SECOND PART. THE PEKING GAZETTE The Oldest Newspaper in the World and its Imperial Editors. MURDERERS SLICED TO DEATH. 1 Look at the Last Great Examination, and its 17,000 Students. ECHOLAKSMP A PASSPORT TO OFFICE rCOEBESrOSDEKCI OT TBI DISPATCH. 1 PEKING, CHI NA, December, 1SSS. One of the oldest things in this old capital of China is its news paper. The Peking Gazette has been published almost daily for 800 years. It is the oldest news paper in the world. It was read by the Chinese centuries before America was dis covered. Its first copies were struck off hundreds of years before Gutenberg gave printing to Europe, and it was in existence 600 years before'the Frankford Gazette, the first daily newspaper of our civilization, be gan its publication in 1610. Age has, how ever, produced no more change upon it than upon the Chinese people, and its contents are much the same to-day as thev were when it was founded in the darkness of the mid dle aces. Its method of printing is the same and it is still set up Iroru movable type of Fae Simile of a Page of the Peking Gazette. wood and struck off in dark, low rooms by the long finger-nailed hands of these almond-eyed celestials. Still it is the most aristocratic paper in the world, and the Chi nese Emperors of the past have been its edi tors. It is the ofneial organ of the Chinese Government aud it is simply a record of of ficial acts and report'. It is a crime to add to or subtract from it in its republication. The Chines Government allows no com ments upon its nets, and this is the only organ by which these millions of people, making np more than one-fourth of the whole world, can know what their rnler is doing. AK IMPERIAL EDITOR. The Peking Gazette is edited within the holyot holies of China in the forbidden city -where the Emperor lives. The reports from all parts of China and its provinces come in daily to the imperial editorial desk, and with a red pencil His Majesty marks the characters which indicate whether they are to go into the waste basket or are to be pasted on the bill-boards of the palace, from whence the scribes take them down for the use of the newspaper. Tne first copies are written, and these beautifully engrossed command, Colonel Denby tells me, a price of 5100 a year. Private printing firms buy these copies and republish them. They are set np in Peking and all over China, and are sold in many cases almost as cheaply as are our American newspapers. Soneeditions go for 30 cents a month, and there are Chinese clubs, who subscribe together and take their turn at reading the various issues of the Gazette. John Chinaman does not move by electricity, and the Peking Gazette B. months old seems to suit him quite as well as that of yesterday. A copy of this great journal lies before me. It Is bound in imperial yellow, but it looks more like a cheap patent medicine advertisement in the shape of a long, flabby account book than a "great metropolitan newspaper. You could make 500 Peking Gazettes of one of the Sunday editions of this paper. It is not as large as an official envelope, though its shape is mnch the same. Three inches, wide and six inches long, it contains about 16 pages of Chinese characters. There are about feven lines of Peking Beggar. words on each page, and these run up and down the paper Irom top to bottom, instead of from lelt to right across the page as with vs. The paper is of a tinted white, and be tween the lines are stripes of red. The whole is bound with two paper strings within a paper cover of cheap yellow, and the beginning of its reading matter is at the back of the book instead ot at the front. It contains no advertisements, no editorials and nu social gossip. IGXOBES SrOETING SEWS. The latest Manchu archery match and (porting news is not reported in it, and you will not find the prices' of camel's or doe's ineat, nor other market reports within its columns. It is not cried, upon the streets, end there are no newsboys in Peking. What its circulation is it is impossible to say, on account of its being reprinted by sa many firms. It is well known, however, that all China reads it, for curriers carry copies of it to the various provinces, and it is discussed and read by the educated people of the cities. The Peking Gazette is translated into English, and the Chinese Times, ot Tientsin, and the Korlh China Herald, of Shanghai, devote a part of their space to it daily. From these translations one gets the inside and .most authentic ideas of China, and by read ing between the lines one sees that the Chinese people are the same now as they hare been in the centuries of the past. The I t- i i " GtKfaHm " 1 m 1 J if a ' a, g fr U f 3 & a 4. i ! ' 1 1 : , liuJlL doings of the Emperor are all reported and and his god-like character appears on every page. In the Peking Gazette of December 19, 1 see it stated that the Emperor will go at 6:30 a. m. of the morrow to inspect the prayer which is to be recited at the sacrifice to heaven, and that after the burning of the sacrifice he will proceed to the hall of fast ing. From a copy of last year I see it an-, nounced that he will go in person, on the 2d of January, to a temple and pray for snow, the want of Petty Thieves in Cangue. which is being seriously frit, and that simi lar prayers will be offered at the same time at other state temples by nobles, princes and other members of the imperial nobility. An extract of a lew days later shows that thee prayers were not in vain, for the Gazette slates "that the Emperor ha sent out a de cree expressing his profound eratilnde for the grateful snow which has fallen to the depth of five inches alter his prayers." The same paper states that he proposes to eo that day to offer sacrifices to the god of lit erature, and that he will, a few days later, offer sacrifices to the god of war. From the issue of the 31st of last January I tee that he then conducted the spring sacrifices, and on the 15th of last April a decree is pub lished stating that the Emperor will go out at 4:45 a. at to visit the Temple of Agri culture and to go through tne ceremony ot plowing. Such extracts are published daily in the Peking Gazette. They show how the Emperor of China is the god, saint and, King