WfirfT&&- -- j-4 -f. 1 jrj THIRD PARL r-- i i i - ,. r ujb - ,'- sff'r I VL.-V Wf9TCa ! PAGESI7T0 20. TH PITTSBURG m ea. t dispatch; PITTSBURG SUETOAY, DEOEMBER 1, 1889. . BEFORE THE BATTLE. Pen Pictures of the Contestants in the Speakership Fight. BEED'S STBENGTH AND WEAKNESS. Gossip About McKinley, Cannon, Hender son and Borrows. more than that of any other man in public I Heed, he frequently moves about with bis lite, and it is of the finest intellectual tex- hands in his pockets. He is a great smoker, tare. "He can Bay more bright things in and is seldom seen without a cigar in bis me space oi ten minutes than any other J mourn, tne end of which is always well HOW THE LADIES ABE ISTEEESTD l Hj Con A H like (COKEXEPONEKNCE or THE DISPATCH.! Washington, November 30. omEeed says be felt dur ing bis 'rst six uionths in Congress a fly in a bowl of mo lasses "there wastotsof sweetness, but no light." His con dition i s about the same to d ay as to the and this is the situation of bis Taffy flows from the tongues of McKinley and Burrows, and Henderson and Cannon are moving about the hotels smiling on friends and enemies alike, with all the enthusiasm ot a cat chew ing wax. Promises are plentier than blackberries in August, and committeeships are being arranged on the basis of the suc cessful contestant. Who will it be? This is where the lack of light comes in. I don't pretend to say. I give you pen pic tuiesof all of them. Yon get the lot for a nickel. You pays your money and you takes your choice. Major McKinley, of Ohio, U one of the finest looking men in Congress. Fire feet seven inches in height, he'is as straight as Michael Angelo's statue ot David, and a line dropped from the crown of his jet black bead would jnst toucn the heels of bis pol ished boots. Broad-shouldered and well padded his form would serve as a model for the "Washington Athletic Clnb, and his classic, smooth-shaven face would not be out of place among the signers ot the Declara tion of Independence in the painting which K . hi &&&' I- J J&25&.V 1 "man in Congress can get off in the compass of an hour. He knows what he knows, too, and he is not afraid to say it. He has the same confidence in himself now as he had when he was a boy teaching school and ap plying lor admission to the bannuan fornia. Tom Beed tells the story himself. His admission occurred at the time when the constitutionality of the legal tender act was being discussed bv the greatest lawyers of the State of California. "The first ques tion the Judge asked ine," says Beed, "was: as me iecai tender act constitutional or un constitutional?' I didn't hesitate a moment. but I replied cooly and emphatically, 'It is constitutional.' This ended mv question ing. 'You can pass,' said the Judze. 'We alwavs pass a manwho can settle ereat con stitntional qnestions off-hand.' " Tom Beed has been settling constitutional qnestions from that day to this. He settled his cases well enough to make a success as a lawyer, and bis sell-confidence, added to his remark able ability, has made him the Bepnblican leader ot Congress. SEED A GOOD LEADER. Ko one disputes Eeed's leadership. Mc- Kinley, Cannon, Henderson and Burrows all follow him, and when the fight is on in chewed. He does not weigh as much as either McKinley or Beed, but his frame has uecuuo iron tnrouen exercise, ana it uas C i W7 j. I ; jS7ST555hW'',0 o .. V V. Mfef If flA VAVgAitjasE ij 1 r v WW5J& fwv JL i a 'HUa hrtral wn Awmsmrmim w ttfvsrtn ""' JJurrows, Henderson and f li'liluuVfv"" ' 'A www- lift jui nfc I M ' jy W 111 Major McKinley. Tliomaa Meed. hangs in the rotunda of the CapitoL Major McKinley undoubtedly Jooks like Napoleon. Bonaparte, though he once told me that he did not like to be reminded of the re semblance. He has the same grave, digni fied month, the same high, broad and full forehead, and the same heavy lower jaw. He is a better looking man than was Na poleon, and his bright, dark eyes shine out under brows which are less heavy than those of Bonaparte, and his frown is by no means so terrible as that of the Little Corp oral. He appreciates, however, the value of dignity, always dresses in a donble breasted frock coat, and crowns bis classic bead with a tall silk bat. He generally walks up to the Capitol, and as he goes along with bis chest to the front and his tall hat in the air, he is one of1 the striking figures on Pennsylvania avenue. It was during snch a walk that I once passed him in the street car, in com pany with two Maryland Congressmen. These men were free-traders, and they naturally disliked McKinley. As we went by bim, one ot them pointed to the street and said inja most significant tone: "Some men are born great, and some are born in Ohio." The other two Congressmen laughed and said, "just so," and the two continued to iggle over the remark for the next three lorks. THE OHIO MAX. McKinley was born in Ohio, and he made bis first speech one cold February morning just forty-five years ago. Whether born great or not, he has succeeded in making himself so in the eyes ot the people. He