SyflR pittsburgMfctot (TV-" -" . y SECOND PART. -. H h- " - . - . - THE ff PGES'9T0J6.- j ; 1 rj- i CITY OF THE SULTAN. A Look at Turkish Official and Busi ness Life in Constantinople. GOVERNMENT BUREAUS VISITED. The Secretary of State Sends His Compli ments to Mr. Blaine. SOME OF THE OFFICIALS' SALARIES IT HOM OUB TRAVELINO COMMISSIOXER.3 O KSTASTISOPLE August 20. I write this letter in the Capi tal of the Ottoman Empire. If Paris is , France, Constantmo- pic is Turkey. It is here that the Sultan lives. Here are the i headquarters of the i Turkish armv, and trom the Government offices here go out the wires of political Cucasstan Chief. appointment which control the lives and property of more than 33,000,000 people. Constantinople is the center of Turkish business, and it is the pivot around which the whole Mohammedan world revolves. Situated as it is, partly in Asia and partly in Europe, it forms the connecting link of the two creat civilizations, and its popn lation is the most cosmopolitan on the face of the globe. The straits of the Bosphorus which connect the big Black Sea witu tne little sea of Marmora wind in and out like a wide river leween Europe ard Asia. They are bordered by beautiful hills which slope down in places almost precipitously to the water, and their natural scenery com pares' very favorably with the best bits alone the Ithine and the Danube. At the beginning of these straits there is a lofty peninsula containing the area of two or three good sized farms, the greater part of the northern side of which is separated from the main body of Europe by a long inlet of water which winds around like a horn and which is known as the famous Golden Horn of Constantinople. The lower side of the peninsula is washed by the sea of Marmora and its upper edge blocks the waters of the Bosphorus. Stand ing upon its shores you can almost throw a The Sublime Porte. stone into Asia, and by turning around you could, with a revolver, shoot a bullet deep into the body of Europe. It is upon this peninsula that the greatest part of Con stantinople is built. This part is known as Stamboul, and it belongs almost exclusively to the TurEs. TJpon it stand the great bazaars, above its thousands of Turkish bouses rise the tall minarets of hundreds of moFques, and the cries of its turbaned ped dlers are mixed with the shrill tenor or the Muezzins, who five times each day stand upon the balconies of these towers and sing out the hours ot prayers. A BRIDGE OF BOATS nboutn mile long and as wide as Pennsyl vania avenue in Washington connects this Turkish quarter of the city with the Euro pean shore, and over this bridge there is constantly passing a throng of Turks and Christians, of Hebrews and Greeks, of brown-gowned men from Persia and broad cloth traders from Europe. An Italian writer in Constantinople says that 100,000 men go over this bridge every day, and one new idea crosses it about everv (en years, this bridge leads to Pera, hich is the European quarter of Constantinople. The bills on the north side of the Golden Horn are as steep as those of San Francisco, or of me oiuu on wniju ivansas uity is built. Pera has covered these hills and the palaces of the lorcigu legation, the Kcsks ot the bultan anil the homes of the swell Turkish officials stand high above Stambonl and command extensive land and water views of Asia and Europe. Pera itself is more of a European town than a Turkish one. It has business buildings like those 01 .trans, us stores are nuea witn European goods tastelullv shown behind nlate class windows, and a good street car line carries you from one part of it to the other. It has an underground cable railroad. From the shores of the Golden Horn to the top of 1.a lilniv ah I.:.L .1 -.:. : i ;i i we inuii ufiuu nuiuu tue uiij is uuut, anu the incline of this is as steep as that ot the bluff of Kansas City. The road is well patronized, and it ought to be a paying in vestment, Pera has European hotels with Swiss servants, French cooks and electric bells, in which you can be as comfortable as in any hotel in New York. And the social dinners of its people would compare favora bly with those or the other capitals of Eu rope. As a diplomatic post the city of the Sultan is one of the most important capitals of Europe. The complications which are at any time liable to arise with Eussia leads the English, the French and the German to keep immense establishments here, and the expenses of the foreign ministers lor enter taining runs into the tens of thousands of dollars a year. A COSTLY roSITION. One of the legations uses at its state din ners gold and silver plate which is worth 5100,000, and the Sultan feasts the diplo mats on gold plates and iurnishes them Turkish coffee in gold cups. During the past four years the American Minister has entertained very largely, and Mr. Straus has, I doubt not, spent several times the amount of his salary in keeping up Uncle Sam's end of diplomatic entertainment. He is one of the most popular Ministers America has ever sent to Turkey, and his diplomatic career has been a great success. The Turks themselves are verv hospitable, and many of the Turkish officfais have a part of their houses lurnished in European style. The better class of them n xvM educated, and there are hundreds of Turks in the employ of the Sultan who can speak French, English and German, and who are as thoroughly posted on the leading subjects of the day as the most cultured men of the courts of Europe. I dined last night with Balsamides Bey, who is well-known to even-one who has read Marion Crawford's novel, "Paul Patoff." This man is inti mately connected with the Sultan, and he is, I judge, not much over 30 years of age. He was educated in one of the great Mo hammedan schools, and his life has been spent almost altogether in Con stantinople. Nevertheless he speaks Eng. lish perfectly, can talk French like a Pari sian, and is one of the best posted men I have ever met on the history of the world. He seems Vto have every event in our na tional life at his tongue's end. He knows all of the American authors andean talk by the hour