EB Zr j - . r:3?g??m. J? 4?? ' . , THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH. r, THIRD PART. -i : -.n.rT, PAGES 17 TO 20. RAILROADS IN INDIA. How the English Have Covered Hin doostan With an Iron Network. THE LOWEST FARES IN THE WORLD Magnificent Stations and Iron Telegraph Poles and Ties. SECTIOX HANDS AT FIVE CENTS A DAI BOMBAY, India, May 10. --India hag now 16,000 miles of railroad. It is as far from Calcutta to Bom bay as it is rrom New York to Denver, and several trunk lines run across Hindc stan from one city to the other. There are branches from these which go up the Him alaya Mountains al most to the borders of Thibet, and others which shoot off to the Khyber Pass at the entrance to Alghanis- tan and not a creat distance from the "new Russian railway, which has been pushed on past Samarcand. The day will come when we can travel from London to Calcutta by rail, though this pre supposes the cutting of a tunnel under the English Channel. South India has many long miles of railroads and the whole of Hindostan, which is half the size of the United States, has a railroad net covering it The construction of these railroads has ,?Pli i r ic&?Mm&&&r - -oISTf AN INDIAN BAII.KOAD TRAIN. included engineering works, fully as grand as the railroad making of the United States, i and the keeping of them in order is more difficult. One of the great plagues of Indian rail road makers is the white ant. These insects eat every dead thing in wood form above ground. If a pile of wooden ties is left out overnight an attack of ants will have car ried it away by morning, and there is no possible storage of wooden ties. Such ties as are in the roads are saved from destruction by the vibration caused by the running trains, which scares the ants away. It is the same with telegraph poles and fences, and the result is that the ties of most of the railroads are made ot iron. I have traveled about 3,000 miles over all kinds of railways in India. The telegraph poles on many of the lines are hollow tubes of galvanized iron, about as big around as the average man's calt, so made that they fit into one another and form a pole about ten feet high. To these poles the lines are strung and many of the roads use such poles throughout their entire length. On ether lines the telegraph poles are T iron rails, the same as those on which the car travels. Two of these rails are fastened to gether by bars about a foot wide, and then this iron lattice work is set deep in the ground and the wire strung upon it. About some of ..these stations the fences are made of such iron rails, and through hundreds of miles along one of the rajah's railroads in "Western India I found fences of barbed wire with sandstone posts. These posts were a foot wide and four inches thick, and they stood about three feet above the ground. The wires ran through holes in them, and the railroad men tell me that they are much cheaper than wood. Dlncnlficent Depots. I am surprised at the magnificence of the depots in India. Here at Bombay there is a finer railroad station than any we have in the United States. It cost about 51,000,000, and architecturally it is the peer of any building at "Washington. At Calcutta there are fine depots and even at the smallest of the towns yon find well-made stone build ing surrounded by beautiful gardens in which bloom all kinds of tropical flowers. Nothing about these stations is made of wood. The platforms are of stone filled in with cement, and the cars run into the sta tions on a plane about two feet below the floor, so that the floor of the cars is just even with that of the depot Each station has it first second and third-class waitin? room, and everything in India goes by classes. The cars are first second, third and fourth class and they are all on the English plan. They are about two-thirds the length or our cars and a trifle wider. They are not so heavy as the American passenger coach and they look more like wide, long boxes than anything else. Each of these cars is divided into compartments. In the first and second class there are only two compartments to the car, and the chief difference in these two ciasses is in the. number allowed in the compartment. If you will imagine a little room about 10 feet long by 5 feet wide, with a roof 7 feet high, in the center of which there is a glass globe for a light you may have some idea of the Indian first-class car. You must, however, put two long, leather covered, cushioned benches along each side of this room and at the ends of these have doors with glass windows in them, opening inward. Over the cushioned backs of the benches there are windows which are let up and down like those of the American street car, and which are of the same size. The car has none of the finish of the American Pullman, and though you are expected to sleep within it there are no signs of bedding or curtains. At the back of it there is a lavatory without towels, soap or brushes, and there is barely room enough for yon to turn around in it when you are washing. The second-class cars are much the same, and there may be one second-class car and one first in the same coach. The Sleeping Cars. But how about the bedding? Every man carries his own bedding with him in India and these Indian cars give you nothing else but a lounge on which to spread a cotton comforter, a shawl, or a rug. You carry your own pillows and the bed ding of half a dozen passengers would fill a car. Eaeh traveler of the first and second class brings the most of his baggage into the train with him, and there is often as much as the contents of an American baggage car in one of these compartments. No one un dresses, but all lie down with their clothes on, pull their shawls over them and sleep the best they can. There are no porters to wake you up at the proper time and your boots remain unblacked. Women travel ing alone universally go into compartments reserved for women, and men traveling with their wives have often trouble in keeping together. Cheap Railroad Fare. Only rich natives travel second class in India. The bulk of the first and second class travel is made up of English and Americans. The natives, as a rule, go by the intermediate or third class, and the third-class fares here are the cheapest in