is. not a man of extraordinary natural ability, bnt be is possessed of the genius of common sense. He knows how to take advantage of a koou opportunity, ana ne never mases a mistake. He does not speak olten in Con gress, and bis speeches cover but few sub jects. He prepares himself well, however, and when he does rise the House and the country know that be has something to ear. He is well posted on the rules of the House and he wonld make a good Speaker. His election might be looked upon as a declara tion to the country that the BeDnhlican party proposed to run its campaign on the 1 protective tans basis, and be would be just the opposite of the former Speaker, Mr. Carlisle. He would in many ways make a Much better Speaker than Mr. Beed, and be party could much easier spare him from he floor than the bright-eyed, vitriol oncued genius from Maine. u Tom Beed is a renins. His brain weighr the Honse it is Beed who watches for and is prepared for every surprise. His long term in Congress has amply fitted him for the position. He is posted on all public ques tions, and his reading has covered nearly every field of knowledge. He is n fine French scholar, and his Shakespeare is bet ter thumbed than his Bible.thouph he knows the latter well. He has an analytic mind, and when he gets bold of a tact it drops into oneof the little pigeon boles of his brain, ready to slide off his slippery tongue at a second's notice. He has the bump of humor largely developed, and he can't resist say ing a sarcastic thing even if it does cut tne man at whom it is directed. It is this ele ment of his intelleclDftinntnrR that will Tburt bimTnTiis candTdacy'fofCBI "Bpeakef" snip, juany ot tne snarp throes he has said in the past are remembered now, and some of these have lost him votes and friends. Tom Beed looks anything but the tradi tional leader. He has the frame of a Japa nese wrestler, and his bead might serve for that of a Chinese giant. He is fat and tall, ana nis oig-nonea ooay is padded at every point with muscular flesh. I have never seen bim strike, but bis fist, under John Sullivan's training, would fell an ox; and be has a foot which would make him one of the greatest football players of the world. His face is broad, fair, and fat; the cheeks puff out, and a pair of small, half-almond eyes shine like diamonds under a broad forehead, which goes on and on upward until it fades away into a fuzzy baldness about three inches in front of Beed's crown. Beed's mouth is a strong one, and he has a straggling red mustache on his upper lip containing about enough bristles to make a camel's hair brush. Beed's hair is thickest at the sides and at the back. It is not lux uriant at any place, and he combs the sandy locks well up and back of his ears, so that the ends of them just touch the col lar of his coat. This big, round head is pasted down upon Beed's broad, fat should ers with a fat, wafer-like neck, and when Beed cits in bis chair in the House, with his hands up under his chin and elbows leaning on his desk you wonder whether he has any neck at all, and yon can hardly imagine bim to be the greatest man among all the members surrounding him. Let a discuseion come up and you wonder no longer. Beed's eyes begin to twinkle, a queer smile hovers around that big mouth, and a moment later you see him throw his six feet into the arena of debate, and, in a sharp nasal twang, he pours sarcasm and argument out at triend and foe. As he goes on with his speech his cheeks cbanee from white to red, his semi-bald pate becomes the eolor of a boiled lobster, and he trestnres Jotcph Cannon. violently with his arms, emphasizing every sentence with a shake of his head. He cares but little for appearances, and during the quieter part of the session he walks about the House with his hands in his pockets, stopping now and then to tell a story to a crowd of brother members, and making laughter wherever be goes. He is alwxvs ready with a story or a speech. He never writes out his speeches lor the Record, anil seldom corrects the proof of them as taken down by the stenographers. He can make as good au after-dinner speech as a Con gressional one, and he enjoys the good things of this life as well as any other man in Congress. JOLLY JOE CASKON. His quarter here arenot far from those of the Hon. Joe. Cannon, who is making a jiveiy ngnt tor tne bpeakership, and ho thinks be will get it. Cannon is as uncon ventional in his appearance and babits as Beed, bnt he is an entirely different kind of man. Of medium height, he is lean and. wiry, and bis fair, rosy face, with a pair of bright blue eyes, looks out from under a llA11fh Tlfll WhffOl h. nnll. nm ........ i Hs is alYesterner In appearance, ana, like j been his custom to take a horseback ride every day during his stay in Washington. Mr. Cannon is now 53 years of age, and he has been in Congress for the last 16 years. He has always held a good position on the floor.and he is noted as a fighter. His favorite attitude in speaking is with one foot on the cnair nearest bim. Then lean ing over be shoot his words at the rate of 200 a minute at the opposite side of the House, gesturing as be does so by shaking his finger at the Democracy, and by now and then violently throwing his hand at them. He is a good speaker, is well posted on the rules, and be has many friends. There is nothing snobbish about him, and everyone knows him as Joe Cannon. Mr. Cannon has not as many enemies as Beed, though he is by no means so meaiy mouthed as one of his Illinois constituents. Mr. Cannon told the story ofx this man the other day. When talking about the habit of "taffy-giving," which so largely prevails at Washington, he said: "I have in my dis trict out in Illinois a man who ought to have been a Washington society woman. He has a good thing to say about every man and everything, and he comes in especially strong at funerals. I will call him Jones for short. There is never a funeral in the county but tnat Jones is mere, and in talking about tne virtues of the deceased there is no praise so profuse nor tongue so glib as Jones'. He can find virtues in the worst of reprobates after they are dead, and he is packed full of the. milk of human kindness from the bottom of his flat cowhide boots to the top of bis bald crown. This peculiarity of bis has become a matter of county talk, and two young fellows of Dan ville made a bet upon the death of a repro bate of the county that Jones could not find anything good to say about him. This man seemed to be altogether bad; he had been a worthless, good-for-nothing, lazy fellow during bis whole life, and he was one of those idiosyncrasies of nature which seemed to have no rood in them. At the time of the funeral the young fellows making the bet stationed themselves in the window near which the procession going by the coffin must pass, and waited for Jones. He came along in good time with his handkerchief in his hand. He stopped the procession as he stood beside the coffin and looked down on the reprobate's face long and earnestly. At last with a sigh he exclaimed: "Well, anyway, he had good teeth!" HENDEESON A2tt BUBEOWS. The two other candidates for the Speaker ship are Henderson, of Iowa, and Burrows, of Michigan. They are both reaching out their bands after the gavel, aad there may be some dark horses which may come in at the last minute. Burrows and Henderson are both built on the Brutus order, thoueh Burrows has been christentd.br himarants. Julius Ctssar. They are plain, blunt men, 1 and a large part or their capital lies in the open-handed, bail-fellow, well-met style possessed by each. Burrows is a Pennsyl vanian by birth, and a Michigander by adoption. He has been in Congress from Michigan for ten years, and be thinks the sun rises and sets in the Northwest. He is a man of more than ordinary ability; is a good speaker and a good stumper, and I am told that in the campaign which he has just finished in Virginia has made him very popular with the Bepnblican element of that State. He talked to the people of the back counties as though he were teaching a kindergarten, and gave them their first plain understanding of the tariff. General David Brenner Henderson is a Scotchman, who was brought to Illinois at the age of 6 years, and cot his education in Iowa. He was only an ordinary member of Congress until about three years ago, when be made a great hit in his defense of Colonel W. W. Dudley as Pension Commissioner. Henderson does not look unlike Dudley; he has the same dark hair combed up from a high forehead, the same dark complexion which turns to the color of the moss rose as he talks, and the same half-limp walk, due to the wooden leg replacing that which he, like Dudley, lost on the battlefield. Hen derson is a cood speaker, he gestures well. and has Inngs equal to those of the famed bull of Bashan. He is a lawyer by pro fession, and be lives at Dubuque. He is one of the handsome men of the House, and oneofthe-well-dressed members. Hewears a slouch hat and a cutaway coat, and pot withstanding his wooden leg he walks well without crutches. He is a man of great in dustry and unlimited ambition. THE CANDIDATE'S TVIVES. All of the Speakership candidates are married. Mrs. Beed is a finely educated woman, and the daughter of the Bev. S. H. Merrill, one of the noted Congregational preachers of Maine. She is of medium height and has dark hair and eyes. She is possessed of much social ability, and she will be a fit leader for the ladies oi the Con gressional circle. Mrs. McKinley has not been able to go into society for some years on account of her health. She is a very pretty woman, and is, like her hus band, of Ohio birth. Her father was one of the oldest newspaper men of that State, and the founder of the Canton Repository. Mrs. Cannon also comes from Ohio. She is noted as a society leader, and she will bring to her aid two daughters, who are very well educated as well as very pretty. Mrs. Bur rows met her husband when the two were at school together. It was a case of love at first sight, and Julius Cssar married her as soon as be came out of tbearmy. Mrs. Bur