i-1""l7 v."" ' 2Jii' T--TC.l HMVt 'vv tmtmmm'fmm jj tlAAQ E12ZE Sttfti -ttSM -j ""! l V, V" A SIXTT MINUTES' VISIT. IT WAS PAID CONGRESS RECENTLY BV A WrtTERN MAN. AM Walter Wellauta Ctlllsed HI HeatH? Itenaci Opinion of the- MM Ien' IfVw Maker for the Preeeat Letters-Hew am of Them Appear. Special Oorrecpendcnce.1 Washington, Dee. 12. A friend of mine, a stranger within the gates of the capital, went with me into the dress galleries of the senate and house the ether day. He was a westerner, and of course in n dreadful hurry. Be was "doing" Washington in a day, as most westerners de, and had precisely sixty minutes in which te sea the great Amcr- Er-KAKER REED. lean congress. "All I want," said he, "is a rapid glance at your statesmen. I will take them in oil the run." A ltd se we made a run for it. First of all, lie must see Speaker Reed. Everybody asks te see Mr. Reed. 'I should net be surprised if in a couple of years Reed was the most famous man of his party. Already he is the most talked about person in the capital. It is net likely he will ever be president, for somehow he is net the sort of man that gets a start toward the presidential chair. If it be true, assenu people say it is, that only neutral quan tities are able te achieve the presidency, Reed will net stand much of n show. Aetwrtiistaiiuing nu Biiarp tongue ana his tcrrible sarcasm, Reed is a kindly, companionable man. He lias us keen a sense of humor as anybody I knew, and can be ensilypirovekcd into hearty laugh ter. He smiles and laughs in the chair, in striking contrast te ids predecessor, who was tnore solemn than a judge en the bench, and whose pale, thin face was never known te lie illumined by a smile while nt his pest at the bend of the house. Reed is fend of games and of a few friends. He plays whist and hearts occasionally in his rooms at thoShoic theShoic thoSheic ham, but he never drinks, Btiiekes nor chews. He plays billiards, and when engaged at this pastime is always sure of a large audience. The crowds assotn assetn assotn bie net te witness his game, which is very ordinary, but te hear the remarks which he makes upon the strokes of his competitor and himself. Having looked at Reed till he was sat isfied, my friend ashed te be shown Mc Kinley, Cannen, Burrows, Carlisle, Mills, Helnian cud ether celebrities. I will give what he said of each of these men, judging them simply by appearances, for he knew net one of them personally. "McKinlcy," said lie, "is a man I would trust with my wife, my life or my for tune. But if I had him for an opponent in a political contest, I'd keep watch of him. He is quiet and suave, but sly." When I told my friend that McKinley wej the leader of the house, having taken Reed's place, he said the man would nnkta success of it, net by his masterly activity en the iloer, net by his wit or sarcasm, but with his easy generalship, "his calm, clear headed manipulation of his forces, his alertness, the confidence placed in him by his followers. Of Jee Cannen he remarked: "He reminds me of a neighbor I used te have up 411 Man " sachusctts. This neighbor had spells. One season he was pious, prayerful and an ornament te the ofllce of deacon; ne;ct season he was owner of a trotting horse, a gamecock, a follower of the races, a lever of geed times. That is the kind of a man I imaglne Joe Cannen te be." "Burrows," said my friend, still giving his "first sight" impressions, "is a man who will always have plenty of fi lends, and who may be depended upon te use them." Of Carlisle he Enid: "There is the ideal a face for a statesman, but I'll wager he is one of the poorest politicians in the world." Mills impressed this observer as a man who had altogether tee much stubborn ness and luck of adaptability te be a prinie leader of men, though he possessed great ferce of character and ability. "Helman," said he, "is a splendid old fellow, I have no doubt, but he reminds me of a schoolmaster of fifty years age a conscientious, hard working chap, who spent his old life preventing his pupils doing things of which he did net nnnrove." There is 110 mistaking the physiognomy of Evnrts, with that great nese and seem ingly toothless mouth, nor of Iugnlls,' with that queer shock of gray hair and persimmon like mouth, se suggestive el gripes and bites. Cullem is easily (lis tinguishable from his rescmblance 1c Lincoln, Plumb for his farmer like man ners, old Senater Brown, from his patri archal beard, Allisen for his liaudseim face, new strangely changed, however, by the appearance of n mustache where formerly was a long, clean upper lip, and Edmunds for his bald head mid Ro Re man brew. My friend and I wcre lucky enough U ceme upon Ed iminds in an cxceedinglj interesting attitude. It was ene whicL gave Mr. Geerge Y. Collin, the artist, an opportunity te make a character sketch of two distinguished men. Edmundi and Sawyer bat side by side. "St. Je reme," as the Vermonter is called, wai resting his chin upon his hands, while the rich statesman from Wisconsin wai punctuating a story or argument with one of his peculiar gestures. Edmund, is ene of the few men in the fcenate who de net crew old. &ffii5H ir&rlOY ' s-J s 'A s&vJw V A TAIR WORTH LOOKtNO AT. Senater Sawyer, en the ether hand, ii aging rapidly. He still gets nlmut, but finds it necessary te go te lied early in the evening, and te avoid violent exercise, Trebably thcie Is no happier man in r publieWfe than Sir. S-iwyer. Notwith standing his age he is a ray of fcunsliine wherever he goej. He clings te his old habit of rislngcarly In the morning. At 7 he breakfasts, and at 10:1.1 drives te the caplt il, where he spendi a geed deal of Ms t! nesIU"j"itth" Iradef his com cem u.'Ua' iveui table Uli lib Wisconsin .'