the world. They are, by ordinary trains, less than i cent per mile, and by mail trains only 9-16 of a cent. Still the thhd,clasi passengers at this low rate pay more to the roads than either the first or second class, and railroad managers tell me they believe it will pay to reduce this rate much lower than it now is. Mr. lillswortn, oi tne iien vcr and Bio Grande Railroad, is traveling with me, and he tells me that we have-not begun to touch bottom in our American railroad fares. He thinks the roads would make twice as much if their rates were re duced one-half, and says that the rednction is sure to come. The English managers well appreciate this, and the third-class fares in England are the fares that fill the pockets Of the stockholders. Crowded Train. f Here in India there is avast difference between the prices of the various classes. First class is, on the great Indian Peninsula Railroad, which is a fair type of the whole, 2) cents per mile. Second class is just one half this rate and intermediate one-half of second class. Third class is one-half the in termediate and the third class pays. The third class cars carry 32 passengers. They are divided into compartments with benches uncushioned, running so across the car that the passengers face each other, and the pas sencers are packed in as close as sardines. They are always full, and these East Indi ans 'travel as much as do the citizens of tire United States. I have yet to find a train in which the third class cars were'not packed, and many of those npon which I rode had three times as many third class cars as first and second class. Each native carries a bundle with him containing his brass pot, out of which he drinks, and often the pans with which he coots his food. Accustomed to the poorest of beds at home, a cotton blanket suffices for his traveling rug, and in waiting for the trains at the stations he often puts his shoe under his head for a pillow, and wrapping up his turbahed head in the cotton cloth which covers bis bare shoulders, sleeps upon the ground until the train is called. How Hindoo Women Travel. The Hindoo women travel as lightly as the men, but the two sexes are never put into the same cars. There are closed cars on all of the trains for high caste Hindoo women,, and these have windows of blue glass in the first and second classes, which permit the women to look out but which prevent the men from looking in. These women come to the depot in closed chairs, J. Kagpore Coach. and as they go to the train they pull their shawls close about their faces, though their ankles and -calves, covered with gold or sil ver bracelets, often show. In some of the cars the windows of the women's compart ments are so fixed with shutters that there can be no looking out, and in the train which carried me to Darjeeling there was one car entirely covered with canvas as thick as that of a circus tent This con tained Hindoo women, who, as they rode up the Himalaya Mountains through the finest scenery in the world, were thus shut in the stuffy darkness of this tent-like car and saw no more Of the grandeur of the na ture about them than they would have seen had they been tied up in so many leather bags and sent along as mail. AFroMl-Pliarine Rnllrond. One of the greatest roads in India is the East Indian Railway. This railway has a curious way of investing a percentage of the wages which it pays its hands, which is found to work both to the advantageof the railway and the employes. "Wages are very low in India, but through this method many of the employes have become rich. All of the hands "who receive over 30 rupees or ?10 a month, A. Wedding Procession. have to pay 2 per cent of their earnings to a certain fund. They can pay as much more than 2,per cent as they please. The road receives the money, pays interest on it and upon their leaving the service honorably gives them back double the amount they have paid in with interest This seems in credible, bnt I am assured it is so. An En glish clergyman told me that he knew a railroad employe who went in at 510 a month and who will soon take ont $5,000. This method was entered into at the time the railroad was built The managers were hard up for capital and they wished to bind their hands to them. The company is now prosperous and it keeps np the same system. Very Cheap Iinbor. Speaking of railroad wages in India, I find that section men work here for from 3 to 6 cents a day and that the roads can get all the men they want at these prices. Engi aers work oa time and distaaee, and they .iSBt&M. are about the highest paid oi the railroad employes. They get about 570 a month while running regularly, but they can in crease this by extra running to 583 and 5100 a month. The Indian railways have no con ductors in our sense of the word. The tick ets are collected and examined by men at the various stations and the guard who manages the train in other respects, has nothing to do with the tickets. Such guards get about 525 a month and on the smaller railroads they receive from $7 to 520 a month. The most of the guards are natives or half-breeds, while a majority of the en gineers are English. I don't think the English engineers are as well posted as our American ones. I asked one of them the weight of his engine. He stammered and replied that he did not know. The Ameri can engineer can tell you just what his en gine weighs, how much steam she carries and all about her. A Pecnllar Freight Benedale. The engines here are lighter than ours and the whole equipment of the railroad is upon a smaller scale. Most of the freight cars are made of iron and you could crowd three of them into one American caboose. They carry on an average about six tons, have no trucks and only four wheels. Our freight cars will carry from 40 to 50 tons and some of our narrow gauge cars carry 40 tons. If these Indian trains had such cars they could carry from seven to eight times the amount they now do, but the people have never been accustomed to large cars and they stick to the old ways. None of these freight cars are managed by brakes from the top and you see no brakemeu trotting along on the tops of the trains. Freight in India is measured by the mound or 80 pounds. Freigfit trains are called goods train, and I find