of his people. SOCIETY MESTIOJT. Other extracts give some idea of his pal ace life, and some show that though infalli ble he is not immortal. Here is one stating that 20 roots ot "gingseng, which is the cure all o! China, were sent to the Emperor from the Governor ot Kirin. It gives their weight at nine and one-half ounces and their value at about $2,600. This is considerable over 200 an ounce. Gingseng is worth in America, I am told, about 60 cents a pound, but in China it brings more than its weight in gold. The full story of the Emperor's coming marriage may be read in this Gazette, and the condition of his wardrobe mav be told by velvets and other things which are forwarded to the palace. It gives the full record of nil the receipts of the Gov ernment, and I see that offices are sometimes sold, and that five literary degrees lately went for about 54,000. The charities ot the Empire are also re ported, and the Celestial heart grows as tender sometimes as does that of the Chris tian. On the 2d of May, 18S7, 1 see that Li Huog Chang has given 13,000,000 pounds of nee and more than 5100,000 to the sufferers of a famine in his Province, and that on the 14th of June $15,000 were col lected for the poor in the Canton Province, and that a literary graduate there has lately donated 2,200 teals to found a charitable school. y . The crime notes of this official paper are numerous and the horrors of purgatory may A Students Celt. be read in the lines fixing the punishment The sentences where the criminals are to be sliced to death are many. Strangling is common and decapitation is an easy method of taking off. The bastinado and flogging are found in nearly every issue, and I see that corrupt officials are often degraded from their ranks. In a country where ancestral worship prevails, the most terrible crime is the killing of parents, and parri cides are, in China, invariably sliced. The punishment of slicing to death means the cutting off of one member at a time. Finger by finger, ear by ear, toe by toe, and the legs by inches until the criminal at last dies under the torture. Here is a decree of such a punishment, which shows that the in sanity dodge does not prevail in China, and that the insane murderer gets the same deserts as .the sane one. The decree was published on the 16th ot last July, and the crime occurred in the Province where I write this letter. I copy the decree ver batim. The article is headed: A PABRICIDE BY A MANIAC. It reads: "Li Hung Chang reports having passed sentence upon a man who killed nis father during a fit of temporary derange ment. Whang Tsaitou had always been Eubjeot to fits of temporary insanity, which rendered him unconscious of what he was doing as long as they lasted. As he was not dangerous his father had not reported his case to the authoritiesas he did not want him placed in confinement. One morning last March he went into a baker's shop and began to dance about wildly in one of his fits of insanity. His father came in and ordered him home, whereupon he picked up a cleaver and struck the old man upon the head and neck, killing him. At the in quest he was not able to talk and jabbered away in a kind of gibberish. The law says that the son who, sane or insane, kills his father, shaH suffer death by the slicing pro cess, and this is the sentence that has been Eassed in the present instance. The neigh ors who had not reported the man's insanity to the officers, and who have therefore ren dered themselves liable to the same penalty. as for not preventing the commission ot a mnrder, have been fined and given 100 blows each." On the 27th of last September I see that a murderer wno killed a rival through jeal ousy was sentenced to be strangled and that tbe'woman in the case was flogged with 100 Uows lor loose living. It is almost impossible to conceive that such cruelties exist in this latter part of the nineteenth century, but they do exist here in full force, and the board of punishments of Peking, passes upon such sentences daily. Even the most ordinary punishments of China are horrible to us, and the torture ot the cangue can hardly be appreciated. Dur ing this cold December day I saw sitting on one of the narrow streets near the Tartar wall, a Chinaman with a board four feet square so fastened about his necK that he hud just room to turn his head through the hole in the center. His hands were tied and his bare feet were bound by a chain. His cue was unkempt and black bristles two inches long iad grown up all over his un shaved head. Beside him stood another man with a similar board about his neck, 8 Ixlxi and the two were chained together. Upon these boards were pasted bills containing Chinese characters showing that they had been guilty of some petty offense and" were doomed to wear these boards for weeks. The boards were so fixed that they could not feed themselves and they shivered and howled as the cold winds from the Mongol ian mountains came through their ragged clothes. I snapped my camera upon them and took their photographs, but I cannot photograph the heart-sickening sight in pen and ink. SEVERE EXAMINATIONS. The great examination hall -at Peking covers, I judge, at least 20 acres, and 17,000 students were examined in it a few weeks ago. The number passed was, I think, about 200, and there were 40 deaths during the three days test. The students were all examined as to their clothes and persons, to see whether they had any notes concealed upon them, and such as were found guilty were prohibited from luture examinations, and were punished by the cangue in the same way as for stealing. Their fathers and tutors were also punished. I visited these halls to-day. They are not what would be called halls in America, and they look more like a stockyard than anything else. Take a level 20-acre field and build within it long rows of narrow pen-like cells. Your ma terial is of brick and the walls between the cells are thick. The roots are of heavy tile and the cells have no windows and are open at the front. They are not as high as yonr head and they aro not more than five feet deep nor more than four feet wide. In the walls at distances of two or three feet from the floor are ledges, in the tops of which