as&aaaE&att EISHfiflK! y.Hf'ttf &vR9$W$r Hl8 THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH, SUNDAY, JUNE - 23, ' 188a: 5LSJE2SS . ? UK command from the corporal of marines, a 'swirl of meu, and the Commandant was cone. He left behind him a flippant burst of laughter and Harold leaning against the postern to hear the last peal ot irony. "When the Commodore reached the ver anda of the hotel, he stood a moment look ing over the ill-kept glacis and forlorn bar racks. There was not an emblem of authority anywhere. But he was thinking of his boy, whom he had not seen for three years. Somehow his heart turned to that boy out of all this chaos of popular in certitude with a tender impulse. At the moment when no one appeared to know what his duty was or to what he owed alle giance; when the old lore for the authority of the Republic seemed to be swallowed up in confusion, he yearned to put his arms about the one being that he had himself consecrated to the service of his country, and reared from a child with but one clear idea of his duty. He felt that there would be no hesitatinc, hair-SDlitting loyalty in that boy's heart, for he had watered it with his tears and set its example in his own blood. He dashed his hand across his eves, and straightened himself, as if ashamed of his afiection, put on a grim look and disap peared in the hotel. Lieutenant Harold lingered a few mo ments on the parapet, and then leaving the group listening to a burst of Southern fire works from the Colonel, he came slowly down the steps and had just turned upon the pebbly road that runs to the wharf, when he came face to face with Lieutenant frank lin Breeze, carryiug a traveling bag. "Great Scott!" was his immediate ex clamation, "have you seen the Commo dore?" "No, not yet; just this moment arrived. "What's the situation?" "Don't vou know. It's maddening." "I heard just enough in New York to make me anxious. I'm atraid the governor's in a trap." "Sure," replied the other. "And the devil of it is there's no way to hety him." "Well, that's what I came here for. How ranch is the Government property worth?" "There's 500,000 weight of nietal there on the sand; they are 10 and 15 inch colurn- mads." "I heard," said Lieutenant Breeze, "that the Boanoke was lying at Hilton's waiting for a commander." "Yes, I heard it this morning. "We get our Government news here through a woman." "The understanding in army circles in New York vas that the Secretary would move this property South." "Exactly, and your father will obey his superior officer." "Who's thewoman? asked Breeze. "Her name is Preston. She's from South Carolina." "What, Georgiana ! She here ?" "Yes, she's got a wire into the Depart ment; vou can't make a move here without her knowing it. Look hire, Frank, it's aj regular conspiracy, and the people of the North are such id)ols they can't see it" "Where is the Preston now?" "She's up there on the promenade, cutting tip the service with her sharp tongue. Did you hear the news from Pittsburg? All the stuff at the Allegheny Arsenal has been ordered South." "Do you say," asked Lieutenant Breeze, "that this Preston has retained her influ ence at beadquarters ?" "I say," replied Harold, "that her being ordered'here is part of the same infernal plot that ordered your father here. Where are you going ?" "I'm going up to see her; I'm an oldflame of hers." "Good luck to you. Come over to the hotel when you have tasted her vitriol. Your father's there." While this conversation was going on, the group on the parapet broke up. "Colonel," said the Preston, "I'm going to the beach. I prefer the roll of the breaker t the roll of the drum." "The beach by all means," cried Oakland, "the noie of the surf is a protection." "A what?" asked her ladyship, with gen uine interest. "A protection," he repeated. "We shan't be able to hear each other talk." There was a general gathering of skirts and overturnine of camp stools, and Miss Elutterlip prepared to gather in her cadet, who were hanging halfway over the ram parts. Oakland, who stood near her, offered his assistance and took a preliminary look over to see how great the fall was, incase the boy .got the best of him. The moment his eyes Jell on the white pebbles, he exclaimed: "Why there's Lieutenant Breeze." A moment later, when he offered his arm to the Preston, that capricious creaturesat down again. "On the whole," said she, "I think I'll stay here, I prefer the roll of the drum. I'm tired of human society." And Miss Elutterlip was heard to mutter as she swept down "Yes, when she wants it inhuman she remains by herself. Presently the promenade was deserted by all but this one dainty remnant and Flick, who held her closed parasol like a banjo, and was picking an imaginary jig on the handle as he kept time with the tip of his patent leather shoe. The lady composed herself in what might be called an attitude of unconscious grace just in time for the Lieutenant, who came up the steps with a brisk jump, and stfll carrying his traveling satchel in his hand. Very handsome he looked, in spite of the dust on his coat. There was something in the Norman blue and gold of his tempera ment that betrayed the lather's energy of purpose in spite of his mother's grace and comeliness. .No one who had ever seen that mother, long since buried on a foreign shore, could wonder at the father's admiration of the boy. 'Ah," he cried,"Miss Preston, Georgians, j. juai uja uiuuitub ucmu mat you were here, and turned aside on the jump to pay my respects to vou. I haven't seen mv father yet; in fact, I've only been here half an hour. She gave him her hand cordially, and there might have been discerned by an ex pert, a glance of quick admiration in her black eyes, as she took him summarily in. "Not reported to your father yet," she asked. "No, I reported to you first; I understand that vou are Commandant here. Bat, I say, things have changed, since we ate or anges and flirted down there at Moultrie, haven't they? Do you know, we ought to be bitter enemies?" "That's like a man; he thinks that a woman's heart changes as often and easily as a form of government." "I used to, that was when I was a stu dent of yours; but I've got to be the stead iest fellow in the world, don't ask me to flirt again. Jupiter how stunning you look." J "Alas," she said with a musical laugh, "Isee what a bitter change has come over yon." He picked up her hand. It was one of those dainty, "puissant hands that have nes tled in the fists of champions and emperors and turned Empires upside down with noth ing bnt dimples. "That's my ring. Why didn't you give it to a new lover?" "Don't know," she answered, languidly, "unless it was because a woman always gives away the best she's got. What brought you here?" "Bun on to see the srovernor. The old boy's been almost retired down here thought I'd try and cheer him up a bit. The family's under a cloud; why, I've been waiting for a command for six months; been virtually retired myself, and all on account of the governor's cranky northern notions. Xou know what a martinet he is. By jove, Georgiana, you could help me, one word from you would fix up my status." "What a boy you are," she said softly, eomewhat as if to be a "boy might be a dis grace to the intellect, but an honor to the heart. "Don't you know that a woman never does a favor for a man whose heart she has lost?" "EubbiA, you could get me sent to a for eign station, and, by jove, I'd take you with me.' "What a pirate it is. Heavens. Lieuten- ant, move away a utue. ' . - - ...... . J "Fancy the Mediterranean. Why, Moul trie and the moonlight nights at Savanuah would pass under an eclipse, and then we'd escape all this political hubbub and inter necine rumpus." "Let us be frank," said the Preston, try ing at the same time to be fascinating. "Do you know the situation here?" "Only vaguely. I'm alraid the governor has got himself in a box, and I suppose you will