iWA'i( ysrvsT WJK r THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH. F.' r, r PAGES 17 TO 20 - THIRD PART. ME A PEG WITH I, A Cheerful Greeting Extended by Europeans in Asia to Their Friends. INDIA'S SALVATION ARMY. Its Peculiar Method of Reaching the Intemperate Natives. GAMBLIKG IH CHIfi A AND THE EAST. Favorite Tipples nod Gnmca of More Than Half the World Drinking feakl In Japnn Chinese Fondness Tor Samshu How the Slikado Drinks Champaenc Asiatic Gamblers Bellini: on Cricket Fights and Quail Combats Lotteries In the Pacific bamethinc About the Greeks as Gamblers. IcOREEsroxDrxcx or tot dispatch. Wasiuxgton, D. C, November 9. TTBIHG the past summer the Salva tion Army has at tacked India. A company of re formed Englishmen and women sailed from London to Bombay, and there began their war against intemper ance in a truly orig inal way. They dis carded their English clothes and put on ths dresses of the na tives. This dress ic many of the dis tricts, is little more than a dirty white sheet, wrapped in folds around the bare body, and the fair white skin of these Caucasians shone out strangely among their blacker brethren. Most of ihem were barefooted and a twist of the sheet not seldom showed bare legs as well. The girls appeared upon the stage and told their experiences with intoxicating drinks in this garb. The men paddled about tne streets with drum and fife, and the same fan tastic drumming up of recruits went on as is seen in the Salvation Army of this coun try. The better class of foreigners were dis gusted with the antics of the Salvationists, and they claimed that they did the cause of temperance more harm than good. The Salvation Army officers replied that they wanted to snow the Hindoos that they were their brothers, and that they cduldle closer to them while wearing the same dress. They saidthat they proposed to co throughout India and to carry their crusade into each district attired in the dress of the natives. It is hardly probable, however, that they will do this, lor the dress of both sexes in some of the remote districts of India is not more comprehensive than the fig leaves of the Garden of Eden. IXTEMPEBAXCE IN INDIA. Intemperance is growing to an alarming extent in India. The sale of beer and liquors is licensed by the English Govern ment, and John Bull adds to his pile by every finger of bad whisky that the poor Hindoos drink. Queen Victoria sent 2.000, 000 gallons of beer from England to India in a single year, and in addition to this she has licensed breweries all over the country. A Japanese lppLer. There is a sort of palm in India, which, be ing tapped, produceia liquor which, by sev eral days' fermentation, becomes intoxica ting Nature has thus provided India with a cheap means of eettine drunk, and her people have taken advantage of it. TheH English liquors are, however, preferred, and wherever our civilization goes, our strong drinks make progress in advance of our Bibles. Korea was opened to "Western ideas and men a little over a decade ago, and the Koreans were delighted with Scotch whisky and Jamacia rum. They had never seen bottles before and they prized these as rare curiosities. In many of the huts through out Korea you may find beer bottles and whisky bottles set up as works of fine art, and taking the place that we allot to rare bits of china or Venetian cut glass. English beer, French brandy and Scotch whisky are now sold all over the East, and nearly every town in Japan of any size has its liquor store. In both Japan and China the dif ferent brands of ales and liqnors are coun terfeited by the natives. The labels on them are forged, and the poorest of intoxi cants are sold under forged names. THE MIKADO'S FAVORITE TIPPLE. The Chinese are very fond of champagne, and when I called upon any of the Govern ment officials in China, Japan or Korea, champagne was brought out. Li Hung Chang, the Viceroy of China, drinks with his callers when he wants to terminate the interview, and the bringing in of the spark ling liquid serves the same purpose as coffee sometimes does in the East. The Mikado of Japan is passionately fond of champagne, and it is whispered at Tokio that 'His Majesty now and then drinks too much of it Champagne intoxication lasts for a full day after the liquor has been drunk, and these periodical sprees of the Emperor, if in deed the stories told of him indulging in them are true, must be a serious matter to his Cabinet and the ladies of the palace. I attended at Soul, the capital of Korea, a review of the army, and drank champagne in company with General Dye and the other American officers who have jrone there to rmrganiz- the troops. We clinked glasse with the big-hatted Korean Generals, and upon going to the palace had again to drink the same liquor in company withtheKinc's Cabinet Ministers. In callintr upon His joined with him in a jigger of eome liquor J AW rv -vw i ay m&9 1 Jpf "3C3WT- 1 Crf which was as strong as Chartreuse, and I seldom made a call upon any of the for eigners in Asia without being asked to take a peg. "Pegs" is the name for drinks among the English ail over the East "Come and have a pes; with me" means "come and take a drink," and the expres sion rose, I am told, lrom the old saying that every drink that a man takes puts a peg into his coffin. SAMSHU AND SAKI. Speaking of.drinking, every nation of the East has its own native intoxicant. For unnumbered centuries the yellow-faced Chinaman has brightened his almond eye with samshn. And it is now 2,600 years ago since saki, the national brandy of Japan was invented. Both samshu and saki are rice brandy, and jt is said that 7 per cent of tne entire rice crop of Japan is turned into this liquor. It pays over 3,000,000 a year in revenue taxes, and its brewers have to pay a license and a percentage on the amount of their sales. Ho Japanese dinner is complete without saki, and it is custom ary for a party to use but one cup, taking a drink, and then rinsing out the cup in a bowl of water kept for the purpose, and Ainot Drinking. handing it to his next neighbor. The liquor is served hot. It contains about 15 per cent of alcohol, and