on English literature. He is as well up on public men as he is on public matters, ana is one of the most agreeable conversationalists I have met. He is the jiB ii nV 'uJ best type of the advanced Turk of to-day, and like many of his kind, his life is more like that of a European than a Turk. All of the Government officials of Turkey dress in European costume save that their black broadcloth coats are cut high at the neck and that their heads are always covered in the house and out with the red-fezzed, black tasseled cap. JUST LIKE TJSCLE SASl'S. The Sultan has his great Government de partnientsike those we have at "Washing ton. There is a department of state or for eign office, a war department, a department of public works and department of educa tion, of the interior and of justice. A large number of these departments are in the vast bnilding'known as the Sublime Porte, which is located near the great palace of the Sultan, in Stamboul, known as the Old Seraglio. I visited thcfiublirae Porte yes terday and met a number of the leaning Turkish officials. I found that many ot them spoke English, and that all could con verse in French. The Secretary of State asked me to give bis compliments to Mr. Blaine when I returned to Washington, and to tell him that he had a great admiration for his ability. Another Cabinet Minister VrriiomjjimiGT HI IJ -1 sp-v.- - -sg&- Turkish Peddlers. who has charge of the newspaper press of the Empire, and who is to a large extent connected with the interior, told me that the Government was now encouraging the newspaper, and that the day would come when each city in the Turkish Empire would have its daily paper. There are a number ol daily papers in Constantinople. Some in English, some in French and some in Turkey. The Persiaun have a paper. The Greeks have their organs and there are also newspapers for the He brews and the Armenians. A missionary press publishes a Bulgarian newspaper, but I understand that with all these papers the censorship of the press is very strict and that the greater part of the articles published are read over by the Government officers before they are permit ted to be printed. This is especially so with the Bulgarian newspapers, as the Turks are much airaid of revolutions among the Bul garians and they cut out everything.that relates- to liberty or tends to the depreciation of the government ot the Sultan. In-the Sub lime Porte the leading foreign newspapers are taken and I spent an hour in a large room in which a dozen clerks were busy translating articles which had been pub lished in Europe and America upon Tur key. Everything that was written about the Sultan is translated and presented to him, and while I was present I noted that two ot the clerks were working on articles irom New York newspapers. SOME OP THE SALARIES. Judges in Turkey get about $320 a month. Assessors receive from 5125 to 5200 per month, and common soldiers are supposed to grow fat on their board and clothes and 3 cents a day. Turkey has a conscript system like that of Germany, and all of the able bodied Mohammedan population receive a lair amouut of military training. The Turks make magnificent soldiers, and those I see here at Constantinople are as finely formed and as well built men as you will find anywhere. I am told that they will mm bo able to puti an army of 800,000 trained men in the field, and they have the best mounted cavalry that" I have ever seen. Poorly as the men are Eaid, they seem to be happy, and they ave in fighting a courage which other soldiers have not, which comes from their implicit belief that they will go to heaven it they die while fighting for the Sultan. It may be this reason that excludes non believers from the military service. The large number of Turks who are not Moham medans cannot enter the army if they would, but they have nevertheless to pay an exemption tax amounting to 51 50 a year per male person, and this tax levied on" the baby boy 1 year old as well as on the man of 75. When a poor Armenian, Greek or Hebrew happens to have a familv of six or eight boys his expenses are materially in creased, and the number of these foreigners in Turkey is so large that this species of tax income amounts to a great deal. Scat tered about the hills of Constantinople are barracks which look like palaces, and which are probably built with this tax. TAXED TO DEATH. The Turkish people are, in fact, taxed to death. The extent of the taxation and the poor methods of its collection grind the life out of the people, and the Empire is practi cally bankrupt. If it could be properly managed it might yet pay its debts and prosper, but it is very doubtful, whether it will do this under the present government and people. As it is, its foreign loans amouut to more than 51,000,000, and there are import and export duties on nearly everything. The foreign bond holders control the cus toms and dnes, and though there is a bi" tariff on tobacco, and the tobacco trade in itself is a monopoly, the Sultan never gets any of its receipts. He hands over the trib ute from Egypt to the bond holders without looking at it, and he is 60 surrounded by his creditors that he can do nothing without consulting with them. The business of Constantinople, like that of all oriental cities, is done in bazaars, and the bazaars of this city are perhaps the largest in the world. They are all under one roof, and this roof covers acres of nar row streets which wind in and out, cross and re-cross one another until in passing through them you lose yourself again and again as though in the mazes of Bosamond's bower. The pavement of these bazaars are cobble stones. The streets aie about five or six feet wide and no carriage or wheeled vehicle can drive into them. The stores are narrow cells, ranged along the sides of the streets, with wide ledges cr divans in front of them, and the merchants in turbans and gowns squat on rugs cross-legged with their goods hung up above them and piled all around them. You can buy in these bazaars anything from a clove or a needle to a pair of diamong car-rings, and there are old gold watches by the