boards are put to form seat and table, and the whole is so arranged that when the scholar is in he cannot get out. He is fur nished here with pen, ink and paper( and here he sits for three days and three nights and writes his essay aud answers certain questions. The examination is on the Confucian philosophy, on the repetition of passages trom the Chinese classics and on agriculture, war, coetry and finance. Only lately math ematics and some of our sciences have been added to this, and it is a curious iact that at the recent examination the highest grade in mathematics was taken by a youth from the far west provinces ot China. The boy had studied his way through mathematical science by books aloue,and he distanced the men of the colleges. It is impossible to appreciate the severity of these examinations. The misplacing of a character, a blot upon the manuscript or the slightest mistake will impair a whole paper and render the examination void. A student at the last test who bad done very well up until the last dav, then became very tired aud fell asleep. Hfis candle was over turned and his papers burnt up. He was so disappointed by the accident that he killed himself before the examinations were over, and, as Is the custom of caring for dead students at such times, his body was dragged out through a hole in the walls and handed over to his friends for burial. Frank G. Caepesteb. NOVELTIES IN GLASS GOODS. An Interesting Exhibit of Curious and Useful Article ot Tnule wnrc. For several weeks a large number of drummers, representing various glass houses in "Western Pennsylvania, Ohio and "West Virginia, have been quartered at the Monongahela house. They come regularly twice a year, to exhibit their samples and to meet customers from all parts of the country. Agents of jobbing houses as far west as San Francisco and as far east as Halifax come to Pittsburg to inspect sam ples and lay in a six months' stock. The drummers are naturally a jolly set and they have especial reasons to be good humored at this time, for trade, they say, has been brisk. One agent showed his order book to a Dispatch representative, and reeled off long lists of figures in which such items as 100 barrels of eoblets, 25 barrels of tum blers,40 barrels,No. ," etc, were of frequent occurrence. The goods,as arranged in the various sam ple rooms, aflord a curious and interesting sight Seeing so great a number of pieces together, no two ot them alike, gives an ex cellent idea of the numerous and widely different styles of glass goods manufactured in this vicinity. "The factories are all striving continually for something new and original. Styles change in tableware as much as in other goods. Occasionally some pattern catches the txipular taste and there is a steady sale for that line of goods for years, but as a general thing the demand is for something novel and unique. There are also goods made especially for certain sections of the country. Here is a line of goods, for ex ample, running from goblets down through wine glasses, champagne glasses, claret and cordial glasses, all similar in style. There is little caH for the glasses for cordials out side New Orleans and other sections of the South. Here also is a paper weight a fat pig on a pedestal white, blue, red, or any color preferred. These are made for the port towns, Chicago, Cincinnati and Kan sas City,and are bought by the pork dealers as presents for their Customers. Another agent showed various styles of flint glass goods,among them some decorated with various ornamental colors. Nothing like it, he said, could be imported. A Tar entum firm made an exhibit which con tained many decided novelties. Conspicu ous among these were glass plates and truit dishes so closely resembling china that only an expert could distinguish the difference. These goods were translucent and orna mented with various designs, hand painted, which cave them a rich and beantiful ap pearance. This is called the "opal" ware, and its manufacture in this country is of very recent date. IT HELPS SALOON TRADE. Prohibition Acltatlon Beneficial to tho In terests of Barkeepers. "Whether that prohibition amendment is adopted or not," remarked a Fifth avenue saloonkeeper, "the discussion of the ques tion is benefiting our trade at present." "Bow so?" inquired the reporter. "Makes men drink more. You may laugh, but I can assure you I am not joking. My, business is improving daily. The man who just went out took two drinks he never took but one at a time before this amend ment came up for discussion and jokingly said: " 'Liquor is going to be scarce after next Jure, so I'm going to have all I want while I can get it' "If I hear that remark once a day on an average I hear it a dozen times. Men who drink seldom need bat a small excuse to ir duce them to drink more, aud though they say such things half in jest, a good many are unconsciously influenced by this sort of reasoning to indulge more in" stimulants. It's queer, as you say, but it's a fact never theless." ELECTRIC EFFECTS ON WATCHES. People Afraid tho Allegheny Road May Ruin Their Watches. "Will a watch be damaged if its owner wears it on an electric railroad car?" was a question asked of a Pittsburg jeweler. "Not if it is a good watch," was the re ply. "A good many people have asked me the same question. Indeed, several who travel regularly on the electric road in Allegheny seem to have assumed that their timepieces were in danger of being ruined. There's nothing in it, so far as I have been able to discover. Theconductors themselves don't complain of it, and one of them, who bought his watch from me, assured me the other day that it was keeping the best of time. It might not be quite safe to carry an ordinary watch into the electric power-house, but as far its being affected on the cars, that, I think, is nonsense." PITTSBURG PITTSBURG, SUNDAY, NTE GETS BAD NEWS. The Marriage of the Marlboroughs Humorously Reviewed, THE DUTIES OP TITLED FOLK. Something About Swapping a Broken Heart for a Coronet. SAD THOUGHTS AND A SADDER POEM rwntmur roa im pispatch.i AM pained to re ceive later intelli gence from dear o.l d Blenheim which leaves me no chance to doubt that a cloud about the site of a joint