laaaB T'lWTF PITTSBURG DISPATCH THE -1 . J PAGES 9, TO 16. SECOND PART. ?. i HOWWEGETOURMArL A View of the Bustling Interior of the Pittsburg Post office. SPEED A VITAL ELEMENT ,In the Composition of the Men Em ployed by Uncle Sam. GITIXG ODDS TO BASEBALL PITCHEES. High Standard orPitfbnrB'sPostofflce The Best Talent Encaged Remarkable Speed and Memory of Stall Distributor Collecting tbe Mall Effacing the Stamps Filling tbe Poncbes The Small Per centage of Mistakes Dally Stndy Neces sary to Maintain Efficiency Deciphering Blind Addresses An Occasional Con signment to tbe Dead Letter Office. intuitu? FOK TIH DISPATCH. VERY device which can insure speed in the transmission of the United States mails is now snapped up eagerly by the Postoffice Depart ment There are three essentials in the trans mission of the United States mail, viz., speed, accuracy and pre cision. The machinery which secures this result is complicated, the men who are the prime agents in the work are dextrous and skilled by years of practice so that they be come almost automatic in their operations, and the different things which may be termed labor and time-saving accessories of the Postoffice Department are all at a high pitch of perfection. Especially is this the case in the Pittsburg postoffice, long held up as a model for other cities, and demanding a high meed of praise from those who know what postoffice effici- the prr ency is. Pittsburg's peculiar position geo graphically is such that a vast amount of mail which has not the slightest connection with the city and its population has to pass through the Pittsburg postoffice and be ticketed for points all over the East, "West, North and South. It is usual to refer to Pennsvlvania as the Keystone State, but in postoffice parlance Pittsburg is the keystone of the United States mail field. Hence'it has lor years been demanded that the Pittsburg office should do an amount of general work outside of its purely local incoming and out going mail. Other postmasters have had a share in the high plane attained, but i may be said that Mr. J. jB. Larkin has measured up to the highest demands of the nositinn. The stationing of one of the veterans of the mail service, Superintendent of Mails Stephen Collins, in this city, has been a steady recognition of the importance of the situation, and the great need ot the best ob tainable talent in dealing with the knotty mail problems elucidated in this city. THE VITAL ELEMEKT. In every way speed has become a vital element of the service, both for local and other mail service. To trace the course of a letter through the mail boxes, pouches, dis tributors and carriers is a fascinating pursuit and will undoubtedly interest a public always eager for information of an instruct ive nature. First and foremost tbe letter duly sealed and stamped, is deposited in a box, say in the East End or Bouthside. Then comes along one of the new little mail carts, a cross between a go-cart, a "one-horse shay" and a sulky. The col lector of mail stands on a footboard at the rear and drives. At every box the mail matter is collected and "chucked into the mail receptacle, a place somewhat similar in shape and size to the "boot" of an En glish mail coach, so charmingly described Jpij Charles Dickens in Pickwi'ck Papers. The cart carries 100 pounds of mail matter, and when it starts toward the main office no grass is allowed to grow under the feet of the motive power a more or less spry horse. The driver turns into the blind court between City Hall and the postoffice and dumps the mail into a sort of clothes basket Two men seize the basket and weigh the matter and it is then hustled into the canceling tables to have the sickly green stamp defaced and rendered valueless by a smart blow from an inked stamp. A man stands in front of the huge pile of letters. In one hand is the stamp and the other "skins" over the letters rapidly. Then, when a bunch are gotten into position, the canceling clerk begins to fly, hitting the postage stamp and an ink pad of buckskin with alternate strokes, and so fast doei'the clerk work that the eye is puzzled to follow his motions, while the ear can hardly count or separate the blows. Henry Bichllne, the fastest man in the office has a record of 200 a minute. There are EOletters estimated to tbe pound andthe biggest kind of pile is not long in melting away rapidly under such lightning manipulation. Newspapers take much lieJd-tftne to cancel than letters and noonepteeftdstoestablishingarecord. "When men fiwtbein canceling they have a hard tirae-in-fefting a good brisk "move" on tbe bnsiaes a the blows in inch rapid succession 'iWthe wrist and arm and callous tfAhmi, Between the hours of 8 and 11 p. jtTwSen the bulk of the mail from business houses And individuals comes . IS yvBKiii in, the work of canceling is at high pres sure. XiXOHTXXXa DISTEmUTIOir. Then the letters go to the distributors. These quick-eyed chaps