bushel, and ottar of roses by the gallon. Each bazaar street has its own line of merchandise upon it. The jewelers work side by side, the shoemakers have a street of their own. and the dealers in old arms and old clothes each have their own separate locality. ALL KIXDS OF BAZAARS. There is a saddle bazaar where all kinds nf gorgeous saddles are made and sold in cell after cell. There is a spice bazaar in whir-h the' perlnmes of ground cinnamon greets your nostrils. There is a Persian bazaar where you can buy enough rich shawls to carpet a larra from every long bearded, richly dressed Mohammedan within it, and there is a bazaar where the finest of gold embroidered curtains and other rare articles in silk and silver are sold. There are bazaars of all kinds and the Turkish merchant and the traders that you find in them areof all classes and sexes and they come from all parts of the Mohammedan world. Here is a veiled lady in a balloon-like silk gown from some Pasha's' harem, a black faced eunuch with a whip in his hand stands beside her and watches her closely as she buys or a hand some "Armenian. Ne.ir her stands the hamel or porter with his saddle on his back, ready to carry away for her anything she may buy, though its weight be 600 pounds. There is a Circassian with a high African cap and his breast covered with cartridge boxes. He Is a chief in his native village, and he is making a trip to Constantinople. Here comes a Greek in red fez cap, gold embroidered waist and skirts which stand out from his body like those of the girl who rides the trick horse in the circus, and here comes an Abyssinian slave in turban and gown, whose face is as black as the silk ha( of that European merchant who walks be hind him. Here are Persians from Bagdad, Kurds from Asia and Bashi Bazouks irom the interior. Here is A PBETTY AKMENIAX I.ADT, and there, flirting with au old Turk as she tries on a pair of new slippers, is a dark eyed, rosy-cheeked beauty wearing the em broidered dress of Bulgaria. There a group of Syrians are drinking coffee together abd here comes a lemonade peddler with a four gallon bottle on his back, offering a drink which he claims is sweeter than honey. Commission merchants and brokers by the dozens hang round you urging you to accept their services in purchasing. Your eyes dancs in trying to coniprcnend the colors of the rainbow which you see all aroa nd you, and your ears are deafened with a dozen strange languages. You wan der hrough street alter street, finding something new at every Sep, and when you think you have come to the end your guide tells you that you are onlyat the beginning. I huve gone again and again to these Con stantinople bazaars and I find something new in every street every time I go. Feank G. Carpenter. MAKING BE0W.VIES TO SELL. The Novel Industry Started by a Clever New York Woman. New York World.! Of all curious and ingenious ways of making a living that of the New York woman who invented the "ordinary brownie of commerce" takes the lead. Every knows and loves Palmer Cox's brownies, who first appeared in St. Nicholas, and later in book form showed what pranks they were equal to. At first they were only the old fushioned little elves, with their skin-tight garments and peaked caps, such as all children were familiar with, but as the series went on there appeared in the crowd, first, a dnde brownie, then an Irish elf, a Scotch one, a Chinese; old and young ones, brownie policemen, and one who wore a crown. The children all over the country grew to know and love the'm, and then this afore-mentioned ingenious woman conceived the brilliant idea of making brownies to sell. She worked at it some time, but finally with the aid of a little wire, cloth and a paint brush, she turned out a sprite that wouldn't have known himself in the glass from the real thing or from Palmer Cox's pictures. She made three of them at a venture and sent them to the "Woman's Exchange. They sold the first day, and the second day she had an order for ten. Before the season was over the Exchange alone had sold 1,500 of them, the shops and exchanges in other cities had taken as many more, and every moment she had to spare would not suffice to fill the orders that came in, and she was forced to hire several assistants. Now a well-known firm has hired her to make brownies exclusively for them. They pay her a big salary, give her an airy workroom in their establishment, where there are half a dozen girls to aid her and carry out her orders. She has copied all the varieties ot brownies that Cox drew and has made half a dozen fresh sorts out of her own head. It seemed a very trifle foundation for success, but it is not the first time she has made money out of trifles, lor it was she who in vented the tissne paper owls which have sold by the thousands, and when the brownies lose their popularity is she confi dent she can find something to take their place. IIAUD ON A F00E MAN. His Wife Slakes lllm Tell the Truth About HI. FishlDfj. Boston Courier. 1 He had just come from a day's fishing in the perch pond, and was in the act of open ing his mouth to tell ot his exploits, when his wife, closing the book which she had been reading said: "Oh! it's you, George, jlear. I'm glad to see you back. It was so dull with you away that I took up the Bible to pass the time, and was reading the Book of Bevel ations as you came in. That's a wonderful book. And just think, it says, 'All liars shall have their part in the lake which burn etii with fire and brimstone.' Have you caught anything?" "No, Mary," he answered. "I didn't catch a thing, but I thought, as I went out out to get fish, we might as well have a string, so I called at the fish store and bought these." She said she was glad to get the fish, and talked to him with much cheerfulness; but he was gloomy and pre-occupied, and scarcely said a word in reply, and, in a short time, giving the excuse that he was tired, went off to bed. Poor fellow! WHY SHE DOESN'T B0AED. A Boston Lady Tnlks of the Annoyances of Hotel Life. Boston Herald. "Why don't I go to a hotel?" replied a Boston woman the other day