AlfffiESE EISIAECK. i - A.n Interview Willi Li Hung Chang, the Great Viceroy of China, On THE EXGLUSIOX OP THE CHINESE. Bis Daughter's Wonderful Wedding and a Family Jangle. THE TICEEOI AS A SMOKER tlTOM OCR TRAVELING COSIJIIBSIOKEI1.3 Tiemsij., China, November 30. HAVE just had a most in teresting interview with Li Hung Chang, the great vice roy ot China. Li Hung Chang is by all "odds the greatest man in the Chinese Empire. He was called by General Grant the Bismarck of China, and in statesman ship he ranks with the greatest minds of the European nations. He is practically the "Premier of the Imperial Government, is the Chief Secretary of Foreign Affairs, and dur ing the past few years has been the medium ot communication between foreign nations and the Celestials. It was he who was com mander in chief of the Imperial forces dur ing the great Taiping rebellion, which cost China 10,000,000 lives and which resulted in the overthrow of the rebels. It was he who settled the difficulties with Bussia in 1881, and it is he who is called in to advise the Emperor when any crisis takes place in the affairs of the nation. Li Hung Chang carried on all the ne gotiations with Mitkiewicz and granted the charter to the Wharton Barker syndicate, which fell throngh by Mitkiewicz's indis cretion and bad character. It was he who introduced the telegraph into China about seven years ago, and it is he who is now doing all in bis power to have China adopt railroads and develop its material resources. ii Li Bung Cliaug. Li Hung Chang is the viceroy of Chili, the northern province ot China, uhich includes Peking and Tientsin, and which has a popu lation of 35,000,000, or nearly as many as Great Britain. Over these people the viceroy has more power than has the Queen of Encland. He is also superintendent of the northern trade of China, and it is said thst the monev he receives yearly amounts to over 53,000,000. CHINESE CIVTX SERVICE. In China office comes, in the first place, from scholarship, and Li Hung Chang is one of the most noted scholars of China. He has passed three public examinations, which means having been three times one ot 200 ot the successful out of 15,000 com petitors, and at the last one he received the highei-t degree. He is a fellow of the Han lin College, the most learned body of China, and he is suph an important man in the Chinese Government that when he wished to retire from office about six years ago to mourn on the account of the death of his mother, the Empress refused to give him more "than 100 days for griet. iShe thenre called him to his post on the ground that he was a necessity to China. He now lives here at Tientsin ana his residence makes this point almost as important in the eyes ot the nations as Peking itself. Tientsin is a city of nearly 1,000,000 people. The foreign settlement where the leading French and English merchants do their business, and where the consuls have their residences, is three miles from the native citv. It is here that the ships land, and here that the foreign hotels are located. Between the two cities is a series of Chinese villages so closely joined as to form a third city, and it was through the narrow streets of these that I was carried by four chair bearers in uniform on my way to my ap pointment with the Viceroy. No one walks, it he be a foreigner, through the streets of China. They are tuo narrow and the crowd is too dense and too dirty, In paying cere monial visits, one must go in state.ann I had one ot the Chinese officials of our consulate at Tientsin riding in front of my chair on a white mongolian pony. He had a big round black cap upon his head with its brim turned upward and a gorgeous red tassel covering its crown. His powerful bod v was covered with a rich blue silk gown, down the back of which hung his long, thick, black cue. His legs were clad in pantaloons of wadded silk and great fat boots with white soles an inch thick covered his feet and ankles as he rode. TBAYELIXG XS STYLE. Mv chair was a fine, sedan covered with a rich navy blue cloth and lined with silk of a delicate blue. It was swung oetween poles about 25 leet long and the four men who carried it walked in couples, two in front and two behind between the shafts and supported it by great bars of teak wood, which, resting on the thoulders of the men, -were fastened to the shafts and thus enabled the men to move in single file. It took us lalfanhour to make the journey between fiie two cities. We were otten stopped by long lines of wheelbarrows loaded with merchandise and pushed and pulled by coolies. The weather was bitterly cold and I shivered In a heavy overcoat and under a thick rug which was wrapped around my knees. Still, many of the coolies were bare to the waist, and I passed a beggar who, as naked as Adam in the Garden ol Eden, was crying and shivering under a piece of coffee sacking which he had thrown about bis bare skin. We crossed a stream, passing thou sands of jinrikshas and going all the while through the most crowded ot narrow streets and at last came to a high wall, on the nut side of which about two score of ponies were standing tied. This wall surrounded the Tamen, or the gubernatorial residence of the great viceroy. we passed throngh a great irate and came into a court which was full ot the servants and lackeys ot mandarins. We stopped for a moment before a pair of large double doors upon which were painted two hideous figures which I was told were the gods of war. A moment later we were conducted pastthee into another court where was an other retinue of lackeys all in pigtails and gorgeous uniforms. Here my chair was iet down lor a moment and the Chinese official from the legatiou took my card, a strip of red paper about eight inches long and three inches wide, upon which were painted in black the wo Chinese characters, which indicated the translation of my name. A moment later I was conducted into an anfe-room, where the secretary of the viceroy, Mr. Loh Feng Luh, who had arranged the interview for me, received me. WAITISC tTPON THE VICEBOT. The crowd in the ante-room and that in which I was received made me think of the "White House at the beginning of a new ad ministration. There were hundreds of vel lowfaced, almond-eyed men, who looked as Jouirh they might be office seekers, in the ante room, and the few who sat in the recep tion room were evidently dignitaries f a high degree. They wore long bluck silk gowns lined with sable and other fine furs, and their hats were decorated with the but tons of hizh rank. One had a great pea cock feather in his cap like that worn by the Chinese Minister at "Washington, and another was a mandarin of the red button. i usijarot The room itself was a shackley looking affair about 20 feet square, and its walls were covered with a cheap paper pasted over bare boadrs. A wide divan covered with red cloth, which, in China, means prosper ity, ran around it,and upon this were placed little tables about two feet square and about six inches high. The mandarins