.. 6vjA yy .Jtyj.-tjf';ji friends ranged along ea either side. My friend the visitor insisted ea my going en gossiping like" this abe'lt all th senators whom we saw sitting before us, and of course that consumed se much time that he missed his train for the meat. Then he confessed te met "It can't be dena. Yeu can't take la eon cress satisfactorily with a hop, skip and jump. I'll ceme up here again with you te-morrow." WaLTSR Wkllmaw. THE BIG AUDITORIUM. JOHN M'GOVERN WRITES ABOUT THE MAN WHO BUILT IT. II' at Treroenileu Untitling, It Cot Mill Mill Ien, and It I fluaranteed te Pay a Pa Out. It Hu Jmt Iteen Chrlateneil by a Performance if Italian Muilc Today there stands in Chicago a build ing which, by its magnitude, fixes itself upon the attention of all the people. In its walla, uutecn from the outside, are no less than 17,000,000 brick, while ten regular stories and a tower of seven ad ditional stories confront tlirce Btrccta with blocks of granite. Upen the vnrieus floors of the edlllce are 50,000,000 minute pieces of marble wrought in mosaic Ten thousand electric lights are in use. The terra cettu cost $210,000 for 700,000 square feet. This building, viewed from a point in the lake, shoulders above the town as a grain elevator dominates the scenery in a region of decks. The tower strikes the eye from all the West Side bridges. Three vast facades offer te the people a spectacle by no means as imposing as is the Cook county court house, but where the court house may lie beautiful, the Auditorium is te be useful. In the court house thcre is net ene admirable room. In the Audito rium thcre are regions and worlds. There is a theatre which is as large as thea tres should be. Thcre is a hotel as large as hotels should be. Thcre are stores, offices and miner halls,'; where thousands; of auditors may cathcr. It is the wm mass of all this adeusa path. that awakens the pride of the Cliica Cliica geans. The thought of the theatre car ries that mass supports it. Therefore, in the public mind, the theatre has be be be ceme the Auditorium. We have just been an Italian opera troupe of world wide fame lauding at New Yerk as the Remans might land at Ostia, and pressing forward te Chicago, as the Remans might press en te the eternal city. Whatever clse may besaid en this head, I, at least, may re-mark that a city has arisen en Lake Michigan which has all the vanity of New Yerk, with a present willingness te pay the startling expense which comes with a gratifica tion of that vanity. Thcre are rich and luxurious peeple in New Yerk, in Boj Bej Boj ten, Philadelphia. Well, then, let them wait until the rich and luxurious people of n parvenu city shall have been served! Let I'atti and Del Puente make n way station of the metropolis en Manhattan Island, while a new town out west, which had no paiticular existence in Buchanan's day whilthls town dedi cates its temple, warranted te pay 5 per cent, usury, and seals its bargain with the thought that, if Chicago have net culture, alie still may keep culture wait ing for a chance te hear Patti, and for a chance te see a reallv Creat theatre. 'Ilie iiiw who built tlie Auditorium Is named Ferdinand W. Peck. He was born rich, en the site of the Grand Pacilio hotel. He is 43 years old. He is tall, lean, dark, intelligent. I should call him one of the ilk of liter ary men anxious, busy, peculiar, com muning with such thoughts as become real in auditoriums. Three years age I was commissioned te write a prospectus of the Auditorium. It was with pronounced mental impatience that Mr. Peck found time te outline I113 fixed idea. But having lest the ten min utes and passed the wicket of brain fric tion, he detained me in order te cany conviction that the Auditorium would he a geed thing, and, in parting with his humble bervant, expressed a warm desire te 6en and revise the copy. Meanwhile the contractors were in the ether room, $5 with whispers of 3 low llgutcs ter 17,000,000 brick, a million cubic feet of granite, 10,000 electric FERDINAND W. I'CCK. lights and thirteen elevators. Still, ns the man had spoken, it was important te cenveit this scribe. Let the scribe be in no haste te withdraw. . . 1 nearu a Herman count declaim against the Auditorium. "It is," he bald, "the most advertised, the most overrat ed of structures. In the first place, it is hideous. In the next place, it is railed popular, when in fact it is select. It of fers a nucleus te the rich. It appalls and robs the peer. It begins with the most luxurious chapter in our history. It is a speculation for private gain, and carries the public geed as a side card." I asked the count if the Auditorium did net, nevertheless, occupy a half block. I asked him if it wera net a huge reality. I asked him if it wcre net the only hall in America where a na tional convention could he conveniently and agreeably held. But the man of licilin detested the idea of a town hall that should pay 5 per cent., when it is a well established custom that town halli cost 10 per cent., housing only tax eat ers. Jehn McGevfkn'. A Maine tn Nullum Hale. On Sept. 22, 1770, Capt. Nathan Hale was shot as a 6py by the British, ns all schoolboys knew and many elder peeple forget, in Rutgers' orchard, 011 East Broad way, New Yerk. The Society of the Sens of the Revolution are te crect a monu ment te his mem ory in the City