9mw w. mr THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH PAGES 9 TO 16. f SECOND PART. i ride imeyp How Offenders Against the Law Are-Transported to the Central Station. CALL FOR A PATROL WAGON. Sparing Prisoners the Humiliation of Undue Publicity. THE SAD LESSONS OF THE LOCKUP. Delicacy of the Police tn Handling and Arresting the Transgressors Against tbc Itir. The Fatrol Wnjon'. nastr Ac.wcr to a. Call The Modest Pride of the Arernae Drank-Disappointing the Carious Crowds Searching for Wen p. oni Escorting the Prisoner to n Cell The Morning After The Rapid Descent of an Old Timer Frightful Examples of the Effects of Vice. TOniES FOB TDK DISPATCH. HO hankers for a ride in P V V Xs' one r e burry-up waS- osa ui luia geueruua t ny t .Let any Each pause a Imonient when about to commit some overt act :rv, which is sure to enlist the lightninc transporta- tional facilities provided by" a thoughtful municipality, and reflect upon the element of secretiveness which enters into the treat ment accorded to offenders acainst the peace and good nature of the people. "When tou get right down to the matter of shielding the wanton smasher of the peace from an- w Answering a Call. due prominence in the stern eye of the pub lic, you find a delicate, consideration, a thoughtful and paternal care which should eToke the heartiest gratitude. As a usual thing, however, the eyes of the offender are too blinded by partisan prejudice against the institution of arrest to allow of calm and rational appreciation of policial deli cacy in dealing with the individual. Some times, too, the perceptives of the offender are dulled by the amount of -oh-be-joyful temporarily amalgamated with the system. "Who" can expect an eye made lazy and dull by firewater, a mind whose subtle workings are disarranged, or a body limp and wabbly, to understand the extent of the privacy ac corded by the covered hurry-up, the emptied station house and the exclusion of the curiosity of the vulgar? There are few things in the round of city life more common than arrests, yet but few eyes are allowed to trace the final step of the incarceration of the offender prior to his entrv upon the police blotter as a truest of the city for the city's good, it's an inter esting ph.se of the well-oiled machinery for the enforcement of law and order, and a de scription of the precautions taken to min imize the humiliations of arrest will be read with interest by that portion of the public which murmurs "poor devill" as the hurry up wagon dashes by, as well as that element enjoying leisure enough to flatten their noses against the windows of the station house and blink hopefully at the scenes within, barred ont by the hard-hearted bobby who interposes a demurrer to the laudable desire ot the aforesaid public to jam itself into the station house at the heels of an offender. HOT rr is DONE. Somebody has been drinking and has nav igated an undue load so far and no further. An involuntary halt is called, to which Chief Biown's most contiguous finest takes exception. The patrolman goes to the nearest of the 125 patrol boxes in the city and turns in a call. For the sake of a re duction to speed we will imagine that the call comes from Penn avenue and Eleventh street If it is at night, Mr. E, B. Leech, in the Police Inspector's office, calls up the patrol wagon at Second avenue. The horses are partially hitched and are hustled into nSw v rr F2 JL Candidate Jor a Ride. harness without the loss of a second. So rapid are the movements of men and horses the result of long practice that the wagon has several times reached the law smasher inside of six minutes from the time the alarm was turned in. As a usual thing the prisoner is landed at the Central station and the wagon back in its stable in side of 15 minutes. The reason for such speed is obvious. The officer who makes the arrest may be surrounded bv an unruly element of population who would love to rescue the prisoner from the clutches of the law, or he may be trying to retain his grip upon a whole wagon load of vicious and un tractable citizens. The hnrry-up dashes up to the box and while the driver reins in his spirited ani mals, the two wagonmen jump out and as sist the patrolman in the sometimes difficult task of installing the unwilling and refrac tory offender. If he is either a common or an uncommon drunk, main strength is very necessary in insinuating him into the dreaded vehicle. Some offenders embarK on the trip wltn nonchalance born of familiarity. Others burst into tears and endeavor to hide themselves while en route to the Central stntion. Drunks are, of course, in a nega tive state of resistance. Many of the latter clsss dimly belieTe that they are being favored with a distinguished honor, and with becoming modesty insist that they are much 'bilged at being singled out for sueh an ovation. If in the preliminary scuffle a weapon has been taken irom the offender it u handed to the wagon men, and a brief ex- m It -A. I SSfSJ iMmsSj&n S'- JIKU "" YK. V 1 ?--: planation of the cause of arrest is always given by the man on the beat. -WAITING FOB THE GUEST. Then the hurry-up wagon threads its rapid course toward the Central station. The officials of that place which mijht have the famous inscription, "Who enters here leaves hope behind," written over the door have bceu meanwhile apprised of the fact that the wagon is hurrying up with one or more unfortunates. In order to warn co temporaneous traffic the patrol wagon has a dismal gong which clangs at intervals. "When the wagon reaches the entrance of Diamond alley the gong sounds its warning and the officials in the station throw open the front doors. A crowd or greater or less ex tent gathers as the wagon stops, and the gaping at the captive and captors is pro longed and earnest. If the prisoner is able to move he orshe clambers out with a wagon man on either side, and no time is wasted in getting into the station, whereupon the doors are hastily shut, excluding the vox populi, always sorely against their will. If this is at night time and a large per centage of the patrol wagon's work is done between supper time and midnight the Being Searched Jor Weapon. criminal is marched through the sta tion, Turnkey Lourimore