hare got them selves tip to such a Ditch of accuracy of eye and aim that their work is little short of marvelous. In eight hours' work on an ordinary day of the week past, one distributor, working in front of a mail rack containing 200 pigeon holes one for everv Dostoffice in Pennsyl vaniadeciphered the addresses of 10,153 letters, and the bulk of his work was done in three hours. In treatment of matter mailed in Pittsburg for elsewhere, ittaay be Stamping Packages. said, by the way, that the morning crew, which works from 7 A, M. to 3 P. M., handles only a third of the daily mail. One man does the "midnight run" from 11 p. m. to 7 a. 3i., and handles an average of 12,000 letters per diem. Se mail matter fluctuates in quantity, the middle of the week being always the heaviest. The distributors are a class all to them selves in the department work. They are -t- ana nave to De extremely sharp-eyed witn phenomenal memories as a side qualifica tion. The mail matter is distributed in "cases," these being allotted to various States or groups of States. Pennsylvania and Ohio each have a case to themselves. Other States receiving less mail from here do not demand so much room. There are upward of 1,300 distinct separations of mail made in the Pittsburg office. "When the mail is all got awav with each pigeonhole is more or less filled. The letters are taken out, tied in a package and ticketed with a slip upon which time of completion, num ber of clerks and point to be reached are stamped, then these packages are ready to be "routed, i. e., sent in the proper mail pouch over the proper railroad line. Hot a moment of time is lost in th'e whole opera tion, and the men who can go in and take a case in the distributing department mnst have the topography of the United States down very fine. POSTOFFICE PITCHERS. These packages of letters are taken out to the mailing room. There is a pouch race in the center of this room which is in the sbape ot a half semi-circle, the center being occu pied by a table upon which the mail is damped. There are 152 canvas sacks hitched to tbe rack, with their wide-open months yearning for mail. Some of the sacks hold both letters and mail, but the majority of them in the largest rack are for papers and packages. The rack slopes upward in order to range the sack mouths in ascending order. On a dead level the men who so expertly shy the packages into ihe sacks could not operate at all. It is really marvelous to see the way in which these active dis tributors make the mail fly into the sacks. Several men work together in the space. Theygrabupabundle of papers and packages and arrange them so that the postmarks can be handily seen. Then the shower begins and the speed with which the packages shoot in all directions is absolutely wonderful. One man curves a newspaper into a sack crossing en route a package of wools which is skimming toward a sack diametri cally opposite. The aperture in the sack is about 10 inches in diameter, and an average man would have a hard job in tossing a brick with even extreme deliberation into so small a hole at a distance of 15 or 18 feet. But what a complete masterv of the science of tossing all shapes, sizes, weights and varie ties of packages, a man must possess to be able to read an address, figure out the proper route and with one little turn of the wrist, yank it into the Lock Baza. exact sack out of 162 into which it ought to go. The men rarely make mistakes, even when throwing thousands of articles daily. The average of errors amount to five or six per month. There are three turns which make use of 14 men. These 14 men throw an average of 10,000 pieces of mail every day in their lives, the aggregate weight of which is 30 tons a day, and out of the vast number handled in a month only make an average of five or six errors. Most of those are the result of sacks being too full, with no time to pack the contents compactly. The speed has to be great, and at 7 in the even ing, when in the throes of making up the biggest mail of the day, the air Is really white with flying mail matter. IT TAKES BITOT. One of the oldest employes, in speaking of tbe exactions of this branch of the ser vice, said: "No one can hope to become a really A 1 distributor unless by devoting from three to four hours of hard study to the work every day at home. Civil service questions are not much good in this. Meu have to know every postoffice and the coun ty it is in in a State to be rated 100 on that State. I know one man who has studied Ohio four years, and at the last examination f made only 30 per cent The examinations are monthly and cannot be got around by any pretext The crack distributor must know 95 per cent of the postoffices in six or seven States, although he may be rarely called on to work over two or three States. Ohio and Pennsylvania Lave a man apiece, but he cannot dawdle around. He is at concert pitch all the time h ,. & and the