seated themselves one on each side of these tables, and thus we'sat in couples about the room. The servants brought in tea and we sipped the choicest ol the Chinese liquid while we waited. The mandarins smoke pipes, and each had his servant beside him to fill his pipe for him when it became empty and to light it when it went out. Now and then a new arrival would be ushered in. and then all would arise, bow two or three times, shake their own hands, which is the mode of salutation in China, and smile all over their fat yellow faces. Mr. Loh Feng Luh, the Viceroy's Secre tary, and also one of the great men of Tient sin, speaks jsngnsn periecuy, ana una him a man of broad reading and much information. He discussed with tne during the waiting some phase of the Spencerian philosophy, told me how far he believed in the theories of Huxley and Darwin, and, speaking of the latter, said he lited to be lieve in the survival of the fittest, but not in the origin of species. He seemed pleased when I told him I had read Confucius, and had decided opinions upon Emerson and Car lyle. He was for a long time connected with the Chinese Legation at London, and has also been stationed at Berlin. It was he who accompanied me into the presence of the Viceroy, and who acted as interpreterof the conversation. A CHILLT EECEPTIOJT. "We went through I don't know how many rooms and narrow passages. There aie, I am told, many more than a hundred rooms in the yamen, and a liveried official pre ceded us, holding our red cards high' above his head as he did so. The house seemed old aud not very well furnished, and the ro m into which we were at last led was carpeted with a dingy brussels carpet which looked as though it might have come from a "Wash ington boarding house. It was the reception room reserved for foreigners. It had foreign chairs and lounges, and at one end there was a raised platform lighted with a window at the back and furnished with a divan, which was covered with red silk. It hadatablealso covered with red silk, and I suppose that here it is the Viceroy sit when be receives Chinamen. There was no fire in the room and the cold made it seem almost barn-like. The viceroy himself, who seemed to fill the whole of it with his august presence, was not warmer than his surroundings, and his tall frame clad in a long gown with a short seal skin cloak, in the long sleeves of which his hands were clasped together as he salut ed me iustatcly style upon my presentation, was rather productive of chilliness. A cold shiver ran down mv back as he motioned kme to one seat and took another 15 leet dis tant on the other side of the room. The Secretary sat between us, and we conversed through him, our words almost freezing as they ricochetted through Mr. Loh from one to the other. It does not take more than two sentences to show the person who talks with Li Hung Chang that tie is in the presence of no ordi nary man. His words come out quick and sharp. He asks the most direct of ques tions in tones which show that he expects an answer, and while he demands all kinds of information from you, he gives you just about what he pleases in return. His figure is a most impressive one, well formed, he stands 6 feet 2 in his stockings, and his long silk gown makes him look like a giant, while his hat, which he wears at all times, adds to his stature. His shoulders are broad but slightly stooping. Still in his 67th year, his step is springy, and his only signs of age are in the gray of his hair and whiskers. His yellow complexion shows few wrinkles, and his twinkling almond eyes look out through black spec tacles. He shaves his head like all China men, and his long cue is as white as the driven snow. His sparce mustache and his thin whiskers are also gray, but his face is thin and he has nothing ot the round fat appearance of the Chinamen of America. Still, he is a pure Chinaman, with no Tartar blood in his veins, and he comes from one ot the old aristocratic families of the country. INTERESTED I2T HABRIS02T. His first words to me were about General Harrison. He wanted to know if I knew him and I told him I did. He then asked as to his profession and as to how he stood in it. He was especially solicitous as to President Harrison's views on the Chinese question and he requested me to tell the American people through my pen that he did not at all approve of the exclusion of the Chinese from the "United States. Said he: "The passage of the exclusion act is en tirely contrary to the spirit of the treaty re lations between the two countries. It is an outrage and I hope it will be repealed, and I wish you to tell the American people for He that if it is not repealed, I propose to ad Vise our Government to exclude the Ameri cans from China, and I think it will be no more than right if we do so. You may amplify this as much as you please and I trust that you will put it in so strong a light that the American people will do justice to our nation." These were the words of the Secretary of Foreign Affairs of the Chinese Empire. I write them here not more than one halt hour alter they were uttered. I do not think it necessary to amplify them and it seems to me that they are strong enough in the words of the Viceroy himself. The conversation next turned to railways and the Viceroy asked me if I knew Mr. "Wharton Barker and as to what was his profession. I told him tbat I was not per sonally acquainted with him, but that I Knew mm to be a banker ot brgb standing and great wealth. He then asked as to Count Mitkiewicz, and upon my saying that I had met the gentleman and had re ported his story of the granting of the char ter, to the New York World, he replied that he did not like Mitkiewicz, and that "he was no gentleman." The scheme, however, I nnderstand, of founding an American bank with the great powers spoken of in the Mitkiewicz combi nation, is by no means dead. It will prob ably be revived acain with the Bussian Count left out, and I happen to know that the Viceroy is very anxious that Mr. Whar ton Barker" should come to China, and also that Mr. Barker has signified serious inten tions of so doing at no distant date. The Viceroy is anxious that American capital should be brought here. He was disap pointed when the other scheme fell through. and he would like nothing better than to see it put on a sound footing and to redeem him self as having been the part of an enterprise which failed. In our conversation, however, there was no such talk as this. I asked the Viceroy as to whether the scheme was on again, but he retorted bv asking mea hundred and one questions which made my head boil in con structing diplomatic answers to them which should not implicate myself nor my friends, and I wished a dozen times that I had never mentioned the subject. The fact, however, that the scheme is not dropped still stands. CHIXA'S COMMERCIAL FUTURE. I asked the Viceroy as to what he thought of the future of railways in China and as to their effect npon the country and the world. He replied: "Before half a centurv has passed China will be covered with railways as with a net. Its immense miueral resources will be de veloped. It will have rolling mills and'fur naces in many parts of the country, and it is not impossible that it may do the manufact uring for the world. It seems to me that the most serious question which menaces the working people of your country and Europe lies here. The Chinese have shown themselves to be as bkillful and as intelli gent as any people in the world. They will work hard and they can live cheaper than your people, and when our country is open to railways and it has turned its attention to supplying the markets of the world, I be lieve it can supply them better and cheaper than you can. This is a question that yon will have to face." "I think so, too, your excellency" said L "Then I wonder." replied the Viceroy, "that you wish to have China come into competition with you. So yon not consider us dangerous competitors?" "Yes." I replied, "we do. But if the time ever comes when Chinese labor thus rworking in China comes into competition wild American labor we will buna a wan of protection about the United States so high that none of your products can come in." The Viceroy then asked me as to my tour and as to my newspaper correspondence. He asked me why I traveled and it seemed to surprise him when I replied that it was for the purpose of making money out of my letters and of improving my mind by meet ing such distinguished men as himself, and by being able to write intelligently of them thereafter to the American people. At this moment a servant in livery brought us three bubbling glasses of champagne and drink ing this together, the interview was over. The Viceroy offered me bis long finger nailed hand, pushing it far out of his fur cuff as he did so and he walked with me to the door and down the hall of the yamen. Our interview lasted fully half 'an hour and after the ice was thawed it was a most pleasant one. His excellency smoked dur ing the whole of the interview and 1 was furnished with a Turkish cigarette. The Viceroy smoked a pipe which had a stem at least four feet long and which was held to his lips and lighted by a servant. It, was a water pipe and the smoke was drawn through the water with a bubbling sound as we talked. About 10 whiffs consumed the tobacco in the bowl and then the servant had to slip out the metal bowl, blow out the ashes, refill the pipe, relight it and put it back into the Viceroy's lips. It was a curi ous proceeding and it seemed a lazy one. A HIGH-LIFE WEDDIX O. All Tientsin isjnst now excited over'the marriage of Li Hung Chang's daughter. It took place this week and the three days' wedding was the greatest event of the year. I saw some of the flowers at the yamen as I passed through, and I am told that the wed ding gifts filled three rooms. Some of the presents were of jade, pearls and precious stones, and there was a great amount of silk and velvets. Li Hung Chang is superin tendent of trade for northern China, and all of the great merchants made presents to the bride. The manner ot sending the presents was, in the case of small things, on trays and some of the larger pieces came in carts. Thetrays were covered with red silk, which means luck in China, and a number of presents were sent by each per son, the idea being that the bride would select the one which pleased her most, and which according to etiquette, ought to be the least valuable of the lot. The Chinese at this wedding showed their great love for foreign things. They bought out the entire effects of a French store in the foreign settlement, and one of the noblemen took a fancy to a big-figured, old-fashioned brussels carpet of a pattern common in America a generation ago. This carpet had been in the store for years and none of the foreigners would buy it. The Chineman's eyes lighted up as he took in its gorgeous figures. He said: "I want that for the Viceroy's daughter." He was of course charged a good round price for it, and it duly appeared at the wedding. The bride was dressed in red, and her head, it is said, was so heavily decked with jewels tbat it had to be supported by others during a part of the ceremony. She is 23 years old, and is said to be rather pretty. The Chinese gossip just as do their Amer ican sisters, and the story cow afloat in the high circles here is that the Conntess Li Hung Chang, the Vicerov's wife, was de cidedly opposed to the wedding. It is said that she read the Viceroy a curtain lecture in choice Chinese when he announced to her that he was about to give his daughter to Mr. Chang Pei-Lun, and said that the groom was 20 years older than the bride, and that be had no rank. The truth of it is that the groom had a high position some years ago, but he was disgraced on account of his dealings in connection with the French-Chinese war, and his rant: was taken from him. To continue the gossip, it is said that the Viceroy replied to the Countess that his new son-in-law had really great powers of mind, that he would be given an other office, and that be would eventually be even a greater man than himself. "Then," responded the Countess, who, though she dictates to the Viceroy, really admires him, "he will have to be the Em peror himself, for there is now no greater man in'China than my husband." And so, in the words of a fairy story, "they were married, and it is to be hoped they willlive happy ever afterward." Frank G. Carpenter. WHAT DREAMS ARE MADE OP. Some Interesting Experiment That Pro to They Go bj Contraries. Tne Argosy. J From time immemorial, dreams have been the wonderland of waking hours. Hope and fear have wrought them into their own fabric Superstition has seized upon them and worked up a curious ritual of "dreams that go by contraries," of "'dreams of the morning light," of dreams with sig nificances, some of which seem natural enough, while to a few of those apparently most arbitrary, science herself has offered a certain amount of explanation. Dreaming is an experience which may be called common to humanity, though it varies so widely in different individuals that, in a few exceptional cases, it is abso lutely unknown. A French physiologist caused many curious experiments to be made on himself during sleep. These ex periments took the form of trifling physical sensations, which produced almost invaria bly a wonderfully exaggerated effect on the sleeping mind. Thus a leather tickling the lips was converted into the horrible punish ment of a mask of pitch being applied to the face. Abottleofcau.de cologne heid to his nose sent him into a dream of a per fumer's shop in Cairo. A pinch on the neck recalled the days of his boyhood and the old family physician applying a blister to that region. Scientific writers admit that there is a type of dream in which coming physical disease or disaster is shadowed forth some bodily sensation, perhaps too slight to be noticed by the subject when awake, yet contriving to impress itself in some symbolic form on the