its properties are such that it quickly mounts to the head. The Ainos, the race of hairy savages, who in habit the north of Japan, are a nation ol drunkards. They believe that drink came from the gods, and think that a man is Very close to heaven tfhen he is under its influ ence. In Japan proper, I saw much drinking but very little drunkenness, and during my whole year in Asia, mixing with all classes of the people, and going into all sorts of slums, I saw fewer drunken men than I have seen on a single Saturday night in Presbyterian Glasgow or in Episcopalian London. If the Mongolian or the Indian drinks to the same excess as does his Cau casian brother, he does it in secret. And as to drunken women, I saw not a single one in my whole Asiatic tour. The only ap proach to it was in the imitation of drunk enness bv two pretty Japanese geisha girls on a miniature stage at Hikko. This was at a picnic given by Mr. Charles Flint, the Eastern manaccr of the "Wateroury Watch Company, at which be had engaged these girls to sing to, and play lor, the guests. GAMBLING TOB DINNERS. Gambling is naturally associated with drinking, and all of the Eastern nations are loud of games of chance. The Chinese are the greatest gamblers in the world. The man who works for 5 cents a day and who has 1 cent set aside for his supper, will go to a cook stand and invest that cent upon the littlelottery which the man rnns in con nection with it. If he win he may get two dinners, if he lose he goes without At Tien Tsin every"peddler of cakes and boiled bread has a bamboo tube as bier around as a tumbler, and in this there are a number of sticks about the length of a knitting needle, and of the size of a slate pencil. On the (-endsofsomeof these' sticks there are num bers, while others are blank. The numbers are on the ends of the sticks which are stucK into the tube, and. the purchaser pays so much a draw. If he pull out a stick with a number on it he has the nnmber of cakes represented by it, if not, he pets nothing. A common game at Chinese din ners is the guessing the number of fingers which one man thrusts out quickly before the eyes ot his neighbors. If the guess is wrong the guesser has to take a drink of samshu. Fan-tan is the greatest Chinese game of chance. It is played everywhere, and it is usuallyrun by slock companies in houses called tan koon. These honses have two rooms, in one of which cash or copper coins alone are played for, and in the other of which silver and gold are used. A fan-tan table has four numbers on it, one. two, three and four, and it takes three men to manage the game. At the head sits the croupier, who has a great pile of copper cash, each with a little square hole in its middle and each as big around as a red cent. PLATING PAN-TAN. .He gathers up a double handful of these and puis them under a tin basin. The gamblers who stand around the table then put their money on one of the four numbers, and as they do so the shroff, or cashier, of the game takes an account of them and looks to see that the money is not counter feit A third man connected with the game is also present to pay over the money to the winners. As soon as the game is ready the basin is taken off and the croupier, by pok ing an ivory rod into the hole of the cash, draws away four at a time. The number last left at the last drawing decides the winning or the losing. If the money comes out even and four "cash are left the money of four wins. And if three or two are left those putting their money on four save the amount of their stake. All on number one lose. It is in the same ratio on the other numbers, and the gambler has one chance of winning, two of cot losing anything, and one chance of losing. This is one species of fan-tan. Another is where siLJlB .- A Quiet Game in Korea. the gambler, if he win, gets three times the amount of his stakes, but if any one of the other three numbers win he loses. There are as many other kinds of games played on these fan-tan boards as are played on the roulette table, and the chances are in all cases with those who run the game. Even in paying the winnings 7 per cent is usually taken out to defray the expense of the pro prietors, and the professionals, as usual, make the money. China has its policy game, which is not much different from that known in America, and a great deal of gambling goes on by means of cards. CBICKET MGIITrNO. There are few horses in South China, and there is little horse racing among the na tives. The Chinese have not vet learned to gamble with the baseball nine, bnt they make up for the lack of these tiro great features of American chance by betting on cock fights, bird fights and cricket fights. Thisfightingofcricketsisoneof the insti tutions of China, and crickets are caught, fed and trained for fighting. There is a fixed diet for them, and part of their food consists of honey and boiled chestnuts. If they get sick, they are fed with a diet of ms-wA mosquitoes, and thev are groomed and trained like horses. Before being caught they are weighed, and there is a fixed regu lation as to their sizes. Each cricket has its record pasted up on the doors of the house in which the fight is to take place, and the owner of the cricket which wins gets 10 per cent of all the bets. A good fighting cricket is very valuable, and its fame goes abroad in the land, It will bring a big sum. and when it dies, according to Archdeacon Grey, it is buried in a silver coffin. The cricket pit is a low tub which is placed on a table. After the insects are weighed and groomed they are put into this tub and tickled with straws until they rush at each other with loud chirrups, and fight to the death. They are as brave as fighting cocks, and they wrestle, bite and tear each other, till one or the other dies. Quail fights are common all over China, and they are carried on much as cock fighting is in Hew Orleans. The quails fight fiercely, but the spectators must be very quiet in order that the fighting birds be not frightened. In most cases the bird is purposely made deaf while training, and this is done by blowing into the bird's ear with a tube. Pigeon