school district has obscured the honey moon of the Duch ess of Marlborough and the eminent but nawsty Duke. It is only a little while since they were married in the midst of all the pride'and grandeur of Mayor Hewitt's office, surrounded by the Mayor himself, and supported by the janitor of the build ing, messenger boys in full panoply, heads of departments, letter heads, corned heads and bill heads. As the happy couple left their horse car, driven by an eminent savant in a rubber overcoat, and moved proudly across City Hall Park, they were preceded by a beautiful woman 63 years of age, and wearing a black and tan breakfast shawl, who scattered flowers to thmasses at 5 cents a bunch. It was a solemn and impressive sight. Men standing on the steps of the Court House near by, waiting to be sum moned as jurors for the ensuing term, mean time trying to forget what information they had ever acquired, so that their minds would be thoroughly fitted for the arduous duties of jurors, looked np in a vacant way. TO KECEIVE THE DUKE. Mayor Hewitt looked out the window and saw them coming. Hastily upending his cuffs and ruffling his hair, so as to have a distinguished and disheveled appearance, he instructed the official organ of the city to play the wedding march. There was a low gurgling knock on the door, and when Mayor Hewitt opened it, there stood the Duke. Motioning the Mayor out into the hall, Marlborough took him around behind the woodbox, where thev could be entirely alone. Then he whispered to Mayor Hewitt, "Abe, are you busy?" "Vell, not so all-fired busy. "What is it Duke?" "I wanted to get married if you've got time to attend to it How soon could you wait on us?" "Oh, I can do it now, I guess. I -was writing a piece for the paper, but I can put that off. Come in and take off your things till I have time to compare a little im promptu thought or two, and send out for a package of cardimon seeds. I hate to kiss a Duchess, as a general thing, unless my breath is as sweet as a violet" By this time the wedding party had en tered, and now stood abont the office, read ing the acts of the Legislature, or vainly seeking to look through the opalescent win dows. "Is Duke all the front name you've got?" asked the Mayor, as he began to write in a red account book and regard him closely with a keen, searching glance. Mulborough said it was not, and went on to state at some length what his full name was. I will not try to give it here, because this is simply a short, hasty article for the paper. It is not a city directory. "Well, then, it you are ready," said the Mayor, briskly wiping his pen with the tail of his linen coat, "you can stand up over there by the register and take hold of hands." ' DON'T PUT ON THILLS. "Which side do you want me on?" says the Duke, trying to look cool. "Oh, either side. It don't make any odds to me," says the Mayor, "I don't know what the practice is among a passle of Dukes, but as regards the statutes it don't make any difference. Here in America we don't care much for frills. We care little here for what the world calls pomp. We scorn the little forms and tunny-business of a false and swelled upbut tottering dynasty. If you're ready now say when, and I'll show you a style of splice that I can recom mend." Then, as tbe Duke pulled his stop watch and gave the word, tne Mayor ate another cardimon seed and, reading a selection from the Hail and Express instead of opening the exercises by means of a kit of burglar's tools, proceeded to draw out the Duke as to his intentions for the future, and to quiz him a little as to whether he would love and cherish, support, maintain, foster and en courage his wile, provided, he had one, and whether he would be willing to divide her private fortune with her in case she needed money. Getting the Duke's views on this subject, he chatted with the bride in an off hand way, meantime transacting other busi- Coming to the JTiss. ness, ever and anon, as people came in from time to time to see him abont opening up a new street or getting out a license lor ex hibiting a tame bear in a quiet little town. AS TO DUCAL DUTIES. All being satisfactorily answered, the Mayor said: "I now des'ire briefly to pro nounce you man and wife, and what I have joined together as Mayor of New York it will bother a plain citizen to put asunder. I cannot refrain at this time from making a few remarks which I have thought up while standing here. It is these: The duties of a Dnke and those of a Duchess are almost en tirely different, as I understand it. As Duke it will be your duty to receive and account for all such moneys as nfay come into your hands, paying them out only on an order from the worthy Chief. You will be re quired to do the chores or see that they are done by others, see that sufficient coal is laid in during the month of August, while it is cheap, to keep the castle hot till spring; also to keep the taxes on your Dukedom paid up and not allow the same to become delin quent. You will eject the cat'at 9:30 each night, lock the front door carefully and wind the clock. It will also be your duty to love your wife all the time, no matter what the customs of eminent people may be. a c -u FEBRUARY 17, 1889. ' Do not think because you are a Duke that yon can comeover here and corral a trusting American girl, lead her away to your large stone smokehouse, put up a light board fenoe around your premises, and neglect her. If yon do that, I will correspond with you and thus make your life a perfect hell. Try to live down the disagreeable reports I hear about vou,-Marlborough.