produces a portentious key and opens the gate of inch-bar iron and the wagon men rush the offender through without so much as by your leave. The door is swung to and locked, and the prisoner is halted and held by the wagon men while Turnkey Lour imore and Sergeant David Myers go through the pockets of the offenders with an amazing dexterity and celerity born of unremitting and constant experience. The entire con tents of the offender's pockets are hauled forth and inspected, and the two officers run their hands all over his person in search of con cealed weapons or valuables. Papers, handkerchiefs, etc, are returned to the ar rested person, but firearms, knives, watches and all valuables are taken out to the desk by the sergeant, who, before so doing, asks the prisoner his name, and usually receives the Smith or Jones bluffi The valuables are sealed up in an envelope and marked with the name and time of arrest of the owner. The time of arrest has to be put down in each case, or the identity of a num ber of John Smiths would mix up the prop erty question very seriously. Knives, un less ot the stiletto, Barlow or Bowie brand, are usually returned. Bevolvers never, un less the prisoner has a permitto carry the same, and sometimes not then, if the pris oner is a well-known or dangerous char acter. A MODEST CIIAMBEE. "While the sergeant is attending to this clerical portion of the business, the turnkey, aided by the wagon men, has escorted the offender to one of the double-row of cells, unlocked the door and thrust him in, leaving him to his reflections. If drunk, he hasn't any reflections until the next morning. There is not very much in the cell. The oc cupant can stretch himself out on a plank ledge, which might by courtesy be called a bed, but which reminds one of the story told of the novice who went to sea, and when it came bedtime asked the sEipper where a bed was to be found, and was told, with a sea man's oath, to stick. ttkhife In the softest board of the ship's deck and use that as a couch. The bed is polished by long con tinued contact with the physiques of all sorts of unfortunates. In the morning when the prisoner is sub mitted to 'an examination by Magistrate Gripp, the case, if finable, enlists the frienaly offices of the valuables found on the person the night before. If there were no valuables, and if the prisoner has been un able to scare up some friends in need and in deed, the magisterial sentence sometimes in dicates that the way of the transgressor is as hard as the bed he passed the night upon. By far the greatest majority of the cases terminate in a sent ence of greater or less period to the works. If such be the case, that portentous conveyance called the "Black Maria" trans ports the unlortunate offender to the West Penn depot, where the courtesies of a free ride to the "works" are extended. So it will De seen that the city is not mean or par simonious in the provision of free transpor tation. Many a rich man rides behind a much inferior team than that attached to the hurry-up wagon, and many a poor fel low has deliberately committed some overt offense in order to gain the exhilaration of a rapid ride to Central station, a railroad trip to the works and a season of compara tive idleness with comparatively good "grub" as an additional advantage. Women who fall into the meshes of justice are accorded much the same treatment as male offenders, except that the searching of their persons is attended to by the matron of Central station. THE SENTIMENTAL SIDE. The above is the practical side of the ma chinery of the mnnicipal arrests, but the sentimental side is ineffably sad. The news paper fraternity are always admitted to the station when the drag net discharges its sad catch of the scrapings of the haunts of sin and vice. There are newspapermen who can remember the wrinkled old hag with the drink-seared countenance, bleared eyes, disheveled hair, bloated body and wretched rags who was fetched in screaming and cursing last night, when she was a novice iu crime and had not reached the uttermost depths of squalor and degradation. It seems nam to neueve tuai seven or eight years could effect so startling a metamor phosis. The first time she came into the Central station, her eyes were still bright, the country roses had sot fled lrom her cheeks, she was clad in tawdry finery, and the outlines of her form were yet those of youth and health. She walked erectly, and the light of defiance gleamed in her restless eyes when' she faced the police sergeant for the first time with a remnant of shame struggling to the surface in spite of assumed denlmayoareishness. How quirk the tran sition effected by debauchery and drinkl Truly downward steps soon become a head long rush. Even a powerful imagination would be baffled by some of the "regulars' who are periodically rounded np by the po lice and sent up to the works, their release to prove only more strongly the futility of controlling appetites wedded to the dregs of sin. The men who float into the Central station arouse more disgust than emotion. But there are lessons, nevertheless, in the changes in the faces of periodical visitors of the po lice headquarters. The young man who was gulled In last war with hhr faco flushed Eer First Arrest. with drink, his step unsteady, his hard earned money a golden means to the enjoy ment of the moment and its fascinations, was at that time the worst enemy of himself. Bioting and frequent arrests have destroyed his manhood, calloused his emotions of shame, and in a marvelously short time he has been transformed into an enemy of so ciety. It doesn't take long, especially when one resolves to become his own agent of de struction. More eloquent sermons on the vices of man and womankind, more vivid illustra tions of the dangers of intemperance, and more speaking instances of the possibilities of degradation filter through the police headquarters of a great city than all the Talmages can paint in a lifetime of ser mons. The volcano of vice seems to in crease its eruptions yearly. At least that is what intimate contact with the habitues of Central station would indicate. Wales. HEWSPAPEES OF THE. WOELD. America Leads the List With 12,500 and Germany is Second. London