r-aii ws -, THE rl 1 1 SBURG DlSr A 1 Ln. SECOND PART. ' - -& pages g to 16. :; ' : ( k GOEGEOUS PALACE. Vivid Description of the Biggest Opium Den in tlie World AT SHANGHAI, THE PAKIS OF ASIA Tho Wonderful lanjtsekianff Biver and Its World of Boats. CHINESE DOCTORS AND DENTISTS. leoKJiEsroxcEKCE or inr uisrxTcn. SHANGHAI.Feb- ruary 8.X yisited last night the big gest opium den of the world. It is sit uated on the edge of this great cosmopol itan city of Shang hai, in which Chi nese rowdies from all parts of the em pire congregate,and where the China man has learned to play billiards, to drink whisky, and to practice the refine ments ol "Western as well us Eastern vice. The palatial saloons of New "York, the bar room of the Hoffman House, and the gilded gambling palaces in San Francisco have cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. This opium den of the Chinese has likewise eaten up a fortune, and it is more like a palace than an opium-smoking joint for pig-tailed celestials. Three stories high, and covering what would be nearly half an American block, its entrance is lighted with the electric light and its interior is furnished in the most extravagant Chinese fashion. The ceilings are ot richly carved wood, and the finest of Chinese lamps, each of which costs hundreds of dollars, throw a soft light over the hazy smoking crowd within. The painted walls are inlaid with cnrious marble, the grain of which is such as to give the idea of landscape sketches, and the finishing of the rooms is in carved teak wood, which, oiled and colored, shines like ebony. There were, perhaps, ,a thousand smokers in this opium den when I visited it last night, and I pushed my way into it through a throng representing every class of Chinese SMOKEfO life. There was the pompons mandarin in gorgeous silks beside the half-naked cooley in ragged cotton. There were desperate look ing men and women, quiet, intellectual scholars and wealthy Chinese merchants. AH stopped tinder the electric light to buy little pots of opium as thicK as molasses, and each holding about what could be crowded into the smallest of our American indi vidual salts. The cooley and the mandarin were charged the same for their opium, but they paid different prices according to the rooms which they occupied and the pipes which they used in smoking. The cheapest cost about 10 cents a smoke, and the dearest was sold for not much more than 15 cents. The pipes, however, were different. They were about two feet long, with a big, round bowl set into the handle. The mandarins smoked pipes of ivory, some of which were elaborately carvea, while the cooievs were satisfied with plain pipes of wood. The re ceipts of this opium den are said to be more than $1,000 a dar, and I am told it is always fulL Opium Cells. "Passing the electric light you enter hall after hall filled with hazy fumes of sickly smelling vapor through "which the rays of gorgeous lamps struggling find their way, and cast a wierd ghost like air over the smokers resting below. The smoking com partments are divided into cells open at the front and separated from one another by gorgeous carvings of teak-wood which, colored with the smoke of thonsands, has turned from a rich brown into an oiled jet. Each cell accommodates two or more people, and the most of the men I saw smoking were in couples. On each side ot a little glass lamp the men lay on red cushions, some times dropping their feet upon a chair and resting their heads on blue pillows, each about a foot square and a foot long. The most expensive of the compartments bad cushions of fine velvet and the frames of come couches were inlaid with mother-of-pearl and jade. Opium smokers always lie down while smoking. They bend themselves spoon fashion as they manipulate the opium, draw it into their lnnc6 and blow it out of their nostrils. In some cases I noted large rooms in which private parties seemed to have as sembled for an opium smoke together, and I passed through every hall of this large opium joint and did not see a bit of dis order. Your opium smoker is different from the drunkard. The opium calms in stead of excites. I was treated with polite ness everywhere and the drowsy, sleepy crowd did not seem to care that I stopped and looked at them. The Cnrso of China. This is, however, only one of hundreds of opium shops in Shanghai. I visited another den upon leaving this big one and I found It nearlv as large. It is said that China uses aboJt"fc300,O00,000 worth of opium every year, and it is rightly called the curse ot the people. Opium is now grown in every province in China. The seed ot the poppy is sown in November and its juice is collected in February and March. The opium is gotteu "by cutting the capsule of the poppv flower with a notched iron in strument at sunrise, -audby the next mora ine a drop or so of juice has oozed out. This is scraped off and saved by the grower and after be has a vesselfoil of it it is strained and dried. r It takes a great many poppies to make a pound of opium, and it goes through a num ber of processes before it Is ready for the market. In a liquid state it looks like a dark strawberry jam, and when prepared for shipment it is put into chests, each of which contains about 40 balls of opium. These ballsarc rolled in dried poppy leaves and here in China the duty onopium is so heavy that the castoin officers watch theie chests very closely. At Shanghai there are a num ber of large ships which look like fioatmg swimming baths or naval training ships in which tne opium passed upon by the cus 'tomi is stored, and by which method stnug- jSp I J s 4tlllf) gling is somewhat prevented. The Chinese arethegreatestsmugglersin the world and it Is only by the aid of foreigners that they are able to hare a good customs service. And their receipts from foreign customs are now four times as great as they were several decades ago. The Opium Wan The Chinese are naturally opium smok ers, but it is due to the foreigner that the drug has become a national evil. The offi cials and the emperor saw the danger before it came and they tried to keep the