some curious rules in regard to freight Beturn trip tickets are issued to horses, and camels cost 12 cents per mile per truck and four camels can be put on each truck. Ele phant calves are transported at,the rate of 6 cents a. mile, and as to other animals, the cost ot' them is gauged at the rate for dogs. . A Dancerona Prcdlcnment. One of the worst things about these In dian trains is the impossibility of passing from ona car to another and the difficulty which one has to get at the guard or to stop the train. You may be locKed up in the same compartment with a mad man or a robber and it is impossible for you to help yourself. In the cars of one of the Western Indian roads there is a little electric button, fenced around with a walnut frame, over which is a pane of thick glass. Just around the button run the words: "To stop the train break the glass and touch the button." On one of the trunk lines I was closeted in a first-class compartment in a train going at the rate of 30 miles an hour. Looking upward I saw that the glass globe contain ing the lamp was leaking and that a fnll pint of oil had run out into it and that this was shaking with each sway of the car. There was nothing between it and the blaze, and I feared every moment that it would catch, the glass would break and a pint of burning oil would spread out upon the carpet of the little box-like room below, in which I was. I looked for a bell rope. There was none. I went all around the sought everywhere some means of stopping' tne tram. J. coma nua none ana naa to wait until we arrived at the next station, a half an hour later. Luckily no accident happened and I was here able to call the guard and have the lamp removed. Had there been an explosion my only salvation would have been in putting out the flame or in jumping through the car window while the train was going at this lightning speed. Pbame G. Carpenter. STRYCHNIA AND SNAKEBITES. It Looks n Tbonch Whisky oa a Cure May Have to Go. Dr. Mueller, an Australian physician, has, according to the London Hospital, suc cessfully treated a number ot cases of snake bite with strychnia. This he has done on the hypothesis that the poison affects the nerves, weakening and paralyzing them; in fact, that the venom is not, after all, a poison in the common sense, and does not directly cause any change of tissue. Its effect is simply produced by the operation of dynamic force that is, it suspends the action of the nerve cells for a longer or shorter period. Hitherto all antidotes have been administered on the theory that the virus affected the blood, and the most suc cessful results have come from the adminis tration of alcohol, which seemed to main tain the strength or the sufferer until the poison was eliminated by natural means. Dr. Mueller's theory at first sight is at variance with the fact that the blood in case of snakebite does actually change, but his explanation of this change is that the pulmonary capillaries, through which the blood corpuscles pass when going to the Inugs to exchange the carbonic acid of effete blood for fresh and life-giving oxygen, have lost their power. They owe the tension their healthy contracting power to the in fluence of the vaso-motor nerves, and when the latter are paralyzed the corpuscles lose their power, so to speak, squeezing out by the superfluous carbonic acid, and leaving the corpuscles free to take up oxygen. Thus the corpuscles pass through the lungs un changed, carrying back to the heart blood as full of carbouic acid as they brought from it, and they themselves absolutely die, bursting in consequence of this load ot car bonic acid. Dr. Mueller's remedy is the injection of strychnia by means of the hypodermic syringe, the application of arti ficial heat, and the interference with the tendency of the patient to sleep. He thus sets up a rival dynamic force which fights it out with the original poison, and if the' antidote is applied in time, generally with success. Lesson of Experience. Hatchet.1 Anxious Mother My son, that young lady you admire knows nothing about housework. Son Well, mother, you know you don't either. "True, my son. Your father's brother, however, married a girl who did, and the money she saved was invested in real estate, and they are now living in a brown-stone palace." 'Oh, well, his fortune couldn't all have come from that" "Maybe not; maybe not But your father and I are living in a rented house, and one of our old servant girls owns it" Perfectly Willing:. Boston Herald. 1 Wife I wish you would push this baby carriage a little way- Husband Well, J will, if yon will carry tfea baby, - A Steady Team. prrTSBrma, sunday, june i6, issa HAUNTED, NEW TORE. OliTe Harper Tells of Ghosts Often Seen and Heard. SOME ARISTOCRATIC SPIRITS. A Ghostly Game of Euchre and Harder in a Hotel Bedroom. THE GHOST WHO COUNTED HEE DEESSES rWBITTKT VOB TITS DISPATCH. ' 7t is not often that we get hold of an au thentic ghost story, where the relator has seen the shadowy spirits himself, or herself, as it may be. I have heard many stories of supernatural sights, but nearly all have ap peared in some remote place and were seen only by the aunt, cousin or grandmother of some intimate friend of the story teller, but there are ghosts right here in New York, 'several of them, and while those who have seen them are almost as visionary as the ghosts, still they deserve a certain consider ation, and I now feel impressed to give it Where the French Hospital has been, in West Fourteenth street, there is an inquiet spirit of some kind, and for a long time the house could not find nn occupant who would stay, and yet no one who has lived fliere has ever actually seen anything. But in the middle of one night in each week, there is a sound of a woman's sobbing, a hurried open ing and closing ot doors, a light footstep running and the swish of draperies along the hall, a heavier step behind, panting breaths, a scuffle, a stifled scream, a sound of heavy blows, a fall, silence; only broken by a hurried descent of the stair case and an opening and shutting of the front door, and mystery, complete as to the cause of it all. A HAUNTED rZX-X-. In Spring street is a well, covered over with a slab of stone, and filled with rubbish. This well is now under a