to a remark of a friend that it would be a pleasant change from her summer housekeeping. "This is why I don't board. I have to say 'Good morning' to 50 people I don't care a straw about. Every time T step on the piazza the other women ask me how I do, if I am going to drive, if my book is 'nice' if well, you know the formula. Now some of these people I like and some I detest; but I have to be civil whether I am in the mood or not. If I remain in my room, I am called 're served,' disagreeable or worse. ! "I loath fancy work, and all the boarders expect rae to admire what they are making for Christmas and church fairs. Any seri ous reading out of doors is not to be thought of, because it is impossible to concentrate the average mind in a chatter about the relative merits of a Eosenbaum or a Bed fern gown, or whether foulard is prefer able to India silk, and what boat or train somebody's husband comes on that after noon. No, I am not adapted to the summer hotel. The Child Wondered. Youths' Companion. Georgie saw a telegraph wire and poles for the .first time. Gazing for a minute or two deliberately at it, he remarked, in his slow way, "Is there any woman big enough to hang clothes on that line? Eqtmlly Expensive. Old Lady Doctor, please let me have my bill. Doctor My good woman, I know you are not in the best of circumstances. I want nothing formv trouble. Old Lady Oh, that's kind of yon! But who will pay the druggist? German Paper. PITTSBURG, SUNDAY, OLD SLEUTH EACEET. Nye Tells How a Reporter Became a Detective and a Saddened Man. G0l!Na IN FOR ORIGINAL HETHODS. He Continually Buns Against All Kinds of Stumbling Blocks, and is KOW DOING TIME ON A FDNNT PAPEfi tWWTTEX FOB TUB DISPATCH. J ESTERDAY I saw a sad, sad reporter. He said that he had been regarded always as a good all-around news paper man, who bad begun as a journalist and gradually worked his way up. He had written every kind of descriptive work on short notice, and had done everything from a prize fight to ten nis tournament, Irom a four-hour speech on the tariff to a holo caust, and had been generally considered a good man. Lately he had decided that he would strike out for original methods and thus in crease his salary. He had noticed how well it paid to do the detective reporter style of work, and so he thought he would do some of it. He had come on trom an interior city and other newspaper men had told him that to get on rapidly he should do some difficult thing and then write it up. Other people had tried in New York, but failed because they just tackled the old reliable stock of dime museums, elevated railroad, Castle Garden and the park, so he ought to do some daring and dangerous act, after which he could write it up and get big pay for it. He tried it gently by riding on a street car all day and talking with the driver and conductor. He picked out a good-natnred looking driver and bright conductor on a Broadway car, and rode all one afternoon with them, GETTING GOOD STORIES from both, while he rode first on the front and then on the rear of the car. Each man told him of the hardships ot bis position. The driver said that, though a young man, he had quite a family at home, and that on his salary he found it very difficult to clothe Being Taken in ty Another Reporter. the little ones, to say nothing of sending them to school. His wife was blind, hav ing lost her sight from the effects of over work with her needle at night without sufficient light, so that the little ones were practically orphans. He had a long, hard day's work to do, after which he had to cook enough for the next day, and mend the children's clothes while they were in bed. And yet the company docked him at every possible point and abused him if he dared to sit down to drive on a dull day. The conductor told a sad story of priva tion also. He said he had only one little girl, but she was a cripple. The child had come one day to bring his dinner to him, and on the way had been run over by a brewery wagon loaded with glucose beer and a fat driver. The conductor heard her scream and ran to her in time to snatch her out from under the hind wheels, but the other wheels ran over her and injured her spine. Now he had to leave her at home all day in charge of his wife's mother, who was paralyzed on one side and an habitual drunkard on the other. Yes, he said, the company docked him for the time he was absent, when he ran to save his little girl, though he only lost one trip. He was not a complaining man, he said, but some times it seemed hard. FOOLED BY HIS FELLOWS. The reporter made copious notes, and that night made two columns of the story for the Sabbath paper. "When it appeared all the papers made fun of him because both the driver and conductor of that car were re porters who were also getting material lor their journals, and when they saw that he was securing information for publication, they proceeded at a rapid rate to fill him up, and even as the reporter was listening to the smooth and tearful tale of the driver. the conductor was thinking up what he also would tell him. In the alternoon the editor told him that he would not do. "You ought to know better than that," he said. "You have made us a subject of mirth, for the other papers have got their stories direct from the driver and the conductor ot' that same car, and the worst of it is, that they tell all about how they loaded you up with prop erty facts and low, coarse falsehoods. Yon ought to know better than to show your notebook anyway unless you want to be done up. Now go and act at once and do something creditable, or go away and never come back any more. I am sick and tired of people who have no originality of thought. Why do you not lead a life of shame, or murder some one, and write it up for us?" The reporter said he would do the best ho could. He began by taking a drink at a piece v here you can get a cocktail, afresh egg and a bowl of bread and milk, with music and a shave for ten cents. When we stop to consider that the cost of the bread, milk, egg, music, etc., is all taken out of the quality of the cocktail we at once arrive at