Hall park. It will consist of a statue of Nathan Hale, eight feet high and of bronze. It has been designed by an American nr tist, Frederick MucMoenios, n nephew of Ben- PLS (ifl'imim'i y-?"Sffv ruoresEn iui.e statvc. j a in i n W 0 u t . Thirty-five hundred dollars have been raised, but 1,000 are still required te complete the statue, The Society of the Sens of the Revo lution was organized in 16SG for the pur pose of preserving the memory of theso who fought for and achieved American lndeiendeuce, The society new num bers 500 members, ".f (is Jf S v2f WBBSsx&rmm 'irea&Naif :i,,v "KMSJB X SI SZ! cZ-T AriTAlIAN FUNEIUir A CURIOUS INCIDENT OP LIFE AND DEATH IN NEW YORK. H the Mearaars Mlacted Untitle and Sorrow lUcsed Children Fallow Ui Mede ala Tunc lijr a Bnm Dans', Mingling Ariel and Otrc. (SpccUl Correspondence. New Yerk, Dee. 12. Augcle Falcs first made his appearance in Park street about seven months age. He was net as strong as Italian children usually are, but by careful nursing he lived te be five months old. Angcle get along nice ly until the cold winds of October came. Then he caught a cold, and in ene week was dead. Ahgcle's death occurred at 8 o'clock in the evening, en the second fleer of Ne. 01 Park street, ever a lager beer saloon. The mother of the child drew the kitchen table te the mlddle of the room and spread ever li a sheet taken from the top bureau drawer in the corner. Over the sheet she placed a wlde piece of cheap lace, which at sotne time had evidently dene duty as a win dow curtain. The loco work reached down te the fleer. Upen the lace was laid a pillow lengthwlse of the Uble. Anether pillow was laid nt right angles with the first at the head of the tabic Each pillow was trimmed with cheap lace. When the lonely bier was all ready, the mother, with revcrent hands, lifted the child upon the pillows. The little cheap shoes, badly worn at the tees and heels, were then removed, and white slippers were put upon the baby's feet. The useless shoes wcre placed in the top bureau drawer bedewed witli tears. By this time the news had spread and the neighbors began te ceme in. These began te decorate the room in a manner usual among the Ncaelitnns. A bed sheet was tacked upon the ceiling. Then tlirce mero sheets were hung from the ceiling in such a manner as te inclese the dead child en tlirce sides. By this time the father of the infant had re turned from a millinery stere in Divi sion street with eoiiie artificial flowers and mortuary ornaments. One of these consisted of a louquet of while flowers mingled with red and green blossoms of a most vivid hue. Upen the bouquet was perched a white deve with outspread wings. This was placed upon the baby's breast. A chaplet of artificial flowers was placed ever the brew of the dead baby. Bright colored handkerchiefs were busy upon the Bhccts. The whole sccne was picturcsque and striking. The infant's face wero a peaceful ex pression, a3 if he had fallen asleep. As the night wero en the watchers dropped asleep in their chairs. But the mother, who sat near the head of the baby, rocked te and fro, and at intervale called te the infant in Italian te return te her. It is the custom among the poorer classes of Italians for the mother net te eat anything until after the funo fune ral is ever. Sometimes the mothers go without feed for thrce days. In the morning a male Italian learned of the child's death. IIe also learned from the family that an undertaker was needed. IIe turned across the street te the shop of Charles Bacegalupe and informed the undertaker that his services wcre ro re quired. By se doing he secured 10 pei cent, of the money derived from the fu neral expenses. The undertaker placed n bow knot and streamers of white era pa upon the outer deer of the tenement. Over this he hung a silver cord, indicat ing that the silver chord of life was broken, .13 spoken in the book of Ecclcsi astes. He also placed a brazen hoodoo, in which seven candles were burning, nt the head of the table upon which the baby lay, together with a flgure of Christ upon the cress. The undertaker also hired four coaches te convey the mourn ers te Calvary cemetery, paying $l,CC apiece for tlicm. These wcre sublet te the mourners nt the rate of $1.25 a head. The father of the dead baby thought a brass band was necessary in order te make the funeral complete. The baud was secured at its headquarters in a lagei beer saloon in Mulberry street. Fifteen pieces were hired at 3 per man. The itinerary of the band included a walk around the block and thcuce te Jamet slip, a distance of about 0110 mile. At 10 o'clock the cefilu was carried un der the undertaker's arm across theEtrcel te the room where the body lay. It wai about thrce feet long, and was made el cheap white weed covered with p.vpiei macho. At intervals upon the sides and top of the ceflln wcre little decoration! evidently cut with u die out of bleck'tin. These wcre made te represent Reman urns, with a lien asleep upon the top. While the undertaker was putting the baby in the ceflln the band came strag gling up the btreet. The men wero no uniforms. They went into the saloon under the room where lay the baby. A white hearse, made te carry babies, also came te the deer, followed by the four coaches. Tha band came out of the saloon and each man blew a few preliminary toots upon his instrument. Then a swarthy Italian came down the stairs with the little cellln 1 in his arms. He was followed by a bai e- ! headed woman carrying the bouquets and the dove, These were placed