shop, and I think the number is not far from 65, but I cannot remember it exactly. Hera the shadowy spirit of poor Elma Sands rises once a year and calls for vengeance on her unpunished murderer. She was a lovely young Quaker girl, pure and sWeet who was foully thrown into this well many years ago, it was sup posed by Levi Weeks, but the crime was not actually proven upon him and he was liberat ed. The case was famous then on account of the prominence of his' family, and the fact that be was defended by Aaron Burr and Alexander Hamilton. She, poor girl, had been of poor but respectable family and she went out sleigh riding with him, her be trothed husband, and never came back. Quite a time afterward her body was found in this well, her tender hands all bruised and crushed by cruel boot heels to make ber let go her hold on the planksand fall into the icy water beneath. The history of the crime, and how she was placed outside her door on abier, in Washington street, forthe populace to see her as she lay dead, is written in the history of that day. Now, a sturdy German carpenter works above the well where she was murdered and never thinks of it. In a pretty but old-fashioned house in Stuyvesant Square ghosts like squares, I think is another ghost This house stood empty for several years, and about six years ago a gentleman, his wife and little daughter moved in there, and while fitting up al lowed the child to play about the empty attio which had apparently been arranged for a children s playroom long ago. "Xhere was a fireplace and a large fireboard in front of it. When the house was about fin ished downstairs "the mother began to pay more attention to the little girl, and tried to keep her down there with her, but the child always stole away and went back upstairs again and again, until finally the mother asked why she liked to go up there so much. She replied that she liked to play with the funny little boy. Investigation showed that it was utterly impossible for any person, man or child, to get in. that place or be con cealed there, but the little girl insisted, and told her parents that he "went in there," pointing to the fireboard. A MTJEDEB BEYEALED. The parents were seriously concerned, be lieving that there daughter was telling them an untruth, and threatened to punish her for it, but she insisted so strongly that she saw and played with a "funny little boy, with lots of buttons on his jacket," that they finally gave up threatening and re solved ' to investigate. The father, who is an old sea captain, found out that this house had been' occupied by an English man named Cowdery who had had three chil dren, two boys and a girl. One of the boys was an idiot. This idiot was supposed to have fallen into the Bast river, as his cap was found there, and he had always shown a liking for the river when his nurse took him out Soon after this Mr. Cowdery moved West This was enough for my friend's friend, who had the fireboard taken down, and short work in the wallJbv the side of the chimnev brought the body o( the unfortunate idiot boy. The back of his skull was crushed in. He still Bad the dark blue jacket on, with four rows of buttous ou the Iront The poor little bones were buried and the affair kept quiet, bnt the Captain le t the house. A lady whom 1 knew well, had a strange experience in the northern part of the city near Washington Heights. She was a guest at Mr. Beeknian's bouse, and as there were very many other visitors .the housekeeper assigned her to a room which had belonged to the son of the owner, and he was dead. My friend was young at the time, and she could sleep anywhere, but she found it utterly impossible to sleep in this room, and moved by uncontrollable impulse she got out of bed and walked restlessly about the room until 1 o'clock, feeling at the same time a great depression of spirits, unusual to a bright, happy girl. Finally she threw herself into a large chair, and instantly felt a pain in her throat, and a suffocation that caused her to faint and fall to the floor so heavily tnat the housekeeper and one or two others came hurrying in. Later she dis covered that in this room the unfortunate son of the host had cnt his throat in this very chair, and had fallen and died on the spot where she fell. A spook's passion fob deess. This same lady, who is no visionary, but one of the most common-sense women I ever knew, had another curious experience in an old-fashioned hotel which stands or did not long since near McComb's dam. She and a number of other young folks had been in vited to a large party at a house not over a half mile or so away, and the night before the party several members of the lamilr re turned unexpectedly from abroad, and there was not room enough for them all. So a young married couple and this lady and her sister volunteered to go over to this hotel to pass Saturday and Sundav nights. The small hotel was quite full and so a room, which apparently had not been used for some time, was prepared lor the two young girls. The elder sat up a while after the younger was in bed, arranging her hair and thinking. When the door opened noise lessly and a lady with what she thought was a peculiar night dress orr. and with long hair unbound, came into the room and went to a wardrobe in the corner and took the two sisters' dresses and threw them on the floor and counted all the garments hanging there. Then she went, to the bureau and looked over every piece of linen or other article it contained, counting them in a whisper. So life-like did she appear that mv friend never dreamed of thinking her a ghost, not even when she went out of the room and closed the door after her. She was surprised at such a curious proceeding, but no more. The next morning was rainy and they took breakfast there, and my friend saw hang ing in the little parlor a photograph ot her visitor, and at once recognized her, The landlord's wife asked if iha "had slept well, and my friend answered that she had, though "she did not retire until late. The landlady then asked if a had noticed any anything unusual, and in Bbort the whole thing was explained in this way. The landlord's first wife had been passionately fond of dress, and before she died she de clared that she could never lie easily