sleeping mind. The more striking instances of this sort may serve to explain how, in some lesser de gree, certain Bymbols are likely to attach themselves to certain painful sensations or conditions, until at last they are finally ac cepted as mysterious presages ot evil. . Conrad Gesner, the eminent naturalist, dreamed tbat he was bitten on the left side by a venomous serpent. In a short time a severe carbuncle appeared on the very spot terminating his Hie in the space of three days. It is a most singular fact that under certain combined conditions of fatigue, dis comfort and malaria, whole bodies of men such as companies of soldiers have been seized by the same terrific dream, and have awakened simultaneously, shrieking with terror. Such an instance is related bv Laurent, when after a forced march, 800 French soldiers were packed in a ruined Calabrian monastery which could ill ac commodate hall' tbat number. At midnight frightful cries issued from every corner of the building as frightened men rushed from it, each declaring that it was the abode of the evil one that thev had seen him, in tne form of a big black dog, who threw himself upon their breasts lor an instant and then disappeared. The men were persuaded to return to the same shelter on the next night, their officers promising to keep watch beside them. Shortly after midnight the same scene was re-enacted the same cries, the same flight, as the soldiers rushed forth in a body to escape the suffocating embrace of the black dog. The wakeful officers had seen noth ing. Inharmonious. Chicago Tribune.: George That is a beautiful piece, Laura, and you have played it most soulfully. But what is that rumbling noise I nave been hearing nearly all the time since I came in? Laura It must be the wind. Excuse me a moment (Goes into the kitchen.) Mother.'can't you take that washtub into the back basement? It doesn't chord with the piano. HOW TO MEET PEOPLE A Few Eules for General Deportment in Everyday life. THE GALLANT PAT MEN OF FIFTY Who Desire to be Modeled Into Fashionable Men of Society. HOW TO GREET A LADY Off THE STREET 1 tWMTTEN FOB THK DISPATCH. "There is nothing so commonplace in all the world as the meeting of people every day, and yet there is nothing so really un common and rare as the man who knows just how to conduct himself under these cir cumstances." This was the dictum of the man ager of a dancing academy. He has made the study not only of ball etiquette, but gen. e ra 1 deportment the specialty of nis life, and has devoted so much conscientious at tention to it that he is regarded as an authority upon the nice points of conduct by all who know. An Old Style Bow. "The high art of being a gentleman cannot, of course, be acquired by mere training. There are es sential to the completeness of the character some inborn traits, and yet it is quite possi ble for men who do not possess them to pass for gentlemen because they have mastered the rules of deportment." "Are the rules of deportment set down in the text books?" "No. There are books on etiquette, but the matters I refer to are seldom to be found in them, at least, with any adequate treat ment. I usually give my instruction by word of mouth or by example." TEACHING DEPORTMENT. "Do you ever have pupils who come to you for the express purpose of learning de portment?" "Very many, and they vary in age from little children of 6 years up to fat men of 60. It is by no means uncommon that a man past middle age comes to me to take his first lesson in dancing to learn how to carry him- The Present Proper Mode. self in the street or in the car. It is a cu rious speculation as to what leads them at that time of life take up this study. It would seem as if anybody who was inclined to attend to it at all would surely have done so in his younger days, and I really suspect that my middle-aged pupils are parvenus. I do not mean to use the word in the disa greeable sense, and in fact, I think it is very commendable that a man who has sud denly acquired wealth or had gained some years of leisure by hard labor, should un dertake to fit himself as well as may be for his new position in the world." "How do you go to work to teach an old man these matters?" "Just as I do with children. I teach them first to walk. As a rule, men walk best when they walk naturally, but when they come to pay particular attention to matters of gait and carriage, they are almost always inclined to some eccentricities of movement which haveto be corrected. It is always the case, too, that men who come to me wish to learn to -dance, and I put them through the initial lessons with a view to cultivating two things, grace of carriage, which includes an easy, unconscious control of the limbs, and the technical figures of the dance. As the lessons progress, of course, I teach the pupil the etiquette of the ball room, and it will generally follow that who ever behaves in good form in the ballroom will not go amiss elsewhere." HOW TO BOW. "Is there a recognized mode of bowing?" "Yes, there are two. One style, that has really passed out of recognition, is still seen in the case of gentlemen of the old school, as we term them. Their method of bowing is a relic of the minuet, and if you have ever seen that beautiful dance, you will re- An Introduction. member it. The gentleman places his right hand upon his heart, and bends over verv low, and, as I say, only gentlemen of the old school or person's who do not know any better and try to ape matters with which they are not familiar, adopt this method. The proper bow of to-day is a far less con spicuous movement. The hands should be kept at the side with the arms straight. People who are conscious of their arms and hands probably will never learn to bow cor rectly, and those who have become self possessed in matters of carriage can usually keep their arms at their sides without their appearing to be stiff or in the way. "With the arms at the sides, the bow of to-day should be made by a slight inclination of the head. There should be just enough of this forward movement to be perceptible and no more, for then there would be danger of a burlesque of the form of recognition." "Is this method of bowing the right one to be used when being presented to a lady either in the ballroom or in a parlor?" "Yes; there is only one form. When you are presented to a ladv, you should make this respectful inclination and make no ad vance whatever unless she gives the cue to fWSm 111 mm .jggreggg H 'A i5iV t 111 ffiW f ' nU it. The custom of shaking hands is not by any means reprehensible, but it is not con sidered the proper thing for a gentleman to offer his hand to a lady unless she makes it evident that she is willing to receive that greeting. Those who are well trained in deportment can meet each other ina formal way and shake hands without anyembar rassiug pause or hitch, so quietly do they see what is the proper thing to do. The ladydoes not bow in the ceremony of intro duction. Her greeting is entirely with the expression of