fighting also furnishes much opportunity for Chinese betting, and cock fighting is common in some parts of the country. GAMBLING IN SIAM. The Siamese are inveterate gamblers, and there are more gambling houses than there are stores in Bangkok. Tne Chinese own the most of these houses, and the business is allowed to go ou on account of the big reve enue which it pays to the Government Shells are still used to some extent as money in Siam and India, and a great deal ot this gambling is done with come shells, which are about the size of a lima bean, and which, in Siam, take the place of cash. Singapore and Penang are noted for their gambling houses, and all over the West Pacific you will find great quantities of lottery tickets lor sale. The Manilla lottery there takes the place of the Louisiana lottery in America, and its drawings are participated in by both foreigners and na tives. There are lotteries in Egypt, Greece and Turkey, and Cairo has numerous gam bling houses, at which the games are played on the same plan of those at Monte Carlo, bnt not with the same honesty. The Greeks are fond of gambling, and, though they are in the main respectable and upright in their own land, they have a very bad reputation in Egypt, and a great part of the criminal notes of the Alexandria newspapers are made up of the fights among them. The Burmese have their gambling games. You will find card-playing and dice throwing going on in nearly every part of India, and in short, I doubt where there is rS iiT'i,3wi&w Yw Q ) Chinese QuaO-Fighling. a place in the world in which games of chance are not played for money. That same attribute of human nature which makes poker popular throughout the United States seems to be found in every human skin, whether its color be yellow, black or brown, and it takes the best of civilized laws and the most rigid of religious influ ences to keep it in check. " Eeank G. Cabpekteb, - QTJEEB CUSTOMS IN SITKA. Interesting Facts About tbe Natives of Oar Northern Territory. Et Paul Globe. T. C. Jewett, of Sitka, Alaska, was formerly a resident of Mower county, Min nesota. He was appointed Commissioner of Alaska during the Cleveland regime. He says: "Sitka is an old Russian town once with 3, COO popnlation and manufactures and shipbuilding. Now it has not over 250 white population, including Eussians and some of those somewhat mixed and about 1,000 natives. We call the natives Indians, bnt they are as distinct from the North American Indian as the Caucasian and African. I have seen much that leads me to the conclusion that they are the descen dants from the prehistoric race, the Mound Builders. And the more I see oftbem the more it grows into a belief. They are in dustrious, enterprising and provident, and fast improving and assimilating to the manners and customs of the whites. Their ideas of marriage and divorce are unique, requiring but little formality or ceremony. "When a man thinks about preparations for dying he selects as his successor his best marriageable friend and turns his wife over to him in lieu of life insurance. A man in the ranche native village with nothing ailing him, got bent on dying of heart disease and selected his best man and turned his wife worth at least?15,000 over to him. He isn'tdead yet, and lives in the same house with them. Lately husband Ho. 3 has come into the family, and they are all living together in her spacious, comfortable, well furnished house, happy as larks." WAITING TO KILL WALLACE. Why the Author ol Ben Ilnr Slept With a Pistol Under His Pillow. Ladles' Home Jonrnal. In patriotism Mrs. Lew Wallace and her husband stand shoulder to shoulder differ ing only in his wearing the straps. She had need of all her courage in some of their hair grizzling experiences in Hew Mexico, when her husband was Governor there. They found border ruffianism in all its pristine glory, and General "Wallace set about break ing up the business. One of a gang who boasted that he had killed a man for every year he had lived (he was then 21) pledged his word and honor as a desperado that he would track Wallace till he had shot him; with so much at stake they played very earnestly and Ben Hur "wore his beaver up" and pistol cocked for him. Finally he took lodgings in the sane hotel, and at night General Wallace closed the door of his room. His wife speaking of 'the heat opened it, and he qnietly said "its best not to have it open is in the house watching his chance to shoot me." We can fancy the alacrity with which she then shut the door, and that she probably corked the keyhole, as Miss Pecksniff did the wine bottle, with a curl paperl With rifle at hand and pistol under his pillow, Governor Wallace lay down and slept better than his wife did. you may be sure. THE WISDOM OF A GOOSE. An Old Bird Which Had a Good Deal ol Common Sense. New Orleans Picayune. 1 To call a stupid person a goose-is a great injustice to the goose, for they have been known to show themselves very sensible, to wit: One goose that warn't a bit of a goose, as the saying goes. This smart goose was quite a pet of the writer, and was very fond ot feeding on soaked bread. However, it did not disdain a dry crust, which it would pick up and carry to a "water trough and soak thoroughly before attempt ing to eat It." , PITTSBURG-, SUNDAY, IE FAME PAYEES Of London Described by Sir Morel Mackenzie's Daughter. ENGLISH CHAK1TY BAZAARS. Laboucnere's Curt Eeply to a Fascinating Beggar. FAIE ABISTOOBATS AS STALL KEEPERS ICOEBESrONDESCE OP THE DISFATCB.l London, Hovember 1. In taking up my pen to write on Fancie Fayres, I feel like the critic of a fashion that is gone by, for surely the day of the bazaar, plain or fancy, isover; it is an institution worn out and de caying. It is possible that next season some enterprising individuals, in despair of getting money for some cherished scheme, will venture a forlorn hope and endeavor, with the aid of some startling novelty, to galvanize the dead custom into simulation of life; but the wise will recognize that the attractions of the Fancy Fair have died of repletion. Let us not mourn for them; for in spite of the eagerness which