in her grave if she' thought anyone else was to wear her clothes, and that she should coma back every Saturday night and count her clothes. A CURIOUS COINCIDENCE, There was a very enrious coincidence which happened a few months since right in the house where I live, and which I find it hard to explain. There was a lady of whom we were all very fond, who had rooms on the floor below us. She gave up the front rooms and reserved another, into which'sbe placed all her belongings and then went to Alhany to visit a sister. A member of my lamuy naa Been ont ana returned in the evening at 10 or 10:30, when at the door of this room he saw a lady in black. Ho was obliged to pass her, -ana he saw that it was our friend. He spoke to her and asked if ho could be of any service, thinking that she could not unlock the door, but she slmplv bowed as if she did not wish to speak and be v.uuia uu up iiuuu asionisnea, xnree aays later her family came to remove all the things. She had just died when he saw her. He was not thinking of her at all when he saw ber there, nor had she been ill but a few hours, perhaps minutes we do- not know that exactly; She died of apoplexy. The only other authentic New York ghost that I know of is that or rather those that I saw, and others saw, in the Metropolitan Hotel, in room 242. This room fronts on the Prince street side, and must be described to tell the story. The room is about 10 feet wide bv 15 long and has an alcove for a bed, adjoining the main hall, while a narrow hall alongside of the alcove leads from the room to the hotel corridor. The room has but one window, and has a fireplace by the ome ui me wiuuow, ana inev Doth tate up the entire wall space. An old-fashioned bureau stood, by the window on the left hand, with the hall door as the starting point A small stationary wasbstand is placed between the door and bureau, with a movable gas burner above it. A small, oval marble table stood in the center of the room, and a couple of easy chairs, two plain chairs and a lounge completed the furnishings of the room with a wardrobe. There was no possible way of any one entering the room except by the door. I had arrived from California that aay ana was tired, so after dinner I wrote a few letters and dispatches and went to bed as soon as they were sent To write these I had to move the little table over close to the washstand, and opposite the lounge which stood against the wall at the right side. I went directly to sleep, and I do not know how long I slept when I awoke suddenly and sat up in bed, and saw two men seated at the right side of the room, one on the sofa and the other on a chair, with the little table, which I had left on the other side, be tween them. The gas, which I had turned almost out was full on and these men were playing euchre. They did not speak, but I knew the game by the play. A GHOSTLY HUBDEB. The man who was sitting on the sofa was a thin, delicate looking man, dressed in a light suit of clothes, with scanty reddish hair and a straggling beard. His forehead was unusually broad and high, and the rest of his face so thin that it gave him a pecu liar look. His hands were long and thin, and the left wrist was misshapen. The other man was stout, dark, with piercing black eyes and thiok eyebrows. His hair was straight, thick, short and shining, and his heavy black mustache drooped. Yet I could see a small triangularscar at the edge of the mouth. His cheeks and chin had that peculiar .blue, tinge that some men have after shaving. He was handsome, and was dressed in dark clothing. Thev played out one hand and one tnek on the next, when they seemed angry and quarreling, though I heard no sound, and in an instant the dark man drew a long knife and stabbed the other one in the left breast. The knife penetrated tohe very hilt. The wounded man shivered a little, his eyes closed and he was dead. The other one rose and lifted up the inert right arm, drew it forward and clasped the hand' around the knife, and pushed the table closer until it held the dead man's elbow in such a position as to prevent its falling again, alter which he gathered un the cards, put them; in his pocket, and the whole thing disappeared. I might give a long description ot my ter rors, only it would not be true, for I was not frightened, and lay down to sleep again, thinking it was a dream, but in the morning I lound the table by the sofa and all the things I had left on the table upon the bureau. Still, I did not attach great im portance to this.asl had often waited about in my sleep when I was young. All the next day I was very busy getting my steamer ticket and one thing and another, and had forgotten all about it before night, but that night I was aroused in the same manner and saw the same thing and found all my things displaced as before and the table at the other side. The third evening I spent wih some friends and returned at abont 11, and almost immediately retired, though before I did so. I tied a rone that had been around my trunk fast to the leg of the bureau and all through the supports of the table in more than 20 knots, and piled the table with everything I could get on it, and left the gas turned up brightly. The same experience, only that the rope was left neatly coiled np and all the things put on the floor. ' SEEN BY OTHERS. Then I began to. feel creepy. I tried to get the chambermaid to sleep in the room with me. she said she would ask the house keeper as it was against the rules. Tha housekeeper came to me, and in answer to my questions as to whether anyone else had ever complained of this room, she hesitated and finally admitted that a sick lady had once insisted on having another room. She gave no explanations, nor did I, but I thought I would give it one more trial and I determined to sit up all night in the room, but when it came on to 12 o'clock, I con cluded that I could see from the alcove quite as well, though it was not far away. I sat down npon the bed for about half an hour, and all at oneo the whole scene was re enacted, and I must confess to feeling very queer. In the morning I sent for Mr. Adams, the clerk, and asked him if any murder had ever been committed in that room, but he declared there had not, but in answer to my questionings admitted