- Come home to your meals. Allow vour wife to see all yonr mail. Bead the 'marriages and deaths to her from the morning papers. Ask her advice In matters of business, and then do as you like. That's the way I do. It pleases your wife arid does not hurt your business. Be a good husband, even if you have to neglect your duties as a Duke, and good luck to you. ' ADVICE TO THE DUCHESS. "To you, Duchess, I need sav but little. You can reason to a man and possibly im prove him in that way, but a woman's great success or failure rests in her own heart That's whyl need not talk to you at length. For awhile it may seem odd when you will eet np from day to day and find yourself a Duchess, but you will eet used to it at last just as a man "gets used to a wooden leg un til at last it seems entirely natural to hint. And now, Duchess, adieu and God bless you. So long, or Don jour, as we say in dear old Prance." "And now," said the Duke as he picked up his umbrella and felt apprehensively in his vest, "Mr.'Hewltt, how much are you out on this?" "Oh, any time will do for that," said the Mayor, "and if you don't pay it at all, that will be all right, I guess." "Well, then, if you don't want to take anything for it, I am much obliged any how, and if I can do you a favor any time, just press the button and you'll get waited on." It .was not long till the eminent but im moral Dhke returned to his estates. Nobody welcomed him. He got off at the station and had to carry his valise and hatbox up to the castle. There all was hushed, and the Duke had to crawl in at the iront window and unfasten the door before he could let the Duchess in. A proud Duke hates to do that. It makes him hot. People go by and see him tearing his small clothes on a nail as he hangs by means of his stomach on the ledge of the window. It unmans him and makes him sayt things which would sound better in the'affidavit room of a newspaper. And so the whole matter has been inau spicious from the start The Duchess found the basement of the castle alive with rats. The seed corn in tbe spare room had been almost entirely carried off and a can of strawberries which had been placed too near the furnace had "worked" and blown its brains out all over a roll of stair carpet, the potatoes in the donjon tower had mostly all sprouted and a lackey had to run a'lawn mower oyer them before thev could be cooked. Ants were in tbe sugar barrel. Moths in the clothes presses and Satan in the servants. All the help bad been eating in the ducal dining room as the casual observer could at once discover. Not only that, but the thinking mind immedi ately jumped to the conclusion that the ser vant who had done the carving was an ama teur and that the gravy did not match the wall paper. THE FLAG- INSULTED. That is no way for an American Duchess to be welcomed in her own house. It is an indignity to our flag. When one buys a ducal coronet she does not wish to be welted over the head with it. She does not care to be greeted with coldness in her own castle or fail to find the key to the front door under the door mat according to agreement, or to find the drawbridge tied up and have to. wane across the moat. That is not all. Marlborough has kept company with others who are distasteful to his wife, those with whom his name has been formerly associated in a disagreeable way in the days when he was trying to com bine the correspondent and Duke industries together. It is all sad. It is pitiful to see a social wreck at his best, but it is doubly sad to see him mar one of our wealthiest and most de sirable American girls, and, having taken her home, proceed to desolate her life by a course of blooded cussedness which would nuke talk and call forth adverse criticism in Satan's addition to Texas. And so I cannot close this letter in a more appropriate way, it seems to me, than to dash off a little poem which I have thought up myself and which is supposed to be the wail of a soul or the moan of a Duchess. It breathes a spirit of extreme sadness and melancholy which I think will touch each heart, even though expressed in faulty orthography, syntax and prosody, as I am only just beginning to write verse, and my muse, as one may say, has not as yotgot her sea limbs on. . THE WAIL OF A SHA1TEEED HEAET. Canto Pint. Ob, I've came far o'er the sea, But you've went away rrom me, And 1 wildly, wildly smart Though Iknow 1 hadn't ort, As I think that I have went so far away. Canto Second, Bnt oh t can't be gay When I have went away From all my friendsand kindred oh so dear. For I see I made a fluke When I wed a nawsty Dnke And that is why I make the statement here. SHREWD AGENTS' POLICT. Why Life Tmnmnce Men are Interested In Wedding: Announcements. "It seems to me," remarked a young Fittsbnrger, "that the life insurance agents watch the columns of the daily papers for wedding notices, and as soon as they read of the marriage of a businessman at once go in search of him. Within the last few months three fellows in our office got mar ried,and in each case theannouncementof the wedding was followed by the daily appear ance of a tribe of life insurance men, each apparently very solicitous abont the wel fare and future prospects of the bride groom." "Did the agents succeed in inducing tho young man to take out policies?" 'They captured two of them and the other one escaped by lying. Said he had all the insurance he could carry, and so got rid of them. Talk about persistence! Why, the most indefatigable hook agent could get pointers from a life insurance man. And the queerest thing about them all is the firm belief of each agent that his own com pany is the very best in creation. He not only believes ttiis absolutely, but he is able to prove it if yon will listen. Once they get alter a man they never let up in their e Do its it he gives the least sign ot encour agment Professional men seem to be pre ferred; they are what are called 'good risks,' and the agents have most success among them." ' " ' Bringing Some the Plunder. DISPATCH THE CENTER OF LIFE. Dr, Hammond on the Functions and Derangements of the Heart,. THIS GENERATION'S RAPID PULSE Ascribed to the Increased Mental Activity of the Age. THE DANGER OP TI0LE5T EMOTIONS rwarrnar iron thx dispatch.1 HE heart may be de scribed as a hollow mnscle, the function of which is to pump properly aerated blood to every part of the body. In order that this, action may be performed the blood which has served its purposes in the economy and which is load ed with worn-out material enters one of the chambers of the heartcalled the left auricle. It thence passes into the left ventricle, and from that cavity is propelled into the lungs, where it is subjected to the action or the oxygen of the air, whereby its impurities are removed, and it is rendered fit to again assume the office of nourishing the body. From the lungs it passes