lend a hand to coop him up, but you can square yourself -with your conscience by helpinft me" "I suppose you mean helping yon to a war vessel so that you can turn its guns on my own people, eh?" ""Well, I wouldn't be as apt to asome of the fellows who stand on the governor's side in this broil. Tell me, for you probably know, is the Boanoke at Hillons?" "Yes, and waiting orders; there was a hitch about the command." "So I heard. Why can't we get the Boanoke, some kind of special service, don't you know, like Lieutenant Lynch's picnic to the Dead Sea to discover Lot's wife." The Preston's little diplomatic head was doing a rapid amount of thinking. She could get the ship for the son of Commander Breeze, she was sure of that, if she could guarantee his sentiments. Would it not be a good thing to get rid of him so that tbe secretary s conspiracy could De carried out, with only an old martinet to deal with? Then, too, there was a little touch of senti ment in her judgment. After all would not a long flirtation in the tropics be pref erable to a long and hollow life of duplicity here? "What are you thinking about?" asked tbe Lieutenant. "I was thinking," she replied, "what a fatal thing it is to use an old saw, and I was just about to use one to cut this problem all is fair in love and war; it is somewhat stale, but I think these times have freshened it a little." "I accent it, especially the love clause. Your sentiment ought to be stronger than your politics; it generally is in a woman. Get me the ship for the sake of old times, and then let me renew them. Shall I send your nieger for a blank dispatch?" "No," she said, with a significant smile, "there's too much dispatch already. I haven't seen you for so long I've got to make your acquaintance all over again. O, I don't want you to coax, I want you to convince." "How shall I do it?" he exclaimed. springing up. "By sitting down," she said, "and not running away. Your father is coming, I hear his voice." "Heavens," gasped the Lieutenant, as a pang shot through him, "not here." "Why not? He is probably looking for you." "Itemember I have not seen him jn three years." "So much the better. I want to enjoy theoneeting." The first and almost ungovernable im pulse of the young man was to fly, but the significant scrutiny of the black eyes that were watcning mm determined bis painful course. He stood still like a statue, but in his heart was a whirl of emotions. He saw the white hairs of his father as he came labor iously up the steps, and he felt the warm, strong arms of the veteran wound round him, but he was thinking of the black eyes that were watching him. "Frank, my boy," exclaimed his father, as he stood off to admire him, "I've been looking for you. I expected you to come straight to me," and he regarded him with Eardonable pride. "There's an officer who's een trained to know his duty. He's had an example of hard-earned honor, and I'm proud to know he'll not disgrace it You dog, why didn't you report to mc?" "I was on my way," said the Lientenant, "when I met this la'dy, who is an old ac quaintance. While he was saying this with his lips his heart was saying, "God bless his white hairs." "Old acquaintance? Have you got any older acquaintance than I am?" Don't you know I haven't seen you for three years? you rascal?" "If I had thought that I could have been of much service to vou " tin - -j. . . j, none oi your internal modesty, I never needed you so much, nor did your country." "My country hasn't needed me a r-rent deal, I've been begging for a command lor six months from the Government, presently there will be no government to appeal to, and upon my word if I had been appointed to this post, I would have resigned." "What? Resign? What are yon talking about? Do you know what you are saving? Besign? Besign from doing my duty?" "Yes father, not because there is danger in doing it, but because there is no honor." "No honor in doing my duty? Have I lived to hear my boy say this?" "Pray do not mistake me, father, cer tainly one's duty is not as plain in this crisis as at ordinary times." He saw that his father was looking at him with a pained and confused expression, although he did not dare to return the honest stare. He felt, too, that the black eyes were watching every expression of his face, and he brought every nerve to the tavk before him. "I beg of you," he saio, "not to discuss these painful topics here. At a proper time and place." "Painful topics," repeated the old man, with pitiable astonishment. "Are you not an officer of the United States?" "I hesitate to say that I am of the United States. I am bound to tell you that my training, my loyalty, my love of country never taught me to turn my hand against my own people." One swift glance as he said this, caught all the minutite of suffering on the noble old face that he loved, he saw the look of yearnine in the watery eyes in spite of the indignation under them, and he grit his teeth -and felt a sudden hatred for the woman who was watching him, that he would have been ashamed of at another time. He heard his father's words, tremulous with emotion, but thev had no other mean ing to him than that "of the suffering with which they were freighted. "My God, sir, you talk as if you had no country and no father. I expected you to comehere to my assistance. It is the one time in my life when I depended on your loyalty, your sense of duty and your affec tion, and you talk to me about resigning. Frank, my boy, have you turned traitor to your country? No, no, I will not believe it. Has all my training come to nothing. wuenit is most needed? Why don't you speak out, don't you see you are breaking my heart?" 6 "The fact is, father, you take this matter too acutely. My affection is not abated one ten-thousandth part of a conceivable supposition, but in this national matter I have no heart" "No heart? There's some American blood left in you, isn't there?" He waited a moment, and there was a silent gap that was terrible to the young man. In that in terval the flag, which had been attached to new halyards, unfolded itself in a sudden breeze, and spread its full surface of color. Nothing was heard but the soft flap of the uuuuuk uver meir neaos. "Do you stand there mute?" resumed the commodore, with more of parental than martial authority in his tone, "while my scarred face is blanching with shame; are you silent, when your father and your country appeal to you? My God, Frank, mv boy, niy father carried the. flr with Bainbndge, and died under it; I have served under its folds round the world; it was wet with my blood at Vera Cruz nnd it waved in triumph over my deck when you were born; never have I seen it abandoned or dishonored by one of our family, and when you were struck down by pirate bul lets in the Chinese seas and I carried you in these arms and prayed heaven to spare you to me had I known then that you would live to briug these gray hairs, whitened in the service of our common country, to the grave, I would have prayed to heaven to let you die." "Father, father," gasped the young man, "you do not know what you are saying; in the name of heaven, stop." "Lieutenant Breeze, look at me. I -am an old man, but I am here to represent the Government I have hoisted the flair and I shall do my duty to the best of my ability. I I have no doubt about it, it is to lay down my life whenever the nation needs it I can only say to you, sir, that if there is any pang in" that last hour it will be caused by a recreant son." And turning upon his heel, the old officer left them without another word. It was with something like bitterness that the Lieutenant spoke to the Preston. "Will you get me the ship?" he asked eagerly. "Your father is severe." "Will you get me the ship?" "Calm yourself. You speak as if I had the assigning power. My influence ends with a recommendation. To get command of the Boanoke you will have to start for Willett's