that a man had once committed suicide there. He had been sick and despondent and so took his life. I then told Mr. Adams that I felt sure the man was murdered, and gave him my expe rience. He could not give the details of the position of the body of the supposed sui cide. I was then assigned to another room and I promised to say nothing about it. I went abroad and came back; went to Cali fornia and returned; went South and hack, and had almost forgotten the whole affair, when, one day I felt absolutely impelled to write about it, which I did and sent the article to the New York Sun. They only took time to verify what they could of the story and published it This caused con siderable stir, and brought out the fact thnt others besides myself had seen things in that room. A Catholic priest published an arti cle relating to it, and saying that he be lieved that the man had been murdered and that as a punishment for his crimo he was obliged to enact it every night in flep, aud that it was a well-known fact that one mind had more or less influence over another, aud that his mind, freed from body, had forced mine to see the tragedy. This seems to me a plausible theory, or at least the most plausible of any I have heard or can invent. An English sea captain also published his experience in this room. He had been playing cards with a friend, and while at the little table there, came an invisible shower of apparently heavy articles down on the table, scattering the cards right aud left Another man had peculiar, but not startling,, manifestations there. There may be more returns riot in let Qr4YS Earpkb, MY H H BY IOTTISB CHAPTER I. THE newspaper which Beuben Hale and I own and edit is, I am aware, a "one-horse" affair, but we are satisfied with it It is a small eighpaged weekly, largely made up of advertisements and scissorings, aud the sub scription price is $1 a vear. We have no re porters, we never print telegrams nor murders, and we have a sub scription list of 172,000 names farmers, gardeners and country people, because wherever there are people raising fruit, truck or flowers, there goes the little Seed and Graft, and we are old fogy enough to employ girls to fold and direct these news papers, and these girls do their work cheer fully and seem to be happy. When oneot them marries, we give her a sewing machine and a dining room table. One day I came into the office after an absence of a couple of hours, and found Hale scissoring the New York dailies. "Dan," said he, ''there was a young woman in here to see you." "Very well," said I, getting a glass of water; "you saw her, I suppose ? It -is as hot as ginger outside, Beuben. "I saw her," he replied, "but she didn't want to see me. It was the old gentleman she was after." "Now come," said I, sitting down, "I am not going to shirk the title, but you'll have to take shares in it You can't be distingnished from me by it, my boy. I am gray, bnt you are bald; I am lean and you are stout, and there isn't a six months' difference in our years or our looks, Beu ben Hale." "Have it as you please," said he; "but that is what she said she wanted to see old Mr. Crawford. I think she thought me the young one." , "Was she a blind young woman?" "Blind," he repeated. "Just wait until you see her eyes. Ob, she is coming backl At 2 o'clock, Daniel. Even if she didn't want to see me. I asked her to do that I told her you'd be sure to be in then." "Well, I won't" I answered. "I am going ont to Melvin on the 1:45. I am not goirfg to stay in town this sweltering after noon." "Yes, you are. You.'ll thank your happy stars it you do. If you miss her, Dame), you'll break her heart, and after you have seen her sh.e'11 break yours." "I am going on the 1:43 train," I re peated. "Bet you a .dollar you don't," said Hale. "I told her to come at 2, but she said 1 o'clock would be more convenient, and she wonld try to find you then, and, Daniel, you had better take your feet off the chair and brnsh that hair of yours up a little, for here she comes. I hear the echo of her voice and the patter of her heels in the out office, where she has just asked Marvey if you are in." "Whaa dunce you arel I really think " But at that moment the dooropened, and Marvey appeared. "Lady to see Mr. Crawford," said he, stepping aside, and there entered a young woman dressed very plainly in dark blue, with a smoke colored vail pretty well cover ing her face. "Yon do not remember me. Mr. Craw ford," she said. I am Miss Margaret Wool stine. I see you very often in church, but of course you do not see me, but you hare to ," and she nervously laughed, "you have to hear roe, you know." "Mr. Crawford," said Beuben, getting up without the glimmer of a smile, and with great deliberation, "I am going to Melvin .MOu.gaeii!!i. The Attack on the Office of the Sill Beacon. on the 1:45, and I shall have to leave at once. Will yon kindly pay that dollar for me on account?" He put on his hat, took his cane, bowed to Miss Woolstine, went out the door, and I heard him immediately tramping up stairs to the composing room, where I knew he had proots to read. There were times when Beuben Hale was 16 years of age instead of CO. Miss Woolstine looked more comfortable after we were alone, and she took off her veil, holding it in ber hands, "I almost felt as if Iknewyou, Mr. Craw, ford," she said. "When I was a little girl I used to sit with my uncle in his pew just where I could see you as I looked at the painted glass window, and now from the choir, of course we have you in full view." "And you do not think roe rude because you su often catch me watching you?" The girl slightly colored, "lou have the kindest face in all the cbuich. I could never think you rude." And with that she became scarlet "I will not say what I think of yours," I said gently, "or you might think me very rnde indeed, but can I do anything for you?" She crushed her veil tightly in her hands. "I do not want to take up your time, Mr. Crawford, but I do want to talk to you a minute-. J have to support myself and I want to get newspaper work, Mr. Crawford, and I thought perhaps, yon would give me some. It is so quiet here." I looked at her with surprise. "I thought you lived with your uncle, Mr. Masou?" "I did, but we do not ogrce, and I have