pretty women have always shown in this particular cause of charity, they must, as a rule, have been productive of anything but unalloyed satisfaction to the fair stall-holders, i Acknowledged beauties find it irritating to hear everyone remarking how extremely well a rival's dres3 becomes her, or that money has been pouring in at a neighboring stall, while she has only succeeded on be guiling a paltry 100 out of the pockets of the passers-by, and is conscious ot the fact that her own costume does not suit her as well as it might It is all very well for her to console herself with the thought that Mrs. A. has stooped to take the trouble to fascin ate indiscriminately, and that is the reason she has succeeded in disposing of her very inferior wares; the sting of a rival's triumph still remains. The embers of this fading institution flick ered almost into animation during the past season, and the arena at the Albert Hall was perpetually enlivened by groups of gaily-dressed stall-holders; but it was only the death struggle, and it is very doubtful whether any of them were successful enough to cover their expenses. Let the charitably inclined take heed of this fact, and not at tempt to disturb Fancy Fair as it lies, unre gretted, save br a few. SOMETHING NEW DEMANDED. The trnth is our jaded appetites require some newer stimulant to charm from us our hard-earned gold. We are weary ot old English and Irish villages, al fresco fayres, Shakespearian fetes and the union of nations. Perhaps we are even growing tired of see ing the same pretty faces in a variety of costumes. Something very wonderful would now be necessary to attract us into visiting this or that hall or riding-school, transformed by the aid of the scene painter into a thing of beauty, and tenanted for the time by some ot the loveliest women in London. Since first this form of charitable begging came into fashion, tbe title bestowed by the promoters of "the fair" has always been a great feature; and over and over again Juliet's reasoning as to the little worth at taching to the name has been disproved, while another important item was found to be the spelling of that title. A halo of "The Good Old Days" had to be shed around the bazaar, if It was to be popular, no matter whether it was an ice carnival, a Japanese tea garden, or a "Midsummer Hight's Dream," and unless the spelling on the announcements was essentially "Early .English' the'more-eccuntric- the better people would imagine it to be a kind of sale of work by a Dorcas Society, and would not trouble to read the list of patronesses, even though it might contain thenamesof all the beautiful peeresses and lovely Americans in the town. As a rule, the spelling was the line drawn between the fancy fair and the bazaar, for they are very different things nowadays, the latter term having been appropriated by old ladies of the "Tabby" type, who hold func tions in back drawing rooms, where under clothing, dolls and knitted articles are the chief objects offered for sale, and who draw themselves up in virtuous Indignation at the very mention of a "fayre," and who would probably leave the room at a proposal that they should give their aid to the good cause by appearing as the Nurse in "Borneo and Juliet," or an old Irish peasant, even under the cloak of that charity, which covers such a multitude ot sins. BEAUTIFUL MABTTBS. The list of patronesses was, of course, an other matter of importance. Bnt from tbe regularity with which the names of fashion able beauties appeared as stall-holders, it is to bo concluded that this did not give great trouble. At nearly every fete this year we might have seen the same ladies making martyrs of themselves and standing day after day for several houre in the hope of extort ing gold from a public who seemed as a rule possessed of a desire, very unnatural at a bazaar, to have their full money's worth. It cannot possibly be for pleasure that these dames of high degree sacrificed their time nor for the satisfaction of donning an effective fancy costume; for during this season very many ladies, disregarding the fad that it was a fancy fair, appeared in ordinary attire. Therefore, it can only be that these leaders of the "Upper Ten" pos sess a larger share of good nature than their more humble sisters. There was, too, as a rule, a certain regu larity in the arrangementof the stall-holders, the refreshment department being usually managed by a bevy of lair Amcricans.Lady Randolph Churchill being especially ener getic, while the Duchess of Marlborough, Mrs. de Boode, Miss Thackeray and Mrs. Fackler all helped on various occasions. At tbe Ice Carnival, that most tawdry and much abused of bazaars, the two great sensations were the wonderfully effective and novel eleojfie rose worn' by Mrs. Bon alds, and the IWess, perfect in all its details, of Miss Waltwhitman nsPocahontas, though Mme. Hordica's stall "at the Horth Pole" came in for a large share of admiration. In deed, at this so-called Ice Carnival onr American cousins had it all their own way, in spite of the rival attractions of Lady Carew, who, as usual, presided over the fish pond, and the Ladies Chomondeley, working as hard as ever.'the Countess de Mosella and Lady; Feodore Sturt. An other name which is always on the list is that of the good natured "Silver Queen," Mrs. Mackay, who never minds taking trouole for a good object. SNUBBED BY LABOUCHEBE. Still, although our pretty cousins from across the Atlantic very frequently under take the dispensation ot fascinating cakes and refreshing drinks, it was not an Ameri can who received the well-known snub at the hands of Mr. Labouchere, but an En glish professional beauty. Soon after the introduction of the lancy fair, it became customary for ladies, with shame be it said, to enhance the value of such wares as but ton holes, cigars or drinks by putting the "flower in the purchaser's coat with their own fair fingers, by biting the end of the cigar, or by putting the glass to their own lips. The story runs that Mr. Labouchere, having been beguiled into one of these mighty crowds, took refuge at the refresh ment stall and asked