least hesitation may throw him hopelessly behind in the work of the day. A man has to keep his brain clear or anob scure postoffice may slip his memory at just the time h ought to remember it The pay ranges from 5600 to $1,100 per annum, but it is not enough, and the distributors are now organized nationally and will present a solid forefront to the next Congress for an increase in compensation. "We make up big sacks of mail tor San Francisco, Texas, and big "Western cities which are never touched this side of Chicago. Oh, yes, tbere is a label cm each sack so that tbe de partment can tell what clerk put it up, what time it left the office, and what time it reached its destination. There are from CO to 100 separate routes made up in this office. The letter mail leaves here, of course, over comparatively few routes, but it has to be divided so that the pouches come in se quence, whichever direction the train runs away from here. It is a mighty complicated business." HUSTLING INCOMING MAIL. Superintendent Collins explained the handling of the incoming mail as follows: "The letter mail say from New Tork in the morning arrives at 7:45, and the heavier mail comes at 8:15. The mail wagon takes about 20 minutes in its trip to the office,and the pouches are hurried in and opened, and the time slip filled out Then the first sep arators take hold and divide the box and carrier mall. The mail carriers then get in their most rapid work in getting the mail arranged by their route. There are 9 car riers in the main office, 13 in East Liberty. 10 on the Southside, and the utmost speed consonant with accuracy is maintained in the proper distribution. The detailed sort ing is, ot course, slower than the first separation, but tbere are many men in the omce who size up wen in tneir speed recora with any office in the United States. The lock box contingent is much smaller than the amount handled by the carriers,and has to be handled with deliberation, for Newspaper Boxes. wnen tne letter is placed in the box the de partment's responsibility ceases. But the. clerks who distribute that class of mail easily average 2,000 an hour. The addresses are generally legible for box letters. The carriers have the bnlk of the fun o f de ciphering the terribly written addresses of Pittsburg's foreign contingent There are an average of 300 hopeless cases daily. My clerk and myself manage to decipher the uulEot tnese, out an average ot zu letters go to the dead letter office every day. "We have a smattering of languages which is very effectual in most cases. It is rarely more than an hour before the heaviest East ern mail is out on the streets and ready for the recipients. In the matter of speed tbe conditions have to be such in Pittsburg that we have to excel almost any office in the ivnntry. I am certain that in transmission of mails either outgoing- or incoming, Pitts burg will compare favorably with any other office in the country." "Wales. A CANINE PH0T0GKAPHEE. A Terrier Furnishes Valuable Asslstanco to ' an Amateur Artist. Boston Conrlcr.I The latest trick in amateur photography is to have a trained dog who at a given signal will run and pnll a string by means of which the slide of an instantaneous cam era is worked, so that his master may be taken in a group or alone as often as he pleases. It is of course necessary to start the creature at a distance sufficiently great to give the master time to re-arrange his features after giving the word, but this is not a difficult thing to manage, and the young man who devised the trick has been exceedingly popular at the seaside hotel where he has passed the summer, as all the pretty and most of the plain young ladies in the house were anxious to have their pictures taken by the agency of the clever little bull terrier which served as his assistant One is prepared for anything nowadays, and it may be that it will'notbe long before the dogs are seen running about with detective cameras upon their own account It would not be a bad idea to furnish a watch dog with a flash light detective camera, and thereby he may take the picture of any vil lain who invades the domain which he is setto gnard. The picture would be an interesting piece of evidence in a trial for burglary,and if it did not carry a conviction it would not fail at least of producing a sensation. MRS. HACKAI'S PARROT. The Wonderful Bird Which Is Owned by the Bonnnza Queen. St. Stephen's Gazette. London is marvelously empty, but enter tainments are still given at Mrs. Mackay's. It is true that the hostess herself is not yet at borne; but a grand green parrot has sat at the open window since last Sunday, looking on Bnckingham gate, and attracting hun dreds by its humorous conduct. I baveseen and heard many parrots, but never one like this. I was returning from the park on Sun day when I first saw it The pavement in front of the window was thronged and ev erybody was roaring with laughter, for the