opium out of the country. The English, however, who were bringing in large quantities from India, were making too" much money out of it to let it go, and one of the most disgrace ful pages of history is the record of how John Bull, philanthropic and moral, as he pretends to be, forced China to take a poison which its officials knew would de grade its people. The Emperor of China at the start taxed the consumers of opium and threatened them "with death. Opium smugglers were seized and tortured, and the native dealers were executed. The Chinese, however, could do nothing with the foreigners, and they became the smug glers. The Government then appealed to the for eigners and one of the Government commis sioners asked the English merchants to give no their opium that it might be destroyed, They gave np 20,000 chests, worth $11,000, 000. China retuscd to' pay for it on the ground that it had not authorized its com-' missioner to demand it, and that the opium was smuggled. For this the British went to war with China, and through this war opened most of the ports. They made a treaty in which opium was not mentioned, but at the making of which the Chinese un doubtedly asked them to prohibit it, and which they refused. At present the United States is the only country which has made a treaty by which it is unlawful for its citi zens to sell opium to the Chinese, and the poison is now brought into China by the millions of ponnds a year. The Chinese, finding that thev could not prohibit it. have begun to raise it themselves, and as above stated, it is now grown in. every one of the Chinese provinces. Progress of Civilization. Still, in the great work of civilizing Asia, the opium war did much for China. It opened this great port of Shanghai, gave Great Britain the island of Hong Kong and showed the Chinese that the foreign devils were stronger and mightier than themselves. They paid the 21,000,000 which represented the demands of the British, and thereafter gave the foreigners the right to trade and settle at Canton, Amoy Fuchau and Shang hai. The United States soon after this made OPIUM. her first treaty with China, which was made by Caleb Cushing in . 1844, and since that time foreign trade with' China has steadily increased. There are now 22 open ports in the Empire, and the foreign trade amounts to more than 5273,000,000 a year. European and American goods are now found in every province of China, and our missionaries have penetrated to the wildest regions of the Celestial Land. The erowth of the foreign influence and its effect upon China can nowhere be better seen than right here at Shanghai. Here is the largest foreign colony in China, and there are from 5,000 to 7,000 Europeans who have their homes here and who are engaged in business with the Chinese. The foreign settlement of this Paris of the Pacifio looks more like a slice taken out of one of the rich cities of the United States or of Europe than a city in Asia. The wide river front is lined with big, three-story buildings, and a beautiful public garden runs between these'and the water. The streets of this part of the city are well paved, and you will meet as finely-dressed men and;women upon them as you will find in Wash ington or Paris. The crowd is, however, a much more cosmo politan one. The French and the English are mixed with Americans and Germans, and the servants of all are the yellow-faced celestials. The policemen are East Indians, tall, well-formed," dark-faced, black-bearded men, dressed in the uniform of our police, save that thev have red turbans a foot high on their heads instead of helmet caps, and they do not carry the ebony club. They are used chiefly in arresting the Chinese, and foreigners have to be arrested by for eigners. They are among the finest men I have ever seen, and they contrast strikingly with the delicate, ' slender, aristocratic limbed Chinese. Ynngtscklaac RlTer. Shanghai is about midway on the Pacific coast between the northern and southern boundaries of China, It is near the mouth of though not on the great river, the Yang tsekiang, which divides the empire into two equal portions and which forms the great central avenue of trade. This is one of the greatest and one of the longest rivers of the world, and it vies with the Nile in the rich deposits which it carries down from the mountains of Thibet and spreads over the rich plains of China. Its waters where it enters the sea are as yellow as clay and their contents are, I am told, as rich as Guana. They form a fertilizer which the Chinese use by irrigation, so that it is spread over much of the 48,000 square miles which forms its basin and makes this land produce from two to three crops per year. The Yangtsekiang has a fall nearly double that of the Nile or the Amazon. It is so wide at its mouth that when we sailed up it in coming to Shanghai we, for a long wavs, were hardly able to see the banks and this width extends np the river for hundreds of miles. It is navigable for ocean steamers to Hank" w,thecityof the sizeof Chicago, which is situated on its banks 600 miles above Shanghai, and river steamers can go 1,300 A Chinese Junk. miles up Its winding course. Above this there are gorges and rapids which the for eigners now think can be passed, and there will then be an opening into the Interior of China by this means for more than 2.000 miles. The Yangtseklang is so long that ItH wouia reacn irom can Jfranciico to New York and push its way out into the Atlan tic if it could be stretched out upon a plane of the face of the United States. It is longer than the distance from New York to Liverpool, and it is said to be the best stream in the world as to the arrangement of its branches. Its boat population is numbered by hund reds of thousands and it is a city hundreds of miles in length made up of junks, ships and barges. These Chinese junks are gorgeously painted and carved. They have the same style ot sails and masts that were used thousands of years ago, and their sails are immense sheets of cotton patched to gether and stretched on rods of bamboo which Iook like fishing poles. The sailors