into the right auricle, then into the right ventricle, from which it is sent out to every part of the sys tem, accomplishing its work of nourishing the tissues, and when this is fulfilled re turning to the heart as before, and so on un ceasingly while life lasts. This round of work is'called the circulation of the blood, discovered in 'part by that great genius Michael Servitus, whom John Calvin caused to be burnt at the stake, and that equally remarkable man, William Harvey,who was persecuted by his brother physicians for having discovered something of which they were ignorant. THE HEABt'S ACTIOS. It does not require much anatomical knowledge for a person to understand that In order for the heart to do its work in a thoroughly good way the valves must be in perlect order, and the substance of which it is composed in such a state of Integrity as will enable it to act with sufficient force. If, for instance, the valves are so diseased that they do not open and shut in an entirely normal manner the blood will be unable to get out of the heart as freely as is necessary. If the muscnlar tissue which forms the walls of the heart is from any cause weak or inefficient in its action it will not contract upon the blood in its chambers with the requisite degree of force, hence the organs of the body will not receive their dne sup ply of life-giving fluid. In either case se rious and even fatal consequences may re sult It is the general impression among those who do not stop to consider, that the heart Is continually in action, but such is really very far trom being the fact, for about one third part of the life of tbe organ is passed in absolute rest Thus it dilates to receive the blood, it contracts to expel the blood, and it rests Detween these two actions. By simply putting the finger on the pulse the truth of this assertion will be readily demon strated. J. ne artery at me wrist, mr in stance, will be felt to dilate and then there is qnite an appreciable interval before it is felt again, and this marks the repose of the heart This period varies greatly in dif ferent persons and under different circum stances and sometimes, as in fevers or con ditions of great exhaustion, the pulsations follow each other with such a great degree of rapidity that the interval between them can scarcely be measured. In other in stances the pulsations are so very slow that the impression that the heart has entirely stopped may be obtained. CAUSE OF HEAET FAILUBE. Ordinarily and in normal conditions of the system "and in adults the pulsations vary in number from 60 to 80 in a minnte, but this rale is not without its exceptions. I have known healthy persons in whom the heart beats were as ie'w as 40 a minute, and others in whom it exceeded 90. They are generally increased in all persons by mental excitement, by stimulating food or drink, or even by an ordinary meal and by physi cal exerefse. I think it undoubtedly true that the heart beats more rapidly at the present day than it did SO years ago. A result which must be ascribed to the greater mental activity of the age. As a consequence the heart wears out more quickly now than it did with our ancestors, and cases of heart weakness and heart failure, which in former times were almost unknown, are now quite common. Like every other muscle of the body, the heart is strengthened by exercise, but this ex ercise must be systematic, regular and not so excessive as to make too great a demand on tbe powers of the organ. For instance, a person who has not been in tbe habit of taking much ph steal exercise has a heart, which like all the other muscles of tbe body, is comparatively weak. He is suddenly forced to exert liltbself in a manner which is unusual to him. He runs luO yards or so, or rapidly ascends a long and steep staircase. This exertion causes him to breathe more rapidly than is natural to him, the blood must be sent into the lungs in in creased quantity, the heart most responato the demands maae upon it and in order to a: compllsb its work its pulsations are greatly in creased in number. It may be unable to ac complish its task and It suddenly stops alto gether and in the twinkling of an eye death ensues. DANGEBOUS EMOTIONS. Another may think be is leading a very regu lar life, his business is of a sedentary charac ter, and when he has to go from place to place be rides in a horse car or drives in a carriage. He probably does not walk altogether as much as a quarter of a mile a day. Suddenly some violent emotion is excited within him. the heart participates in the general disturbance, it throws more blood into tbe lungs than they can manage, the pulmonarr vessels are clogged, it cannot overcome the obstacle of a colnmn of almost stagnant blood, it stops and tbe individ ual is dead of heart failure. We can scarcely pick np a newspaper without reading or some such occurrences as these, not tbe result of or ganic disease of tbe heart such as derangement of its valves, but a functional disorder, tbe re sult ot a vlcmus mode of life. That in many cases the heart mat be strengthened by proper hygienic measures and medical treatment isnot.i question. In regard to this there is no donbt Systematic bnt moder ate exerc se which, strengthening tbe other muscles of the body, also strengthens the heart, is probably tbo most valuable ot all the means to be adopted, and of this climbing heights should be a prominent feature. A person up accustomed to this kind of .phjsical exertion should, of course, proceed very carefully, and under tbe directions of a physician, till tbe body has become habituated t tbe work. The food should be of tbe most nutritious charac ter, not over-stimulating, and especially not ex cessive in quantity. Tobacco, if used at all, should be used in moderation, for It Is very certain that inordinate, indulgence In this direc tion weakens the heart The like is true of al coholic drinks of all kinds. The mode of life should be such as to militate against the accumulation of fat in tbe body. The heart of a man weighing 150 pound", for instance, may be strong enough for all the purposes of life; but If he makes his body weign mi pounas tne proper proportion is e stro; ed, and the heart is relatively weak. The