Times.l A large number of statistics have been collected in connection with the Paris Ex hibition, and of these probably the most in teresting are those which deal with the total number of journals published in the whole world. These have been collated by La Xature. The facts given show that Ger many has the honor of publishing the larg est number of periodicals In Europe, these numbering 5,500, of which 800 are dailies. Journals devoted to special religious dog mas, creeds and scientific theories abound more in this than in any other country. The oldest German journal is the Frankfort Gazette dee Postes, founded in 1616; the most widely circulated, the .Berliner Tage blatt, issues but 55,000 copies. After Germany comes England, which publishes over 3,000 newspapers, 809 of which are dailies. France follows, with a nearly equal number, of which only a quar ter are dailies, bi-weeklies or tri-weeklies. Italy holds the fourth rank by publishing 1,400 journals. In Austria-Hungary there are 1,200 journals, of which 150 are dailies. So far as other countries are concerned Spain follows, with 850, and Russia with 800, 200 of the latter appearing at St, Petersburg and 75 at Moscow. In all, Europe is credited with over 20,000 jour nals. . Turning to Asia, the figures show that here no fewer than 3,000 newspapers are issued, most of which appear in Japan and the British Indies. China is very poorly supplied, having but the King-Pau (offi cial journal of Pekin), which issues three editions a day on paper of different colors, and one journal at Shanghai and one at Corea. Japan, on the other hand, pub lishes 1,500 journals. Africa makes but a very poor show, having but 200 newspapers, 30 of which are published in Egypt, and the rest in European colonies. America has a large share of representa tion in the world's press, the United States alone issuing 12,500 papers, 1,000 of which are dailies. In Canada 700 journals are published, most of which are French. Be sides Mexico and Brazil, in which quite a large number of papers are published, it may be stated that the Argentine Bepublio has 60 journals. Australia is credited with 700 papers, all of which are English. HAEYELS OP MEM0ET. Men who Conld Repent tho Contents o Whole Books. Blackwood's Macazlne. There have been stupendous memories enough in ancient and modern times to stag ger belief such as those of Theodectes and Hortensius and Cineas, of whom Cicero speaks, and in our later days, Pascal, who, it is said, never forgot anything he had seen, heard, or thought; and Avicenna, who re peated by rote the entire Koran when he was 10 years old, and Francis Suarez, who, Strada tells us, had the whole of St. Augus tine in his memory enough, one would think, to destroy all his mental power of di gestion; and Justus Lipsius, who on one oc casion offered to repeat all the "History" of Tacitus withont a mistake on forfeit of his life; and in our own days Jedediah Buxton and Zerah Colburn, among others, who had such a prodigious power and rapidity of calculating in their minds. Colburn, it is said, could tell the cumber of seconds in 58 years almost before the question conld be re peated. The story is told that Jedediah Bux ton was once taken to the theater to see Gar rick, and that he was observed to pay unre mitted attention to the great actor through out the play. When he went out his friends who accompanied him asked him how he had been impressed by the acting, and Jede diah answered by stating the number of words and syllables that Garrick had spoken. His mind had been interested sole ly in this enumeration. I dare say it was a purely mechanical operation of mind with him, and I rather think that with all these great menories it is the same. WHT HE DIDN'T PE0P0SE. A Young Man's Excellent Reasons for Abandoning Matrimonial Intentions. New York San.1 A certain well-known New Yorker, who has to hustle for his bread and molasses, this summer fell in love with a girl, and ever since August has been on the eve of proposing to her. His income is $2,500 a year, but he wanted to be certain that he could pay all the expenses before rushing into the fray. He estimated that the rent and running expenses of a suburban resi dence would cost $1,800 a year. He al lowed $350 a year for his personal expenses, and thought that the girl could get along on a like snm. To be sure he didn't expect to save any money while living at this rate; bnt like other young men he had abounding faith in a special Providence which would cause a long-forgotten nncle or other rela tive to die sometime and leave him a for tune. So he asked an intimate friend of his lady love how much the latter spent for her wardrobe during the year. The friend said: "Why, she told me only day before yester day that her clothes cost $1,600 a year, but she did think she could get along on $1,500." The engagement has not yet been announced. A Sadly Disappointed Maiden. Philadelphia Hccord.: , A gushing Philadelphia miss was one of a party at a rabbit supper in the country a few days ago, and she was real provoked be cause she could not find a single wishbone in the whole potpie. Times Bare Not Changed. John Alden Wehave just won ye game cf skittles, Priscilla. What thinkest thou ot thy John As prowess ? , JjclelPue. x-riscum AUllMUW ii g jtre.iuo pso- uo i5w- i PITTSBURG, SUNDAY, WOMAN IS ADYANCING Julia Ward Howe Tells What the Sex Has Gained in Half a Century. WOMAN F1F1T TEARS AGO AND NOW Is Woman Less a Woman Because She is More a Citizen? THE EFFECTS OF COLLEGE EDUCATION rwKrrrzjt von the sisfatch. As these questions have been stated for me to treat of, the most difficult clause stands first in order. A moral advance is not so easily made sure of as is one in education, or in physi cal condition. The deep things of the heart do not float on the surface of the commu nity. It is not easy to say at any time how much of the vice of the world escapes detec tion, nor how much of its virtue fails of re cognition. Yet, to a certain extent, the tree may be known by its fruits. We may infer a higher moral condition from a better social state. When I remember the world- as I knew it, 40 or even 50 years ago, and compare these recollections with what I see to-day, the moral