are pig-tailed men in lat clothes of cotton, who sing in a cracked gibberish as they work, and who understand how to manage their rude sails so well that they can often pass ships ot more modern make. All of the Chinese boats have a pair ofeves painted on the sides of their prows, and the Chinese sailor would no more think of navigating without these than be would think of eat ing without chopsticks. If asked the reason he replies: . "No have eyes, no can see. No can' see, no can go." Chinese Dentist and Doctors. The Chinese themselves do not believe in dissection, and there is no body-snatching here. They believe that the heart is the seat of thought; that the soul exists in the liver, and that the gall bladder is the seat of courage. For this reason the gall blad ders of tigers are eaten by soldiers to inspire them with courage. The Chinese doctor ranks no higher than the ordinary skilled workman. He gets from 15 to 20 cents a visit, and he often takes patients on con dition tnat e mil cure them within a cer tain time or no pay. He never sees his female patients except behind a screen, and he does not pay a second visit unless he is invited. His pay is called "golden thanks," and the orthodox way of sending it to him is wrapped in red paper. " The dentists look upon pulled teeth as trophies and they go about with necklaces of decayed teeth about their necks, or with them strung upon strings and tied to sticks. Toothache is supposed to come from a worm in the tooth, and there are a set of female doctors who make a ousiness of extracting these worms. When the nerve is exposed they take this out and call it the worm, and when not they use a sleight of hand by which they make their patients believe certain worms, which they show them, came from their teeth. I have heard persons tell of Chinamen who claimed to have had ten worms taken from their mouths in a single day, and I saw a woman actually at work upon a patient in the street here. China is as full ot superstitions as the "West India Islands, and the people like to be humbugged quite as well here as we do in America. FBAUK G. CABPE2J TEE. THE C0NGBEGATI0N SMILED. BnttheBrldoand Groom Did Not Think It Quite so Awfully .Fanny. Boston Transcript. A story that goes back to the meet in' house in Wrentham is one of a worthy man named Habbakuk P., a resident of the town, and a faithful attendant upon worship, who had been blessed with four wives, one after another. Habbakuk was rigidly or thodox, as his name seemed to demand, and was always in his pew on the Sabbath. He sat there in his conspicious pew with No. 4 by his side, on the first Sunday after their marriage. It was a .balmy June day, and the zephyrs from the open window toyed playfully with the bride's white satin bon net ribbons and the groom's silken locks. There was a stranger fn the pulpit who had exchanged for the day with the venerable Mr. F., the pastor of the church. After reading a few Scripture passages the stranger proceeded to read a notice which he had found in the Bible, and which was as follows: "Mr. Habbakuk P "desires the pray ers of the congregation that the death of his wife may be sanctified to him for his spiritual g6od." Then, when tho congregation was between stupefaction and explosion, the clergyman went on with the service at'a rapid rate. He was at a loss to know why the congregation seemed to be throughout the remainder of the service on the point of laughter, but at dinner Mrs. F , the pastor's wife, ex plained to him that Habbakuk P sat three rows from the front in the broad aisle with his brand new wife, and he had read an old notice that Mr. F had probably been using for a book mirk ever since the death of wife No. 3. HE HAD NO EAE FOE MUSIC. An Albany Tenth Tnrns the Hose on an Annoying Piano, Albany Journal.: One young man in a State street boarding-house is in trouble. A young lady re siding in the establishment for some time had made life miserable by playing on the asthmatic piano in the parlor. Finally patience became a vice and the young man resolved to sacrifice himself for the good of others. He procured.a hose, attached it to the cold water faucet in the wash-room, carried the other end into the parlor and turned it upon the fair disciple of Vulcan. The effect was even more than could have been expected, for it not only stopped the noise but poured into the "works" of the piano. In the subsequent excitement this was not noticed, the wires had time to be come rusted, and an expense of $50 was nec essary for making repairs. The landlady is now- endeavorpe to collect the amount of the young man, whose financial condition makes it impossible for him to comply with the demand. The Art of Photography. New York Epoch. Miss 'Clara I have just had some pho tographs taken, Ethel. "What do you think of them? Miss Ethel (a bosom frind) They are splendid, Clara. How a photograph does idealize one's facet Accommodating;. Paris Figaro, j A lady, greatly excited, asks to see the editor of a daily paper and is told that it is impossible, the editor being too busy to speak to any one, no matter who it may be. "Oh, that makes to difference," is her reply, "I shall do aU the talking myself" tip' Chinese Female Dentist. PITTSBTJKG-, JBUNDA.Y, MONEY MAKES MONEY. A Chapter Illustrating the Workings of Compound Interest BETTEET0 LENDTHAN TO BORROW. Tie Great Percentage of Profit in Building Associations. EYEN THE DAI IABOREE HAS CAPITA! IWailTMT TOE THE DISPATCH.! FTEB religion and politics theie is no Bubject upon which intelligent people differ so widely as to the mode of in vesting surplus earnings, and lean think of no practi cal subject upon which there is so much popular mis conception as the power of compound interest. Secretary Maloney, of the Enter prise Investment Company of "Washington, D. C, remarked to me during a "recent visit to that city: "The common saying, 'money grows,' does not half express the full import of the term, if it is compounded. The grass grows, but there is a period when it does not grow, when the roots are dried up a sear and yellow leaf period, as well as a