rows is tall and slender; she has sparkling eyes and a rosy complexion. She is fond of society and societv is fond of ber. The same may be said of Mrs. Henderson, who is a pretty entertaining Iowa lady; and, however the fight for the gavel ends, it is certain that the Honse social circle will not lack an ac complished leader. Fbastk G. Cakpentee. WOMAN'S IDEAL MAE Mary J. Holmes on the Qnalitiesin Men Most Prized by Women. LADIES' LIKES AND DISLIKES. Things Which Make Marred Life a Fore taste of Paradise. A I0UNG GIKL'S OPINION OF THE MEN tWBtTTEir FOB THI DISPATCH. I have been asked to give my opinion as to what qualities or actions of men are most pleasing to women and most conducive to their happiness. If there were but one woman in the world, and I were that woman, I could answer the question easily, for I know exactly what pleases me in a man and could tell it in a few words. But the name of woman is legion, and every woman has her own ideas, and these ideas change as years go by, until, seen in the full glare oi our summer life, or through the speotaclea which more sober autumn puts on, the man who, in our spring time, was our ideal of all a man should be, falls from his high pedestal, and the pieces of our shattered idol are not worth the pick ing up. When Mrs. Jones, in her earlv eirlhood. married Mr. Jones, she thought him the one man in all the world who could make her happy, and his roughness and swagger and coarse good-humor pleased and amused her, for tnere was in her nature something which responded to his. But, given the same ad vantages, women polish sooner than men, and are quicker to adopt the little customs of politeness and refinement, and although Mrs. Jones is not yet so refined that she can not'enjoy herself, she has learned to blush at her husband's roughness, and shivers at his coarse, loud talk, Mrs. Brown likes to have her husband smoke, and enjoys the .smell of his cigar, while Mrs. Smith detests tobacco, and the smell of a cigar makes ber sick. Mrs. Wilkes likes her husband to dine at his club; because it gives her more liberty to gossip and visit, while Mrs. Tubbs cries if she is left to dine alone. And so one might multiply the list of women whom the minor actions and habits of their husbands make happy or miserable. s THE MTSTEET OF LOTJE. Bnt it is not altogether with the Mrs. .Smiths, and Browns, and Joneses that this article has to do; nor yet with that class of women who married the man they knew to be a drunkard, saying, as did a young girl of my acquaintance, that they would marry him if they knew he would be brought home every week in a state of intoxication. That, I suppose, islove; but of the kind of which I know nothing from personal experience. I could not marry a man who drank, or gambled, or swore, or made vile remarks about women, holding them all as low as himself, or who had not as much or more brain than myself. Still, there are plenty of girls who can and do marry just snch men and seem reasonably content. And thus the puzzle "grows as to the qual ity in men most prized by the better class of women, for I do not call her of the better class who willingly and knowingly promises to love and honor a fool, or a roue, or a swearer, or a gambler, or a drunkard. She may be and often is in the so-called higher ranks, where money reigns supreme, for money will buy nearly everything and everybody, and I should sometimes be tempted to think it the golden virtue which my sex prizes the most in men, did I not know many a noble-minded woman who has chosen to be poor with the man she loves rather than, rich, with, the one she does not To judge others by one's self is said to be righteous judgment, but is not always a safe rule to follow in drawing conclusions, and since thinking of this articlel have sounded several women with regard to their likesand dislikes in husbands, real or prospective. I asked a young girl with positive opinions what trait she would like best in her hus band, if she had one, and her answer was prompt and to the point: "I'd want him to have a mind of his own, and not be bossed round by his wife!" WHAT THE GIELS WANT. The reply was startling, bnt had in it of herself; whether intentionally or not, there must always be a hidden pain a want or sometbing withheld, marring what might otherwise have been perfect. If were a man and how many chances have recently been rung up on that if I would treat my wife with every possible at tention and kindness and courtesy, and the older she grew the more attentive I wonld be to her, for in this way, I believe, I could mate her happy, even if Iwerenfeitherrich, nor learned, nor famous, nor the perfect Adonis so many young girls are expecting for a husband. As grains of sand make the mighty desert, so little every-day deeds of kindness or unkindness mar or make the sum of human happiness, and be or she who is most thoughtful, most kind, most forbear ing and unselfish, does the most toward making married life what God meant it to be a foretaste of paradise. Maet J. HOLSTE3. CTOSSCTT-A.: A STORY OF EGYPTIAN-ISRAELITISH LIFE. ENGLAND'S COAL SDPPLX. A Decrease In tbe Production of tho Fast Vevr Tears. youth's Companion. 