tne conclusion that the liquor is of an infer ior quality. SEEKING A. GOOD FIELD. He drank another and then decided to gradually nork his way over to the Inebri ates' home, where he had heard there was very poor food for the inmates and a good field for newspaper work. He took another Attorney street cocktail and a breath nf air, and soon let off a yell which awoke a police somnambulist. Goaded to madness by thus being aroused in the middle of the afternoon, the policeman hit the reporter a sickening blow on the head and took him to the sta tion. On the following day the reporter tried to write it up as far as he had gone, but his head hurt him so that he gave it up. The other papers, however, had real good ac counts of the incident, giving his name and also stating that he was the reporter who w Til i wi 1 iy i SEPTEMBER 15, 1889. had made an ass of himself by interviewing two other reporters on a street car, and filled the columns of the press with horror over an imaginary tale of woe, well calcu lated to injure the street car line. So he did not try to investigate the Inebriate's home at' all. He just stayed for a few days at a little inebriate's home of his own, and tried to make his wife b lieve that he told her about the origin of the trouble. He hired out then for a day or two as assistant to a tinner, and went with him to assist him in putting a tin patch on the country seat ot a wealthy man. Here he got to thinking once more of his old work and also of the great field for usefulness in the detective line. First he thought he would try it as a stowaway, but he only tried one vessel and found that another naper had a representative there, and one stowaway was really all that the vessel would accommodate. A NEW LINE. Then it occured to him to get smuggled into a dissecting class. He had heard that the classes in anatomy at one of the big colleges were very much depraved, and that they played baseball with the heart of the sub ject, and when they went to lunch, in order to prevent fellow-students frou swiping their pipes and chewing tobacco, many of them concealed these articles during the lunch hour in the thorax of said subject. He decided, therefore, that, ghastly as' the subject was, he would have to do it. After a good deal of delay he got permission as a friend only to visit the dissecting rooms as, a young visiting physician from PhiladeK phia. He desired to reveal the true horrors A Lively Corpse. of the dissecting room with his trenchant pen and thus attain a name and a salary which would rattle along down the corridors of time. He asked if he might be permitted to see the gentleman upon whom the class pro posed to elucidate, and was given permis sion to visit the room prior to the hour of demonstration, "if he would agree not to carry anything away." He went nervously into the place by him self in order to get up his courage. Also to make a few notes. He saw something that looked like a person concealed under a covering evidently doing the Sir John Moore act. The reporter, with his fatal notebook, went up to the table, and, won dering whether he would see a mangled criminal or a fair young Peri, he gently lifted the sheet. It was a young man. There was nothing at all shocking abont his appearance. He looked as it he might be slumbering. One could almost fancy that he breathed. THE COEPSE AWAKES. Pretty soon a large fly buzzed around for a moment and alighted on the white, band some nose. The corpse stood it as long as it could, and then brushed him off. The reporter felt faint. He tottered and felL'over against the table. It tipped np a little and the remains slid off at the side. Seeing the note book the remains said: "Mr., are you a reporter?" "Yes, sir," said the sad man. "Well, snake, if you please. So am I. It struck me that it would be a good idea to get at the inside of the traffic in dissecting goods and raw material for demonstrations. So I concTudcd to work it np and give it to the public. I arranged the matter so that I could be 'snatched' and I guess I must have .overslept myself. The thing wasn't what yon could call a success, however, although I have got enough notes to make a good story, but I have just found out, when it was too late, that another medical college surprised one of the reporters of the evening papers, so he'll scoop me at 1 o'clock on a story I had for to-morrow morning." The sad reporter said that he went home to the office and asked for an assignment. "1 have none for you," said the city editor, as he put a column story in the boiler and boiled it down to half a stickful, "we have none." "Very well," said the reporter with a sob, "if you have no assignment for me I will go home and with the.aid of my creditors I will make one myself." He is now doing time on a funny paper. Bill Nye. A llILLIONAIEL'S HALF HOLIDAY. lie Spcndi it Inn Quiet Way and Feasts on Free Lunch. Chicago Tribune The story of a salaried man who took a whole week: "If I couldn't have any more comfort with money than some men whom I know, I had rather remain poor. The other day I had business with a man whose wealth is variously estimated from a half million to one and a half millions. I called at the office and was told that he was on his vaca tion. I said I was sorry, as my business was urgent. The clerk replied that old Moneybags would be at his home that night. 