growing'period, but money at interest, more especially when compounded, grows when you are asleep night and day, sumtaer and winter, in good and bad times." Nobody understands its growing quality better than the banks, brokers, building as sociations and the lenders generally. "But is this growing compounding feat ure rightly understood by the borrower, from either bank or building association? I think not." Said a Chicago gentleman con nected with a building association in that city, to me recently. WHAT A LOAX COSTS. I asked the association what it would cost me to make a loan of 800. He said it would take about 25 per cent premium, which, added to the actual loan, would make 51,000, equivalent to ten shares of stock, on which I would pay interest at the rate of 8 per cent: mv payments, which would be made monthly, would be 50 cents a share or 85; interest on $1,000 for one month, $6 67; total payment per month, 511 67, which I would be obliged to pay for eight years until my stock reached par, which would be SI, 120 32; total cost of loan, 5320 32. But in reality I would have had the total amount of the loan but half of the eight years, as I would Immediately start to pay back my loan in monthly payments as soon as I received it. Therefore, in reality, I would haye paid for the use ot $800 for four years interest to the amount of 5640; premium, $200; actual cost, 5840. "It struck me then that there must be some enormous profits for somebody in these Associations, and I asked if the profits were shared alike by both borrower and lender, and was told that they were and that the only difference be tween the two was that one borrowed his stock from the Association at the beginning of the series and the other waited and got his at the close of the deal. But is this go? Let's see. The non-borrower pays into the Association 50 cents a month on one share qf stock, or a total of 548 in eight years, when his stook reaches par and receives 5100 in return, making a clear profit of 553. But pause a moment. A GBEAT DIFFEBENOE. While the non-borrower has paid the sum or 548 in equal monthly payments of 50 cents a share, he in reality only had half of 548, or 5-4 in the association for 8 years. The profit for one year would then be'$6 50 on $24, or over 27 per cent, which 3a not so bad for a mutual sooiety with the "mutu ality" nearly aU at one end. As the non borrower simply pays his installments and none of the profits and the borrower pays his installments and alltheprofits.it is plain enough who is getting the best of it. It struck me there must be some immense profit in lending money even "mutually" (?) at compound interest. A well-known savings bank of this city has recently published in the papers tables showing the amount of the saving of 1 cent a day for 40 years, and the "compounded" total makes quite a respectable figure. The table recalls to our mind the celebrated saying of Peter Cooper, that it now takes longer in this country to learn economy than to learn a trade, and without economy to make a "start" of what use is a com pound interest table? AIT ECONOMICAL EXAMPLE. One need only go over on the Southside in this city and note the number of iron work era who have been making $5 per day for Iol these many years, living as tenants in houses owned by other workers who made but 51 25 per day in those same years to emphasize the difference between earning and "saving." Everybody knows that money makes money, but not everybody pays attention to the modus operandi by which it is brought about and its consequences. Take, for ex ample, a laborer beginning life at the meager pay of 51 per dav. In visible stock in trade he has nothing but pick or shovel. Nevertheless he has a capital, which, if rightly used, is equivalent to Carnegie's 510,000. He may increase it, diminish it, waste it or throw it away, or multiply it and "compound" it for a rainy day, just as surely as the wealthy operator can with his investment. Ten thousand dollars in United States Government 3 per cents will only yield 5300 a year. The dollar-a-day la borer invests his muscle against the 510,000 capital, and has a trifle more to show for it at the end of the year. Therefore, rude strength, without a superabundance of in telligence, is equivalent to a capital of 510,000 a year. EOBMS OP WEALTH, Youth, health, capacity, etc., are capital as well as monej. "Wages at 51 a day pre suppose very little intelligence, very little skill, very little responsibility. The skill and industry of the average mechanic are as productive elements fairly equivalent to 525.000, and yet that looks like a big pile of cash to tho average toiler. If looked at rightly hi capacity is a better capital, with creator possibilities than the capitalist's 525,000 bank account. Bnt how few look at it this way? The toiler is often given to "booze" and politics, both of which are poor investments, and rather than study the law of accumulation he would prefer to attend a meeting around the corner from the postoffice, the proceedings of which would read about this way: Speaker of the evening: "Gentlemen, there is no use of consuming time. We all know just how we stand. The question is now where (the toilers join hands), where, I say. can we get two glasses of beerfor a nickle?'1 They all voted aye. "Then, gentlemen," said the speaker, "where can we get the nickle?" and then the reporters were .asked to retire while the boys went into executive session to take ac tion on the matter. DON'T ENOW HOW TO SAVE. Then there are people like the average farmers who are disposed to be economical, but don't know how. The "know how" is a good deal in this world. "When General Jackson first went to "Washington he was charged 25 cents for shining his boots by a champion "shiner" of that day. The Gen eral remonstrated it was awful exorbitant,1 MAKOS 24, 1889, ete.hut said the champion shiner, "Mine is a good shine, is it not?" "Excellent," said the General. "Very well.'' said shine 'em; "I only charged you 10 cents for the shine and 15 cents for the 'know bow. " That is the premium on the "know how" all through" the