167. It
would he unfair, however, to conclude that
anything like one in seven of the attempts
on life In this city escape Justice. Thenum
bor of arrests in the last four years by the
police under the heads of abortion, assault
with intent to kill, manslaughter and mur
der—all of which fall under tho broad terra
“murder", were; Abortions. 31, assault
with Intent to kill, 657; manslaughter, S3,
and murders, 140—a total of 911, or 227 in
each of the last four years. Excluding as
saults with intent to kill, for whiob arrests
are made in most cases when the victims
survive, there are left 254 murders, or 63 a
year.
Taking the eoronor’s inquests and tho po
lice arrests together it may fairly be said
that each year of the last four has seen
from fifty to sixty “murders” in this city,
and about 150 murderous assaults. If from
five to six persons out of the fifty or sixty
who year ly commit murder—and the 160
who attempt it—escape all detection or
punishment by concealment or llight, this
cannot bo considered a disproportionate
showing, with all the facilities for escape
which exists in this country—facilities
which render the task of the police and the
prosecuting authorities inconceivably
harder than tn any European couutrios.
It must, be remambored, iu passing upon
all criminal statistics in this country, that
murder is far more rife in the United States
than iu Northern Europe, commands more
popular sympathy, and offers, consequently,
greater difficulty in conviction. The man
who hung his watch on a lamppost in
Broadway the other day, and, after three
hours, found it still hanging there, would
have probably lost it in London; but the
chance that in a quarrel he would have had
a revolver drawn on him would be Im
measurably greater in Now York than in
the English metropolis. We have pointed
out that there were in this oity
probably from fifty to sixty murders n year
in the past four years, and probably
through the last ten years. England and
Wales, with about twenty-eight times the
population of Bhiladelphia, and—a fairer
comparison—au urban population nine-fold
larger, had 151 murders" in IS6B-'69, and 190
in 18s7-’BB. In 18S1 all England—with
9,300,000 peoplo iu cities and 25,300,000 in
rural districts—had twelve arrests tor mur
der, against nineteen iu Philadelphia last
year; fifty-one for manslaughter, agairst
seventeen here; 147 attempts to murder,
against 163 here, and fifteen cases of in
fanticide agaiust five arrests for abortion
here.
It is tolerably certain that all crimes were
followed up in England. It is less certain
here. In other words, in IH9O, with a popu
lation of 1,040,000, this city fairly matches
the violent crimes of all England and
Wales, with nine times ita city population
aud a rural population, besides, twenty-five
times as large. Even France, in 1886, with
5,000,000 iu great cities and 33,000,000 in
small towns aud rural districts, had but 144
convictions for murder, but twenty-seven
of which were capital. In 1887 this oity,
which had then a bare sixth of the urban
and a forty-third of the total population of
France, had forty-nine homicides, according
to coroners’ inquests, and 258 arrests for
murders and attempts at murder.
This state iu 1886 had one-third the city
population of France, and approximately
one-tenth its rural inhabitants, but it sent
to tiie penitentiary 837 convicts, against
2,900 in France, or over one-fourth as many,
and 31 convictions for murder against 144
in France; but, while only one person was
executed iu this state, 27 were condemned
to the guillotine in Franco.
These figures, which are loss often In
sisted upon than they should be, must con
vince every American that human life is
hut lightly regarded In this country, and
its murders far exceed in number couutries
like France, England or Germany, and are
matched only in countries like Italy. Nor
is the relative position of Pennsylvania as
favorable a one as one could wish. The
murders in this city are less than in
New Y"ork. but the murders in both
states outside of the large cities of
each are greater in this state than in our
northern neighbor. This is, of course, due
to the large foreign population of our min
ing districts. In tho six years ending in
1878 the number of felonious homicides in
Pennsylvania was 843, an annual average
or 90. As H. V. Redfield pointed out, how
ever, in his “Homicide, North and South,"
if murders were as common here
as in South Carolina there would
have been over 690 annually,
and 700 If life had been as freely taken here
as in Kentucky, In short, the state and
Philadelphia have from a seventh to an
eighth ns many murders ns occur in south
ern states, in proportion to population. Yet
the number hero is far larger than it should
be, or would be, if the laws were more rig
orously enforced and the offense of carry
ing concealed weapons -was punished as it
should be.
A 810 LILY.
The Victoria Bog-la BTowers In a Foun
tain Bhbiu In the Hotauical (Jnrdena.
n™ the IVus'ua jton Star.
The botanlonl garden has succeeded in
propagating the tiuuous royal water Illy,
or as It IS knovvb In butauy, “The Victoria
Ksgla. ” One of them Is now la full bloom
in the little fountain south of the mala
greonhonso, and several are in bloom in
the basin of the large centennial fountain
in the oeuter of the grounds.