no money of my own, and as I have to leave there, I must support myself." "But surely your natural resource would be in mnsic, Miss Woolstine. Your voice ought to he worth a great deal to you11 "I could not sing fnimblic," she quickly answered, "The church I do not mind, be cause I have gone there all my lile, bnt the concert stagel oh, I could not do that! And I would rather not teach. It worries me to teach music" "You would make a success in concerts." She shook her head. "And," I continued, "it would be for more lucrative than any work I could give you. You would not like a position here at all. The girls are good, respectable girls, but they would not suit you at all. Arid the- wages are low." "I have my -salary in the church," she said, "that would help a little, and I do not want a situation with your girls, Mr, Craw ford. I want editorial work." "Ho, ho, editorial workl" I smiled at this, "but you kuow Mr, Hale aud I do all that and have time to spare." "But I have helped you a little," she ex plained, with .eagerness. "I have written you several things, sad you have altfays WmBU MIS DELIGHT STOCKTON. published them. Last" week you mads an editoiial of one'" "So, indeed 1 Then you are "Mark Wil lis?" and I nodded my head like a Chinese mandarian, I have since been informed. "Well, you are not only a very beautiful yonng lady, but you are a clever one, too. I don't know that we ought to refuse Mr. Mark Willis." "Ob, please do not" she cried. "I should be so glad to come here, and I think I could soon learn to be useful. I could cutoutpara grapbs for you, and that must be such stu pid work for you to do, and I could write on what subjects yon thought best and if you or the other gentleman wanted to go away for a few days I am sure I could do differ ent things for you. And," she added, "you might both want to go away together. Sup pose to-day you also would have liked to have left town on the 1:45 train? Wouldn't you have been more comfortable to have known some one was here ready to receive messages or attend to your orders?" At this how could I help smiling, and I told her that her reasoning almost con vinced me. "Indeed," I added, "it would do so but for two reasons; one, we do not need you in' the slightest, and the other is that this stuffy office is no place for a young lady." She stood up, and I could see tried to look entirely indifferent, but her lips trem bled, and her face paled. "Of course then," she answered me, "there is nothing more to be said, and I can only beg your pardon, Mr. Crawford,, for having troubled you." As I sat still looking at her, it flashed upon me that perhaps, if I knew more of the history of this girl I should not so hast ily shut the door upon her. And I have a very strong feeling about disappointing women. When I married, my wife and I THE POWEE had only a meager salary upon whioh to live, and I grumbled enough because I had to work all night and in consequence slept nearly all day. X thought I was deprived of mv sharp of sunlight and social life, and my wife tenderly agreed with me. After she suddenly failed in health and died, I dis covered that she had worked in our little house all day, and sewed for the shops at night. It was thus she bought mj little comforts. And now that she was dead and could not share the comfort and repose of my life, it seemed to me that becanse of her deprivations I onght to be more thoughtful of other women. Little enough did the girls guess how often they owed some little pleasure or indulgence to the mute pleading of my wife's memory. Thinking thus, I said: "Are you quite determined on newspaper work, Miss Woolstine?" "Quite. And, perhaps I should tell you that I have an offer which I can accept from the Royal Express, although I have not written for them, but I have just come from there and they seem desirous of trying me." "Do you want to go there?" She flushed painfully. "No, I do not. It is so .public. There are so many men coming and going." I rubbed my bands nervously. "Sit down. Miss Woolstine, who did yon see there at the office?" "Mr. Finley, the editor." "And you will go .there?" "I think I ought at least to try it don't you. It is one of onr best papers." I have not described Margaret Woolstine, and I do not know how to do so. She was a lovely creature, tall, slender, with a superb carriage of the bead, and the most charming coloring. Her eves were dark and tender. but pride and obstinacy curved her pretty mouth, and I often thought that it could not be pleasant to cross her will. But thus far I nave never had to do more than ob serve what has,happened to others who tried to subdue and conquer her. A3 she stood before me, so yonng and charming and innocent I thought of my wife who was also a Margaret, and I knew she wonld not have allowed the child to go into such a crowd as frequented the Royal Express, and I said: "Have you no mother?" "I have only my uncle," she answered, "and he is angry with me. My mother and father are dead." "Very well," said I, "someone must take care of you, and I am going to ask you to let me try lor a little while until your uncle has slept his anger off. And although we do not actually need anothereditor, yon can be of use to us, and I want you to come." Did she resent this half grudging invita tion? No. She looked at me with content and happiness in her eyes and asked me if sho should begin the next morning. When Hale came down stairs Miss Wool stine was gone and I was in a little room back of our office, taking papers out of a desk. "How is this?" he said with a fine affec tation of wonder, "didn't you getoff?" "Hale," said I. "we are going to have an other editor, and this room will have to be made ready for her at once. I think we'll put a matting on the floor and make it look clean and cool, and we'll hang a pink cur tain at the window. This desk will do, but we must get a better chair. If you will plear our belongings out, I'll send Marcy for tbo scrub woman and I'll go lor the matting." - "By George," said he. "are you daft? What on earth are you talking about?" And when I told him he listened, and his only reply was an'occasional ejaculation of "Oh, Lord!" but his intonation of that ex pression never varied. CHAPTER H. It is very certain that had Miss