advance made by society appears to me unmistakable, and in this advance women have been not only participators, but active agents. This is not to say that there were not many good women in the time of which I speak, nor that there are not many bad ones now. But the position of women has essentially changed since that time. In this country, of which we can speak with the greatest certainty, the whole ideal ot womanhood has been lilted bodily, and placed upon a secure elevation. How should it be otherwise where freedom has given woman room to grow and expand to her full stature, and where the cruel gvves of servile superstition have been stricken from her intellectual faculties? Ho creature can be noble that iSfbrced into an apologetic position. The first sinner, who stole the forbidden fruit, and led the man to taste it. Who can tell how severely ancient niyihus may have reacted upon the position of woman? Not the Hebrew Scriptures alone, but others of the Oriental religions, threw the burden of the world's evil upon womankind. Philosophers of our own day who have become enamored of these ancient faiths have endeavored, in their way, to set forth this mean ard un generous doctrine, and to maintain with the followers of Buddha that the evil principle, throughout creation, is the female. From the Buddhistic point of view this doctrine has indeed its logical justification. "WOMAN'S EDUCATIONAL ADVANCE. If, as this assumes, existence is an evil, then the great part which women bear in the production of life is primarily an evil. Has not our Christianity put all these cob webs to flight, with its wholesome showing of the absolute valne of human life? Even the genius of Schopenhauer will not efface the sacred image of the mother and her babe, to have in its place the bootless pres ence of an infinite nothing. The question of woman's educational ad vance might almostappear superfluous in a I day in which the ancient barriers no longer cross wie unwaru patu vi vug wuuieu wiiu would know something. The high schools and colleges of the coun try, once closed against women, are now in great measure open to them. Their record in these institutions shows their studious zeal and capacity. After and beyond this scholastic training, the education of practi cal life--is now vouchsafed them, in the variety which corresponds with the variety of their gifts and predilections. "What Will He Do With It?" is the title of one of Mr. Bulwer's novels. The question, "What will she do with it?" has often re tarded the granting of the higher education to woman. We of to-day can answer: "She is doing good work with it. Thorough in tellectual training is making plain to her the laws which underlie her most gracious instincts, giving her the rationale of the poetic saying that "Spirits are not finely touched But to fine issues." The pursuit of the higher education for women has been met by two grave difficul ties viz., the fear that its emancipation would react unfavorably upon their moral nature, and the persuasion that severe men tal application would impair the physical condition of the mothers of the race. The first of these foregone conclusions springs from the tyrannical instinct which is at certain stages of society the leading force among human tendencies. Not men only, but women also, wishing to command, naturally desire that others should be in capacitated from sharing their rule. The surest way to do this is to keep for them selves the secrets of the knowledge which is power. Statecraft and priestcraft have closely allied themselves with these views, and in our days a sort of "rank craft" has done what it could in the same way. THE BIGHT TO VOTE. The heroic men who have vindicated the cause of human freedom have brought soci ety out of this rntof fear and repression. They have shown, and history has shown with them, that the true danger of society lies in ignorance, and not in intelligence. The Channings, Garrisons, Phillips, have made the atmosphere all clear and bright abont us. Before their time, the saintly women of the Puritans and of the Quakers, and in their time, the brave women of the anti-slavery movement, have aided in tramp ling out the embers of the old inquisitorial fires. And to-day, the women of the suffrage movement may point to Ann Hutchinson, Maria Weston Chapman, HarrietMartineau, and a host of others, and ask whether a woman is less a woman because more a citi zen, less fit for home duties because she has learned to apprehend rightly the relation of these duties to the State? The question of woman's physical im provement comes last in my list of queries. I mention it here as being closely allied to the topic of extended education. The demand that the college curriculum should be as free to women as to men called forth from members of the medical profes sion an indignant protest AH the ills that flesh is heir to would visit them and their posterity if this demand should be granted. Insanity, sterility, deformity, would afflict the college-bred women. Either they would stay the men fatally in the race for acade mic honors, or, the effort to keep up with these would shipwreck the health of the young girls for life. in spite ot inese inreats, coming lrom high quarters, the demand was persevered in, granted, and availed of. What followed? The inevitable conclu sion that young women are as well able to bear the strain of college studies as young men are. It also appeared that if some girls are physically disqualified for sustained intel lectual labor, a certain proportion ot the young men are subject to the same limita tion. Cases of breaking down among the male undergraduates came to be observed and reported. Non omnia possumus omnes. We can't all go to college, men and wo men of us, but many women can and should go. And, thank heaven, they did go, and still continue to do so. EFFECTS OB1 WOMAN'S CLTJBS, What a hysterical view was this, that all the discoveries of science, the improve ments ot hygiene, the ameliorated views of diet, ventilation, and of the use and care of the body, should not sufficiently benefit wo men to offset the danger of a thorough course of Latin, Greek and mathematics! Mir uiucp wsfo- w wo wisueu mil ins I now much were, m to be