to-day. If you are to have it the order will be there before you. You under stand you will probably be sent as far from the States as possible. "Enough." "You understand, also, that whatever in fluence I can bring to bear will he used to that end?" Half an hour later, and just as hewas get ting ready for the train, Lieutenant Harold put a cipher dispatch from New York into his hanq. "At all hazards keep everything in statu quo for 48 hours; the order has been given to remove the cuns. Prevent for that time de velopments at any moment in Secretary's department. The Lieutenant knew perfectly well that the property could not be removed in a week, unless a regimentwassent to effect it What he was most afraid of was that bis father would put him under arrest, and he did not breathe easily until he felt himself moving toward Willett's, and heard the rattle of the train with impatient ears. CHAPTER IIL Fort Gates was not a fort, even in the official sense. At the best it was a naval station and school. Just now it was the most forlorn and anomalous of military de pots. There was a million dollars' worth of metal there under the tumble down sheds and on the sands. The great 12 and 15 inch smooth bore guns had been lying on their black bellies, each with a trunnion in the air, like so many turtles out of season, all through the pining times of peace, and little girls in leghorn hats summer after summer had come and climbed over them with gleeful wonder and shouted boo in their cavernous throats, and then gone away, north and south, as girls will, to get ready for long dresses and to help on the differ ences of opinion that would, sooner or later, set these iron monsters all roaring with red hot throats. The Commandant sat in bis small head quarters, as he was pleased to call his little room on the ground floor of the hotel, a fine picture of helpless authority. He had waited all the alternoon and for a great part of a sleepless night for Frank to come back, penitent and contrite. He had clung to that conviction till it faded into a hoDe and then into a fear, and now in the early morning Lieutenant Harold bad come in stead, to say that Lieutenant Breeze bad disappeared. Gone. "Gone," said the old man, with a hollow voice that had an awful suggestion of deso lation in it, and meant in its intonation, "Gone out of my life forever." Then suddenly and somewhat bitterly: "Where is that woman?" "Do you mean Miss Preston, sir?" "Yes, did my calling her a woman raise a doubt in your mind?" "She's at her headquarters." "Thunder and lightning, sir, what do you mean by headquarters? Has the service come to this, that a commanding officer's station should be confused with the boudoir of an adventuress?" "I beg your pardon," said theLieutenant "It is the slang of the place." "What's the reason thatflagisnotflying?" The Lieutenant hesitated. There was even a slight flush of shame on his cheek. "Well, sir ? Well, sir?" "I have to report that it was stolen last night, sir. "Stolen I Incredible t Was there no de tail at the works ?" "Yes, Bir; Sergeant Sanford " "Put the guard under arrest The Amer ican flag stolen. I never heard ,ot such a thing. This is a fine state of discipline, sir 1 I shall look to you to recover it." The veteran sat at a little table, which was evidently straining itself, like its owner, to keep up an appearance ot official regularity, for there was a meager display of blanks, a bell, which nobody apswered, and some dusty packets of documents tied with red tape, and formally arranged in a line. He undertook to write an order, but the ink was thick and the pen was rusty. Everything offended him, and the Lieuten ant walked to the window to spare the old man's feelings. Presently the CommandanVcalled to him with a softened tone: "Lientenant" "Yes, sir." "See here. There's some kind of a con spiracy here to thwart and defy the mili tary authority of the place and the Govern ment" "I am glad you have detected it, sir, "said the Lieutenant with alacrity, "some ot us have long suffered under it." "It inust be stopped." "Yes, sir," promptly replied the Lieuten ant, anxious to hear how, seeing that the (Government had a hand in it "The property must be protected," con tinued the Commodore with fine determina tion, as he glanced through the window at the bare flag staff. "I understood this morning," said the Lieutenant, "that the property was to be removed." "It has been removed, it must be re placed." "You refer to the flag," with something like a tone of pity in his voice. . "Certainly, I do." "I refer to the guns." "What on earth are you talking about, no guns can be removed without my orders." "True, sir, we might say the same of the flag, but it is removed. I beg your pardon, but J heard this morning that the Secretary had ordered a contractor at Willetts to take them to Ship Island, near Balize." The commandant smiled grimly. "I should suppose," he said, "that an officer of your intelligence would know that an order of that kind must come through the com mandant of the post," ''Yes, sir; in the ordinary course of official action, but in the present state of affairs "What on earth have I got to do with the present state of affairs ?" interrupted the Commodore. "Where did vou cet this precious piece of information ?" "X came through Miss Preston, and I am bound to tell you that it looks, official. She is in constant communication with the Secretary." It was with mingled indignation, in credulity and contempt that the old officer said as he got up from the table : "O, she is, is she ? She wants to abolish the service, probably. We'll see about it Confound it, I'll put her in the guard house. Come with me, sir." He strode up and down the room once or twice inactive indignation. His cocked hat was on the dressing table, and the dress sword that he had worn with dignity and honor before emperors was lying beside it He stopped once as if he had an inclination to put them on, then, as if changing his mind, he seized his round undress cap, and started for the Preston's quarters, followed by Lieutenant Harold. Before they reached the rdaee'tt telegram was placed in his hands. It came from one of the most eminent and patriotic of men who afterward went into history through the Lincoln administration. It was dated at New York, and read as follows: "The American people will hold you re sponsible for tbe theft of its property; the infamous robbery at Allegheny City must not be repeated.". This had one effect, at least, Upon the old officer; it made him realize that the eves of the millions of the North were upon him. The Preston's reception room was really something like a headquarters. She sat at a round center table that was covered with papers and dispatches. She wore a dainty morning gown of sea green hue, and her wavy black hair that was cunningly dressed across her temples, rounded up her handsome face charmingly. She lay in dolently back in her cushioned chair at the table, and held the pen she had been using as if it were a little level, on the tips of her narrow fingers, in a straight line before her eyes. By her side, evidently acting as sec retary, was Colonel King, bursting into ruffles and rolling in unstarched shirt collar. The lady did not get up as the two offi cers, after some little annoying delay, came brusquely in. There was a composed smile on her face, and much suavity in her voice as she said: "Ah, Commodore,you must really pardon my having to receive you what is virtually an office, but the accommodations are so poor here that we ladles have to forego most of the elegant regulations of society when morning calls are made." . "Madam," replied the Commodore, "so ciety had nothing to do with my visit I came to tell you at first hand, and without the possibility of misapprehension, that this is a military post and that I intend to carry out the discipline and enforce the regula tion of the department, if I have to put some of the women in the guard house and break into the regulations of society." "A very proper determination, Commo dore, I am sure. Why did you come to me with it?" "Because, madam, you are interfering with the dis:ipline. I understand that you have put yourself in communication with some ot tbe underlings at Washington and are meddling in the public business to my disparagement" "You are wrong, and I am glad of the opportunity to correct you. I am in com munication w'ith the Secretary of War only, and only as an intelligent American , on looker. You will allow that I can try to keep posted on events without attempting to create them. I try to get all the news that I can, and if I outstrip this department I trust you will not put me under arrest for it in our day. It pains me to say that you are a little behind evens yourself, and were you to arrest me you would be deprived of a valuable source of information at this time; Colonel, where is that dispatch?" The Colonel found a telegram, and hand ed it to her. She passed it to Lieutenant Harold, who read it: "WiLLETTS.