Woolstine gone to the office of the Royal Express she would not have had the chance for house keeping that we afforded her. With a little white apron tied over her dark dress, and an obtrusive duster'in her hand, she very soon learned to keep us in very good order indeed. But she had the rare, most angelic talent of making that order , ours and not her own. She never put our ink stands in the .middle of the tables.. Mine stood as I liked it, close to my hand, while Hale's was at arm's length from bis, and duc ucver lujjkcu u iciiio wibu fc.ie urab proofs. If I put a book on a shelf I found it there, dusted no donbt, but where I laid it Life n our establishment was very simple. Xheie tu ao rub of reporters, no lute hours, no excitement over news. The) flowers bloomed in the spring and we told her how to care for them, and what to buy, and we grafted, budded, ploughed, and reaped without even as much as a harvest dinner: to look after. Vainglorious old farmers) sent us samples of prodigious com and pumpkins, and market gar deners didn't forget to lei ns see their prize fruit and berries. Every thing sweet and pretty went to Miss Mar garet as her natural fee, and she it was who opened the boxes of flowers, the baskets of fruitand it was she who introduced the) soirit lamp, and tea kettle, and who made a corner in her little office where she served our little Arcadian lunches of bread and I butter, fruit and coffee. But it was Hale) who bought the teacups and money enougn must he have spent on them. There) were not two happier old boys than we ia the city that summer, and we never tired o telling each other what an admirable peH son Miss Woolstine was. She was very nsej ful to us. Her style in writing was full of sparkle, and her very notices of giant radishes, or new harrows, had little gracej ful terms of expression that took them out of the common and made them readable. She wrote our business letters, she scissored, she read proof and filed it, she sorted tha mail, she kept the water cooler in order; she opened the exchanges, she took tha most complete and unobtrusive interest in everything, but with it all Bhe kept her self apart with a gentle reserve that made us greatly admire her. As I knew her better, I saw there was trouble in he? life, and I suspected it arose from her quar rel with her uncle. He had been a father to her, and she had left him and was board ing in another part of the city. I knew that it was impossible that ha should not miss her, and she often spoke of her old, home with a lingering tenderness that was pathetic. Of the circumstances ot the quar rel I knew nothing, but Hale and I agreed that Mr. Mason had been to blame. And so the summer wore away. Hale) went back and forth from his house by the) sea, and I came in everv day from my farpx at Melvin, but Miss Woolstine stayed in the city. We invited her to visit us, wa urged her to take a holiday, but she replied that she was perfectly well and that work; suited her better than play. Off MELODY. "If we did that sort of thing," saidl, ona day, "we'd send you to write up tha Tigei Hill strike. You'd like that" "Why should I care to go there?" sha answered, coloring as she was apt to da when conversation became personal. "You are so much interested in mining affairs," I replied, "I have often noticed how you stop to read the Sill Beacon no matter what you are doing. Let the maij bring that and at once everything ia dropped. Seel Your very eves confess your giltl" 8hemet my accusation with as braves front as she could command. "Now come. Mr. Crawford," she replied, "You notice that I read that paper because) you are interested in it yourself and on tha lookout for itl Pray do you also notice how much I also like to get tha Orchard and. Meadow?" "I am interested in the Sill Beacon, "said I. "because mv nenhew. Jank T.av! rm t. lam also anxious 'to see what fool thing he will do next. There never was a, boy who so loved to stir up the wasp's nest I.want to see what he will say when he ia stung." "And I," she boldly asserted, "am inter, ested in those poor miners whom he abuses so much." "Abuses!" I repeated, "they ara a set of rascals every one of them. An insane, law defying crew." "They are a poor, ignorant crowd oi men, said she, "and it is our duty to edu- cate and civilize, not abuse them." "My dear," said I, "the United States Margaret a Frlsoner. offers refuge to the oppressed, but it does not offer a free-fizht territory for outlaws, and that is what these men ask of us. It i( the duty of their c-vn Governments to edu cate and civilize them. We do not aspira to make our country a reformatory school." "All that is true, but their own Govern ments won't do it, you know, and,they ara here. We must do it." "That they are hera is unfortunately true," said L "And your nephew's paper says they ought not to have schools where their own lan guage is used. I think that unkind. Their native tongue must be dear to them, and they naturally wish their children to know it" "Then let them teach it to their children at home, bnt in the pnblic schools of this country the language of this country is ia place. How else can we educatccivlliza and make good citizens of them? If they are to be part ot us, they should speak our language, read our books." "They will learn English. It is in tha air, and they cannot help it But it keeps the children and parents together if tha children's school life is that which tha parents knew. How would you like your child taught in a French school, a languaga and a method of thought of which you wera perfectly ignorant?" "If I fled with my child to Prance and expected him to be a French citizen, I think I wonld stand it Jack is in tha right, Miss Margaret He makes a mistake in not conceding more than he does, but la this he is right." J' You are fond of your nephew, and ara. ounuea to nis misiaces, said she stoutly. "I hardly know him," I replied. I never saw him but once, and that is five years ago. He is good-looking." By that time the kettle had boiled, and Hale came in with a basket of grapes, and1' we talked no more of the miners nor of tha perplexities thev presented. But of Jack we did sneak, and to thn -nnr. pok be.ote the day tiih oyer- xi mlnz ; fiMW r '.- v...,....,ri ;.-A .... ,.