her face unless she "chooses to shake hands. There is no rule to say whether she shall do so or not excepting that at very formal receptions that feature is to be avoided. When there are a great number of persons to be Introduced to, unless the guest is a distinguished person, it is better to avoid the fatigue and annoy ance that results from shaking hands. But in a private introduction there is no reason of etiquette why she should not grant that favor to any gentleman whom she meets tor the first time." WHEN YOU MEET A LADY, r- "Is there no recognized form of greeting a lady upon the street?" "Yes. Your well-trained centleman will " a: w liV A4& il& If J4i1a VWmSm m I MM Street Salutation. always lift his hat. If you were to go out upon a public promenade and watch the people as they pass, you may probably see a hundred different ways by which, the gen tlemen in the throng ereet their lady frieuds. Some men simply bow,(Qome make an off hand salutation with the arm without touching the hat, others put their fingers to the rims of their hats, others tip the hat a little forward over their eyes without really removing it from their heads, aud from this there' are all degrees tojthat absurd practice that prevailed a few years ago of takiue the hat off and rapping the chest with it. That was a silly fad and is happily entirely gone out of style. "The proper form consists in taking the hat by the forward part of the rim and lifting-it entirely clear of the head but not away from it. It may be swung forward verv slightly in order that there may be no stiffness in the salutation, but a good rule to follow would be to carry the hat forward from the head until the back part of the rim is just above the forehead, no further than that. The hat should be immediately re placed and the arm allowed to drop to the side, aud this salutation should be accom panied, as far as possible, by the bow which I spoke of before. One rule which many men who salute very grace "ully do not un derstand or forget is this: you should al ways lift the hat with the hand that is away from the lady. SHOW TOUE FACE. Mi is a recognized law of all deportment, whether in the ballroom, the parlor, the street, or on the stage, that no gesture should be made in such a way as to hide the face behind the arm or hand. Therefore, if the ladv approach you upon your right hand side, you should lift the hat with the left hand. Some men seem to have the idea that it is very bad form to salute with the left hand. As a tact, it is much worse to put up the right and thus conceal your face or partially hide it from the party whom you meet. "There is another matter about this recog nizing of ladies and friends upon the street. "Wnen you are upon a public promenade where you are liable to meet your friends several times in the course of a walk pass ing back and forward, it is not necessary to raise the hat to them more than once. If you tip the hat every time you meet the lady in the same day it becomes an exag- Ifo Place for Sis Sands and Feet. gerated recognition, so that its respectful quality is lost. Raising the hat the first time you meet your friend is like passing the time of day, and after that it is much better simply to bow ulightly or even to smile." "Do you ever have to teach men the proper method of sitting in chairs?" "Yes; that is an important matter and one that displays a man's bad breeding about as quickly as anything. The worst you can do when seated is to cross your legs in an un gainly fashion. A general rule to follow in such a matter as this is to avoid making the legs conspicuous. It is much the best plan, therefore, to sit with your both feet squarely npon the floor and close together. Your hands may be occupied according to circumstances, and if you are listening and merely waiting, they had better be laid upon the lap without being folded." THREAD SPOOLS. Where and now They are Made nnd Polished Shoe Peas by the Bushel. American Analyst. Among the peculiar industries which flourish in western Maine is the making of thread spools. They are cut from smooth, white birch timber a wood which works easily by various kinds of improved machines. There are numerous mills throughout the lumbering region, where the birch is sawed into strips about four feet lng and from one or two inches in width and thickness. These strips then go to the spool factories, to be converted into spools. Ihe processes they are put through are num erous,and one or them, the method of polish ing them, is quite interesting. A barrel is filled nearly lull of them and then revolved by means of machinery and belting until the spools are worn smooth by rubbing one against another. Spool manufacturing is the most important industry in several vil lages of Oxford county, and will doubtless continue so until the supply of white birch timber is exhausted. The "manufacture of shoe pegs is another peculiar Maine indus try, though shared in to some extent by other New England States. These are cut from maple and white birch by machinery, and are worth at the factory from 35 to 95 centsla bushel. Tbe'compressing of sawdnst is also a flourishing business in Bangor in that State. There is a firm there styling itself a "Compress company," who convert sawdust and shavings into solid bales by compression, which find ready sale in the large Eastern cities.. . 8 THE STORT OF IRON. India the First'tountry to v Utilize This Gift of Mure. PEIHITIYE MODE OF SMELTING. Mineral Coal Used in the Manufacture of Iron as Early as 1619. WONDERFDLSTRIDESMADEIIf AMERICA CWBirnw Ton tite dispatch. 1 NDOTJBTEDLY iron is one of the most im portant agents in man's civilization. It is also one of the most widely distributed of metals. It is never found in a pure state save in meteorites, and in its common form of ore it is only separable from its impurities by the application of a high degree of heat so high, indeed, as to be obtainable only by some artificial blast. Save bronze only, it is the oldest of metals' in use, and, being so widely distributed, so universally known, it would probaoly have been first used but for the difficulties incident to its separation from the impurities of the ore. At what time iron was first made.ijwe are unable to discover, though it was certainly first produced in India. From Egyptian monuments we learn that it was in use in Egypt certainly as much as 4,000 years ago. The industry is very ancient in the South and "West of England where the traces of the old Boman period are found in the ashes of their works. The primitive mode of smelting in Asia and India was very crude, consisting simply of a hole dug in a bank, or mass of clay, with a small opening at the bottom for the introduction of a weak blast, which, was made with a goatskin bellows. The hole was partially filled with charcoal and "iron sand" (oxide of iron of 72 per cent purity being required) placed' on top. By this means sufficient heat could he made to re duce the mass the oxygen being consumed and leaving the iron to sink