'Then he is not out of the city? I asked. The clerk said 'No.' and added, 'His vaca tions are halt days off and are passed near his business.' Then I asked where I could find him. The clerk took me back of a screen and told me confidentially. I took a Cottage Grove avenue car and got off at Thirty-ninth street. I went into one of the beer gardens of that locality and there I found my millionaire with two or three others, I don't remember the number. Having transacted my business 1 apolo gized lor the intrusion and left. Passing through the business end of the .concern I loitered n few minutes and talked with the man in charge. I said something about his good enstomers. " 'Do ycut mean that crowd over there?' he inquired, pointing to the one in which the millionaire sat. And then he continued: 'They come here about twice a week and three ot them chip in and buy a bottle of Rhine wine and then work the sausage and cheese on the connter. They call that fnn, and I suppose they go down town and tell about having had a monkey and parrot time at my place. I'd "like to see such men shipped to New York.' " , Curious. - M. i Miss "Why, John, these gloves are not mates. John I know they're not, miss; and what troubles me most is, the other pair what's in on the table do be in the same predicament as these. Judge. - ANDBAS HOMES. DUEL A FRENOH-AMEEICA1T NOVELETTE. Written for The Pittsburg Dispatch -BT- SARA BERNHARDT. CHAPTER I. HELEN DELWABE AND COMPANY. NOVELETTE for The Pittsbobg Dispatch I "Well, it shall not be much more fiction than fact, and it shall have for its place a single rail road train. But, as the cars are in motion all the while, there will be changes of scene, nevertheless. It will be like one of those theatrical views which are the same throughout a play as to the spot on which the action occurs, but are shown from presumably different points of the compass, so that the background changes. I do not make it so for the pur pose of economy in scenic material, do be lieve me, but because it really was that way in the occurrences depicted in this story. They began at the Grand Central Bailroad station, in New York, and with the depart ure of a dVamatic company on a professional tour. Such a party of Travelers can- always be picked out and identified the world over. Actors and actresses are cosmopolitan in their vagaries ' of dress. If the actor's coat is made of common-place fabric, it will have a curious cuj to distinguish it, and if it be spaped in conventional accord with prevailing styles, it will be sure to be made of singular cloth. In one way or the other he is bound to be coated in a manner to announce his calling. And the actress, if her traveling suit be quiet and ordinary, there wfll at least be a roguish plume on her hat. or some other embellishment which says to every observer as plainly as in words, "I am an actress." So it was that in the multitude of people at the Grand Central, and in all the commo tion of arrival and departure, this one small company of players displayed their occupa tion to all who cared to know it. There was trouble about their trunks, con fusion about their tickets, and consternation over one or two members who 'arrived barely in time to board the train at all, but when the wheels did begin to roll under the cars, the business manager breathed a sigh of re lief as be leaned back in his seat and felt that, however the tour might end, it was commenced without mishap. His name was "Wilton Ortley, and he had been an actor himself, but his voice bad gone wrong with asthma, or something of the sort, and he had been forced from the art of the drama over into the commercial side of it. It was one of those sumptuous parlor coaches, luxuri ously peculiar to American railroads, in which he hatt comfortably bestowed his com pany. The principal among them was Helen Delware, a woman whose beauty, bore the test of daylight admirably and that is a great deal to say of an actress, whose pro fessional countenance has to be a matter ot artificiality. She was above the medinm in size, and certainly far superior to the aver age of her sex in shapelinesss, which was that of a Juno indeed. She was not as young at 30 as she had been at 20, and yet there were no signs of over-maturity, either in the face, with: its. regular and almost classical features, op in the form, with its happy medium betwixt the slimness of a girl and the roundness of a matron. The richness of her traveling suit told of finan cial resources as yet unimpaired by her venture as a star actress. Helen Delware The Tempter Succeeds. had been less than a year on the stage, and there had been no slow climbing of the ladder in her" case, from obscurity to fame. She had begun as a star, of as great a mag nitude as lavish expenditure in schooling 'and wardrobe could produce; and if her acting was not wondrous in the way of genius, it was at all events remarkable for its clear escape from artistic failure. It is true that she had not yet exploited herself in New York, but during one season of pro fessional visits to nsely chosen small towns she had found audiences to accept her, and now she was off for a more ambitious route through middling sized cities. Manager Ortley, soon after the train started, took a gentleman to her and placed him in an adjoining chair. I wish to intro duce this person to the reader particularly. He was Andras Normaine. It wad to be seen at a glance that he was a Frenchman, and it did not take a long look to see that he was a Parisian. He was dark complex ioned, as most Frenchmen are, and tall, which most Frenchmen are not. Of all the theatrical party he was the single one without a theatric aspect. The lower part of his strongly handsome face was mus tached and bearded, contrary to the custom of actors, and he was enabled to leave it so by reason of his role in the comedy used by Helen Delware, being that of a gentlemanly villain, and we all know that gentlemanly villains invariably wear whiskers. Nothing but honest amiability, however, was now expressed in his bright, intelligent visage. "When he politely removed his hat. upon being presented to Miss Delware, he dis closed that upright and close-cropped con dition of black hair; which we are accus tomed to see in Pans, but which in America is associated in idea with foreigners Frenchmen, Italians, or Spaniards. Agree able as was the appearance of Andras Nor maine in private life, it must be confessed that when hn figured in the nlav as a wnnn. drel ho resorted to no alterations whatever, inriner man to displace nis naturally ur bane expression with a sneering scowl. In point ofa'act, he had not up to this time been an actor at all, save during a week of rehearsals prior to the outset. How this had happened he explained to Miss Del ware in the conversation which ensued. "I have been much pleased with your ability, as shown