bird itself was laughing so heartily that its example was contagious. At last it said, with intense emphasis: "Well, I declare," and then burst into convulsions of laughter again in a manner really too Indicrous. It exchanged remarks with the spectators, it hailed passing hansoms, and on being asked what o'clock it was replied, "Halt past four," which was in fact correct In credible as it may seem, the bird on Monday afternoon was asked the same question, and replied accurately, "A quarter to five." So great has been the attraction of this gray green bird that the police have had to Keep moving the people to prevent obstruction of the traffic. "Go onl" cries the bird. Brazening It Out. Principal "Well, Tommy, what can I do for you? Tommy My teacher, she set me up to say that you've bten very bad, and I am to give yon a jevere whipping. Take off your Jaektl-Pucl. - - - i PITTSBURG, SUNDAY, ASIA'S COAL FIELDS. Mountains of Black Diamonds of the Yery Finest Quality. TOKGKING'S TREASURE- TROVE. Eemarkable Wealth of France's Possessions in Indo-China. A LESS OPPEESSIYE P0LIGI SEEDED. ITB02I Otnt TRAVELING COlOaSSIOJJIB.3 HE first explorers of Tongkiug saw in the Bed river, which crosses it from frontier to sea, the great highway to and from the vast and wealthy provinces of Southern China. This was the dream for which Francis Gamier and the rest of the brave band of French men schemed and fought and died. To-day it is known to have been indeed the "base less fabric of a vision." The Bed river has been explored to the Chinese frontier and found to be unsuited to serious navigation for the greater part of its length, to be both shallow and full of rapids. The future of Tongking, therefore, if it has 'one, must lie in another direction than that which in spired its conquest But has it a future this 200,000 square miles of varied country, which has cost France 36,000 men and un known millions of francs, will it some day give back these lives and this treasurer hundredfold, or is it destined to drag on in misgovernment and amid political rancours for a few years, till evacuation closes the shameful chapter? That depends. But for my own part X do not see how anybody who has had opportunities of closely observing Tongking in different parts can doubt the possibility of a future perhaps even beyond that which Gamier dreamed. To begin with, the most striking super ficial feature of Tongking is its lertility. "Wherever I have seen it, the land has been green with trees and "in verdure clad" or covered with luxuriant crops. Ihe enor- BJ A Tongkingese Belle. mous delta of the Bed river is or may be a vast rice field, but after the splendid crops of last year nobody doubts this. Before many years the chief rice supply of the Far East may come from Tongking. And in countless other parts of the coun try, all the travelers have told ns, show moist low-lying land equally suited for rice cnltivation. Already experiments have shown that wheat will grow admirably on the dry uplands. Its gram is smaller and browner and much heavier than in Europe, the cost of cultivation is not more, while the selling price is at present 50 per cent higher. Oleaginous grain is already grown in considerable quantity by the na tives, who extract the oil by a curious pro cess of their own. A large concession of land has 'just been taken up to be. planted with sugar cane, and there is no donbt that many other agricultural products need only intelligent Introduction. OPEHINO TJP THE COUXTBY. Again, considet the question of opening up Southern China. Garnier's hopes of the Bed river route were baseless, but what the river has failed to do the railway may easily A Street Scene in Tongking, accomplish. An interesting scheme to effect this is at tbe present moment straggling against the vacillation of tbe authorities. It is the plan of the Marquis de Mores, who has gone over the ground himself with French engineers, and certainly on paper it is an attractive one. His idea is to supersede half the caravan route between Canton and Yunnan and Thibet. At present the cost of transportation is from 3 to 4 shillinga per ton per mile I am quoting the details he gave me himself and the time occupied in transit is from Canton to Namning SO days, and Irom Pakhoi to Kamning 18 days. At present from Yun nan and Thibet only opium comes back jn exchange for piece-goods. It has been well known for years that Yunnan is extremely rich in minerals, iron, silver, lead, tin, zinc, etc., but none of these can afford the cost of caravan transport M. de Mores claims that he can reduce the 4 shillings to 3 .pence and the 30 days to 15 hours. The railway, of meter gauge, is planned to start from a place called Tien-An, (you will not find it on the map) some dis tance on the coast north of Haiphong and to run about 100 miles in a northwest erly direction to a point on a river1 where France has treaty rights of navigation to Lungchow, where