to the bottom of the pit. Of course theiron contained a considerable amount of impurities, yet it was tolerably dear. By renewing the'ehar coal and sand alternately from 5 to 200 Itounds could be made, depending on the eDgth of the blast. A CBUDE FBOCESS. Iron ore could not be nsed successfully in this process because lime to a considerable quantity must be introduced tbat the refuse may be made fusible, though in rich ores but a small amount is required. The iron was removed from the pit while still hot and hammered, and then reheated and ham mered again until most of the cinder was removed and tolerably good iron obtained. This rehammering in later times being usually done by water power, tended to locate the industry where such power was obtainable. This cnide and simple process was prac ticed by barbarous and civilized nations alike down to the eighteenth century, though of course with some improvements in the instruments. In the mountains of Spain as early as 1293. a cylindrical hearth about 11 inches deep was introduced into the bottom of the "furnace," which gave a considerable increase in the productive power making about 140 pounds in five hours. Yet the principle was the same and charcoal the only fuel. To this day very large amounts of iron are made by this prin.itive method in Sweden and the United States, and it is the sole process among thclesscivilizedpeoples.In the United States about 70,000 tons are so produced an nually from the .rich sands of the western shore of Lake Chnmplain, and large quali ties are made in "New Jersey, Pennslvania and Tennessee comprising in 1882 about one-ninth of our production. The charcoal iron being malleable is especially valuable for many purposes,producing most excellent steel. Even among barbarous nations trav elers are frequently, impressed with the excellent quality of their iron and steel. In the "Middle Ages" Damascus steel was famous throughout the world, and the famous Swedish iron is almost entirely made from charcoal. Bnt the process is rapidly dying out from natural causes. It is at tended with enormous consumption of wood and soon exhausts the forests. As much as 300 years ago, in. Elizabeth's time (1574) the English Parliament, alarmed at the de struction of the forests, forbade the estab lishing of new iron works within a certain distance of London and the Biver Thames, and about 100 years later some British crown works in the southwest of England were ciosea up to save tne wood lor naval purposes. Beforp the eighteenth century the English manufactnre seemed to be dying out, and had ceased altogether in many localities. In 1740 the total production reached but 17,000 tons, about the same as the present State of Connecticut. In Wales the present great fields seemed to begetting useless. In 1750 this brought forth an act of Parliament admitting American colonial iron free of duty. The whole feature of the progress of that day was that the industry was pushing ahea'd into the uncivilized wilderness. "Under such a state of affairs the present modern manufacture was clearly impossible. " THE ADVENT OF COAI.. Down to this time coal had been used for domestic purposes, and to some extent by smiths. It had been used probably as early as the ninth century, and certainly not later than the twelfth, though not to any great extent. It was probably thought to be un healthy, for with sucn resources it is hard to account for its limited use on any other supposition. It seems reasonably certain that as early as 1619 one named Dud Dudley smelted iron by the use of mineral coal. He carried on the industry successfully for sev eral years, making iron at a greatly reduced cost and of good quality. He was much persecuted by rival manufacturers, who excited the popular prejudice against him. His milt was much damaged by a flood, and was eventually destroyed by a mob in 1640. Overcome by continuous mis fortune, he eventually succumbed and died a pauper, carrying his secret with him 'to the grave. Though numerous experi ments were tried, the next that gave prom ise of success was that ot Abraham Darby, who first submitted the coal to the process wood undergoes in being converted into charcoal making a sort of coke. In 1757 coke was first 'successfully applied to iron. Then in Cheshire it was discovered that coal could be used. The manufacture at once began to grow, but it still seemedthat peo ple had no idea of the possibilities of the industry. As late as 1755 a district in tne mountains of Wales of the finest coal and iron lands, eight miles long and five miles wide, from which many (Jreat fortunes have since been made, and which is now one of the great seats of the modern manufacture, was leased for 99years for the sum of 200, and neither party at the time realized the good bargain the lessee had made. In the early stages of the manufacture the use of coal communicated many impurities to the iron it was much inferior to char coal iron. But the process of converting pig iron into bar iron was soon discovered. In this operation the iron is brought in con tact with the flame only. The effect of these discoveries was wonderful. Prom 17,000 tons in 1740 the'production rase in 1788 to 60,000 tons. In 179G it was 125,000; in 1806 is was 250,000, and in 1882 it was 8,400,000 toni, an inconceivable amount, and a five hundred fold increase in less than a century and a half. WATT'S rMPEOVEMENTS. Ofcourse this'shows the effects of more than the improvement mentioned; but these and the application of steam power to the industry lie at the root. Watt made im provements that increased the blast by steam power which of course Increased the smelting powers of a furnace. His improve ments were felt about the period 1788-1790. Up to this time the increase in the manu facture had been large. But from this time on, to draw a comparison, the increase was in a geometrical as distinguished from an arithmetical ratio. It had long been noticed that better iron was made in winter than in summer, from which fact it was reasoned that an arti ficially cold blast was the best. But a shrewd Scotchman named Neilson thought differently. He reasoned that a hot blast would save immensely4n the fuel required. But it was only after the most discouraging efforts that he found one willing to change his furnace to try an experiment so contrary to accepted belief. Neilson eventually took out a patent in 1828. The success was great, the result being the immediate saving of from one-third to one-half the fuel re quired in smelting. The improvementgave Scottish iron an immense impetus, but it was soon adopted in England and the United States. Down to the middle of the eighteenth century cast iron was unused; but with the introduction of mineral coal it became a great feature in the manufacture. Its pro duction naturally involved the making and handling of great castings, which in turn reacted on the manufacture and stimulated inventions for handling great masses of iron, steam power being the great agent. The history of