-December 29. "Lighters, with cranes and derrecks and a detail of 200 men have been provided here for the removal of the guns at Hampden. They will probably be towed up to-day." "Rubbish," exclaimed the Commodore. "Not a gun shall be removed Irom this place, unless I give the order. Even the Secretary will have to follow the precedent and usages of the service." "In that case," remarked the Preston, "you are in collision with your superior officer. But as a mere matter of curiosity, I should like to know how you are going to prevent the removal." "I do not intend to discuss the means with you," said the Commodore, "but vou may rest assured that I will not sit idfy by and see the property of the government stolen under ray eyes." "Certainly not; will it annoy you if I look on?" But this remark was of little avail, for the Commodore had marched out without his usual courtesy. The moment they were gone there was a slightly maligtfant smile broke out on the face of the Preston: "Arrest me will he, I fancy he'll have enough to do to take care of himself. How do you like that, Colonel, 'stealing the government property?' " "A piece of undiluted, mush-eating, Mas sachusetts mendacity," said the Colonel. In a place like Hampden acts of all kinds diffuse themselves through the atmosphere. The air is always heavy with the trifles that are going on. In a very few hours Lieutenant Harold noticed that the entire community knew the state of affairs. There was an extra effrontery on the part of the enemies of the Government, and a tacit understanding among the loyal men that the Commodore was heirless, and that the Preston had everything her own way. Gos sip had it that Lieutenant Breeze was in league with her, and was an old lover. These stories came distorted to the ears of the Commodore, and he shut himself in his room, where after several futile consulta tions with his sabalterns, and vainly try ing to get an answer to his telerams from Washington, he sunk into a pitiable condi tion of irrascibility and complained of a pain in the back of the head. " "I believe," Harold said to Oakland, "the old man's heart is broken." , There was a great deal of excitement in Hampden on the 30th of December. Mary land was hanging on the edge of secession, and the little town was full of strangers. Oakland bad the opportunity of meeting several distinguished Maryland politicians, but he could not for the life of him make out what their intense importance and im patience portended, and Lieutenant Harold was grimly taciturn. At the rooms of the Preston two of these dignitaries held behind closed doors a con sultation with the lady. One or them, a rather important and portly personage, said to her with emphatic manner, as he kept time to his short sentence with a fat, red fist on her heavily littered table: "Matters move too slowly. What is done at once counts. Every day doubles the danger. What are they thinking about at mnetisr viney got tneir orders a week ago." "You forget," said Miss Preston, "that the undertaking is a much larger one than you have been accustomed to handle. To do it quickly requires, I am told, men and appliances, and it was necessary to send to Baltimore for the men. What do vou fear?" ' "Nothing definite, but a great deal vaguely. The national tension is dreadful. Any overt act on either side will precipi tate matters." "In that case," said the Preston, laugh ing, "we shall rise from conspirators to revolutionists That will be a decided gain. So far as my information goes, everything is as certain as death and as quiet. The expedition starts to-day, and ought to be here to-night" The rest of the day passed in uneventful drowsiness. The December sun lit the un trampled and deserted sands, and showed nothing bnt Miss Flutterlip's yellow para sol glancing now and then on " the parapet, and a solitary sentinel pacing monoto nously before the old sally port and as it went down over the Maryland hills it threw the shadows of the coiumbiads in regular stripes across tne yenow beach. ..The Commodore sat in his room alone, with an open book turned upside down on his knees. It was an old custom of his, when he wanted to shut off worry, to get Pollock's "Course of Time" out" of his trunk. But it had failed this time, for he was gazing out to sea witn a neipiess pathos, and thinking of Frank. It was 9 o'clock that night when Hamp den was suddenly turned upside down. The astonished townspeople heard the most un accountable tooting of steam whistles and puffkig of tugs, mingled with the distant shouts of men, and creaking of cordage and clanging of iron. When they swarmed down to the beach, the whole harbor ap peared to be full of boats. A thick haze hung over the water, and the full moon, no where discernible, flooded everything with a phosphorescent light that seemed to come through ground glass. Scores of signal lights were glowing through the fog like live coals. The whole vista was alive with preparation. The expedition had arrived. In a very short time the old wharf and the sands were crowded by the navvies and sail ors who were landing. There was the pop of a cork in the Preston's room and: as Flick handed the glass of champagne to his mistress she reached across the table and tipping the glass of her porSly friend said: "Down goes the last possibility of failure." The confusion along the shore was to the quiet people o! Hampden something dread ful to behold. It was as if a mob had de scended on their coast, but it was a mob that meant' business, for presently an electric light was streaming over the sands, and out of the black shadows rose the gaunt arms of J tne immense snears and engines for remov ing the guns. Lieutenant Harold reported what was go ing on to the Commodore who, still sat look ing out to sea. The veteran listened to him and then said: "Go and'order out the battalion of ma rines. How many muskets have you got?" "Not over 25, sir." "That will do." . "It isn't much of a battalion, sir," with a smile, "and I fearwill prove inadequate." "What on earth have I to do with" the adequacy, the obligation is enough for me. Don't be alarmed, I shall take command of them myselt. Order up your men. One moment , Help me buckle on that sword." Thus it was that at 10 o'clock that night, when the uproar was at its height, and all the whisky in tbe two groggeries down by the old dry dock had been carried off, that tbe regular marching sound of a drum was heard, and there was seen coming across the open space between the tort and the bar racks a handful of men in close order led by the Commodore. He did not hear the peal of derisive laughter that went up from the group at the hotel, but kept steadily on 'until helhad reached the first of the big guns and was in the thickest of the crowd. Then he shouted: "Who commands this trespassing expedi