en top el I the cefilu as it lay in the hearse. The baud ranged itself in irregular fashion in the middle of the street. It struck up n spirited Strauss waltz and the precession started. The only ene who showed nny symptoms of grief was the mother of the baby. At the first sound of the music children began te gather from every direction. Every window wa3 filled with heads. The crowd filled the sidewalks and literally crowded the mourners. Thcre was a halt at the corner of Baxter street by the band te permit the coaches te catch up. When the precession staitcd again fifty children, from 5 te 10 years old, marched ahead, keeping time te the music, which was of the most jubilant kind. Among these children were two little girls about 8 years old. Each car ried ever her shoulder nn infant about as old as the baby in the hearse. The living babies were ns resv as red apples. They looked with wondering eyes at the biass band spilling innsle all ever the muddy street. Beth of the girls who carried the bablcx wcre barefooted nnd bareheaded. The visible flesh was browned from con stant exposure te the sun. By the time the cortege had geno a distance of 800 yards from the starting point, the sidewalks of Baxter street had becotne impassable en account of the crowd. The precession I went around the block bounded by Park, Baxter, Mulberry and Bayard streets. All the time the advance guard of little 1 children tramped along Justin front of the musicians, the two caretakers stag- J goring along almost under the nese of . the cornet player. The narrow escapes of these children from being crushed under the hoofs of truck horses and vegetable wagon wheels which filled the btrcets were alarmingly frequent. Meanwhile, ene of the babies had fallen asleep In its juvenile guard ian's arms. Net even the blare of the big bass horn could keep it awake. The babv wobbled about in its slrter'e anhs- liUu a small Kift of meal. HUe shifted I it from should- r i shoulder te obtain rest for Iter aching aims, for by this time the baby had l.-ceme vi ry heavy The precession emerged from Baxter street iute I'ark nWt It did. net evi dently occur tetne children that tney were straying far away from hftne. The child who carried the sleeping baby was perspiring freely when the cortege en tered Roosevelt street. Her feet sllnncd Ien the cobble, stones, and several times (en the journey down tha street she was jostled by clumsy boys into the gutter. With a frichtcned clance ever her (shoulder she resumed her journey. She was satisfied toendure any contumely se long as she was near te the blissful musle which filled her palpitating heart with delight There wcre creups or little girls in the racked ndvance guard who held tli;htly te each ether's hands. All wcre bare headed and bere that mature womanly nppcarance peculiar te Italian children. They clustered together like f lightened partridges whenerer a truck herse came near, Several times the little girl with the sleeping baby tried te keep step with the pulscry music, but her burden was tee great for any such rhythmle gaycty. It was 11 o'clock when the ragged and unkempt ndvance guard, the blaring band and the shining coaches emerged into Seuth street. The bend new stop step ped playing. The hcarse and coaches wero driven en beard the ferryboat. The cheering influcuce of the music be ing geno, the sleeping child weighed like lead en the nrms of her sister. She looked around at the buildings and real ized that she was lest. Then she began te cry. The baud dispersed and each man went home by a different route. The ndvance guard vanished like the morning mist. The two children were left alone. The baby slept ea peacefully as if it had been in its cradle at home. While standing in the mlddle of the street the mingled tears and perspiration ran down her face, and her feeble knees bent under her heavy burden like theso of n baby learning te walk. Her home was half n mile away, and she did net knew hew te reach it. Down Roosevelt street a brawny Italian came running, her loosened hair flying out behind her. She looked wildly here nnd there, nnd at last caught sight of the disconsolate child crying in thosquare near the ferry. One minute later the baby lay securely in the haven of its mother's nrms, mid the tired child was hanging te her mother s skirt with the grip of a drowning man. Kret-bt .Urrei.d. SILCOTT, THE DEFAULTER. 111. Heme llltterjr Ilunr lie Operated. The Wntimn In Ilia Cem. The accompanying portraits are of C. E. Silcott, defaulting and fleeing cashier te the scrgeant-at-urnis of the heuse of representatives of the fiftieth congress, Louise Thiehault, ills female companion in flight, mid Sergeant-ut-arms Lcedem. LEEDOM. 81LCOTT. THIEDAULT. Silcott was born in Adams county, Ohie, about fifty-two years age, and for twenty years was engaged in the mer cantile business nt Yeungsvllle, always bearing n geed reputation ns nu honest nnd efilcicnt business man. The news of his downfall was a com plete surprise and shock te his acquaint ances. He lias always enjoyed the con fidence of his friends and neighbors, and they would have trusted him with any thing they had. He was appointed by Hen. J. P. Leedom as n reward for fccrv Ices te the Democratic par,ty as a candi date for auditor of Adams county, in the race for which he almost bankrupted himself, but wan defeated. This infor mation is taken from the Columbus (O.) State Journal, which adds: Mrs. Silcott comes from nn old Vir ginia family, which has always been con sidered among the best families