there is a French consul, and which is 100 kilometers from the present caravan route, oucu u iu. ue juores Plan and the French Government is said to have j agreed to it provisionally and promised a J .... .. .. - - mm T I'll OGTOBER 20, 1889. Jfn,i grant, etc. If it is carried out, other Hues will connect the harbor at Tien-An and with Hanoi, and then strike still fur ther North. "Whether this line is built, However, and it is but a trifling thing of 100 miles, the principal objection to it being jnat it looks too simple. I am convinced hm rawav communication with Southern hi na via Tongking is a practicable scheme. Finally, as regards its minerals, the health of Tqngking is not open to doubt Two years ago the Government engineer sent out on a special mission by the French Admiralty and Colonial Office to report npon the coalfields of Tongking, gave a list or other mines worked by tbe natives, 117 in all, and among them 32 gold mines, 13 silver mines, 29 iron mines, 7 copper mines and 6 zinc mines. Here I can begin to speak irom my own knowledge. UNLIMITED WEALTH ZK SIOHT. On tbe concession of the Societa Fran caise des Charbonnages da Tonkin, at a place called Campha, I have seen a "boul der stream" of remarkably pure antimony, 3,000 yards long, with an average thickness of 20 feet, and I have stood on a solid block of pure oxide of antimony weighing 16 tons. In the same concession I saw a vein of oxide of cobalt measuring 100 vards by 00 by one yard. And from a little further north I have seen remarkable specimens of copper ore. Infinitely more important, however, tban all these, are" the coal fields stretohing all along the east coast rOf Tongking. For years the existence of these was well known and many times the com manders ot French gunboats, who had been struck by the multitude of outcrops, sent home reports calling attention to them and to the enormons advantages which would accrue to France if they could be success fully worked. At last the company I have already mentioned was formed: two years ago to work a concession obtained by H. Bavier-Chauffonr, and a large number of its shares were taken up in Hong Kong. At this time the venture was looked upon as A Coolie Miner. risky and many French and foreign capital ists fought shy of it The story ot the concession, if I had space to narrate it, would read like a chapter of an Oriental "Monte Cristo." To make an indisputable legal tender a ship was char tered to carry 100,000 silver dollars to Tong king, where the foreign population turned out armed to escort the bullock-carts carry ing the 25 wooden cases through the streets. Befused there, the dollars were taken on board again to the Court of Annam and the ship narrowly escaped destruction in a typhoon. Then they were brought back again to Haiphong, where the French au thorities finallyaccepted them. Now the So ciete has already 1,000 coolies, two engineers and a dozen master-miners at work. Its concession extends over scores of square miles, not one-tenth of which has yet even been explored. It consists of three dis tricts, Kongav, Hatou and Campha, the first two being wholly coal. I have been over the whole of the workings twice and into every one ot the galleries, and even taken photographs of the miners at work. So I can speak with some confidence. As regards the qnantity of the coal, it is practically in exhaustible. There are millions of tons in sight and nobodv can gness how much lies below. I have been in a score galleries, each of them in a solid seam from 10 to 20 feet thick. At Hatou there are seven seams side by side, aggregating 5i feet of coal. And yet these are merely the preliminary works of prospecting. A MOUNTAIN OF COAL. The "Marguerite Mine" at Hongay is a great mountain of coal. As regards quality, the ptospects are equally good. The works at present have been made chiefly with the object of discovering the proper place for the deep shafts, and therefore the coal has almost all been surface coal. Yet its analysis has been excellent; it has been tried sne cesstnlly on board a French gunboat, the Arqnebuse; I myself have traveled for two days in a 50-ton launch with high pressute engines burning it all the time and keeping 60 pounds of steam up; a first contract for the sale of 500 tons has been made; and within the last week coal has been reached at the "Marguerite Mine" giving on an alysis 16 per cent of volatile matter. This was all that was lacking in previous analyses to snow a coal siigntiy superior to Cardiff. Curiously, this is exactly what the French Government engineer, whom I have previously quoted, roretold two years ago. "Our opinion is," bis report concludes, "that Tongking possesses an immense wealth of excellent combustible . . . rivaling Anzin and Cardiff by its extreme purity, the absence of iron pyrites, and by a development of heat at least equal to that furnished by these coals." I asked the en-gineer-in-chief for