tion?" The gangs that pressed upon him looked on with staring and slicrhtly contemptuous curiosity. Some of them suspended their work long enough to make course and loud comments on the parade, and presently a burly personage forced his way through, tbe perspiration on his face shining like varnish in the glare of the electric light, and wanted to know whatever was the matter. "As Commandant of this post and custo dian of the Government property," said the veteran, "I warn you not to remove any of it, and to peaceably leave the Government ground1!." A course murmur, that swelled into a discordant jargon rose over the assemblage. "Are you going to stop the Government from removing its own property?" asked the man, with a stolid sort of commiseration in his tone and face. "Yes," replied the Commodore, "unless the order comes through me. Send your men back to their boats." "See here, Captain," said the man, "re'te sent here to take this stuff, and we're going to take it. If you don't want your sojeis thrown into the bay, you'd bet ter march 'm out of the way." In this short colloquy the issue was joined, and the outcome was the defiance of conscious strength. The Commodore gave an order: "For ward!" he cried, "fall back there." Anything more futile than the attempt to force a way through that mob could not be conceived. But it was Lientenant Harold, who stood by the Commodore's side, and not the Commodore who had the faintest realizing sense of the absurd discrepancy in the antagonistic elements. Colonel King and his friends extricated themselves as best they could and climbed upon the bank, where the barracks stood, in order to see the outcome of the collision. What they discerned in the somewhat con fusing light below them was a mass of ruth less and excited men about to be converted into a frenzied pack of wolves by the in stinctive fear that this absurd old soldier would not hesitate to pour his bullets into them. But as yet this mass was actuated only by an impulse of defiant contempt. Some of them, as they crowded up, had their tools, crowbars or pieces of heavy timber in their hands. Those in the rear were vociferous and impatient The Com modore attempted to move his men to a position of advantage, but the attempt was beset with humiliating difficulties. The crowd jostled him and was pressed upon him by those behind, and he was about to give the order to charge bayonets, when a heavy missile, flung over the'heads ot the nearest men, struck him in tbe temple, knocking off his cap. His white hairs fluttered in the night air as he dropped his sword and stag gered. His men wavered, and their line weakened as they saw it. Quick as a flash Lieutenant Harold picked up the sword, and with one arm around the commandant and the other holding the blade aloft in the air, he shouted in a clear, ringing voice: 'Steady there, close up, attention!" There was something in the voice that stiffened every man in the' squad immedi ately. Jn a moment he had his men in a little hollow square, and the crowd fell back somewhat from the unbroken line of bayo nets. "Nay, sir," cried Colonel King on the bank. "The first blood is going to be spilled in Maryland, after all. Let South Carolina look to her laurels." ' "Are you hurt?" asked the Lieutenant, as he replaced the Commodore's hat. The veteran was evidently stunned by the cruel blow, for his answer was given with obvious pain. , "No, sir, no. Do yonr duty. Where's the Lieutenant? He should be here." "I am here, sir. I'll do mv duty." He let the old man sink down with his freighted with pain and reproach: "Yes, but where, where is Frank?" It struck the young officer, even at that perilous moment, thaj there was something of the awful pathos of a dying invocation in the words and tones. And then, as if in answer to it, there burst upon the wet night air the report of a heavy gun, whose reverberations billowed up and down the astonished coast with warning vibrations, "Dear me," cried Colonel Kintr. "it is an armed armada. Let me take your glass, General." Then occurred one of those phenomena, often seen from the deck of a man-of-war. The fog, either precipitated by the report, or blown away by the discharge, left a clear space of air, and there in the offing, loom ing up, black and taut, was a United States frigate with her decks cleared. Colonel lung's exclamation was: "If that ain't the Roanoke, I'm a re turned idiot 1" . " It was, indeed, and presently the clear water was black with her boats. The gun had made the Preston's cham pagne glass tingle, and, seizing a mantle, she almost ran across the parade ground to the group on the bank, just in time to see What her good taste would have told her was a very pretty sight in the moonlight, if her sectional prejudice had not somewhat confused her judgment. It was the forma tion of a battalion on the beach. As soon as the command was in marching order word was received from the command ing officer that if any of tbe Government property was touched h'e would blow the ex pedition out of the water. And ten minutes later Lieutenant Frank lin Breeze walked into the little'group on tne nans:. The Preston looked at him with a wither ing eve. "This time," she said, "you will report to the Secretary of War." "It would be difficult, if not impossible," replied the lieutenant, with great suavity, "we can't find him." "Dead?" gasped the Preston. "No; absconded." She was staring at him with all the bit terness of disappointment and defeat in her face; "Miscreant and traitor," she hissed. "Madam," said the Lieutenant, "I have taken another lesson of you, and I was rash enough to use the old saw you put into my hands, instead of a sword, 'All is fair in love and war It is somewhat stale, as you remark, but it was our business to fresh en it." Her reply was lost, for just at that mo ment Lieutenant Harold's little command was giving three cheers. "It's astonishing," said one Lieutenant to the other, as he grasped his hand after wards, "how a woman will hate you if you usp her weapons for only halt an hour to save your own father." A long time afterward, when questioned about the regularity of his exploit, he said: "If there Is ever a moment in peace or war, when pure bravado is excusable, it is when it will alone gain time." The End. Copyright, 1889. All rights reserved. Polite. The Tooth's Companion. J Fannie tried very hard to be polite and speak correctly. At church one day she met a little friend who had been sick for some time. In asking abont her affliction Li cannie-saia: uiayoueujoy much pai: wnen you were iu. back against the breech of one of the big funs. "lam here, 'sir," he repeated. He cnt bis head down, and he heard the words. LESSONS OF NATURE. Key. George Hodges Writes of the Great Disaster at Johnstown. REAL INSIGKIFICAKCE OP MAN. The Many Earthly Plans That Were Shat tered by That Flood. A CHAEACTEE THAT CANNOT PERISH IWJUTIEX Ton THE DISPATCH. J I take my text out of the "other Bible." There is one Bible, written by man's finger, under God's guidance, and inclosed between two covers. So far as writing is concerned there is nothing more to do to this Bible. It is finished. The hand of its latest author has now been dust these nineteen centuries. In another sense, so far as reading, learning and applying are concerned this Bible will never be finished. It will last as long as truth lasts, and that is forever and ever. But beside this is the "other Bible." God wrote this Bible, and He is still writing it. It is written in gold and blue in the sky above us; it is written in brown and green upon the earth beneath us; it is written in the history and experience of man. God besjan writing it so long ago that when we think even of guessing at the date, we lack figures to set it down. This Bible is not finished yet This, too, like the Bible of ink and paper, like the word of truth en shrined within it, will so on forever. Br and bytherewill be