of the country. Mr. E. E. Wlnshlp, cashier of the Sec ond National bank of Ciiclcvillc.O., who was Mr.Silcett's predecessor in the ofllce of cashier of the scrgcant-at-arms under Hen. Jehn G. Thompson, explains the methods of congressmen in drawing their salaries ns follews: "The salaries of members of congress are drawn from the United States treas ury by the Bcrgeaiit-at-anns monthly upon the certificate of the clerk of the heuse during the vacation and by the speaker after one is elected. Each cer tificate is also Blgncd by the member and is for $117. The salary is bent te each member by draft during the vacation if they request it, and when congress is in session the money Is placed te the credit of each member in the books of the Bcrgeant-at-arms and is Eiibjcct te the check of the members. SiHcett had ac cess te it nil. He was nble at nny time te embezzle thousands of dollars, na there was no check en his operatieim but his honesty." Louise Thiehault, who fled with Sil cott and his 72,000, is a French Cana dian with whom Silcott haa been inti mate for some lime. She is described as a woman of ,'oed appearance, and was known by sight te many in and about the Capitel at Washington. THE MICHIGAN ATHLETIC CLUB. A Yeung but IliuHliy Orgniiluilleii Tim Club lleiii". The Michigan Athletic club is tlie nmne of a successful organization which lint sprung npuitliln n your In tlie City of tha Strait. Tlie finishing touches nre new being put en the club house, ulitch, when completctl, will rival nny simllnr organization hi tliu wi-st. Tlie enlire cost will be ntxiut S2.-..000, of which J.'i.OuO will be expended en the gymna sium alene. In tlie bxteuit'iit et the building nre thu dicssiug ioeiiw, bathrooms, lecU-rn, kitchen and lieller 1 oems. Thcre ia u piling bath ttixlS feet. There hna iwen no regular arrangement of the roenu in tlie huildiiiK, no two Ix-ing of tlie tame shape. The main corridor I) lmjed like n bait moon. On the first Uoer ar the ladies' room nud reading room. The main stairuny lead te the gymnasium en the second Iloer, nud te tlie right of tlie cntrance nnd near the fctalr way li tlieodlce. Adjoining the rending room U the smoking reeni, 1 lx3 feet. Acress th TUG CI.UU'S HOME. corridor 11 tlie rate, I.Yt III feet, connecting w ItU a serving room, !vl5 fuel. Tim billiard room, with ocefiminodaiions for four tables, i ule en thl fl'n.r. The gymnai-luiii occupies th-jentlraiipnfr Heur, ami ii fully equipped with tlie f-paulriing ytfni of apparatus Thcre It In tills i-eiini nn il-ivnted truck (1 feet from tlie Uckt uml 151 feut In rlrcimif ci mice. The ground about tlw houiiu"erd ainpl space for n cinder track of IHe am tetU mil Xvxt spring tha tiunU ceirt will laid out and ti-M v. I10I9 kc-j iad erruugwl for the var..w '-1'. Li'Tf-sa, haw ball, rii Iff- Tii' -. '. luki' par ti uteri I l lr j"i Mldrhlhey claim in.-! 1 1 4 1. heuse gym uanum In tlie I'mu-d ,5tar i.- ' ,ai iitV t Vk. i. f f,tpr5fiiSrrfetnrr NEW YOliK'S BLOCKADES." FOR DAY8 BROADWAY WAS ALMOST IMPAC3ADLE BECAUSE OF THEM. Ttie KWtrlUSatmajr Treeelir CftnMd tha Trtjiiblp, and TrailMintcn Complained That nutlne W Hcrlmuljr Affected. Tlie Street Flltt-d with Stalled Vehicle. Street blockades are net at all unusual in New Yerk city, but the town has re cently undcrgone an experience in that line which surpasses nil ethers. More than a year ago4he edict went forth that all electric wires must Ixi Liken from the poles and burled. The work was in trusted te the Consolidated Telegraph nnd Electrical Subway company, nnd the wires wen? slowly being put underground when, a month or two age, n series of particularly frightful tragedies caused by the wires began. These greatly aroused public indignation, and the Sub way cenitnny was compelled te cease its procrastination and begiu work in earn est. Tills, of course, necessitated the tear ing up of the streets, but all went well until llreadwny was reached. Notwith standing its name, and the fact that it is the principal business thoroughfare of the metropolis of Ynukcclaud, Broad way ia net n particularly wlde street The velume of trafllc is simply enormous, however. There nre in the neighbor hood of four hundred street cars in mo tion en llreadwny during the busiest hours, pud thirty-seven vehicles of ether kinds passed the corner of Fulton street during ten minutes, while the writer itoed thcre the ether day. COKNKIlOr rULTOS ANU .MnOADWAV uum.NO A IlLOCICAtlE. Willi the first stroke of u pick by the subway workmen the treuble began, Great piles of dill and paving stones rose en each side of the trench dug en ene side of the street, and in n few hours that part of the roadway lietwcen ene curb nml the street car track was Im passable for vehicles. Ner wcre the big pyramids of debris confined te the road way. The sidewalks, tee, were en croached upon te such an extent that it was almost impossible te get te tlie doers of many stored. As it was during the busiest part of the year the trades men complained bitterly of this state of nlfalrs; but there was no help for it. This nuisnnce continued in vnrieus parts of tlie street for mero than a week, and the blockades that resulted weru al most constant, mid sometimes took in two squares at a time. Occasionally they even extended down H10 hide streets, Chambers street licing blocked ene day for half nn hour from llreadwny almost te the North river. The following gives a geed idea of hew the blockades btartcd: At the corner of Fulton street and Broadway was n plle of earth and paving stones fully