at the rehearsals," the lady said, "And I am astonished to be told by Mr. Ortley that you are a, novice. Do you think that you will bo able to face an audience withqut fright?" "If I have done well enough to please you at the rehearsals," he replied, "I think I shall do no worses before an audience. It Vol Mils flaljlJEA 0k W I III was much more of an ordeal to act with stage companions only than It will be fn a filled theater." Andras said that in English, and with a strong French accent. The writer here wishes to inform the reader that she is com posing this story in her native French lan guage. It will be transferred into English for my American readers by a collaborator. "Whether he will undertake to spell out my hero's French-English I do not know, but I fancy that he will not, because Andras spoKe not grotesquely, but merely with a French accent, to print which would make him out a more or less comical speaker, while he was anything bnt that. So the reader will please to imagine, whenever 'words are imputed to Andras, that they are uttered with French inflections and accents, although they may be printed in perfect English. "Forgivameifl seem to imply a doubt that yon will acquit yourself excellently," Miss Delware proceeded, and not without manifesting a desire to treat the handsome Frenchman considerately. "I haven't any such fear. But it seems odd that Jdr. Ort ley should have accepted an utter novice for an important part. Howdid it happen?" "I will tell you'rankly," Andras replied. "I am a Frenchman of good birth and no money. I came to America aware that the former fact would be of no value here, but hopeful that the latter one might be reme died in this land of wealth-making. I had no definite plan, but simply came to New York with only a few hundred dollars in my pocket I fancied that somehow or other lucrative employment might be secured. I went to a small hotel In ITniversity Place. That is within the boundaries, as yon may know, of what has become New York's French colony. I read French names on the sign boards, saw French people in the streets, and felt less foreign than I had ex pected to. "Whenever I ventured outside of this region, of course I found myself !n a strange city of a strange land. Bnt I had learned English quite thoroughly, and was able to make intelligent efforts toward plac ing myself in congenial employment. But I did not succeed." "I trust that you wfll find you have suc ceeded now." "I meant no disparagement of my present JUST IN THE position, believe me. All I intended to say was that X could get at first nothing pleasant to do for a living. For a little while I was an agent for a French wine firm a boomer, my American companions called it but I doubt if I was the means of selling as many bottles of champagne as X consumed in the process of booming it, and I was in imminent danger of pronounced dissipation before I gave np the job. One day your Mr. Ortley came to the modest hotel where I was boarding, and inquired of the proprietor for some French actor who spoke English not too brokenly. The estab lishment was a place where French stage folks made their home temporarily, but it chanced that the requisite guest was not there. I heard the inquiry, and at once offered my services. Mr. Ortley was in clined to turn his back on me when I con fessed that Thad never done any acting, bnt I delayed his refnsal by urging that.-surely, my French-English was just about the thing he wanted. He surveyed me inspect ingly, and seemed satisfied that X wonld look as well as speak like the particular rascal which he meant to put on the stage." "A very gentlemanly rascal, you know a perfect gentleman in manners, with an unmistakable stamp of good breeding." "Thank you, madam. You are consider ate. I shall endeavor to so utilize what I can't help that is, my French accent and my deportment that the audiences will mistake it for skillful mimicry." Andras Normaine's free avowal of him self seemed to open the lips of Helen Del ware to a somewhat similar frankness. She had taj:en a liking to the Frenchman, and' was disposed to establish unceremonious re lations. This was not usual with her, and the others ot the party observed it with curiosity. One of them eyed the pair cov ertly, but with a look of seriousness unlike the careless interest betrayed ny the rest. This was John "Warduff, a florid and not sentimental looking man, but when a hus band sees his wife engaged in familiarly affa ble dialog'ue with a gentleman who is hardly more than a stranger, no amount of phlegmatic disposition will prevent him irom becoming ooncerned. Mr. "Warduff was the husband of Helen Delware. I have written of her as "Miss" Delware. It is a theatrical cus tom, as you probably know, to claim maidenhood for actresses before the public, all conditions of matrimony to the contrary notwithstanding. But in the case of Miss Delware the suppression of her wedlock went beyond the printed play bills, and ex tended to the members of the company, not one of whom knew that she was Mrs. "War duff. That was a whim of her histrionic ambition. Her residence since childhood had been in California, where her husband had engaged in mining ventnres, making and losing money spasmodically, and finally getting to a climax in financial col lapse. But his wife was more fortunate. She had speculated in gold and silver mines, too, and came out of the risks and chances with a considerable fortune in her own right. It was from this wealth that she was drawing money to support her stage career, in which her husband figured as os tensible proprietor and capitalist of the un dertaking. The only person In the travel iuc party who knew that Helen Delware and John "Warduff were man and wife was "Wilton Ortley, the business manager, and he had been enjoined to secrecy. These two men sat side by side, half a car's length from Helen and Andras. Ort ley was one of those furtive individuals who hardly conceal their interest in something else than the convcrsation.they are engaged in, provided there is another object of con cern in sight. At this time, ulthough for awuiie