world. But to recur to the farmers. In a late number of the. Atlanta Constitution I read that the Farmers' Alliance, of Georgia, has reduced the interest paid by Georgia farmers when they buy on credit from 108 per cent to 78 per cent It appears corn is sold at 77 cents cash, 98 cents credit four months, which-is 26 percent, on 78 per cent per annum. Bacon sells at 9.71 cents cash, 12.3 cents credit four months; that shows the style of business and the conception of, an investment in a country that sends a droye of Brigadiers up North to teach suoh men a's Carnegie, Hewitt and Oliver how to do business. Interest simple and compound is a greater factor in all these matters than it gets credit for. It is really the secret of the growth of all the big modern fortunes, and is the key to the success ot our savings banks, build ing associations, life insurance companies, etc. BIO KATES OF JNTEBEST. Leisure permitting, I may illustrate this more in detail nt some other time. At pres ent I cannot better emphasize the import ance of compounding investments than by repeating a story told by Peter Cooper at 80, years of age. He was always a care ful and prudent business man, opposed to kite-flying and marginal matters in which ble interest was exacted. Once while dis cussing a big iron project with a friend the latter said he would have to borrow money for six months at 3 per cent permontb. "Why do you borrow for so short a time," Mr. Cooper asked. "Because the brokers do not care to negotiate loans for longer." ""Well, if vou wish," said Mr. Cooper, "I will discount vour note at that rate for three years," "Are you in earnest." said the would-be borrower. "Certainly I am. I will discount your note fpr 510,000 for three years at that rate." Will you do it ? Of course I will, said the merchant. Yery well, said Mr, Cooper, just sign this note for 510,000, payable in three years, and'give meyour check for 5800 and the transaction Is complete. "But where is the money for me?" asked the as tonished merchant, "You don't gel any money," was the reply. "Your interest for 36 months at 3 per cent per month amounts to 108 per centum, or 510,800. Therefore your check for 5800 just makes us even." The force of this practical illustration of the folly of paying stiff rates at compound in terestand all building association and bank loans are based on the "compound" principle paralyzed the merchant and the deal was off. If the non-borrower in a building associa tion realized just how much he was paying for his "loan, would not the loan feature at high rates in such organizations be rather a "loan"-some business? J. W. Bbeen. Boss Township, March 20, 1889. A WISE GORILLA. She Cries if Left Alono and Has Acquired Illnny Civilized Tastes and Habits. London Athenaum. According to a letter recently received from the southwest coast of Africa, Mr. J. J, Jones, a trader of Ngove, a country sit uated immediately south of Camma and the river Fernand Vaz, has for some time past had in his possession a young female gorilla, whose docility and tractability are most re markable. Mr. Jones has trained the little anthropoid to follow him like a dog, and she recently accompanied him on a jour ney to Sette-Camma, a distance of 20 miles or more, walking all the way. Jeannie, as the baby gorilla has been named, sleeps with her master and follows him wherever he goes, weeping like a child if left behind. She has acquired many civilized tastes and habits, and will drink. tea,"ale, brandy' etc. out ot a cup or glass, displaying the utmost carefulness not to break the vessel, and will, in fact, do almost anything her master wishes, and is so intelligent and affection ate as to greatly astonish and interest aU who have seen her. Although the latest, this is by no means a solitary instance of the facility with which a young gorilla can be trained, as there are at present living in London two former residents in the Fernand Vaz who succeeded without difficulty in training young gorillas, and who could corroborate the foregoing account of ,their docility and and of their affectionate disposition when treated with kindness, as well as the dis tress and sensitiveness they exhibit if scolded for misconduct or disobedience. TWO CHAINED SKELETONS. The Story of a Wrecker Who Butt Tbemln the Sunken Merrimac A Bichmond, Va., special to the Balti more Sun says: Private James K. Bolten, an inmate of the Confederate Soldiers' Home, near this city, tells a startling story of the finding in the hold of the Confeder ate ram Merrimao the skeletons of two men. Johnson was a member of Johnson Battery during the war, and was wounded at Bran dy Station. He is now almost in a dying condition. He declares that the discovery of these skeletons has preyed upon his mind for years. According to Bolton's story he was en gaged as a wrecker in 1873. The person with whom he was engaged at that time was employed in getting the old copper off the Merrimac While engaged in this work Johnson says that on one occasion he dived into the forecastle of the Confederate gun boat. There he found the skeletons of two men manacled to the floor. He supposed that they were members of the crew who were incarcerated for the violation of some rule of the navy, and when the craft was sunk were forgotten by their comrades and Trent down to their watery graves. An Editor's Ire Aroused. Clarion Bepnbllcan.1 The crazy fools, who are sending anony moualetters to tome of our people on vari ous subjects, and telling lies about their neighbors, will some day send one to the wrong man who will hunt them up, and when found will proceed to wipe 'up the sidewalk with their dirty carcass and other wise exercise them. Persons who write let ters and are too cowardly to sign their name to them are fit subjects for the reform atory, A TJae for Rejected Petitions. New York Herald.II A superior quality of artistia brass paper weights and other knickknacks are being manufactured in Washington from material furnished by rejected Ohio and Indiana officeseekers. Had Iti Compensations. ym u-i Mr. Bridges (as the .steam heater blows up) Stn there, Car'iihe"? Mrs. Bridges Yes, Ezry; isn't it awful ? . & Bjtjdges Not BOj-very, Car'line. You know-how we've" b'en- trying to gi out! of Brooklyn for years an' yearst Pucft. Yf - T2K KPiMSSiJf -mf& .arTOHai n. s- R VYiiMk- v &, 3&s?