a new heaven and anew earth, and then this great marvelous Bible of nature will pass out of its "Old Testa ment" into its "New Testament," still un finished, still teaching new and wonderful lessons day by day through all eternity. This Bible God is writing now. Out of this Bible I take my text And I choose it from that latest chapter whose last verse God has not even vet set down, wherein is narrated the story of the breaking of the South Fork dam, and the wiping out of Johnstown. The first lesson which I take ont of this awful and mysterious chapter is the truth of the physical insignificance of man. MAN'S INSIGNIFICANCE. I stood the other day upon the great stone bridge at Johnstown, and looked out over tbe site of what had been a busy city. I saw where the town had stood, street after street green with shade trees, beautiful with lawns, lined with comfortable houses, and great brick blocks of stores, and there was nothing there but sand. Not a tree, not a house, not a brick, nor a shingle,noth ing to mark the fact that any human being had ever built anything more durable there than the temporary tents which the work men had pitched nothing but a desolate, flat and uninhabitable waste ot barren sand! And there beyond were the houses which had stood along these streets. Some tilted this way and some that, overturned, distorted, hurled together in heaps, transformed into hideous piles ot broken wood, hiding dreadful and tragic secrets. Here were heavy Ireight cars scat tered about in all directions, burrowing in the sand, leaning up against the corners of buildings, standing in impossible positions, in impossible places, as if some enormous giant had taken up In his great hand a score ot cars and locomotives and scattered them about over the city as a child might scatter a handful of pebbles over a play town of sand. Johnstown is indescribable. It lingers like a dreadful dream in the mind of everybody who has seen it, but nobody cau uia&c ib visiuie to auomer. Only an actual sight at it can trive even an approach to an adequate idea. And all that wreck was done in 20 minutes. Down came that great wave tearing through the valley of the Conemaugh, rolling over and over like a dreadful wheel of solid water, houses, engines, smoke stacks, trees and human beings rolling with it, a cloud of thick mist enshrouding it, and a roar going before it like the roar of all the grist mills in the world groaning together. And when that great wave passed Johnstown lay in ruins. A COMPARISON'. A work was done there in the valley of the Conemaugh in 20 minutes which 2,000 men in 20 months, and at an ontlay of hun dreds of thousands of dollars will not be able to undo. We are getting the mastery in these days of physical forces which thus far have been untamed. We have made steam our beast of burden; we have put him in harness to draw our carriages. We have made tbe lightning our torch-bearer and our messenger.' We warm our hands at fires kindled by a captive giant who has lain for ages imprisoned in thestout bastions of the rocky earth. But we are not masters yet Here comes this great, wild wave of water, down go the barriers which our skill had set up in defense; a whole strong city falls before this untamed demon of the L woods and hills. We are not masters yet Even upon this least of the hosts of heaven, upon this little earth, we walk surrounded by great, irre sistible, mysterious forces the water, the wind, the lightning the common things we see, all known only in part, all greater enormously than we are, all unconquered. It is a lesson in humility. I learn a second lesson the uncertainty of human life. Think of all the plans which all the Johnstown people were making on the morning of that fatal Friday. The merchants were planning their purchases and calculating their sales: the housewives were planning their dinners; teachers and scholars were thinking of the cominsr exam. j inations; the men in the mills were looking iorwaru to pay aay; tne youDg men and maidens were planning their pleasures; my friend, Mr. Diller, the rector of the little Episcopal Church, was planning his sermon for Sunday. "In the midst of life we are in death," would have been a good text for it, had he only known what nobody knew. "Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil," was the text he did preach from not vjry long ago. They found the sermon lying among his books. He had no expectation, that Friday morning, of preaching that old sermon over again, and of meeting death that day in illustration of it He had no thought that that day the "Amen" would be set to the helpful sermon of his life, and that the asceiption of triumphant praise would that day be uttered in the nearer presence of his Heavenly Father. MAN PBOPOSES. He was making his plans for to-morrow and the next day, and so was everybody else in Johnstown. And then the flood came. The flood came like the flood in Noah's day. People weie buying and selling, marrying and giving in marriage, making their plans for the morrow, and then, when no man ex pected, the rain descended, and the winds blew, and the flood came. "The shortness and uncertainty of human life" the phrase is a familiar one. It is so familiar, it voices a truth which is so well known, that we do not heed it It is like the cry which they say has been heard more than once of late years in the streets of Johnstown : "Take care : get on the high ground. The reservoir may break 1" When that word came speeding down over the wire from South Fork into Johnstown even when, ast some say, some unknown rider came urging his horse at a mad gallon down the mountain, crying out, "The dam is broken; take to the hills I" a great many people did not believe it. They were used to hearing that, or something like it, when there was an unusually heavy rain. They stayed where they were and met the conse quences. That human life is, of all things, among the most uncertain to whom does that come as the assertion of a truth previously undiscovered and unknown? Here it is, written up in great letters so that all the world may read it. You and I to-day, to morrow, at any hour, may die. Now, thank God, that in this world where man's strength is so insignificant, and man's life so transitory, one thing is of enduring valne. And that is character. We build houses, and ai flood may make charnel houses out of fbem to-morrow. But the character we bui'd lasts. We die, and are turned again to our dust, DutJ wo lire on, J nevertheless; the body dies, but the soul en dnres. Tbe soul endures, and character which is the expression, (the quality, the personality of the soul endures with it. THE SATE PLACE The only safe place in this world is just where safety lay in Johnstown on the high ground, the only really valuable possession is a high, strong Christian character. Then tbe floods may come, or the winds blow into cyclones, or tbe fire rage in universal con flagration, we can lose nothing. Death him self,, that rapacious robber, cannot rob us. I tell you that when tbe roar of that tumb ling wave came crashing down the valley of the Conemaugh, it was not money that people wanted, nor dress, nor position, nor any of the ambitions which the world com monly struggles after; no, but the memory of a righteous life, the approving voice of a good conscience, the possession of a char acter worth carrying on into another world. That, you may be sure, was what men wanted when the day of judgment came on mat macR a nuay m the vallev ot the Conemaugh; that was what they wanted. And they who had that passed on into that other valley, named "The shadow of death," fearing no evil. Man's strength is insignificant; man's life js transitory; but character is precious and enduring. That is tbe word which comes to us from Johnstown. The trouble with the lives of most of us is in the matter of emphasis. You know that the meaning of a sentence depends not on the words