wished that the NOVEMBER 17, 1889. openly and efficiently against late hours, tight lacing, high-heeled shoes, and the use of nerve stimulants and cosmetics, as it did against the healthful and satisfying pursuit of learning I Much as I consider women to have gained by the position and opportunities secured to them in America, I have yet to name an im portant item which is both a condition and a mark of their improvement This is the fact of their ever-increasing tendency to as sociated action. The social instinct is strong in human na ture, but it does not attain its best results without study and self discipline. The women's clubs which are springing up all over the country are marks of this study and discipline. I know of many of them, and Ido not know of one which does not keep in view serious and worthy ob jects. The feeling of sisterhood which nat urally grows out of club intercourse among women tends to put out of sight the inordi nate ambitions of the few and the self-distrusting passivity of the many. In the club it is soon fonnd that one woman cannot do everything. All must help, and tasKs are constantly found which give scope to the activity of each and all. A generous and far-reaching sympathy, tends more and more to take the place of fantastic aims and illusory relations. The women's clnbs are, as I see them, the sign and seal of the advance of woman in health, in sound life, and in rational enjoy ment and service. Julia Wabd Howe. THE CHAEM OF S0UTHEEN GIEL8. A Type of Truest Womanhood Which Shines Brightest In the Home. The Southern girl shines brighestathome, says the Washington Herald. She has not forgotten the old-time respect that children should have for the mothers who gave them life, and the graceful affection in which she holds the gray-haired woman who kept a brave heart amid the horrors of war and in the sickening days of poverty and privation that followed in its train, and, though she has had all this to bear, has taught her young daughters lessons of self-help, of courage in misfortune, that can never be effaced. Those of true modest womanhood did not need to be taught, for they were inherent When the Southern girl walks on the aveuue she is as distinctly recognizable as though she were marked "From Georgia," or placarded "An Alabamian." Her step is easy, for it was learned from Dame Nature herself, and the slender feet might belong to the daintiest ankle that ever gleamed in the shadows of the Orange Walk at Seville. You never knew before how lovely a cos tume of simple white could be, and yet yon say to yourself that the costliest device of the cunningest miliner in. the "Rue de Bac could not be more effective in demolishing the masculine heart Every woman who sees her knows that that hat was the work of the wearer's slender fingers, but haw becoming it is, lighted by the softest, sweetest, brown-gray eyesl And as you look your thoughts are miles away from the crowded avenue and its inter changing scenes. You are young again,and the romance of the far South come back,and you smell the orange trees as they were in bloom so many years ago, and with Owen Meredith, you unconsciously say, "Oh that we were eternally young!" CABLE MESSAGES IS ENGLAND. Red-Tape Segnlations Abont Dispatches Sent Across tho Atlantic Philadelphia Inq.ulrer.1 The American who goes into a telegraph office in England for the first time to send a cable message usually undergoes an experi ence that confirms him in his opinion as to the Svpetiaitty of the institutions of Mr, native land. He has just arrived and is anxious to inform the folks at home, so he stops on his "way to the railway station or hotel. Telling the Vcabby" to wait, he grasps a blank, fills in the necessary words, lays down his shillings and prepares to go. "Wrong form!" says the clerk, politely but firmly. The traveler looks around help lessly nntil some one, seeing his embarrass ment, hands him the white sheet required for cable messages. He gives it to the clerk with a sigh relief. "Must be stamped!" re plies that official, pointing to a sign of "Stamps sold here." The traveler hands his message to the bright-faced girl who presides behind the iron-railed counter. "You must get it rated sirl" she says. Half in despair, anxious, maybe, to catch a train or join some waiting friends, he finds the rating clerk, buys the stamps from the interesting young lady, and at last, ten minutes or more having passed, has his message accepted and started via a pneumatio tube to some more central sta tion, at which the operating room is located. Many are the excellencies of the English postal service, but promptitude is not al ways one of them. It is just to say the new cable company has dispensed with many of the formalities which are so trying to any one accustomed to American ways. THE MCK. IN THE LAPEL. The Reason That Little Notch Was Blade In Yonr Coat Collar. St. Louis Eepablic.l Did you ever wonder why that little Y-shaped nick was placed at the juncture of your coat collar with the lapel? I suppose you have. Occasionally we all have our little ruminating spells, and fall to wonder ing the whys of the many odd things we see about ns. Hold your coat np before you, and you will see at a glance that it would "set" just as well without the nick as with it Therefore the matter of fit cannot be given as a proper solution of the fact that It is there. Withont apparent purpose this nick is clipped from the lapel of every frock coat worn in the world. But there was motive in the madness of the first man who adopted the little insignia of distinction. Z will tell you about it When the first Napoleon gave way to his ambition he tried to implicate General Moreau in Pichegru's conspiracy. Morean had been Napoleon's superior and was very SDpular, but under the circumstances, as 'apoleon was on top it was not safe to ex press publiclv anv svmpathv with Moreau: so his admirers secretly agreed to nick their coat lapels to show what they were. Care fully note the outlines of the first coat-front you see that is well-fitted and buttoned, and see if you cannot plainly detect the in itial letter M in its windings. The M will appear aside down, the little nick forming its sides. M was the initial letter for Moreau. and