for a enpof tea. Stretching out his hand to receive it, he asked the price. "A shilling," replied the beauty; but raising the cup to her lips, and bestowing a fascinating glance on the would-be purchaser, she continued: "Now I shall ask a sovereign." "Thanks," he re turned laconically; "but I should prefer a clean cup!" Another, revolting practice, only intro duced this season at the Al Fresco Fayre NOVEMBER 10, 1889. and Fancy Fete, where it was made quite a feature, was the leading about of pretty little girls, who were permitted to be kissed for a consideration. What a beneficial ef fect it must have on the minds of these chil dren to be taught to sell their kisses at a shilling apiece. Surely such a practice would deserve a special clause in the re cently passed Children's bill. Where did they come from, these pretty little mites? Even in these advanced days one can scarcely imagine "the daughters of Bel gravia" allowing their little ones to dream of such a thing, for of late years they have discontinued the habit of turning them selves into amateur cigar cutters. Ho doubt that was the ' last straw which broke the husband's back. ABISTOCBATIC INSTITUTIONS. Year by year fancy fairs-have grown more aristocratic, until during the past season it was the exception to find a commoner hold ing a stall, unless it was some much sought after American beauty. Among those whose names figure prominently in this season of fetes of all sorts, sizes and description were the Duchess of Leinster, the Countess Bom ney, the Duchess of Portland, whom every one was anxious to see; Lady Algernon Gordon Lennox, the Countess Cairns, Lady Jane Taylor, the Marchioness of Conyng ham, the Countess Victoria Gleichen, Lady Conyers, Lady Yarborough.the Marchioness oi waterford and Lady Coleridge. Perhaps the smartest of the many fairs held this year, and probably the most suc cessful, was that at the old Irish Market Place at Olympia, with the object of pro moting Irish cottage industries, most of the articles for sale having been made by Irish peasants. Here Lady Salisbury and Mrs. Gladstone, attired in a gown and shawl of Irish manufacture, sold side by side, while H. B. H. the Duchess of Teck, with her son ana daughter, found purchasers lor in numerable baskets of strawberries. The Countess of Kilmorey and the Dowager Countess of Mayo did a thriving trade in fans and kittens, a strange combination, while Mrs. "Tay Pay" O'Connor, Mrs. Os car Wilde, and Miss Justin McCarthy made no end of money at the "Home Bule" stall by the sale of exquisite lace, handkerchiefs, carved bog-oak, "dhudeens" and photo graphs of Mr. Parnell and other Irish patriots. A MIDSUMMEB NIGHT'S DREAM. Hot so successful, vet hv far the nrcttiesl held this year, was the Thimble League, cete, yclept the Midsummer .Night's Dream, where the chief feature was the en tertainments given both by professionals ana amateurs. Although stalls were held by the Princess Victor of Hohenlohe, Countess Feodore Gleichen, the Dowager Countess of Winchelsea and others, the fair was not a great hit financially. Here the great attraction was the ballet danced twice daily by sprites (Mme, Kattie Lanner's pupils) in the Albert Hall arena, trans formed for the nonce Into an Elizabethan garden. There were certainly many novel ties to be seen here, and yet grave doubts were entertained as to whether it would cover the expenses it entailed. When one sees the really deserving chari ties for which these fetes are held, even now when our appetite for them has been so thoroughly cloyed, a pang of regret shoots through our hearts that their failure may mean want, pain or sickness to those for whose benefit they were held. Surely the fertile brain If it is still in the land of tbe thinking which some 12 years ago evolved the idea of that first Elizabethian Fancie Fayre, held in the Albert Hall, can invent some new plan for charming coin from the uncharitable, for it is an extraordinary but remarkably true fact that there are many who, refusing a sovereign in charity, will pay five times that amount into the hands of a duchess for some utterly useless trifle. Ethel M. Mackenzie. A POLISH BOrS AMBITION. One Tonne Hopeful Who Knows a Good - ' Thins? trtVnTld BeeVlu Detroit Sunday News.: The hush of obedient silence was on the assembled children of a school in Polack town at its flag-raising the other day. The rotund form of Aid. Amos arising digni fiedly on the platform was an inspiration to respect from the Polish juveniles, who are cold strangers to much of the English or German tongues or modes of thought The generous Alderman glibly advised the urchins of Northern European extrac tion to study hard and acquire education, so that they would not be obliged to toil at the commonest manual labor for compara tively small pay. The world of letters was betore them, he glowingly told, and many possibilities. "And now," said the pudgy Alderman, "let us see what some of you would like to be." Quickly the right fist of a tawny little codzerinthe background appeared above the heads of the others. "And what would you like to be, my little man?" asked Mr. Amos, in a fatherly tone. "A nalderman," shouted the little boy, as loud as he could. ANCIENT PHONETIC SPELLING. A Volume Iltnstratins the Peculiarities of Modleval OrthoarapbT. It is a striking illustration of the fact that new light is often found to he only darkness, that one can see in the library of the British Museum, under the date of 1585 more than 300 years ago, a volume, the title of which is: "JEsopz Fablz, in tru ortography, with grammar notz. Hernnto ar also jooind the short sentences ov the w z Cato, both of which autorz are translatid out of Latin in too English." The author of this sentence spelled button butn. But this is not quite equal to the di rection of a letter received lately by a gen, tieman who was addressed irom anroaa, as in the "Youknightid Statts of Aymerrika." The name "Hudson" which originally was Hodge's son, is found, in English publica tions spelled in 22 different ways. A Living Business Accessory. Mr. Train (who has just come in) Where'd you get him ? Mr. Crane (who is very busy) Friend send him from Texas. Mr. Train (who is still perplexed) What's he good for? Mr. Crane (who is -happy, now he's got it) He's trained for a billfilA Pretty use ful since the family came'back to tows. Squat, Philemon. Puck, " - 0"O A STORY OF By Georg HTbeiPS., Author of "UARDA," "SDRAPIS," Etc (NOW FIRST SYNOPSIS OP PRECEDING CHAPTERS. The story opens with the death of tbe first born of Egypt. The Egyptians, frenzied by the great calamity that has overtaken them.descend upon the Hebrew ouarterwith Intent to slay all of that race In their midst, to whom tbey attribute their troubles. One man Is found and stoned to death, the other houses being de serted by their occupants. Hornecht, Captain of Pharaoh's bowmen, passed by the ruins ot the Hebrew village, and In rescuing some cats, held sacred by the Egyptians, discovers the un conscious form of Ephralm, a Hebrew youth, who was the bearer of a message from Miriam to his uncle Joshua, a Captain in Pharaoh's army and a warm friend of Hornecht. The latter has a widowed daughter, Kasana, who was compelled by her fatherto marry an Egypt ian while loving Joahux Joshua had just re turned irom a long campaign, and knew little of what had transpired among his people. Ho was satisfied with his position, which was one of honor. He has determined within himself to stay with the Egyptians, when Ephraim deliv ers his message from Miriam, the prophetess, calling upon Joshua to lead his people out of Egypt. Joshua was still unshaken In his deter mination to remain in Egypt, when he was called to see EUab.an aged slave, who had been suddenly taken ill. The old man talked to Joshua about tbe exodus until the latter re solves to join his people in their wanderings. Joshua returns to his tent, and tells Ephriam that he will resign his position in Pharoah's army and join his people Joshua is summoned by Pharoah and during his absence Ephraim, whose heart is filled with love of Kasana, de termines to go to her and bid her fareweU. On his way to find Kasana Ephraim falls fainting in the desert. CHAPTEB IX r . T thi3 same hour a J chamberlain was U leading Joshua into ence. Though subjects bidden to attend the tO. kng commonly had Z hours to wait, the Hebrew's patience was put to no se vere test At this time of deep mourning the spacions rooms of the palace, in which a gay and noisy throng were wont to move, were as still as the grave, for not the slaves and sentries only, but many persons of superior rank in immediate attendance on the royal pair, had fled from the pestilence and escaped without leave. Here and there a solitary priest or official leaned against a pillar or cowered on the ground, hiding his face in his hands, while awaiting some command. Soldiers went about trailing their arms and in silent brooding. 'How and then a few young priests in mourning robes stole through the deserted rooms and speechlessly swung the silver censers, which shed a pungent perfume of resin and juniper. It was as though a terrible incubus weighed on the palace and its inhabitants, for, added to the loss of the King's beloved son, which came home to many hearts, the fear of death and the desert wind had crushed the energies of mind and body olik?., , , -- Here,- under the shadow of the throne, where of yore all eyes had glittered with Pharaoh Holding Audience. hope, ambition, gratitade or fear, devotion or hatred, Joshua saw to-day only bowed heads and downcast looks. Baie alone, the second prophet of Amon, seemed untouched by sorrow or the terrors ol the night and the enervating influences of the day, for he greeted the captain fn the ante-chamber as franklvand cheerfully as ever, and assured him, though in an under tone, that no one dreamed of calling him to account for the sins ol his people. But when the Hebrew, of his own free will, ac knowledged that at the moment when he, was sent for by the King he was in the act of going to the superior captains of the army to beseech tnein to release mm irom his service, the priest interrnpted him to remind him of the debt of gratitude which he (Baie) owed to him. And he declared that for his part he would do his utmost to keep him with the army and to prove to him that an Egyptian knew how to honor faithful service without respect of persons or considerations of birth, nay,even against Pharaoh's will; and of this he would pres ently speak with him in secret. But the Hebrew had no time to reiterate his purpose, for the head chamberlain in terrupted them to lead Joshua into the pre sence of the "kind God." Pharaoh awaited him in the smaller re ception hall, adjoining the royal apart mentB. It was a noble room, and looked more spacious to-day than when, as usual, it was filled with a crowd. Only a few cour tiers and priests, with some of the Queen's ladies, formed a small gronp, all in deep mourning, round the throne; opposite the King, squatting in a circle on the ground, were the King's councilors and Interpreters, wearing each his ostrich plume. All wore badges of mourning, and the monotonous chant of the wailing women, broken now and then by aloud, shrill, trem ulous outcry, came pealing out from the inner rooms and found its way to the great hall, a token that death had claimed a vic tim even in tho palace. The King and Queen sat on a couch under a canopy of black; the throne itself was of ivory and gold. Instead of their splendid state attire they were clad in dark robes, and the royal wife and mother, who bewailed her first-born, leaned motionless and with downcast head against her husband's shoul der. Pharaoh, too, kept his eyes fixed on the ground,' as if lost in a dream. The scepter had fallen lrom his hand and lay in his lap. The Queen had been torn lrom tbe corpse of her son, which was now given over to the embalmers, and it was not till she entered the audience hall that she had been able to control her tears. But she had not thought of resistance, for the unrelenting ceremonial of court Ufa made the Queen's presence indispensable at any audience of high importance. And to-day of all days she certainly would fain have escaped, but that Pharaoh had commanded