his formal opinion. "C'est une richesse lmmense,"he said. And he staked his reputation and he has one to lose that in four months from now he would furnish in quantity coal equal to Cardiff. In Europe ten companies would be formed to exploit what has already been discovered on this single concession. When it is further developed the societe will need a small standing army of miners and a staff corps of engineers. As a proof of how this fact is appreciated in the East I may add that to-day, as I write, there are. in Hongkong buyers of the 500 franc shares of the company at 5700 per share 400 per cent premium and no sellers, although there are thousands of shares in the colony. TONGKING'S POTTBE. I think I have now said enough to show that there is a possibility certainly of a prosperous and perhaps evn of a magnifi cent future of Tongking. l said, however, Id beginning this letter, "that depends." It depends upon the French authorities at home, and upon their influence on the authorities on the spot, and upon that alone. As I tried to make clear in my previons letter, Tongking is grievously misgoverned. Instead of finding a helping hand, the French colonist encounters a closed fist The "functionary," clothed in his little authority, has utterly forgotten that he is the servant of the colonist, that he has no other reason for exist ence except to aid 'and protect and encourage his self7exiled countryman. As it is, while the colonist is the blood of the new country, the "function ary" is the leech. Day by day the cry of the French colonial civilian goes no to heaven, "Pas tant d'administrationl" Everywhere else in the world, capital is 1 welcomed, no matter wnose pocJcet it comes out of. In Tongking alone gold must be stamped with "liberty, equality and frater nity" before it is received, and a man must be a Frenchman before hp is allowed to labor with the rest The anniversary of the Bevolution seems a joke when one learns in Tongking that one of tbe conditions at tached to a concession is that nobody bnt Frenchmen shall be employed on it I do not believe there is another country in the world which would make such a pitiful stipulation. Does France not know what is done in her name? or is she not ashamed,re membering '89, to set such an example to-dav to the world? HekbyUobmait, J JOSHUA A STORY OF 333T C3-eoxg IE"be:r?s-, Author of "UARDA," "SERAPIS," Etc. (NOW FIRST T was midnight. Afire burned before JoBhua's tent and he sat alone beside it, gazing sadly and thoughtfully first into the flames and then out into the distance, The lad Eph raim was lying inside the tent on his uncle's camp bed. The leech who accompanied the troopshad dressed the youth's wound, and having given him a strengthening draught bade him remain quiet, for he was alarmed at the high'fever that had fallen on him. t But Ephraim found not the rest the phy sician had advised. ( The image of Kasana now rose before his imagination and added fire to his already overheated blood. Then his thoughts flew to the advice that he should become a warrior like his uncle; and it seemed to him reasonable, because it promised him glory and honor, as he would fain persuade himself, though in truth he desired to follow it because it would bring him nearer to her whom his soul longed for. Then again his pride rebelled when he thought of the insult with which she and her father had branded those to whom he belonged by blood and sympathy. He clinched his fist as he remembered tne rained house of his grandfather, whom he had al ways considered the worthiest of men. Nor had he forgotten his message. Miriam had said it' over to him several times, and his clear memory held It word for word; also" at intervals he had repeated it over to himself as he wandered on the lonely way to Tanis. Now he endeavored to do so again,but before he could get to the end his mind carried him back to thoughts of Kasana. The doctor had ordered Joshua to forbid any talking, so when the patient tried to deliver his message he bade him be silent. Then the soldier smoothed his pillow as gently as a mother might, gave him his medicine, and kissed him on the brow. At last he sat down by the fire in front of the tent, and only rose to give the youth a drink when the stars showed him that an hour had passed. The flames lighted up Joshua's somewhat 27i Image of Katana Nov Arose Before Sit Imagination, dark features, and showed them to be those of a man who had faced many dangers, and had vanquished them by stern perseverance and prudent reflection. His black eyes wore at,domineerlng expression, and his full, tightly-closed mouth gave evidence of a hot temper, but even more of the iron will of a determined man. His broad-shouldered frame leaned against a sheaf of spears set crossing each other in the ground, nd when he drew his powerful band 'through bis' -fefr .