four feet high. On the top et this plle perched a policeman who by gesticulating nnd yelling was endeavor ing te keep the line of trucks and street cars moving. An old lady ventured tim idly from the sidewnlk and the ollco ellco ollce man descended from the plle of dirt te pilot her. They did net get very far however. An up-going street car get stuck directly in front of thenrund right across the narrow opening between the piles of debris. A truck which was fol lowing close behind the street car had te pull up short. In order te avoid running the great pole of the truck tin engh the rear end of the car the driver turned his horses out toward the down track. Thii stepped a car 011 that track, and the long line of ether cars and leaded trucks behind it had te come t e a standstill. One or two drivers I lied te get out of the jam by driving around the obstructions, and, getting in each ether's way, made things a hundred times worse. Tills bleckade lasted eighteen minutes, and a view from the top of the heap, where the policeman A BUIIWAY JIAN1IOI.K. stationed himself, showed a line of stalled street cars and trucks reaching down ward te below Tiinlty church (four and one-half blocks), and upward te the tri angular open space in front of the jiost jiest jiost elllco. The necempanying picture gives a geed Idea of hew things looked during this blocknde. Tin subways which cause'd all this commotion nre said te be the best jet Invented. They consist of it series of wooden conduits In which the wires nre laid, and which open, at intervals, into "manholes," where the wires may be tapped or new ones Introduced. A pict ure is given of a section of ene of the manholes, with 11 man at work in it splicing n cable. These cables consist of twelve or mero whes perfectly insulated f 1 0111 each ether. CHRISTMAS IN NORWAY. TUn Cuxleua Mythological Story et tha Keiacman, (E(icclal Corrcieudenco.J Nkw VeitK, Dec. 12. Frem the old Nerse mjtholegy, rich in legend and saga, have been derived many of the customs with which tlie Chi istian Christ mas festival is observed, nnd among the Swedes nnd Norwegians In this ceuutry veritable bona of Tlier, as many of them teem te be in their rugged virility and massive strength the Christmas tide is hardly less u celebration of the death of Ualdur, the god of light, or the light of thu world, than of the birth of our Lord Jesus Christ. They borrow the significance of the feast of tlie winter solstice, in eth'er words, from a myth that In oetie senti ment shadows forth n meaning at least biiggcidivu and typical of the story of thu nativity, and in many of the Nor wegian and Swedish homes in our own northwestern states the gaincx and cus toms v. Mi which the holiday cstival U enriched ceme ditcctly from tlie customs of the Norsemen, In New Yerk-city this U hardly tiue. Like thocitlzciuvef ether foreign origin, they have their, jdi-iUnct- V,V., .v-C ,- X ii, jj -. M trciy national entireties and tecietMS, and in these associations the eldor cus toms are still preserved In a modified form, but thcre is less each year of the picturesque home life and northern man ners among them. I found less dis tinctive Scandinavian celebration last year than seems possible among se intel ligent and earnest a people, mid the most characteristic of all the festivals among them last Christmas is the one in the little Scandinavian church in William street, Seuth Uroeklyn. It seems n pity thnt this Is se, for of thu tunny poems of thu world's rcllglenr lhatare founded en the dying of theycni" that of Ilahlur seems the quaintest and most beautiful. He wnn the son of Ther nud of Frlggn, and resembled Auelle In his attributes of light and beauty. When light nnd the warmth mid brightness of the uei them summer came te dle en the cve of thu shortest day lit the year, Ual dur was slain. He had been troubled by horrid dreams and premonitions of evil which he and the ether gods failed te in terpret, nnd Frlggn, determined te pro tect him, if possible, exacted an oath from everything in earth nnd heaven nnd hell that they would none of them harm Ualdur. Only from the niiatlctoe she did net exact the oath. The Asa Leki, who was the god of darkness and evil, and who hated Ualdur, inquired about this, and Frigga told him what she had done. Only from the mistletoe had she taken no pledge, be cause it was, she said, se young and se little that it had net seemed wertlt while. Ualdur, like Achilles, had been made In vulnerable by his mother's tender care, and It came te be 0110 of the favorite sports in the games of the gods for hint te stand up nnd receive unharmed the nssaults of all the wcaxus of the ether usas, or gods. Leki traveled nwuy te the south country, nnd, gathering the mistle toe, hu fashioned a Bjiear whose head was made of the weed of thu despised para site. This he took with him te the winter festival of the gods, and when Ualdur steed up, Leki nsked Asa Hed, thu blind god, why he did net cast, a spear at the sun god. Hed replied that he could net, because he was blind, ami Leki told him that he would direct the sjiear. IIe did se, Hed hurled it, nud Ualdur was slain, Ever afterward, at the fca6t of the winter solstice, the mlstletoe was among the Norsemen tut emblem of the myth, mid net merely a bit of mcaulnglc6 dec oration. When Christianity made its way northward, the priests among the Germans and Scandinavians ferbade tha introduction et the mlstletoe into the churches, but the prohibition was net long effective, nud today it is connected with Christmas