her to appf ar. She knew what counsel was to be taken, and approved of it beforehand, for she was wholly possessed of her dread of thenowerofMesu. the Hebrew, called by his own people Moses, and of bis God, who Aa euphemistic title of tJw Pharaoh &. MigmMvi, WmStm iB&s&QwftwSA mMM TJ.: THE EXODUS. PUBLISHED.) bad brought such terrors on Egypt. Alas! for she had other children to lose, and she had known Mesu from his childhood, and knew in what high esteem the learning of this stranger had been held by the great Barneses, her husband's father and prede cessor, who had brought him up with his own sons. Obj if it were but possible io make terms with this manl But Mesu had departed with his people, and she knew his iron will, and that the terrible foe was armed not alone against Pharaoh's threats but eves against her passionate supplications. Now she would meet Joshua, and he, the son of Hun and the most noble of the He brews of Tanis, could succeed, if any man could, in carrying out such measures as she and her husband might think best for all Joshua Departs on Sis Errand. Earties, in concert wita Buie, the venerable igh priest and chief prophet of Amon, tbe pontiff of all the priesthood of Egypt, who combined in his own person the dignities of Chief Judge, Secretary and Viceroy of the realm, and who had come with the court from Thebes to Tanis. When she had been sent for to the audi ence chamber she was winding a garland for the beloved dead, and lotos flowers, lark spurs, mallow and willow leaves were handed to her as she required them. They lay before her now on a table and in her lap, but she felt paralyzed, and her hand, as she put it forth, refused its service. Buie, the chief prophet of Amon, sat on his heels on a mat to the left of the King; he was a very old man, long past his 90th year. A pair otshrewd, eyes, shaded by a pent house of thick white eyebrows, looked out of his brown face, which was as gnarled and wrinkled as the bark of a rugged oak, like bright flowers from withered foliage and their brilliancy was startling in suck a shrunken, huddled, stooping figure. This old man bad long since left all active conduct of affairs to the second prophet, Baie, but he clung stoutly to his dignities, to his place at Pharaoh's ride and his seat in the council; and, rarely as he spoke, hii opinion more often carried the day than that of theeloquent, fiery and much younger second prophet.. Since the pestilence had invaded the palace the old man had not emitted JeharaoVs-iide, yet he Xelt more alive. thanJ. usual to-aay, lor tne desert wura,-wnicn made others languish, revived him. He was wont to shiver continually in spite of the panther skin which covered his back and shoulders, and the heat of the day warmed his sluggish old blood. The Hebrew Mesa had been his pupil, and never had he had the guidance of a grander nature or the teaching of a youth more richly graced with all the gifts ol the spirit. He had initiated tbe Hebrew into all the highest mysteries, and had expected the greatest results for Egypt and .the priesthood; and when Mesu had one day slain an overseer who was un mercifully flogging one of his fellow He brews, and had fled into the. desert, Buie had bewailed the rash deed as deeply as if his own son had committed it and was to suffer the consequences. His intercession had procured. Mesn's pardon, hut when Mesa had returned to Egypt, and that change had been wrought in him which his friend in the tempIS called his apostasy, he had caused his old master a keener grief than by his flight. If Bale had been young er, ne wouia nave natea tne man wno had cheated his dearest hopes, but the old priest, to whom the human heart was as an open book, and whose sober impartiality enabled him to put himself in the place of his fel low man, confessed to himself that it was his own fault that he had failed to foresee this falling away. Education and dogma had made of Mesu, tbe .Hebrew, an Egypt ian priest after his own heart and pleasing to the divinity, but when once he had raised his hand to defend one of his own race against those to whom he had been allied only by human agencies, he was lost to the. Egyptians. He was henceforth a true son of his people, and whithersoever this high minded and strorig-willed man might lead, others must inevitably follow. Aye, the high priest knew full well what Preparing for the Exodui. it was that the apostate hoped to give to his people; he had confessed to Buie himself that It was the faith in one God. Mesu had denied that he was guilty of perjury and had pledged himself never to betray the mysteries to his people, but only to lead them back to tbe God whom their forefath ers had served before Joseph and his kin dred had ever come into Egypt. The one god of the initiated was, no doubt, in many respects like the God of the Hebrews, and that wis precisely what had reassured the ancient sage; for ne knew by experience that the common folk would not be content With a god, one and invisible, such as many of the more advanced of his own disciples found it difficult to conceive of. The men and women of the masses required sensible images of everythingof which they perceived the effects in and about thesi, and this need the religion of the Egyptian gratified. What comfort could a love-lorn, maid find in an invisible and creative power, govern ing the course of the universe. She would be drawn to the gentle Hatha, who held in her beneficent grasp the cords which bind heart to heart, the fair and powerful goddess of procreation before whom she coald pour forth in full confidence all that weighed on her soul. Or a mother who Jonged to snatch a darling child from datk how could her small sorrows concern the incomprehensible and almighty Being who ruled the whole wj.sl.3'7 1. lM 4La I. Ill m . Jflf.M k.. I SI L VtlT v M Jkwctlf &M(w9tUi.tp asgHii, at could understand her gnef 1 And how ofiea in Egypt it was the wife who influenced her husband's attitude to the godsl And the high priest had frequently seea Hebrew men and women worshiping de vontly in the sanctuaries of Egypt. Even if Mesu should succeed in persuading thea to