&fir pg&m v 3 I CHAPTEK V. ''''.'IE" - W$vfM!3l!9flf rrfwEmrP fH BrfttSaJKBP and his fortunes, and the modeM.tesH WMK: - W mxMMmoMl ' VrlfWP-i 1 mWmBSBSm afteetfon "which the mnch-eouried' ym MM!Blf'Wlv9Hsaks: . WmMm MM -MiKMf I K'rfesilsisrl THE EXODUS. PUBLISHED.) thick black hair, or stroked his dark beard, while his eyes lighted, up with wrath, it was plain that his soul was seething and that he stood on the threshold of some great resolve. As yet the lion rests, but when he springs up his enemies must beware. His soldiers had often compared their bold, strong-willed leader, with his mane like hair, to the king of beasts; and now he shook his fist, and at the same time the muscles of his brown arm swelled as though they would burst the gold bands that sur rounded them, bright flames flashed from his eyes and he was an unapproachable and awesome presence. Out there in the "West, whither he turned his gaze, lay the city of the dead and the ruined strangers' quarters. A few hours before he had led his troops past bis father's dismantled house and on through the de serted town, round which the ravens were flying. In silence, for he was still on duty, he had passed it by, and it was not until they had halted" that quarters might be found for his troops that he learned the events of tbe night before from Hornecht.'the captain of the archers. He had listened In silence and without moving a muscle or asking one word of further information, and meanwhile the soldiers had pitched the tents; but scarcely had he gone to rest when a lame girl, in spite of the threat of the watch, forced her way in and besought him, in the name of Elian, one of the oldest slaves of, his house, whose granddaughter she was, to go with her to the old man. He had been left behind, as feebleness and ill health pre vented his wandering, and directly after tbe departure of his people he and his wife had been brought off an ass to the little cottage by the harbor, which had been given to the old servant by his generous master. The girl, too, had been let to looic after the infirm couple, and now the heart of the old slave was longing to see once more the first born of bis lord, whom as a child he had carried in his arms. He had bidden the girl telfthe captain that bis father hid promised that he ( Joshua) would leave the Egyptians and follow bis people. The peo ple of Ephraim, yea,, the whole race, had heard the news with great rejoicing. The J03HTJA- MEDITATING grandfather would give him more news, for she herself had been nearly out of her mind with trouble and anxiety. He would de serve the richest blessings if he would only go with her. The warrior perceived from the first that he must fulfill this wish, but he had post poned the visit to the old man until the next morning. The messenger, though in "haste, managed to inform him of several things mat sne naa teen or neara oi irom others. 4 At last she waa gone. He made up the fire, and as long as the flames blazed brightly be looked with a dark, and thoughtful gaze toward the "West It was not until they had consumed the fuel and only flickered feeble and blue over the charred wood that be fixed his eyes on the embers and the flying sparks, and the longer be did so the deeper and more insurmountable did he feel the discord in his sonl, which only yesterday had been set on a single and glorious aim. t Tor a year and a naif he had been far from home fighting against Libyan rebels, and for fully ten months he had not heard a word from his people. A few weeks since he had been ordered home, and his heart beat with joy and hopefulness, and he, a man of 30, had felt a boy again as be drew nearer and nearer to Tanis, the city of Barneses, famed for its obelisks. In a few hours be would once more be hold his beloved and worthy father, who had only after deep consideration and dis cussion with his mother now long since de parted in peace allowed him to follow his own inclinations and devote himself to mili tary service and Pharaoh's army. This very day he had hoped to surprise him with the news that he had been promoted above other and older captains of the Egyptian race. The neglect which Nun had feared for his son had, through the power of his presence. bis valor, and, as he modestly added, his I gooaiacK, Deen turned to advancement; and yet be had not ceased to be a Hebrew. "When he had felt the need of acknowledg ing a god with sacrifice and prayer he had worshiped Setinto whose sanctuary his own father had lee him as a child, and whom, at ,that time, all the Semitic race, in Goshen bad worshiped. For M", how-. ' '---' . j ever, there was another god. and this waa ' not tae God of his fathers, bat the jrod who ti was confessed by air t&ese Egyptians who aj had received initiation, though he remained ' hidden from the people, wno were sot abla to comprehend him. It was not only tfcer adepts that kaew hfea, but aho most ot those who were placed in high positions ia the service of the State and'ia the arajr whether they were ministers of the