games, though less among the Scandinavians than further south, where it grown most. "Hut hew should the commemoration et Ualdur's death become- blended with the celebration of Christmas';" I asked of a venerable Scand, who has studied the traditions of his own nnd ether races long and earnestly. "IlccauBe," he answered, "the two are ene. I de net mean that Daldur and Christ are ene, though seme Christian writers have tried te show that Ualdur was merely the northern heathen's dream of the Messiah. I mean that their death and birth are commemorated in thebe win ter feasts which have been celebrated by all nations and all religions at about the time of the winter bolstlce. The Phoe nicians, the Kelts, the Sknnds, the Hin Hin Hin deos, the Greek j and Remans, the Jews, thu Mehammedans and the Christians have alike taken that season for their most important feast. Among the Dru ids was the oak ceremonial, which led te the custom of bonfires and yule legs. Grimm traces these back te the Twelfth century in Germany. The Hindoe feast of Lakehmt is celebrated with charity te every human being. The Remans and Greeks obscrved their saturnalia by giv ing their slaves temporary freedom and llccnse. "Observe that these are all celebrated after the husbandman's labor for the year Is closed nnd the year itself dies. The Rev. Dr. Jennings, in his work en Jewish antiquities, says it ia a vulgar opinion merely that Christ was born en Dec. tiH, The feast is held then, simply because it is the world's time for a feast. Among our own peeple King Huken the Geed, the fester beu of King Ethelstau, of England, tried, in the Tenth century, te ulfellsh tlie sacrificial feasts with which we honored Ualdur, and te sub stitute the Christmas celebration. He fulled, and was compelled te take part in the old heathen riles himself, but his will prevailed after he had passed away. Thcre had been cattle, swlne and horses sacrificed, and occasionally human lives, but this, eT course, i.t no longer the cus tom." Falcs-Curtis. DROP A NICKEL. UlM-etcry of 1'rebnbly Iho Flrt Auto matic C'einiiiiirelal Machine. C Bjieclal Corrc-siKiuOeuce.) SiiEtTiuu), England, Dec. 2. My business in this grimy, Bember liive of industry brought inu te the King's Head hotel, a typical old fashioned house tucked away in a crooked street net far from the market place. The landlord, Mr. Charles Cerke, with the hospitality that afTccU n Ioncsenio American se pleasantly, eummencd the barmaid te a retired nook In the smoking room, whither we had geno te discuss a possi pessi possi ble contract. That comely and discreet young perben promptly furnished the desired "Scotch und potash" (In Ameri can English, whisky and soda), and set the great glasses befere us. Landlord Cerke was smoking a pipe, of course and presently his hospitality extended itself (without reference doubt less te the possible contract) te inviting me te join him. I had neither pipe nor tobacco, but that mattered net. He brought from his collection a pipe of the "church warden" variety, se long that the stem, ence iu my mouth, 1 had te rtcp forward a yard or se te reach the bowl. Fer tobacco he placed a tin bes en thu table. It was about n feet long, eight inches wide and perliaps six deep. There wna a slit in the cover. Inte this the landlord dropped a big English penny, whereupon the lock was released with n click, nnd, having raised the cov er, we filled our pipes with the tobacco lying loeso Inside. It was a crude but ctfective example- of the nlckel-in-thc-slet machine. "This box," said Mr. Corke, "is always in the smoking room for the convenience of guests who are out of tobacco, and thu pennies dropped iu te cecure a pipe, f ui just about puy for keeping tbe sup ply undiminished." "I should think," 1 suggested, "that the box ence opened, all the tobacco might be extracted by seme conscience less vagabond. Your box isn't modem; it ought te be se contrived that only a limited supply could be obtained for each penny.'' "I don't think," he responded, "that the box has suffered much from dishon est users, und as for being modern, of course it isn't. That box has been in use in this hotel for mero than 150 years, and is piebubly the forerunner of nil the penny-ln-tho-slet machines new se com mon nil ever England, and America, tee, aa I understand." Tlie box waa certainly batteied und Uu'.t, i.!uunh tuhare been iu use that Jca- tit e. time, r-. 1 thrru c"nn te 1k no te.i.sen te doubt Mr. Cerke's statement with regard t it . Fi:kpi:;ick l. Huutes. .jtxM u; . 1 1 .Vi.TiMataalSWS jrjhf ftffgte JAv g tut t ' V OLIVE HARPER TELLS HOW TO ORESS THE LITTLE ONES. I Charm leg I!br Cleak Which Cart nd Add Much te the Small Girl Aproeu Hew They Are Made.aad They Are Fer. 