of it only, but on the way the words are em phasized. We all agree that God has put us into this world to make the very most of our life here. It is the will of God that we should get the very most we can out of this present world. He would have put us into the next world at the start, if He had meant us to think more about that world than this, now. "A world in the hand," as Emerson said, "is better than two in the bush." Make the most of life is good Christian doctrine. And we all agree that this, that and the other are desirable elements in a life which ia made the most of. Bat which do we pat first? Which-do we emphasize Ah! jaere. i iear, we rail Into disagreement. Many things are good; but one thing Is needful, Christ said, essentially. He said that this one essen tially ncedfnl thing is character. tbe winning of the approving benediction of God. All other tilings are good, bad or indifferent. This alone is pre-eminently emphatic. How it flashes up in the light of the Are which burns beside the great bridge at Johnstownl Man's strength is insignificant, man's life is transitory; out char acter endures. Yes, and God endures. God endures and God cares. "I belt eve In G J," we say. "in Goo, the Father." We may not And the words particularly difficult of utter ance. But there are men and women all through Western Pennsylvania who when they come upon those words to-day. jay them, if they say them at all. with a smlilen catchin? of the breath and a trembling of the lips. ONE INCIDENT. I saw a mother in that ruined city, whose hus band had been drowned in tbe first shock of the fl&od, but who had escaped to the attic of her house, taking her seven children safely with her, and one by ono there, as inch by inch the water rose, that mother saw those children drown. Down went the sturdy boys, down went tbe little maiden with the bright carls, one golden ringlet floating op on the surface of the black water; last of all the baby In her arms. Anu that mother is to believe in a God of fath erly compassion, "an ever-present helo in trouble!" Afew months ago the boys and cirls of the Johnstown Sunday Schools were learning as a "gplden text:" "When thou passest through the waters I will be with thee; and tbrouzh the rivers, they shall not overflow thee." Where was that promise when tbe flood came? "God? Where is God!" somebody cried In answer to a word of comfort. And where indeed, was God that Black Friday along the valley of the Conemaugh? I will tell you where God was when the flood came, lie was in the very midst of it. He was there, as He is everywhere, infinite in love, infinite in power, and infinite In wisdom. IUnowthat God is infinite in love and in power and in wisdom, because He is God. God made man, possessing power and widom and the instinct of love. He who made man is greater than jnan. Take the ideal man, the strongest tbe wisest, the most loving, and multiply your Ideal of him by Infinity, and you set a dim glimpse ot God. We reason that way, if we let our rea son lead us, irresistibly. And beside that, One who came from heaven, and, having con quered death, ascended again into heaven, said so. Christ confirmed that which some had hoped might be true, bat which forthe most mrt men bad hardly ventured to believe, that He who had made man with love in his heart had love infinite in His heart. Christ came to teach us that the all-powerful and the all wise cares. THE lOTTB OF COD. And when I read the story of the calamity at Johnstown, or look upon the wreck and desola tion which hold the ground where happy homes stood only a few days ago, or hear from their own lips of the almost unspeakable griefs of the survivors, I believe still in the love of God. I believe that God heard that night the bitter cries which were lifted up to Him all down that fatal valley. I believe that God, even God, listened with pity and pain and tender mercy. And I believe still in tho power of God. x believe that if it had seemed Rood to Him. He could have lained meteoric stones out of the sky and strengthened tbe top of the South Fork dam against the abrasion of the water; He could have sent a sudden bolt of lightning and have torn the shores of the spill-way into a wider and an adequate channel: He coaldhave stopped that great wave, as long ago the Jordan stayed its waves. That I believe. But I believe, also, in the infinite wisdom of God. He who knows the end from tbe begin ning. He who knows on all sides ana all the way through, that of which we catch only a small and imperfect glimpse. He saw that it was somehow best that His great laws should take their unstayed course. Remember tba't God did not "send" that flood. If the word "will" means desire or even pur- yuau, tb nag nob iuo rui oi uoa inat tne South Fork dam sbonld break, nor the fatal wave go crashing down the hill, nor that any body on either side the Alleebenies should sutler any kind of loss. God did not send that flood to show tbe wonders of His divine omnip otence. God forbid I God did not send that flood tp punish Johnstown. Christ preached a sermon when tho tower fell at Slloam, which makes that sort of mistake impossiDle, or ought to make it impossible. God did not "send" the flood at all. NO MYSTEBT THEEE. There is no mystery about the wreck of Johnstown. If a man walks unheeding over tbe edge of a cliff he will get his bones woken, and if he is leading an innocent child beside him, holding his hand, the child will go over too, and get his bones equally broken. And though the child be tbe only son of bis mother, aud she a widow, that will make no difference. But Goddoes not push thatlitilccbUdovertbat dangerous cliff. Nobody will blame God for that. God has set certain great, universal laws in the world, and in accordance with these laws this effect is going to follow that cause, impartially and inevitably. Without this tbe world would be simply chaos. And God does not interfere. God has His infinitely wise and loving reasons for not interfering. That is how it was at Johnstown. God set trees upon the mountains: men cut them down, that turned tbe mountain streams when the rain fell into fierce, ungovernable torrents. God set a safe channel for the mountain streams to flow into the river; men dammed it up, and tho men who dammed it up, not expecting any such extraordinary rainfall as we had that last week in May, did not make .the dam strong enough, nor tbe waterway wide enough. So tbe dam broke, and, alas, for tbe towns beneathl But let no body blame God for that. God brings no willing evil into this world of ours, into this life of ours. Tbe truth about is just this: That God has provided for us con ditions of existence which are tbe best possible for all mankind. These conditions are so uni versal, so impartial and so unfailing, that we call them laws the "laws of nature." When we live, as God would have us, in accord with these divine and neneticient laws, we live in happiness. But when, whether consciously or unconsciously, we disobey them, whether by walking over the edge of a cliff, or by setting a weak dam against a strong current, and build ing a town under it whenever we contravene these laws of God, some kind of pain follows. That is one wav in which we learn what the laws are, by tbis education of Dain. But God does not "send" that pain. We bring the pain upon ourselves. DABKNESS AND LI0HT. God sends no willing pain to us His children, but little by little, even out of the pain which we bring upon ourselves God brings blessing. God turns tbe darkness into light. God trans, lates what seems a curse into a benediction. God is in truth an ever-present help in trouble." but He has His own ways of helping, and tbey are always so deep and so divine that sometimes it seems as if there were no help about them. God seems to have deserted us. Only wait and see. In that last great day, tbat day of the revelation of God's judgment, it is not we alone who will be judged. Godwin be judged. Clear will shine the hidden pages of all histories. Plain will be the reasons.evidcnt tbs motives which lie shrouded now In clonds and darkness. Then at last we will know why. Then we will learn how in finite power t'ld love unspeakaole await tbe bidding of Infinite wisdom, All tho pains of all the sufferers in tbe world; all the great calamities which have appalled tbe race of man; all tbe hidden grief which in our own lives offer insoluble enigmas we will read them over then from tbe beginning to the end, and praise God, We will Know why. GEOEQS HOBQES, FAMOUS HEIDELBERG. Belya A. Lockwood Yisifs the Far Famed City and Inspects THE GEAHD .OLD UKIYEES1TY. Everybody Drinks Wine and Beer in tha Public Gardens, bat THESE AEE NO DEUKKAEDS TO BE SEES ICOBBISPOITDENCZ Or TBS DISPATCH. J Heidelbekg, June 9. 