&h A SWEET FAREWELL The Affectionate Parting ,of the Ex P resident and His Wife. MRS. CLEVEIAHD ENTERS SOCIETY. General William T. Sherman's Admiration for the Stage. A WISE MANNER OP DOING BUSINESS rCOEEISrONDESCI OF TBX DISfjlTCILl EWYOBK, March 23. The portico of a big Broadway hotel is a nublio place, isn't it? And whatever is done there is fair matter for publication, 1 fancy, no matter how domestic its character may be. So, when J happened to breakfact early at the Hotel Victoria, on the morning that ex President Grover Cleveland started off on his vacation, trip to Cuba, and on going out saw the leave-taking" scene between him and his wife, I watched it with a premeditated intention of writing this paragraph. Mr, Cleveland did not seem to have lost flesh in consequence of his defeat last No vember. It took a big Prince Albert coat to button hjm in snugly, and, with an artistic view to harmony, he were a high silk hat, with a brim considerably wider than fashion dictates for the sprine of 1889. On his arm he carried an overcoat and in one hand a small bag. He had breakfasted with his companions of the proposed voy age, ex-Secretaries Vilas, Bayard and Dick inson. A NICE LITTLE LADY. Mrs. Cleveland had not been at table with them, bnt she joined them in the corridor just after they were through with their meal. She wore a light brown gown, loose and fluffy like a wrapper, but ornate enough to be denominated a tea-gown. Its front was blue satin from chin to hem. Her hair was brushed np from her forehead, and her face bad a wide-awake, morning brightness. I do not regard her as a beautiful woman, by any means, but simply a pretty, whole some and sweet-mannered one. She shook hands cordially with the three other gentle men, and then linked her arm carelessly into that of her husband's, as they went down the staircase to the hallway on the street level. She hugged her husband's arm gently, and there was no reason to doubt that he liked the attention, although he gave no indication of satisfaction. But that is a man's manner, you know. v "Then you say I can't write to you at all," she said, with a little pout, as though it were a deprivation. "Shall I hear noth ing from you in two weeks?" Oh, yes, you will,'" Mr. Cleveland re plied; "I shall write to you often, but we shall travel about so fast and uncertainly that I couldn't tell you where to address me. Well, good-bye." "Good-bye," AN AFFECTIOJTATH WITB. Mrs. Cleveland let go of his arm, clasped his disengaged hand with both of her own, snuggled up to him for a second, and kissed him smackingly on the moutb. How much of a response he mado I could not tell, but it was surely she who made a,U the noise, but be was yery gracious about it, and he patted her shoulder affectionately as he re peated his good-bye. The wife followed the party outside.tha vestibule, saw them enter a carriage, and waved her handkerchief after them. That was on Mr. Cleveland's fifty-second birthday. The question, of Mrs, Cleveland's admis sion into therAstor-Vanderbilt society is settled quickly, just as I prophesied it would be, in the affirmative. She has this week been the guest of Mrs. Le Grand Can non. Mrs. Willard P. Ward, Mrs. William C. Whitney at-tarmal luncheons or teas,and she has also colled:upon and received visits from half adazed-ladies belonging to that particular set. Brought into comparison with New York's most exquisite style, Mrs. Cleveland appears like the belle of a vil lage. She lacks what we call smartness in dress. But that serves rather to make her interesting to her new acquaintances, and, while her talk and air also have just an ap preciable tinge of provincialism she is- so unaffected, intelligent and affable that we arl like her. A pretentious dinner is to. be given in her special honor by Mrs. Ward immediately after Faster. ZOKD OP THE PLAT. The illness of Mary Anderson makes pertinent this new bit of anecdote. General William T. Sherman is rather a jolly old rounder of the town. His admiration of handsome actresses is quite equal, I should say, to his regard for stage art. judging by a great deal of watching ofhim in audiences. General Sherman has an only son. Thomas Swing Sherman, who was inclined to be a dashing sort of beau when I first met him five or six years ago. At that time he spent a part of a winter in town, and was a guest at several Fifth avenue houses. But since then he has taken a thorough course in Boman Catholic theology, and is going to become a Jesuit priest sometime next sum mer. He visited his father's family a short time ago, and was seen on the promenade, in Central Park, and at church services with his parent and sisters. But he wouldn't go to a theater.. "What is the harm in enjoying Mary Anderson in a Shakespearean piece?" the old gentleman asked, in tho presence of my informant. "No harm at all for you, father," was the son's reply, ''tint I do not think it would be right for me." "Better improve your last opportunities, Tom," the General persisted. "No, no' said the son; "I'd rather im prove the opportunity of denying myself the pleasure." So General Sherman went alone to see Mary Anderson enact the woes ot the Queen and the jocundity of Perdlta in "A Winter's Tale," and to clap his hands like torpedoes in applause of her dance. A BUSINESS MEASURE. A lady was taking luncheon with her daughters at the most famous restaurant in the city. Jlcr check amounted to some thing less than 55. She handed to the waiter a bill, and he brought her change for 55. She declared that the bill she had given was a twenty. She was a very quiet and refined woman, and her belief about the amount of money she had given to the waiter was evidently honest. But the waiter asserted that she was mis taken. He went to the desk and inquired. The answer came back that it was a 55 bill. The lady put up her purse and was pre paring to leave. The head