divinity or not Everyone, however, knew what was meant when they sooke simply of "The God." the "Sum or AH," tfce ''Creator of. praised him, epitaphs waieb everyeae oeald $ read spoice oi tnis, tae oaiy go who revealed himself ia the world, who was co-existent and eo-eqaal witb the universe, imminent ia all ereatiea, not merely as life exists ia tie bedy of maav but as being him jelf tie sasa tetal of created, things, the universa. itself ia iUjaereaaial. growth, decay and resarreetiao, MmselC obeying the laws he had laid down. His essence dwelling in every part of himself, dwelt likewise in maarand lookwhefebe might a mortal could perceive tbe presesee and action of tha one. Withoat Wat aotk ing could be conceived of, and thna he-was one, like the God of his lathers. "Witbeat him nothing could come Into being ser any event happen on earth. Thai, like che Ged of Israel, He was almighty. Jbshaa had long been wont to think of these ge4 as essentially the same, and diaeiug oalyia name. He who worshiped one he deeinnd was the servant of the other; and so the cap tain of the host could, with a clear eea- science, have stood before hMjjareataad " told him that he had bees as fanafal ts tea God of his people as he bad beeaaa a war rior in the service of the Kiag. sj MMam't JVopfttesr. And there was something else, wafecr'fcad made his heart beat faster aad aare fladiy as he saw from afar the pyloaa aad rtoKsaa " of Tanis, 'for in his endless marsk aewBtf tfca silent desert and in many a Idnely oassa-ieat' the image had haunted his visiaa of a' maiden of his own people, whecs fce bad first known as a strange eblid stirred by wondrous thoughts, aad wham be bad seea again as a woman grown. aaapuiaebaMii in her dignity and severe beauty, set Is? before he had lastled bianostto tbeliftyaa war. Bhft had ooraa from Baaes4b 4 3bMB to his mother's burial; her iaage !bdbea ' deeply stamped oa nts neart, swaa mm dared to hope on hers. She had iw' be come a 'prophetess, hearing tbe vtiteat God. "While tbe other daughters f Taiaul; were strictly secluded, she had assmtsd bar freedom, even among men. aad.ia satte sst her hatred for the Egyptians, aad Jar Ms place amoae them, she and not easrtaafcsl from Joshua that to part frem W WMr!t and that she would never cease te SWafc sc him. His wife, whes he saeald wed. MMt be as strong and grave as hiassaH, aad Miriam was both, and east aaesbsr- M brighter Image, ef wfcieh be saee bad laved , to dream, anite into the shade. r: He wasfoad of children, andasweeter eMM than Kasana he bad never seen, citaer Jet Egypt or in distant lands. The ujnisiislsy with which this fair daughter of bk mm J raae-in-arms naa watcnea his aemtTBiusaw BEFOBE HIS TENT. widow had siaee shown hiss, had him much joy in times ot pease. SesWa her marriage he had taouiht ef bar, aa growing up to be his wife; bat bsraaiasul with another and her father's ieasaesd declaration that be wonld never hmMc- daughter to wife to a foreigasr had woaaiiia' ' ms pride and oooied nis artier, xassi ml had met Miriam, and she bad issaired bsaa with a fervent desire to call bar bis owav ' And yet, though, as be marebsd hosatsrasd. ; tae inougni oi seeise jusana owe ssata smm, been pleasing to hiss. He was wall oonhai . that be no longer, wished to marry bar, Mr k must have led to mueh vexarloa. Tbe Egyptians aad Hebrews alike deeaaed K ast, anorainatioa to eat at eaea otaer s sane, art ' to use the aaae seats or katvas, aad tbaagb as a fellow-soldier he waa aaeepted aa ee, or tnemselvea, and naa ones Board . young widow's father speak, kiadly of bis. people, still "the strangers" wen batafsd ia,- the sight of Horaeeht aad nis aoassaola. Tn Minaas Ka hail fnnad tlui nablakf --t- mtWA TOTaisTI 4t ITaun. .mImaI mlVa &a : uaw iivwu inmfc.r T 'tir i-irg, r " - other happy. Henceforth see eoaia be b more to him than a delightful child, ftem whom we leak for nothing but tbe ploawa of her sweet presenef. Hebadlearaedteaek. nothinz of her bevoaa a dad saile. aim? at . his service. Of Miriam ha demanded herasW.rj In all her lofty besaty, for be bad leaS) enough endured the loneliness of a i life, and now that no mother's arasa open to tae noawooaier, ne ieutae nsspwsss ot his single state. He loaged onee bum sa't 1 feel glad in times of peace, wbea aa bnd down his arms after perils and vrivatieaa ot tj r. LI. !. - w every uuu. xt was uis miti w a ( , home to dwell andir his father's isof, aad tet , J provide that the noble race of wUek aa waa . t triA nn iv mala dvKtuufltlRM uusuftaci Enhraim waa oalr his sister's sea. His heart uplifted with saeb ad thoughts as these, he bad eoaaa fcaaar taj Tanis and had almost reached tbe aaai ml , his hopes and wishes, whta bebaltH Smmi lay before him. as It wan, a aaid of i destroyed by Bill aad swarase, of It And, as taoaga la Bowery, late him first to wki bad LMea IM fathers. Whan tbe JsrWsPB JsrvvVL a vVtHTtwwWw V Jt9frt -iTVffJij -- 'LrTsl v jiff 5 J lai&