his champions were known by, ine mess in ine lapeis oi ineir coau. Aged Industry. Mr. Farmhumper Poor old gran'pop's got kinder feeble, but we can't support no uruues rouna vuover-iop, aa no uou nuiuu i drones ronnd Clover-top; an' he don t mind OPENING OF AFEICA. A Pleasant Talk With King Leopold About the Congo Free State. LIGHT FOR THE DABK CONTINENT. Christian Monarch's Ambition to Civilize Africa. THE ANTI-SLATEEI C0NFEEENCE PLANS lcoanxarosBxitcxoT thxpisfatcb.! Bbussels, October 24. FEW days ago I received a note from Monsieur Le Comte Borchgrave d'Altens, Secre taire du Boi, sum moning me to call upon him at the palace, which I did on the following morning at 920 .o'clock. I had pre viously had the honor of making the acquaintance of the Count by a per sonal letter I had brought Minister A. Le to him from the Belgian to the United States, M. Ghaii, and was cordially by the Boyal Secretary. received I was informed that His Majesty had in structed the Count to inform me that it would give him great pleasure to receive me at the palace at 2 o'clock in the after noon of Saturday, the 19th. His Majesty had said that although it was cus tomary etiquette in such matters for the Minister to present an American, nevertheless he desired me A. Scene on the Congo. to say to the representative of the American Government at Brussels that in this case it would not be necessary for him to present me. A few moments before the appointed hour I was received by the officers and serv ants of the royal household and was escorted to the reception room in the east wing of the palace, which afforded a charming view of the spacious and beautiful grounds for which this palace is justly famed. The few minutes I remained in the reception room were pleasantly passed in an interesting conversation with a young officer of the King's household, wo, although not ac quainted with the English language, was familiar with the history and institutions of America. Presently the doors Ieadine to the Einsr'a ffiseeretbKpT!fcBilJwMsha(l Into thepreseleeofSisiGjejtT,XeopoldT jj, -Eung oi tne .Belgians and sovereign Headof thelndependentStateof Congo. He was attired in the uniform of a Lieutenant General, of dark blue cloth trimmed with a small red cord. He wore hut one decora tion, upon the left breast As he stepped forward and cordially grasped "my hand, with his more than six feet towering above me, I realized that I was in the presence of a ruler who waS every inch a King. For many years 1 had known how richly he was endowed with mental and moral attributes such as are rarely possessed by rulers in the Old World; and now I was impressed by his magnificent presence. His urbanity and regal bearing and the warmth of his greet ing pat me quite at my ease, A HANDSOME HOHAECH. While a large man, Leopold IL has all that distinguishes the student, carrying no superfluous flesh; and proved himself a gold listener as well .as a pleasant and entertain ing conversationalist His hair and full beard were carefully trimmed and liberally sprinkled with gray. His features were strong and clear-cut and keen; and his eyes, bright and quick, flashed with intelligent interest from behind a pair of eyeglasses. His bead was broad and capacious; ears set Hative Tfarriort. well back of a brain that towered far above them. His mouth showed both strength and generosity, and his chin was indicative of decision and courage, xiis voice wasciear and soft with minor tones that had held close fellowship with sorrow. During a long and most interesting inter view several questions were discussed; bnt those that I have the liberty of mentioning here pertained to a subject in . which he is deeply interested, and to which he has de voted his splendid talents and vast wealth for some years the Congo State. In reply to my question as to how be first became in terested in the Congo, he said: ' "After the New York Herald and the London Telegravh had dispatched Henry M. Stanley to Africa in search of David Livingstone, and he had snccesslnlly per formed that mission, and had crossed the Dark Continent from the Indian Ocean to the valley of the Cdngo to the Atlantic Ocean, I invited him to come and see me herein Brussels. He recounted his thrill ing adventures and experiences in Africa; spoke in glowing terms of the richness of the soil and the resourcefulness of the country. He seemed to be anxious to do something for Africa, and I told him to go back to the Congo and undertake a work for the country and the people, and that I wonld be his banker. He went and what he did his tory." In reply to an inquiry as to the objects His Majesty had in view in so largely in vesting in an enterprise which is regarded by the world at large as largely precarious and visionary, he replied with animation: ura s i"ik aausi. "mates are Homing more aaa tuBiues; IkgS. ;jBl?: "IISI- "'::i,'"S6Z 6,000,000 souls; in America there is a fam ily of more than 60,000,000. I believe these families have a duty to discharge to the outside world as well as to themselves. Small States have a ..greater facility for doing good to the outside world than large States. The Belgian nation is a small one; no one is afraid of it; and it has neither an offensive ambition nor diplomatic complica tions with larger Stales. It is neutral. You know the history of Greece. Well, Greece was a small nation, and,, while it fought many great and brilliant battles, ITS CHIEir OLOET was in other directions. It had great ora tors, poets, historians, philosophers, artists and clever citizens. Its commerce whitened all seas, and its influence upon the civiliza tion of the world has been beneficent wide spread and permanent Thus the Belgian nation seeks to achieve something for civil ization, and to discharge a Christian duty toward Africa. My people have but two motives in this work; one is trade and com merce, which is selfish and must be allowed; l Pff d&i ill In Court Costume. and the other is to bring the means and blessings of Christian civilization to Africa, which is noble." When I asked His Majesty what he ex pected in return for the great outlay he had made in the Congo, his eyes kindled with interest, and, straightening himself up in his chair, he said : "I have spent