'N 4 Nkw Yerk. Dec. 13. By all eddstta prettiest material for children's cloaks It the cider down flannel. It Is light SnVrl flexible, but thick and warm, and H leeks soft and delicate enough for Mm daintiest darling of all. It is te bs had in many colors and tints, and in strips of various designs, nil of them pretty and babyish. Perhaps the prettiest is dclicate ruouse color, and if aayihfaaf could make a little toddler leek estsr than another it would be ene of little coats in this colon CLOAKS FOll TUG DAMES. I wish it was really the fashion SS leek better after the little children, fef why should they Buffer cold, hunger sad pain when this world lias such an abun abun tlance of what they need? Let us rather take the little Minnies, Annies and Gretchens out of thett wretched homes and dress them up 1b tlie newest styles for once. On one wt will put pretty spring heel shoes and brown woolen stockings, knit drawen which reach Iter ankles, and a warm flannel skirt and undcrvesL Over this brown flannel gown, Qretchcn style, and for out doers a pearl white cider down flannel coat, with a bit of J a heed in the back, and tied with cord and balls around the waist A cunning little cap made el the same, and lined and trimmed with scarlet satin like the heed te the cloak. Fer her cousin a blue and pink striped cloak of the same material with dark blue velvet cuffs and belt, and a littli bonnet et the same, a comfortable littU blue merino kdrcsa and knit undergar ments, and a geed, wholcsemo dinntf under them. Ne wonder she weuW leek sweet and rosy. Her dearest friends and next deer neighbors should have,' first, nbcavcr cloth coat in dark red withlplush bands and belt and cesy heed of the same witli a plush ro sette en top and a serviceable plaid wool dress and knit undergarments. Ths ether should have n pole blue elder dewa coat with n waist of vclutina trimmsd with a little pretty figured braid, and s cloae bonnet et vclutina te match ia dark blue. These two coats Bheuld be long and warm, and the last should cover a lltek gown of red figured flannel, and eset should have clean white aprons te wsai at home te kecp their dresses clean, Jest such as the richest women put en tbsit little children. Some of the little one! CHILDliEN'S FASHIONS f flam 111 i 'H'Ii ' JJawwWn "rvil cuuiu uavu wutui laiiuKiiuu iajiB, woes ,",: nlush. nlald. or velvet even, and sesas ;"H :.' 1.11 ...ut.l... 4 !. .u Bheuld have the bilky long plle plush, j5;, a just 1 no color et ivory anu ricn yeuew -y; cream. They should all have fashion- ;-, able black or brown stockings, thick and A warm and nlce little knit mittens aes k' cunning mites of muffs te tuck thetl dimpled -hands in. These muffs weuW M be of Fenian lamb, for they are lust thv: style. 'M And It doesn't cost se very muck -'A , nlrlin tr rlrnlfl VAII lit lift irt 111 In Uftal Vr,' height of the present fashion. A verj .& geed quality or plusli costs $ l.oej a quat ,-1 Ityquitogeou cneugn, $1; veiuttna, ll Wj 5 cider down flannel about fifty cents, ana 'h&'j beaver cloth is 81.50, deuble width. Ilsfit takes about thrce yards of plush, tw ,. nnu a inur or vciutina auu ene ana a .- nan et ucavcr ler a cie.nn ler a old, and this, with trimmings, is a very -r.nunr.1ilA fr.ii.tiu.nt tllnf niitf fil.ittiap MH ?- w make. The quaint little gowns can b !tlj or almost any material, uaru eeuig pre ferred, und a tasty mother can make little close bonnet out of the scraps thai are left ever. If evcrv mother would buv cneush fat two children, mid make 0110 fur her Ut'-I,, 110 ene anu ene ler ucr poorer neif .or ag; child, the tables miglit all be ma .3 wen uresseu. tius te ?vn millennium hasn't get ArneM roil Tin metucbj. here yet, ineru's the pity. The days .of dainty white aprons are net ever, and neat ladies always wear them at home mornings about theii household duties, or when sewing or tak ing care of their babies. There is no reason why they should be taken efl even when visitors come, for thore If something very domestic and hemeliks about an apreu, and most gentlemen rec ognize the charm of them, and yet per haps they could hardly tell what it is that attracts. I think it is the sense that the wearer has a higher part in life than te be a simple ornament, for an apron is the Bigtt visible, of housewifely or domes tic labor. I glve thrce daiuty aprons. One is of linen lawn, with a cute little pocket, with tucks nnd embroidery. An An other is of scrim, with lengthwise inser tions of oriental lace and with black and white ruflle. The third is large and of embroidered linen, for a mother, n nurse or for the helpful eldest daughter who watches ever the china and silver ana docs nil the dusting. What the Seventh Gun Meant. X4 ..A ..tltAv.ntiim t.-tCiTit OMtrl uy MIMA sriv -a HJ f $ J M mrvimm Baa u f mmm '- l I fzr ,v I Qm !'? I ec?H i?'' It is less cuttemary new than la "ye pslkw SJ dnvs of the drama" for members of tits audi 3M ence te have tbeir little nay. Still, that Una doc occur occasionally was proved by an in cident tbsttstaldte have happened In Buffalo during a recent production of Jesephine, The emperor' sister, Pauline, had Just ex plained that If a girl was born five guns would be fired; and If it was a boy, the num ber et volleys reached 101, Bang! w ent the first gun, the audience aa actors lltlcuiug Intently. The fifth gun boomed, and the firing seemed te cease. "A girl," sneered Pauline, completely disgusted, lioeml went the sixth gun. "A beyl" cried l.u nnrnm nn.1 fl lfll-f-A llUmbCr Of 6XCitfl auditors, lioeml ueut the seventh gun. $ Twins!" shouted a roguish youth In the gal- ..fcvi: Ierr. and tbe be curtalujJvc -htejuriP cot ueivn oaueH -; rears of taught new lleriihaiilt and EaitlaKe urw. V" In "Theodora" and as Lady Macbeth Bern " nariu neon .v.r i - ,j a hang, net made iute a waist, but caught ok 4 1 thn. stinnblara with broachea and held sbeal:'f", WUKU m IWI vv .mw t - tlie hips with the bread metal girdles watch r r r shoLMmidedo fushlonable. Mb Esstlake H-v-ba nsver worn a coret, but replace it with,? ' something nearly as bad, a breed, heaTy, linen bend, which gives her flgure its psc,i liar leek. Iu Clite, hewsrer, ths djspseses . irltkltoudgsinsgrestlyiagrscathswbr, Vrst&i. V3 nm v.-'fl'S -. 'i &! 2 v m ., " la m jn '?! '.7 M M .fiSS 1 Ym Jsl ;: I A -?i IN m ST 1 h!1 J 'flM wa ; H. .' 1$ $a va v?. W Vi