waiter asked her to step to the cashier's desk. The young man then asked her if she was quite posi tive she bad sent 520 up to him. She re Elied that she felt sure of it because she ad a twenty and a five in her purse when she came in and the twenty was gone. Without anymore words the cashier counted out the change for 520 and passed it to the lady. The fact is that the lady was mistaken. But this particular restaurant retains the good will of the wealthiest people by the utmost confidence in their integrity. They rectify mistakes when they know the mis take is not theirown, rather than tohave their best customers be ill-pleased. They will even trust a stranger for an extravasrant dinner and tafco his visiting card for security. Clara Belle. ELILYMOCHQII A Legend of "WRITT33H FOB -UT- aiAXriWCE Synopsis of Preceding Chapters. The story opens early in the pres ent century, on a bright morning in March. Wendell Orton, artist and dreamer. Is landed from a little schooner in the Bay St. Louis, by the Creole owner of the vessel, Victor, who Is to return for him April 10. Orton's host Is Edouard Garcin, whose family consists ot himself, wife and pretty daughter, Lalie. A mystery aurronnds a lovely villa In the neighborhood, whose owner is Mo'siou Rochon.and who baa a lovely daughter known as the "Lily ot Bocbon," ot whom Wendell Orton dreams during his first night at the little Inn. Orton overhears a conversation wbtch leads him to believe that his host is engaged in un lawful pursuits. He meets the Lily ot Bocbon, and Is struck with admiration of hei beauty. Gaspard Bocbon prepares to attack Garcin and bis free booters, and Orton volunteers iu bis host's defense, A fierce battle ensues, dur ing which a terrible hana-to-hand combat tikes place between Bochon and OrtoD. Rochon finally overpowers bis young antagonist, but as he is about to dispatch him, Orton breathes the name of his father, General Horace Orton, of New York. This has a wonderful effect on the elder man. who has his fainting opponent car ried to his own bouse, where he is tenderly cared for by the "Lily," whom he recognizes when he recover consciousness. CHAPTEB VI. ConTnniED. AT THE HOUSE OT THE OUTLAW. When he awoke the afternoon sun was slanting yellow rays between the curtains of a westward window and he heard that gulf breeze still rollicking through the foliage and shaking the window blinds. He looked about eagerly for bis fair nurse, but she was not there. A negro boy came from a corner and stood before him in a respect ful attitude, "Where is Mademoiselle Eochon?" de manded Orton with the fretful peremptory ness common to invalids when convalescing. "She's down stairs, monsieur,-" was the A. BLOW AND boy's answer in very good French. "Does monsieur wish to have her come?" "Yes, I do," said Orton. The boy went briskly and lightly out and aftera little while Mlle.Eoobou came in. She smiled brightly when she saw how much better her patient looked. In her hand she bore a small silver platter upon which was a steaming bowl of broth. "You must be quite hungry, Monsieur Orton," she exclaimed cheerily as she came toward him, "and I have brought you something good that I made with my own hands." "A thousand thanks, mademoiselle," he said, "a thousand thanks." He was, trying to rise. "No, nol" she cried, "you must be quite still, monsieur, indeed you must!" and she put forth her hand as if to prevent him. "You must do just as I tell you." She spread a snowy napkin before him, raised his bead a little with the pillows and prepared to feed him with a spoon. "How good you are," he murmured, "and to a prisoner, tool" "Oh, you are hardly a prisoner, rather a guest," she responded quickly. "Though your invitation was a rather rough one, I aumit. J.t is a wonaer tnat yon are alive. My uncle rarely is so generous." She spoke far from lightly, and there was a sad ring in her voice. "But he seems to have known your father long ago and remembers him grateiuiiy tor some act or Kindness." "I am under deepest obligations to your uncie, mademoiselle," he replied, "Tnope he fared better than I in our little passage at arms." "He was scarcely hurt at all," she said, "he never gets hurt, indeed. He seems to bear a charmed life, and then he is, so strong," Orton smiled reminlscently, thinking over the terrific struggle with Bochon. "I deemed myself a match for any man until I csme upon Monsieur Eochon. said he, "but he rather overbore me, I believe." "It does appear so," she replied; "and I am so happy that it is no worse." "But, monsieur, you are not to talk any more," she went on; "you are to- sip this soup and keep silent." Spoonful by spnouful she fed him with a sweet, gentle dignity of manner, sitting close by his bedside. Orton felt to tbe full that refined delight whieh the artist-lover takes in the dual experience of loving and studying at the same time, and all in that atmosphere of romance so dear to the young and healthy heart. Mile. Eochon, too, was receptive in the highest degree to every charm of the situation. Perhaps she was as yet but half aware of the power that Orton's manly beauty was exerting overherrstill it was exquisite pleasure to her to admin ister to him and to realize that her ministra tions were acceptable. The isolated life to which she bad been for so long confined had made her introspective, finding most of her quieter pleasures within her own breast. Now the care of this golden-haired young messenger from the great teeming social outside world was stirring her heart with many glowing but as yet almost formless dreams. Her experi ences had been softened greatly by the rough but careful watchfulness of her uncle, who in his grim way doted upon her, still she had known, as if at a distance, the wild life that was flowing around her, and bad come to feel quite safe in it. Occa sionally there had come to the Bochon place people of refinement, her uncle's friends from New Orleans and Mobile, dropping ashore for a few days during their summer voyages of pleasure, but these had not interested her in more than a passing way. Eochon's sister, dead some years since, bad been Felicie's teacher, a very anstere and exacting one, indeed, but the girl bad a disposition not1 to be spoiled, and so had grown up strong and lovely in body and soul. Old Eochon himself, as the reader must know, while he was not just the man to be the guardian and director oi a young' " - j . ....... . . ,oji2y it Bay St Louis. THE 3IS3?