much in the Congo, and yet I am not tired spending. What I do there is done as a Christian duty to the poor African; and I do not wish to have one franc back of all the money I have ex pended. God created Africa and the Afri cans as well as. He did other countries and races of people; and we owe a duty to that country ana people that should be dis charged with cheerful willingness." "But what signs are there. Your Majesty, to indicate that those people appreciate the blessings of the independent State you have established?" I asked. "Many," he replied, "but chiefly in the fact that every month more and more of the natives appear in our courts; thus showing that they not only acknowledge the lawful government of the country, but that they have confidence in the administration of justice, and appreciate the privileges and blessings of civil government" "I have somewhere seen that when your son was removed by death, you expressed the belief that God had put Africa on Your Majesty's heart?" Turning his head to one side, he gazed dreamily out of the window, while a sad ex pression spread over his countenance; and then turning and facing me squarely with a tender melancholy In his words, he said; "Yes, it is partly true; but we should not Invoke sorrow to compel us to do our duty. We shonld do right because it is right" After pleasant conversation on other mat ters, I took my leave of one of the noblest sovereigns in the world; an emperor whose highest ambition is to serve the cause of Christian civilisation, and to rrromota the wst-Hlilirli'- hfcjHMKi&si'l'hl aom, mercy auu justice. THE ANTI-SLAVZET CONTESESrCE. The conference of the powers of Europe which had been summoned to meet in this city on the 15th of the present month has been postponed nntil the 18th of November. The postponement was made at the request of several of the powers that ware not pre pared to meet on the first date. All the signatory powers of the Conference of Ber lin, 14 in number, with 19 delegates, will be present at the Conference of Brussels, and Persia will come into the conference, the only power not present at Berlin. Beleiam has no secret or selfish motives in calling this conference. The good of Africa is the sole object in view. No plan has been laid down cr policy suggested for the conference to follow. The delegates from each power will come with verbal and written instructions to govern their action on the leading questions to be considered by the conference. England, Germany, France, Spain, Portugal, Italy and the Congo State nearly one-half of the powers of Europe have territorial interests and claims in Africa, and they will naturally be Interested in the abatement of an evil that has exerted such a deleterious effect upon the trade and commerce of Africa. And no doubt the other powers, although without territorial possessions, will heartily sustain any action that may tend to a practi cal solution of the slave trade. There can be, in my judgment, no plausible ground for a serious division in the conference on the best methods of checking and ultimately extinguishing the slave trade on the African continent providing, however, that wher ever a military, or police, or boat service is employed, it shall be national in its charac ter and administered by and within the territorial boundaries of each one of the signatory powers having thus far estab lished its authority in any part of Africa. The international action of ths conference will doubtless be embodied in a preamble and anti-slavery proclamation. The Mozambique river question will doubt less be brought into the conlerence by Por tugal' and England, but whatever power is made master of this great waterway should be made distinctly to understand that it should be held open to a great international commerce upon equal terms. And if pilot age, harbor dues or a light impost tax should be fixed, it should be done withont discrimination. All the powers should be admitted to trade and commerce upon the terms of the "most favored nations," so clearly and universally understood in in ternational law. Geobge W. Williams. I IISCniliiF-MAEE'S MISTAIS. How a Misdirected Letter Saved tie Work of Cabaa Missionaries. Said Bev. A. J. Dies, a Cuban mission ary to a St Louis QloieDemocrat reporter: "The Lord once made a man make a 'mis take that saved the missionary work in Cuba. The private secretary ot the Bishop of Havana came to oar revival meetings and said he was converted. He made all the demonstrations incident to conversion, and though, knowing how he had persecuted us, we were suspicious when he came in ths name of the Lord, we had to receive him were, in fact, glad to. Then he wasted to preach the gospel, and, of course, we let him, for he was a gifted man. But as soon as he got into our councils we could see ho was doing one thing and another to throw obstacles in the wav. He did this so iasid iously that we couldn't catch him, though he Vas bidding fair to wreck ths work, "We called him before the council, but could prove nothing. Next day J. got an envel ope addressed to myself containing a letter addressed to the Bishop of Havana signed bv the spy and giving a detailed account of what he had done as a spy. I called him. and asfced him about the letter, and learned that he had written a letter to sa, another to ths Bishop ad pat them it tk wrong envelops. It disclosed a plot thst weald fcav?sill oar work: and ta- Let Md UsaschiiMsfs.'' THE I0NE STAB HERO. James Alfred Wakefield Helate3 the Romantic Story of SAM HOUSTON'S LIFE AND LOYE.. A Noble Han Who Sacrificed Himself oh the Altar of Love. ENDING HIS DAIS AH0SG THE DtDIAftir rwxrrrxs' toe thx sisrATcs.i Sam Houston, the man wbo occupied almost every position from the meanest of civil offices to being twice President of s republic, is less heard of than any other man in America who has achieved the same results. He was born on the 2d of March, 1793, in Virginia, and the iron of his soul shows he was a scion of that race which first subdued the wildness of those hills, and Tennessee forests and the ferocity of their savage people. The day of 'his birth was many years afterword to be celebrated as the anniversary of ths birth of a new Republic. It was on his natal day that Texas declared herself free and independent And when thitEepub lic, with its "lone star," was admitted to the constellation of States, with it came that' wondrous man who had stood by the aide Of the youpg country and rocked her infancy in those far-off wilds. He come to tho threshold of the Senate chamber, bringing: in his arms, not like a Scinio of old. tho fine gold and precious stones of distant'-.Jaj uaiuaiiM J"ut" ttjc m Ala IltWIJUUa C4f bat a new nod Tast empire. There he stL !.