acknowledge one God, he, the experienced old man, foresaw with certainty that they would ere long turn away from the invisible Spirit who must ever remain remote and un real to their apprehension, and flock back in hundreds to the gods they could under stand. How Egypt was threatened with the los of the tilers and brickmakers she so greatly needed. Still Buie believed he could Inrej them back. "When kind words will do thework'let sword and bow lie Idle," he had said to his deputy, Baie, who had urged that the fugi tives should be pursued and slain. "We have more corpses than enough already; what we lack are workers. Let us try to keep our ' hold on what we are so likely to lose." And this milder counsel had been quiia after the heart of Pharaoh, who had had ' enough of lamentation, and who would have . thought it less rash to go unarmed into a lion's cage than to defy the terrible Hebrew any lurtner. So he had turned a deaf ear to the incite ments of the second prophet, whose decisive,; and enereetic nature had an influence alK I the more powerful as his own was irresolute. 7 and had approved old .time s proposal that , dosnua, tne manoi war, snouia oe sen. tog his people to treat with them in Pharaoh's" name a plan which had calmed his fears and inspired him with new hopes. . Baie himself had at last agreed to thiaS suggestion, it gave him a further chance ot undermining the throne he hoped -tov overthrow, and if once the Hebrews were rei j established in the land Prince Siptah; in wnose eyes no punisnmen. was too severer for the Hebrews, who hated him, mightj very probably seize the scepter or .thei cowardly Menephtah. But first the fugi-g tives must be stopped, and for this Joshua' was me rigiit man. no one, ixue wougnt, was better fitted to win the confidence of an nnsngTucioni soldier than Pharaoh himMlf and his royal wife. The old high priest was on this point off, to do with the conspiracy; and thus the! sovereigns had determined to interrupt thef lamentations lor the dead and themselves 1 speatc with the Hebrew. i Joshua fell on his face before their feet, j and when he rose the King's weary face was bent on him, sadly indeed, but graciousIyvW The father who had lost his first bom son-' had, according to custom, sacrificed his hair I andbeardto the razor. They had formerly framed his fjinA in rrTncw li1V lTff v.-!; 20 years of anxious rule had turned thenar; gray, and his figure had lost its unrieht bearing and had a languid, senile stoop;' "i lar features were still handsome andtherafi was something pathetic in their melanclmlyj soilness, eyiueuuy ucapaoie or any severe -1 Miriam Calling Vpon Ber JPtoptelj tension, especially when a smile lntb witching charm to his mouth. The indohal deliberateness of his movements scarcelyTd; tracted from the natural dignity of & son, though his voice, which was agrees generally had an exhausted xndjplu tiva sound. He was not benHftw rule; 13 brothers, older than he, rlel died before the heirship to the throne a devolved upon him, and he, meanwhile,1) the handsomest youth In all the laadjt darling of the women and a UghUwwte favorite of fortune, had lived a life of w broken enjoyment till he had almost arnrfw at manhood. Then he had succeeded fak father, Barneses the Great; and hardly ha he grasped the scepter wnen tna juinyay with strong allies, had rebelled agaihst'kk rule. The veteran troops ana tneir cpuv schooled in his father wars, helped Wail conquer. But in tho 20 yean wmcBiBM now elapsed since his father's deatksiisT armies had rarely had any rest, for rflttl. lions had constantly to be Quelled. aowlisT the East andnowln the West, and InsteidSC dwelling in Thebes, wnere he had spent bw?t happy years and livinjr in the most rrfeewn of palaces, as he would fain have don,&i? joying the blessings oi peace ana toe seeiety of the illustrious students and poeUTiwhe, were at that time to be found ther,-he forced sometimes to lead bis armies inteUi field, and sometimes to reside at Tm1V Thus only could he settle the dlfficiltaer that disturbed the border province; ftadfi this he vielded willingly to the couaseleTeC Buie. In the later years of his fattwV reign the national sanctuary at incos, aM( conseauentlv. its hish priest, had attaiaeal greater wealth and power than thejtoyal UUU1J, OUU DIUHU -uuoumiu iroiu.l nature to be an instrument rawer umaij master, .so long as he abdicated none oft? external honors due to Pharaoh. These.b iruarded with a resolute care Which, 'he incapable of exerting when more eerix matters demanded it. "39H The gracious condescension with, wales the iUng received mm graunea joinua smi at the same time roused his susplete However, he had the couraze to..deelee freely that he desired to be releaaedjtsoi. his office and from tne oau ne naa tut) his sovereign Lord. TM Phsranh listened unmoved, and itKn not till the soldier had confessed1 thatihW father's commands had moved him.tojtiie this step that Pharaoh signed to the)hijiv priest, who then spoke in scarcely aniiM., tones: H "A son who sacrifices greatness thatilM may continue dutiful to his father xatW one of the most faithful of Pharaoh's I. ierr? ants. Go, then, do the lidding ofjKBa The child of the sun, the lord of upper Lower Egypt, sets you free. But oaloW condition, which I, as the minisUr.oftMa master, declare to you.- ?m "And what is that?" inquired Joshua? And again the King signed to theTfoJsV priest; then he sank back on the.U7 wniie isuie nxea dim piercing J Joshua and went on: ."3H '-That which the Lord of both worWsi? quires-of you by my mouth is easy tof-dAll.1 You must return, to be his servant aad o of us again, as soon as your people aad tkein enter, who brougnt sucn woe on this imi: shall have taken the hand of the dlvine'iseev of the Sun which'he vonchsafes toholdfortst to them in pardon.and shall have eomeak unaer tne snaaow oi .nil inrone. Jae,oilaie divine mercy, is ready to attach thealte hira-and to his land again with rich girwjwt eon as they come home from the deeertj whither they are gone forth to sacrlAeelte laeirgmi. jslvik w weui All we e) sioM which weighed oa tk-a poefleW: ja X ,n p-'j,.Sii ., .