the industry in the United States is equally wonderful. In 1838 the first furnace was built in Eastern Pennsyl vania. It was 21 feet high and made two tons of iron per day. The furnaces now are from 60 to 70 leet high, and 'produce from 120 to 140 tons per day. The magnitude of the growth is best shown by a few figures: United States. Production. Tons. 1823 130.000 1RJ8 303,000 I860 800.000 1870 1.200,000 1882 4,200,000 Imports. Tons. 47.210 83,900 GOO.000 In 1882 the United States consumed in the manutacture: 7,200,000 tons of coal and coke. 3,200,000 tons of lime. 8,600,000 bushels of charcoal. Yef, this is but one-fifth of the world's pro duction. In 1882 the world's production was 20,000,600 tons, of which Great Britain produced 8,400,000 tons, and the United States 4.200,000. THE AGE OF SOFT STEEL. Malleability in iron is of great use in many ways, and this gave charcoal iron peculiar value; "puddling" iron is a process to make it malleable without its being taken directly from the ore. In 1882 out of 4,200,000 tons produced in the United States 2,500,000 were puddled. But pud dling is rapidly declining since the intro duction and use of solt steel. Steel was very anciently made in India. It was first introduced into Europe in the thirteenth century, but being very costly its use was limited to special purposes. The immense developments in the steel industry are the history of to-day. By the Bessemer process, with a simple blast, from 5 to 10 ton of steel are con verted in from 10 to 15 minutes, without use of fuel and at a very little additional cost over iron. The magnitude of this change is seen from the fact that in 1887 the total product of steel was 2.400,000 tons, while in 1882 it was 6.200,000 tons. In 1872 only 4 per cent of our iron was made into steel, while in 1882 33J per cent was converted. The finest steel, however, such as goes into razors, needles, surgical instruments, etc., is still made by the old crucible process. The fact that the richest ores are found in the oldest deposits, geologically speaking, while coal is of the later "carboniferous" age, has tended to locate the modern iron manufacture away from the ore fields. It has always been more advantageous to trans port the ore to the fuel than vice versa a great natural advantage to England and Pennsylvania. But the course ot modern improvement has tended constantly to re duce the amount of fuel required and is rapidly reducing their advantage. Georgia and Alabama are the most favored districts in the world the coal and ore lying side by side. When we realize that transportation enters into the cost of production in Penn sylvania to the extent of $5 every ton, we see the extent of this advantage and the possibilities of the future changes. From the enormous consumption the English ores are rapidly giving out. Large amounts of ore are already imported into England from Spain, Germany, Sweden and Algeria, and large amounts ot English cap ital have been invested already in opening up these ore fields by railroads. The great revolution seen in the iron in dustry differs from the changes seen in the cotton and woolen industries, in that it shows itself more in thequantity and cheap ness of the iron production made possible ratner tnan any great or material cbange in qualities, and the world-wide distribution of the manufacture. The production of iron is now practically unlimited in amount and in its area of pro duction. The manufacture is no longer confined to wooded wilds, but is world-wide. Any monopoly of the iron manufacture has become impossible. It is true that some particular countries have advantages in the essential elements of manufacture, but they are slight. Every great nation has sufficient production for necessary uses and defenses, and at but a slight increase in cost. It is an industry in which the world has shared, and in which other countries have as bright prospects as England has ever had. John Dean Beown. RELIGIOUS SDMMART. THE Queen of Madagascar has presented Mrs. Mary Clement Leavitt with a gift of $100 as an expression of ber interest in the total abstinence wort. The receipts ot the Congregational Union the last year were 134,725, an increase of $7,800 over last year. Forty-one parsonages and 104 churches were aided in the last 12 months. Thetce are 40 prosperous Congregational Churches In Southern California and half as many more preaching stations soon to become churches. There are on the field already as many ministers as the charges demand. The will of the late Joseph B. Hoyt, of Stamford, Conn., bequeaths 55O.0OO to the American Home Missionary Society, one-half to be used in the enrrent work ot the society and the other half as an endowment fund. A like sum is given to the American Baptist Mis sionary Society to be used under similar condi tions. Three thousand out of the four thousand people on the Island of Mase, of the Loyalty group, in the South Pacific,aro now Christians, and they are well clothed and comfortably boused, and are remarkable for their industry and thrift. By this industry they are not only able to support all their churches, schools, and other institutions, but also to send a goodly sum to the Society in London. Spirit of Mis sions. The Congregational Union of "Victoria has Inaugurated a jubilee fund of $500,000. Ono layman of the church, Mr. G. W. Taylor, proposed to contribute $150,000, at the rate of $50,000 per annum for three years, if the Congregationalism of the colonies would raisa a similar sum; or he would make it $10,000 a year for five years it they would raise another $50,000. The latter chal lenge has been accepted with great enthusl- Lasm. The money is to be largely used in lnund- mcatneoiogicai seminary. jyasnetue vnrist fan Advocate. In the last full fiscal year the total amount given to foreign missions through the Church of England societies was $2,300,000, In round numbers; tbronch Nonconformist societies in England and "Wales, $1,800,000: throngh Joint societies of Nonconformists and Episcopalians, $000.UO0; throngh Scotch and Irish Presbyte rian societies, $1,000,000: throngh Roman Cath olic societies, JoO.OU). The Presbyterians and the Nonconformists, as a 'whole, are making long leaps toward the front in the work of evangelizing the world. The Interior. Give the people the facts and get them to praying over missions and we will win j great victory thl year. Prayer under a haystack at Williams College started fureicn missions in America. A great wave of prayer has lifted the cause'in every crisis into new triumph. For weeks this "burden" has been on my heart to beseech the church to pray for missions as never before. We must have revival in zeal for the salvation of the world. Prayer Is the power tbat will secure it. "To your tent, O Israel!" Rev. J. O. Peck, D. D., in New Totk Christian Advocate. "Wab or no war I Dr. Bull's Conch Sttud must be included i every army's supplies, j LOTE AND MADNESS:- A Strange Story of a Pieclnse Whose life Was Made Miserable BT FATE'S