-A.TOH THOMPSON. girl's life, was as good to her at his busitae and his coarse nature would let him be. While Orton was quietly sipping ths soup tendered him by Mile. Bocbon, heavy footfalls were heard on the stairs. "My uncle is coming now,"she said, half hearkening to the measured tread; ''yom must not let him make you talk too much, remember that, please, monsieur." Eochon stalked ir presently, his burly form draped in a light loose jacket and broad trousers, his gray hair tossed iu great sho"ks over bis head, his beard unkempt. One hand was bandaged, his forehead had a white plaster on it, and his left arm was bound up ju3t above the elbow. Notwith standing his roughness and his air of brig andlib savagery, there was something about him magnetic, a strong dash of personal in fluence as powerful as it was strange. His rather dark gray eyes were deep, clear and steadfast in their gaze, looking out from under heavy, shaggy brows, matted and drawn; his forehead was deeply furrowed, likewise his massive cheeks, over which almost up to his eyes grew the grizzled, tangled beard, rank and refractory and fall ing down a foot in length to spread almost across his great width of chest. He wore heavy Spanish boots rising to his knees, and on his head was a black French cap set well back. In his hand he bore a short stemmed but enormous pipe, old and mal odorous. Just inside the door be paused and stood for a moment chuckling aloud, his eyes gleaming merrily ana his beard palpitating. "Ho hot" he exclaimed in a deep, resonant bast voice, "Ho hoi my finecoq de combat is coming to his appetite, eh? Well, well, my little lily, feed him, feed him, for he's a game one, certainly." He glanced from one to the other (gain and again with a quizzical glare and shook his big head slowly, as one who is well sat isfied with what he sees before him. "Diable dieul but if he'd a cutlass Ilka mine I believe he'd have sliced me into pieces at last. He's the hardest fighter I ever met, certainly; yes, the very hardest. imsmm .., , v. ., . , , . . ix 1 1 1 ii A BULLET. He putme to my very best." Felicia bad risen and was standing with the bowl in one hand, the spoon iu the other, ber cheeks losing somewhat of their color, but she did not speak. "Ho ho! my jolly young swash-buckler, how do you go this mornin?, eh?" he con tinued, addressing Orton and roaring out his words with a cordial, almost jolly in tonation. "Feeding yourself up to fight me again, eh? Don't know that I care about any more of your play, hat haf hat not any more till these gashes get well," and he in dicated his head and arms, "you cut me all over, from crown to sole. Devil of a slash ing swordsman are you, certainly." He sat himself down in the chair from which Fellcie had risen, and spread out his ponderous, iron-thewed limbs; the seat creaked under his great weight. '"You're the very son of your father, boy," he went on, "just like 'him all over, a fighter that never gives in. It does me good to look at you, it's like being a boy again and living over the old gay times in the far East I reckon that your father never told you about our adventures to- . gether." "I think I heard my father speak of you," said Orton. "I judge not," remarked the old man with a peculiar chuckle. "I used to have another name in those days and I have had several good ones since, ha I ha I ha t" He slapped bis muscular thigh with bis hard, heavy hand and laughed uproariously. Felicie quietly left the room. "How are your slashed places getting on ?" Eochon inquired in a gentle manner. "I seem to be doing finely in every way, thank you," responded Orton. "I have but llttlepain now." "Well, how the devil came you over there with those niggers? You're not the sort of man to be in with a lot of cattle like Garcin and his gang of nigzer cutthroats, eh?" Bocbon spoke bluntly, but without any evidence of insolence in voice or man ner. Orton felt it best to explain frankly that the accidents of an explorer's wanderings had sent him to Garcin's, and that he knew nothing whatever of the man's character or of his business. . "Captain Victor, of the Zozo, took me there," he concluded. "Victor, ho ho! Victor; hell not take anybody else anywhere again," chuckled Eochon. "He went down in the storm on Ponchartrain the other day." "Went down!" "Yes, down with all on board; not a soul escaped to tell the story.. Hal ha ! ha 1" This was ill news to Orton, for he reepl lected that Victor with the Zozo was to come to take him back to New Orleans at tbe end of the month. He remarked this speaking to Eochon. "Well, he'll never come back," said the old man grimly, again slapping his thigh. "The fish have- eaten the black scoundrel now. Haf ha! haT' There was something in Eochon's person ality so outre, so savage and yet so master ful, that Orton found himself looking at him with admiration in spite of all that had happened. Surely here was a man who might have been a king of all the bucca- . -neers, the lord of all tbe wild crews that roamed the Spanish main. Never had the artist seen such a perfect type of the old- ' time outlaw hero, who, from his beard to his boots, was bristling, so to speak, with '- unkempt virility and bulging with mus. cnlar force. What a study that form and face would make, Orton thought, and he wondered if the old mau would object to be ing set upon paper or canvas. Eochon remained for some time, talking in a half-jolly desultory way, and at last when he arose to go he said: "Well, my boy, T rather like you. Be patient and eat all they give you and you'll soon come round all right." K He put his pipe in, his mouth and went forth through the door, fairly jarring' the' house with his tread. The impression left in Orton's miad was a stiangej saixture (of, VLi t 4(