Materia Medica embraces several agents which are directly heart tonics, and by the use of which the tone of tbenrgau is increased; hut they are not to be employed without the advice of a physician. It is just as easy t make tbe heart strong as it is to strengthen tbe muscles of tbe arms or legs. And if proper vtes on this subject can be causdl to prevail and to be carried out in practice we shall hear less or weak heart and heart fall n re. A person will then be able to dispense with an elevator when he has to ascend to tbe seventh or eighth story of a building, and he can then Indulge in a fit of anger, if so disposed, without running the risk of dropping dead t the feet of hi antago nist Dr. Wit. A. Hammond. Let all remember.that they can buy Sal vation Oil for 25 cents. It kills pain. TW BURIED RIVER A Romance WRITTEN FOB - JOAQUIN 8YN0PSI3 OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. The story opens with a resume of tbe History of tbe mjsterions Burled Biver, flowing be neath tha Rocky Mountains and deep down in tbe bowels of the earth, the bed of which Is paved with virgin gold. John Grar, the son of an American army chaplain killed In bntie, goes to Rome to study painting. There be meets a wealthy Ameriran who is dying of con sumption, and who wishes his portrait painted before he dies. Gray paints tbe picture, re ceiving in payment gold dust Tbedjing man confides to tbe artist that be has discovered tbe Buried River, and that it is the source Of his wealth. Before he can Impart tbe secret of its location.beyond tbe fitctthat it is in California, he c'les. After an unavailing search among' Spanish records for further Information, Gray starts for California to continue his search. At Mt Diablo he takes possession of a ruined but, and there he meets Farla, the danjthter of the owner of the land. Tbe girl, who believes be is a surveyor who Is seeking to dispossess her father, warns him to leave or he will be killed. Tbey argue tbe question for some time, when tbe girl discovers that she already loves tbe artist. Gray is lntrodnced to Farla's sister Sanello, who has an aristocratic lover. Tbe artist, the girls and their father sail down San Francisco Hay. Farla unaccountably refuses to return with tbe party. When tbe otbers reach borne tbey find that Sanello's lover has deserted her. Cray discovers tbe location of the haunted well, which is Delieved to connect with the .Buried River. CHAPTER IX. THE MYSTERY OF THE 'WELT;. "The last crust," "out at the elbows," such like expressions borrowed from older days convey to us in our land of bounty an idea rather than any actual fact. If a man is "out at the elbows" in Cali fornia let him take off hit coat and carry it on his shoulder, as in Italy. This will con ceal the condition of things and he will be quite as comfortable, for the coat here is rather a luxury than a neccessity. If a man is out of bread let him eat meat . For in al- SHE LAID HOLD OP THE most any fence corner sits a rabbit, with a premium on his head iu many counties, waiting to be killed and eaten. On any .hedge sings a lark; in any dimple of the hills from here to Mexico the quail pipes with his many notes the Vhole year through. A gun and a load of shot or sim pler still a stout cord and a bent bush for snare and spring and you have meat in abnndance any hour in the day; and meat too, fit. for a king. As for the matter of a bed, that is as sim ple of solution as the out-at-the-elbow coat Every redwood tree is of itself not only a tent, impervious to rain or sun, but it is al most an entire hotel. For example, the whole space and circle nnder its spacious and shapely boughs, an area of from 25 to 100 feet in diameter, is one- con tinuous carpet Carpet 1 It is a cushion: a enshion that has cost half a centnry of time to make perfect It is of a solt, subdued, old gold hue; you sink into it at every step. And yet so clastic is this carpet that a horse can make no impression ai he passes even with his iron feet. And the fragrance of it ! All the spices of the Orient are not more delicious, dreamful, luxurious. Yon are invited to repose by this perfume, and sense o f silence, and large liberality of na ture, by every beckoning tree in a redwood forest John Gray had literally eaten his "last crust," bat a heavy fowling piece, borrowed from a neighboring hut, leaned in tbe cor ner, and lie was not Without resources. Be sides, when you go out to sea here, even with the crudest sailors, you will find tumbled abont the deck somewhere or in the bottom of the boat heaps of big sea cr.tb shrimp, and so on. Bread, thick crusted, and of the best, rolls of butter like f;old, boiled eggs by the half bushel these ittle details are always at hand here, where a spanking sail against the 'thousands of miles of uncontaminated air of the vast Pa cific gives you ready relish. These thiugs, let it be repeated, are as much a part of the boat outfit as one of its planks. And you help yourself as leisurely and tally to them all as you do to the air. But in the pres ence of all the majesty that attends yon here, who shall bend down his face to de scribe the art ot tearing asunder the legs of a sea crab? And who shall stop the thun der of the sea ot seas booming and booming against the granite battlements that wall in the gold pieces of California to say how that this man or that woman suddenly grew hungry, and gracefully leaning over caught up from a Innch basket and adroitly peeled a boiled egg? John Gray was eager to get back to bis cabin and he alone. He threw himself in at the opej door, hastily struck a light, and then drew forth his maps from their hiding place near his heart. Opening these out on tbe table he tried to apply what knowledge he had that day gained to tbe solution of the one great prob lem. For now he was certain beyond possi bility of doubt of the tfuth of his theory. The buried river was a fact, He had sailed by its mouth. He had heard it muttering in its muddy bed below. The great buried river that once had drained all the world west of the Rocky Mountains and flowed from Salt Lake to the sea. had had the Golden Gate for its mouth. He was sitting at that moment above the bubbling, roaring waters of the