The plant Is a mojt peculiar growth, tne
leaves resembliug in form huge frying
pans, varying In diameter from six to eight
feet, und, on account of their peculiar con
struction, are capable of sustaining con
siderable weight. Yesterday a photograph
was taken of the lily with the 9-year-old
son of the assistant superintendent of the
gardens complacently sitting In the middle
of ode of the mammoth leaves This is not
the first time lilies of this variety hale been
grown iu the United States, but it is the
that instance where they have flowered lu
water not artificially heated.
The flower is exceedingly beautiful, and
resembles in Its first stage a large magnolia.
As it grows older its color changes to a
delicate pink, graduoily becoming red.until
finally it sinks fiorn sight and develops a
seed pod.
To-dav hundrals of persons visited th.
gardens and viewed the curious botanical
creation. HupU Kmitb ha. decided to keep
the gardens open every day during th.
bloomiug of this lily until dark, bo that
every one can have a chance of viewing the
largest water lily in the world.
A gray beard on a tnun under 50 makes
him look older than he is. The best dye to
color brown or black Is Buckingham's Live
tor th. Whisker.,—Ad.
THE MORNING NEV.'S: SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1891.
CHINA’S 810 FLEET.
Three Met-of-War Exoected to Arrive
In San Francisco.
From the San Francisco Examiner
Admiral Ting of tbe north coast squadron
of the Chinese navy is cruising about
Japan, showing some of bis vessels to the
Japanese uobility nd the Caucasian resi
dents who ere blessed with offices. Com
mon people, except Chinese, are not allow*!
on board.
Admiral Ting’s entertainments of the up
per tea on bis flag ship are described hs
somewhat beyond description in point of
generosity and gorgaou-uess, and receive
columns of notice in the Japanese journals,
which are hot usually given to social re
ports.
All the officers speak English fluently.
The Interest of all this to Fan .Franciscans
is that three of the fleet of five making the
cruise iu Japanese waters will probably
visit San Frar.cisoo this coming full. The
three vessels that it is proposed to send over
here are the flagship Chen-Yuen and the
cruisers Chih-Yuen and Ching-Yuen. The
former is a monster 6ea-going armor-clad
steel battle-ship 808 feet long by 59 beam,
with a displacement of 7,280 tons. She was
built at Stettiu nine years ago. when her
6,200-horse-power engines gave her a speed
of knots. She wears 14-inoh armor
and mounts four 12-inch 87-ton breech
loaders. and two 6-inch 4-ton rifles of tbe
same pattern. Two torpedo boats and two
torpedo launching tubes complete her of
fensive capabilities. Her draught is twenty
feet and her coal capacity 1.000 tons.
The cruisers to aocompany the Chen-Yuen
aro sister ships tn every respect. Both are
of steel, both were built at Elswiok In 1896,
both have a displacement of 2,360 tons aD.I
a speed of 18}o knots. They are belted with
four inch armor, with two-inch turrecs and
shields. Each mounts three eight-inch,
twelve-ton breech-loaders, two six Inch,
four-ton rifles, six six-pounder rapid-firing
gun 9 and four torpedo tubes.
An attache of the consulate here said last
night that although no advices had been re
ceived definitely announcing the visit of the
formidable trio, it had been discussed for a
long time, and he thought it highly probable
that it would be paul before tbo end of the
year. As to the significance of the visit he
had nothing to say.
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nnoea. at the HOHNINU MalW niOnSSS
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I 'lßß—
THAT IS OUR IDEA ABOUT
Some people are satisfied with a small
share of your trade, but we want it
all. We have the goods and the
prices that will warrant you
giving us all of it.
There are a few people in this growiug city of ourg that
we have not had the pleasure of calling our cus
tomers. We want those few to come and see us and tind
out how much they have missed by not calling before.
"‘Take care of the CENTS aud the dollars will take care
of themselves.” V\ e are here to help you do it, and we are
doing it every day of the week by giving our customers the
bottom prices on everything.
We believe in pushing the business for all that it is worth,
aud for that reason we employ only tirst-class men, aud the
following roster \fill show that we are not far astray:
T. R. V. BRADLEY, formerly with E. A. Schwarz— rty
years in the business.
GEORGE L BRADLEY, formerly with A. J. Miller &
Sons —Twenty years in the business.
J. B, KELLEY, been with us for ten years.
CHARLES LOMEL, the only lirst-class Upholsterer in the
city.
GEORGE A. ERNST, a first class Cabinetmaker, and sev
eral others of minor importance.
CARPET DEPARTMENT!
EDWARD L. PURSE, tried and found not wanting —Been
expatiating on The qualities for forty-six years.
ANDY T. KELLY, formerly with E. A. Schwarz —Better
not say how long he has been in the business, ag he is
not married, and it might give his age away.
Marion Bolger, Hugh Wenzel, Charles L, Stillmore and
James B. Calder, our upholsterers, whocau't be beat in their
line. Then there is “Lem,” who measures for all carpets
and shades, and they don’t make them any better. With
this force to look after our interests (aud you as well) we
are to prepared to handle all the business that comes along.
So where you will,
By land or by sea.
Yon are liable to get left,
If you don’t trade at
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been left out It is obvious, however, that many of the themes discussed have a
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