- -tl ...lw ..I A - '-& He has occupied almost every po- sition in life and the heroism of his nature will always be a fertile theme for the old to tell the young in cabin, hut and' r stately palace naus. ills Saxon grit xa-ti surea victory, as a teacner ne was a sue-i 4 ' bHO 4 t-njVt MU tWU,l 1HMJU VtA.U U.S' uy feuo vicar, iuuuic xujn uj UiJSUjJiUSUCatcUf logic, and could steadily pursue truthjT tnrougn me most intricate deduction; , Congressman, he was feltrs Governor, hon-5 orecf and respected: an Indian chief, her touched the hearts of the untutored sons' ofa the forest; President or that Western EeA, public, he was loved as a god; a Senatora his words were- Iliads; hut a a man hVisI all that represents unselfishness and the deS sire for ue weal ox others the ideal hood. a CaT BAW S WYVfJ 1 !. .1... s .t. Tl. .. t.;- i-jr 'd A. OA1 AVAAA tim t. 1 J JtJi Just as lie ir&B stepping upon the tbeatoj$j over the Bkv and wrapt his heart and hasMl.l in sadness and gloom. He married a girl ofr, a trentls character and sweet TMr ftTirt tV- 3 alliance gave promise of all that is" high and good. But due to malignant circum stances their union was unhappy and short It was in their separation that the noble character of the man showed forth. He who, can conceal the love of his heart screen the attecnons or nis soul, lull tne fondness of his. nature and smother the attachment that the'. winzs of whiteness, and all to shelter the' 3 fair fame of her he had sworn before the. AIM. V. VlVt .V UHHiU UU IIUKUI, J.JU9t must read like the exploits of the gods ot.4 mythology, and defies the sober prose of ths English tongue. Fancy has borrowed hsril sweetest images from the wild idolatry ofj jjiqian constancy, uut ut worm ox. paeaoar, must acknowledge him king of pathetisl tenderness, who turns his back upon ti craves of his fathers and the land that caval him: birth simply to go ont of ths horiia of I tne woman ma m lovea. to xsaxs piam.. (ibisrivaJi. o"" . . 'Jim - His young- wife- had loved heme; Ssmi when she gavs her hand to Howioaj her:! heart was withheld. His home hod noas ofj the sweet felicities of wedded souls. iad.'i Ilk all uncongenial alliances the seBarstlBJf) distance grew apace. Her friends loaded his name with odium and charred him witsiz every species of crime. He sat quietly aad saw the wife of Ms heart and bosom t from him withont a single denial of a sinelsi calumny. When she showed herprefereoesj for the sweetheart of her girlhood dsyva J T li.T IV -I I. 4-l --3 a rock snd words as soft ss down fis'J told her they must part; that ne a word should fall from his liesn to cast a shade upon her character, norj would ne suner on unsana Dream sgsiasfig her in his presence. He left the life ofgloryj j snd honor that was dawning upon him, roder, into the forest ot the Bed man aad cast hU lot with them, THE CniEFTAIS'S yTELCOlO, The tonchincr irreetin? of the Tenerahfa J !, rt irt MtTiA .Ka t an !itT$ It. ll he was reverenced. "My son." he said. "ivS is long since we met; my heart has ofteat'j wnnffored to von. T have h-ard that a farTr M cloud has fallen on the whits path you we?s, j walking, and when it fell you turned your. 7?l thoughts to my wigwam. I know you willil and you will tell our sorrows to the Grsst lfstber. Jay wigwam is yours, my home is yours, ray people are yours, res. wiia us. Th-n. in ta heart a! tttA twooAm a- v.T.ntlmA fiv naMomlill afrav1frtffv ttlav! 3 nnhl. lia. W nlra f.nvm n.!(VTttf aj Iaw. amiJ 1 1.1- . U1-.3 t n.U r U-1 tl 4l..9 won that added to our proud domain thstl "lonely star" that has never ceased to silBsi1, bright and alluring to tne pioneer, 'la"' fair god oi love trownea ana snadowea sussfe in gloom. Without the sunlight and ns-fl sustained by that great conservative pria-i clpie of a man's ine tne smne oz onectie? and devotion of a woman whose tender per-'K suasions prove too strong for all allsrey ments, the stricien wanderer fought MwHIf to the front i Durintr all bis trials be never forgot thsz sweetheart of his youth, the young wife of v:. ...l J... ru.1 i...t. -.-u.it inclv he kept his idol enthroned in Ul &. heart Amid the wall of the winds on fe'- J to that unseen world where strife and diss p-:. pointment are saver known, his lips voice J the last sentiment or nisnear.: "JJarua, I forgive you." There ars crowns of lanm. and of cold studded with diamonds: thers have been sonsrs written as tributes to levls ing, devoted , manhood; monuments hsTtvJ been built in honor of men who h-vi achieved greatness, but there never w.L w-ar- crr-atr. nar-rr tribnta erected overl-lia any man tnan tou; never s crows otj, brighter luster than to stand in theglewYj of God and whisper, "Darling. I forgiTS;,' - II Tt la a nmJM tnr m. fntnra " c .,--- i i-r. z.. .to- rft v.-i i.t iv. t.a.... r i.'if-M DO Benign uu irecu wo uuuciivn v. ; j wonderful example, and so cam ana so noiy. a light beams ceaselessly around his tosss that flowers will ever bloom over nis grays in that far-off land. JAKE3 AXTEED WAKEyDELB, ALL ANI80DI COULD 00. Hew aa Osserraat Utile Weatast Tsrsasjl Her Faser. i i Tmthi Canra&nlon.l All the family were reading in the likssm one evening, .air. juay ou uio omi-i-j ..... vtifoh tin nnt down onea to leok'MI a reference in tho encyclopedia. Mrs. KsyJ had a French art book, and consslW.hsrj French lexicon trequenuy. ueorgs sti his mother the meaning of several woHs Uyt the story-Doos: over wnica no w iaib., Evs, sged 5, sat with George's Costs u.n hi, Ian ,ru.....r , ....... .1 "Beading, too, pussyr- siaartsvss "Xet, sir." i "Why, Era .Hay, voa caat reM.i er oroiaer. ,i V.a T au T -an TMH Aajp ajaaf B 'bey' Mi lota of words v-kM X fsadl that's all Ut My of joa at issisxfc-aij HsrW wWW IttHbW "rB MfVrf ZA. 3 'hit 't: k4affiri"i