buried river. He had not a dime in bis pocket; but down there, deep down, almost as the level of tbe oceun, was a river that was literally paved with gold. ' . He went to the door and looked out. The moon was setting fast in tbe Golden Gate; little time to lose. He must look into that Indian well that night and before Farla could come back from the island. PAGES 9 TO 16. of California. THE DISPATCH BY - ' MIX.X.EB. A pang, a sharp pain almost shot through, his he.irt as he hastened out and down the) steep declivity into the dense thicket and thought of Farla away out on her precipi tous rock in tha Sea. She had been good to him. And now that she was absent from her temple he was about to enter it and pilage it of her secret; plunder her house and she away from home; possibly in peril. Passing around by a blind path through a tnnele of musk that made the air heavy with perfume in the dew, he. came suddenly to a deep ravine flowing to the w;st A dense tangle of chaparral and all sorts of overhanging boughs and briers seemed to bar his way here; but throwing himself on his bands and knees he was soon able to risei and walk erect in the moist gravel bed of the little blind stream. He advanced but a few paces, for all thls-little dingle of dense growth down here in the lace of nature was not bigger than a little green plot at best All about the hills hung over it, 'and men and cattle passed daily to and fro and round nbout; bnt clearly nothing ever entered here save the silent priestess of the haunted In diitn well; and even she came and went in the most stealthy way. The moon was at his "back, but very low, as he paused In the little open space in the heart of the dense copse. But what bright and shining fancy circle ot silver was that before him and almost at his feet? It was whiter, lighter tlran the moonlight and rose almost to his waist. He put forth his hand and touched the tall shaft of gold that shot np through one ot the 10,000 calla lilies that made np this glorious snow whits border about the mouth of the Indian well. This calla lily should be called tbe Nile lily. It is the same stately, luxuriant lily that the red, rich waters of the Kile have nourished since the morning stars sung to gether. It was in this same perfumed foliage that the daughter' of rharoah found the holy Moses cradled mid his lily leaves. He now started a little as he saw by tha .dim light of the fading moon that he was standing at tne loot ot tnree caremuy trimmed graves. "What earthly purpose could this strange girl have had in so care- CBAO AND CLIMBED. fully tending these three graves? I do not know, nor will I even attempt to answer for her actions. I did not make her, nor will I answer for her actions. I can only record tbem and set things down as they appeared. Recovering his composure in a moment the man stepped a pace forward, parted the rank and most luxuriant lilies, and leaning far forward looked down with eagerness into the mysterious deeps of the wide, deep well. Kotbing! Nothing! He saw nothing, but certainly there was a bubbling, gurgling sound; a something indistinct and far away. He paused a moment, and then making snra of his footing-, leaned forward over the frag rant wall of lilies, painting his bosom yellow with their shafts of gold, and listened long and eagerly. This time there was no mistaking the fact that there was some sort of disturbance or commotion in the deep, dark stream below. It was almost dark now. The last ray of moonlight was leaving the lilies. Another moment and the man stood there by the three graves by the hannted well in abso lute darkness. No corner is darker than a dense copse at midnight where the rays of tbe moon point through no longer. 'The stars. make no impression in a place like this. Yon had as well stand in a cavern where light has never been born. To go away now at this time was impossi ble. To remain began to seem almost in tolerable. 'A sonnd came up from the well nearer and clearer than be 'ore. It was like the bumping of a boat or light pontoon against a bank. Then again! He could fancy he heard it thumping against the earth at his feet He dared not lean forward and at tempt to look down. Fntting aside all dread of supernatural sights and things the peril of making a single step in this profound darkness with this chasm at his feet was clear. He stood still; leaning back rather than forward, his hands folded on his breast, breathing iard, holding his lips lightly set, and bravely, determinedly daring to await tbe worst where he stood. And now he could distinctly hear the bumping of a boat; an empty boat. He was certain that it was a boat; he was certain that it was a boat of leather or canvas. And he was certain that the boat was empty. It would be idle to explain how he knew all this certainly, but it is enough to say that he knew, Nature, when yon leave on yonr cunning or art, is very reliable. Your senses at such a time as this are at their best. And the best that your senses are ca pable of you will never know till put to trial. John Gray hid lost his dread to some ex tent now. Nothing supernatural was there) at all in the bumping and thumping of an empty boatugainst the sucking of a rising and inflowing well, and he began to specu late nu this additional evidence in support of his Buried River theory. Here was a well or air hole. The river flowed on under this flume to the sea. The mouth ot this river was beiug closed up by tbe filling in of the Sacramento river from the long and contlnned washing down of. the Sierras by gold hunters. The tide would turn this buried river.back on itself daily. But back of that lay the fact that the "buried river was badly choked at the mouth, as before explained, and when great rains filled it from the plains it had hard work in finding expression, and so flooded its own banks. Reasoning thus, and almost forgetting himself in following out this pleasant solu tion of the mystery be ore him, John Gray suddenly stood as stiff and cold as if mads of marble. HeVould not lift his bands or even let them fall down to his side, from where they lay folded and comfortably doubled in with his arms across his breast. The boat was before him. But such a boat 'J .M f 2 i T r