'We sailed from New York May 15 on the steamer "Western land for the Universal Exposition at Paris, but'the current reports of newspapers and travelers of the still unfinished condition of many of the exhibits and the postponement of the time of meeting of the Universal Peace Congress, to which we are also dele gated, for three weeks, has led us to make a detour to other places ot interest in the Old "World, until to-day we find ourselves far down in the possessions of Emperor "Will iam, in this beautifnl and far-famed city, situated on the Nectar, a branch of the Bhine. Heidelberg is a city of 20,000 inhabitants, busy, bright and clean, and founded la 1275. Erom its many historical reminis cences; the battle ground in the past of many a conflict; alternately in the hands of the Germans, French and Bavarians; tha seat of the German Eeichsiag in July, 1384, under Kmg Menrel, and replete perhaps in more historical traditionsand wierd legends than any of the far famed cities ot the Khine; situated on the Neckar, about 30 miles from its confluence, it is more sought by tourists of every land than many more pretentious cities. IN HOLTDAT ATTIBE. "We chanced to visit it on the day of the Feast of the Ascension a general holiday. The famed university and the schools were closed. The 1,000 soldiers stationed at the barracks to guard the city, with their bright uniforms, gorgeously trimmed in red and gold, with the flags flying from the public; buildings, lent both color and im portance to the scene. All ot the chnrcbes, Protestant and Catholic, were open for morning service, for Germany is essentially the land of tite religion. Tho religious devotions performed, everybody in holiday attire promenaded the stree'ts. The red-cheeked, large-waisted, sturdy German women, both young and old, on street and tram car, were mostly without bonnets, while ticcasionally one had a bonnie hand kerchief tied under her chin, with here and therp a lithesome country maiden wear ing the picturesque peasant dress of the olden time. The cozy beer gardens, or little cool arbors everywhere, and the shaded yards, or even street side of the hotels had inviting little tables and chairs for two, at which every body, from the grandmother of SO to the child of 5 years, stopped by the wayside to chat with friends, during which they sipped the large schooners of beer, or drank a bottle of wine interlarded with pretzels. Tbe German seems to have as much aver sion to water as a beverage as the Prohibi tionists of our country have to wine and beer. They use it only for their ablutions. At the hotels and cafes they do not ask you if you will take wine, but simply what brand you will have, and smile if you call for water. But Hiedelberg is situated in the midst of the great wine region of Germany; the principal industry of many hundreds of thousands of persons. NO BEtrSKENNESS OK EIOTINO. I watched from my hotel window until the sun went down, many hundred persons still eating and drinking, but saw no in toxication, heard no rioting, no boisterous language or loud laughing, nothing but the most quiet enjoyment ot a general holi day. "What the effect of this continuous wine and beer drinking may be, mentally or physically, npon the human system, can only be determined, T think, by careful study and close analysis. Only "the light wines arc used. I have seen none of the strong drinks, a3 mm, brandy or whisky, sold anywhere. Occasionally one meets, as in our own country, on man or woman, a red nose and a bloated, disfigured face, but they are not common. "While I have seen no drunkenness, neither have Iseen beggars, abject poverty or squalor of any sort. These exist, however, in the lower portions of the town, in asylums, pauper houses and pris ons. They are studiously kept from the public gaze; but many of them have emi grated to America. Heidelberg University, this famous in stitution of German learning and literature, founded in 1386 by Emperor Rupert I., with all of the vicissitudes of fortnne that has beset it, has with its iron discipline had mnch to do in the molding of Germany's rulers and princes, as well as the general German mind. Known to the student world more than 100 years before America was dis covered, it celebrated the five hundredth year of its establishment by five days of re joicing; closing by a grand banquet in the banqueting hall of tne old Enpert Castle August, 1886. This wierd banqnet room, overgrown by trees, had been deserted for many hundred years; and this fresh sound of revelry by the German student, who is no stranger to fun, or to bacchanalian songs, must have startled from their long sleep the spirits of the old barons and granddamea who years ago inhabited it. THE GEK1IAIT STUDENT is not, as in our institutions of learning, al ways a peaceful and quiet personacre de voted to his books; but he is made familiar with all of the arts of war; admires most of all bravery in his companions, which he considers is-the ability to fight well, and is quick to resent an insult, real or fancied. Thus he is often in trouble often measur ing sabers with a fellow student, assaulting the police if too much beer has been im bibed, or failing in proper obedience to his tutors. The result is an arrest and a trial by the faculty; but, if bis offense is criminal, he is never lodged in the common prison of the town; but from immemorial custom is put in the prison of the university, founded probably before the town had a jail. The janitress, who dimly comprehended our poor German, conducted us through the im- portant rooms of the university, including the main schoolroom, recitation rooms and chapel, and finally to these prison rooms, with their barred windows, narrow iron bed steads and straw mattresses, where many a famous German Baron or General was years ago connnea lor some aireuction of dut and which serves as well to punish the students of to-day. These rooms are a studv and a lesson in themselves. From the commencement of the winding stair to the remotest corner of the darkest room, every inch of space on wall and wainscot has the cabalistic char acters of tbe incarcerated student. Sow he recites his own offense, now caricatures the professors, the police, or the crowned heads of Germany as the humor seizes him, if he has pen, crayon o- pencil, and failing in this, the wooden tables and straight wooden chairs are master pieces of schoolboy wood carving, tbat cannot fail to remind 'one of their own school days at the country school. In the absence of any of these instruments, the tallow dip that lights the room has been utilized to write or draw his profile on the wainscoting. But there are many worthy German students. Belya A. Lockwood, Easily Found. New Tork Weekly. Aged New Yorker I'ye often wondered what became of my playmate, "Will "Win kel, whose parents removed to Philadel phia wnile he was very young. Sixty years ago he was an errand boy in a Market street store, but I haven't heard of him since, Philadelphlan (astonished "Well, why don't you go to the store and inquire? Moj like ho is there jet, I - j5&sa