LNSCRDTABLE DECBEE. Why a German of Aristocratic Birth Left Fortune and Friends TO WORE FOR A L1T1XG U PITTSBURG iwiima TOR TUB DISPATCn.l K" AGED German, living alone in a small three-roomed house on a quiet street in one of the outlying, thinly populated districts of Pittsburg, is a man with an un usually strange and interesting his tory. He is quiet " and unassuming. with a kindly face and dark, intelligent eyes. His countenance bears the unmis takable traces of past suffering and present sorrow patiently borne. He must have been a fine-looking man when young, and even now there is something strikingly handsome in his wrinkled face. In his habits he is almost a perfect recluse, and though hundreds of people know his name and have a 'speaking acquaintance with him, probably there are not five persons in the whole city who ever talked to him on other than business topics or even heard from his lips any words except those of ordinary civility. His manners are those of a perfect gentleman, yet so reserved that it is perfectly plain to all that he neither invites confidence nor desires to be on terms of intimacy with any persons with whom he may come in donticL This remarkable man earns enough to supply his wants, which are few and sim ple, by working at his trade of carpet weav ing. On a small set of shelves in the same room that contains" his loom is a small number of dingy-looking and well-worn volumes. If the curious visitor should take the trouble to examine their titles he would, find among them Latin and Greek lexicons, the works of Horace, "Virgil, Juvenal, Homer, iEschylus, Plato aud other classic writers, as well as a few-volumes devoted to metaphysics, and works dealing with some of the most abstruse questions ever dis cussed by those deeply learned in the nat ural sciences. ' But the bookcase is always kept locked and no one save the owner is ever permitted to finger the precious.volumes. Astonished to see such a library in the possession of a poor carpet weaver, a visitor one day asked the old gentleman, who for the purpose of this narrative we will call Mr. Weber: "Do you ever read these books?" "Sometimes," was the laconic reply. And there the conversation ended. The man who had broached the subject waited for Mr. "Weber to say something further; but the latter, who had volunteered as much information as he cared to, began bang ing away at his loom as if he feared more questioning. The old man was certainly averse to gratifying idle curiosity, and excepting on oneoccasiqn, was never known to converse with anyof his neighbors or acquaintances on. personal matters. And it is doubtful whether. "Weber would have spoken as he did in this particular instance had he not been Jirnmpted by feelings of gratitude and riendship toward one whom He regarded as the saver of his life. It came about in this way: The woman who lives in the cottage nearest "Weber's had .missed the familiar figure of .the old weaver, with his back tbwarid the window, . from his accustomed seat at the loom for three days.". Fearing that some ill had be- -fallen him she-sent her son, a manly young fellow of 20, over to see if .their neighbor, was ill. Jacob, tbe young man, knocked at "Weber's door, but hearing no response, pushed it open it was not locked and entered. There was no one in the weaving room, but the half opened door of the little apartment back of it attracted Jacob's at tention, and thither he went, He found the old man on his bed, alive, but half famished and suffering terribly from rheumatic pains. Jake got food, summoned a doctor and ministered faithfully to Weber's wants until the patient had fully recovered. The old man became warmly attached to his kind-hearted nurse and one day told him the story of his life in about the following' words: "I have been in this -country now over 40 years and have never told my history to but one person. That person was the man who befriended me when I came here almost penniless and utterly heart-broken. I have a great liking for vou, as well as feelings of the strongest gratitude. It is but fair that you should know my story. "To begin with, my name is not Weber at all. What it is matters not at present, but you shall know some day. It is written in each of the volumes on yonder shelves, which contain the only worldly possessions that 1 value. When I die tbe books shall be yours, for I could not bear the thought of them falling into careless hands. It will suffice to say that I have a right to a 'von before my name and that there is an ancient and honorable title in the family. I re ceived a university education and was betrothed when a young man to a beautiful and accomplished lady belonging to i N family of equal rank with my own. I loved her with a love that amounted to adoration, and my affection was fully reciprocated. My parents and friends tried to prevent a marriage, fearful of the result. They knew and I knew that there was hereditary in sanity in the lady's family. Bnt nothing could deter me from following my heart's inclinations. "The wedding day was fixed, and on tha evening preceding the morning which was to smile upon our happiness I was alone with my betrothed. Some trivial subject came up for discussion, and I made a joking remark which threw the lady into such terrible anger as I never saw any person exhibit either before or since. I apologized, reasoned, expostulated, all to no avail. Suddenly my bride that was to be drew a long knife, which she must have had secreted about her person, and attacked me. You can still see the scar left upon my shoulder. I cried out; the family and tha servants came rushing in, and the frightful truth soon became evident to all; mv love was a raving maniacl "I rushed from the house, almost dis tracted, never to enter it or look again upon the face of the beautiful being I had fondly nopeu to mase my wile. 1 waited only to learn the verdict of the learned physicians who had been called, and when I heard it, "incurable" I made hasty preparations for leaving the familiar scenes which had now become hateful to me. Taking a few of my" most valued books I had always been a great student I packed them with some clothing in a small trunk, and secretly left home forever! I suppose I was half mad myself. Not till I reached these shores did I bethink myself of the sorrow and anxiety my aged parents might have on my account. Then I wrote to them, but gave no address, and stated that I should never return. I heard from home, however, throngh my benefactor's corre spondence, and learned that my father and mother had died within a few months after my departure. The lady I loved" Here tbe voice of the speaker faltered, and sinking to a whisper pronounced tha words with a difficult effort. "She perished iu a madhouse years ago. In trying to earn my own living by mv own labor a task I had never attempt ed" before far from all I once held dear, I have vainly sought the forgetfulness which I shall never find this side the grave. This is all my story." Babx. i I ESKE