ne talked with WarduU about the ordinary bnslness affairs of the company, he eyed the other pair so constantly that "Warduff noticed it. "What are joh watehiagthem for?" "War- duff at length asked, so saddealy tfetf'tfce - other was ctartkcL "Ob, nothing af all," he replies!, fenfeg -a careless air. "I was woafcnag vhetiinr i our Frenchman oan helpeBftetiag last the kind of Frenchman we mnt la me play. A good-looking fellow, isn't Ik? Asa Mig Delware," and he used the professional name of Mrs. "Ward off, "seems interested la him." ""What do you mean to InslnBate?" "Not the least thlng No doubt slwfsa. little anxious about his ability, or hi lack of it. Are you jealous already? Thti the usual folly of an aetress' h-wbaad. Don't you indulge In it, jrtiesliy a there isn't any reason." Now, Ortley was playing the rsle of lags, seeking to implant the seeds of jealossy in stead of eradicating them, and for this course he had two reasons. He was some what in love with Helen himself, aad wosld have been glad to set -up between the hat band and wife a discord which, shoald eventually estrange them. Secondly, fco had faith in the solid success of the aetress, and wished to get profitable oeatrel of her, excluding the husband from beta tbe oaari lal and business partnerships. "I haven't any mistrust of her," "rTardna' went on; "she it a good enosgh wife. She gets interested in fine speeimeas of the oppe site sex, like our friend, Andras" Normaise, hut that is all it amount to. Tfeere is & more serious matter that I want to talk to yon about." "Money?" "Money. Yon have guessed it. I want some. You know I have been gaablia heavily in New York, don't you? "Well, . last evening X made a plunging dash at the faro table, hoping to recoup my losses of tee part few weeks, if not to get ahead of tee ' game. The game got a good deal farther ahead of me. J. lost a tnousana dollars, which was six hundred more than f had; The remainder I borrowed from a friend, and it & a debt of honor that X really ought to settle immediately. Indeed, I promised, to make a remittance from Albany, oat of our first night'sreceipts." "But we have already mortgaged about the whole of our share for the entire week. X wished to get from jour wife the money to meet preliminary expenses, but" "But I told you not to, because I had al ready exhausted that resource. She bad paid out as much, or more, than the eest of floating us out of town could possibly come to. She Is no fool, and. while ready eBoagk to stand the expenses of her stage ambition, she has a pretty clear idea of what those ex-; penses ought to be. As she has already made me a liberal allowance for personal, expenditure, beside advancing some hun dreds to cover gambling losses that I con fessed to, I don't think it judicious to strike ; her for more. But you must let ma have it somehow." ""Why not go to your wife, confess yonr gambling sins and ask for forgiveness or forgiveness and money?" Ortley suggested, NICK OF TIME. not averse to making the husband lower himself in her esteem. "X couldn't think of it," "Warduff shortly responded. "I mean to get along with my wife. Perhaps' yon think that wonld be an nnnsnal thing in the theatrical profession? Well, then we shall be exceptional. My wife lores me, and I regard her as a woman worth, cherishing. No, 1 won't, go to her for the money." "If that is the way you feel abont It, I must manage it in another way, I suppose. Uakn a note of Su00. and when we get to Albany " "You will Und somebody to discount it?" "Yes ir it has the slcnatnre of Helen Del ware as indorser. Guaranteed by her, I know a party who will advance the money." He tore a leaf out of a memorandum book and wrote on it a note for$500. Then he handed to Warduff the pocket fountain pen which he had used in wrftine, and indicated where ho should sign, which he did. "Sow tako it to Miss Delware," Ortley said. Accepted With Thanto. "and get her nameon the other side. Yoa dislike tot Well, it isn't essential that she shonld know what or why she is signing. Tell her It is an order for some trivial thing any thing you please. It Is only a form, anyhow." Jttere again uruey oieaub w itu uiu uuier into difficulty. Tho trap was vaguely set, and when, a few minutes later, it caught the in tended prey, tho trapper waa elated by his un-. oxpectedly quick success. The truth was that Warduff knew Us wife's alertness too well to suppose that she wonld sign anything without knowing its nature. He would not trust to the small chance of a lapse in her habit of always knowing what she was about, even though she was absorbedly en gaged in a dialogue with the Frenchman. But he meant to mako Ortley believe she had signed the note. He said to himself that there was not much risk: or criminality in forging her signature. Shouldn't a husband havetbat privilege by right? The law ought to discriminate in that particular. If It didn't So he joined her, foil into tho conversation awhile, showed her some thing or other from his pocket, and endeavored to make it appear to Ortley, who did not seem to be watching the proceeding closely, that ha was getting her to indorse tne note. Instead ot that, he took the first opportunity to imitate her signature with his own hand. Then he re turned to Ortley and handed the note to him. "You didn't have much difficulty after all!" Ortley remarked, as he scanned the indorse ment. 0, none at all," was the slightly nervosa reply. ' Ortley pocketed the piece of paper, saying, "You shall have the money to-morrow in Al bany," and at tba came time communine with himself: "So you are a forger, my foolish friend? Something profitable to me shall como of this." CHAPTER H, A FBEXCH STUDY OF A VBAXCO-AXXBICAIT OIKL. A week elapsed. The theatrical company spent their evenings acting in theaters, and a, good part of their days in transit from city to city. Tbey had a car to themselves, after tho usage of well-equipped American dramatic tourists. This was a veritable salon on wheels. The players who inhabited it suffered nothlbg like tho constraint and restrictions ol European continental travel, with oar (tufty rl