1 ' A paper read before the Boyal Statistical Society in February last, and printed in Engineering, contains statements of Interest to readers here as well, as in the Old World. A coal commission was established in 1871. Since that time statistics have been accu mulating, and it is from these that conclu sions are drawn. It appears that in the northern coal fields which yield to New castle its supply of coal, the rate of produc tion has reached its maximum. Within twlast four or five years there has been a falling off in the amount of coal mined. At the average rate of increased production during the last 22 years the available supply of the Newcastle district would be exhausted in about 91 years. The coal field of South Wales comes next to that of Northumberland in productiveness. Its yield last year was 26,000,000 tons. This' repre sents about 5,381 acres of a four-foot thick coal seam. The, supply of the South Wales basin is computed at one-third of the whole supply of the United Knsrdom. At the rate of production for the last quarter of a cen tury, this basin will last for 79 years. 'Two-thirds of the South Wales coal supply is obtained from Glamorganshire If the production from this eastern portion of the coal basin continues to increase at the average rate of the last 24 years, it is shown that the whole available supply will be worked out before 60 years have passed. Nearly one-third of the coal pro duced in the United Kingdom is consumed iu redncing ores ana in, con verting iron into steel. The processes of Bessemer, Siemens, and other inventors have effected great saving in this direction. The consumption of coal on steamers and locomotive engines has been greatly lessened bv the use of compound engines. "But with all this economy the amount of coal used by ocean-going steamers in 1887 was about y,uuu,uw tons. Xhat used by steamers in the coasting trade is reckoned at an equal amount, and tbe locomotive engines of England need nearly as much. As tbe commercial and industrial prosperity of .England depends directly upon ber coal supply, one cannot see this dwindle and disappear without a thought of the misery which its want will occasion. It will do no harm for the people of this country, as well, to have a care for the natural resources upon which our future industries must de pend. GIYEN AWAI BI A PAEE0T. BY PROF. GEORG EBERS, Author of "Uarda," "An Egyptian Princess," Etc (NOW FIRST PUBLISHED.) COPTBIGnHD, 1883, BTS. S. H'CXUBXWJ SELF CONCEIT MADE SILLY. The Slan Who Got to be Brigadier General ToUcn Down a Peg. Y oath's Companion. It is not easy to tell a self-conceited man bow be is regarded, bnt now and then some one proves equal to the task. During tbe Civil War a man, great in bis own eyes, was, by some influence, appointed a Brigadier General. His sense of his own importance was at once greatly increased. He could hardly speak of anything else but his new dignity. Meeting a "home-spun" Yankee one day be accosted him thus: "Well, Jim, I suppose you know I havo been appointed Brigadier General ?" Tes.'' said Jim, "I heerd so." 'Well, what do folks say about it?" "They don't sav nothin'," replied truthful James. "They jest laugh." SWEET as chaplet of roses is Atkinson's Extract of White Bose for the hair, cleans ing, invigorating and frazrant, flu xne reply was startling, but bad in it a ring of common sense and trnth, for much as a woman may like to boss her husband, and pleasing as the recreation may be, she would in her heart respect him more if he sometimes took the reins in his own hands, even if he upset the matrimonial car, or drove it into a domestio cyclone. I asked another girl, with no positive opinions, and her answer was characteristic: "A man is a man any way. full of corners and quirks and cranks. Bnt we all have to have one, I suppose, and so it does not mat ter much, if be is only nice, and let us have our own way." Another, a frivolous butterfly, would like a handsome man, who stands six feet in his boots, and can dance without stepping on her train, and making a gny of himself. The girl has yet to learn that a dancing man and a handsome man is not a man to be desired, and that the plainest features and most awkward manners, if they go hand in hand with kindness of heart and a soul of honor and integrity, are worth far more than a Turveydrop and a handsome face, which, in a man, seldom fails to be in sipid. Another wonld be satisfied with a man of high position, whom the world delighted to honor, the reporters to interview, and the people to stare at and point out, while she, as his wife, shone in his reflected light. Does not that girl know that such men rarely have time to give to their wives, and do not think of those little every-day at tentions whicS are to a true, loyal woman what the dew is -to the flowers, and without which love will wear itself out in hot re bellion against the ambition and its fruition which have come between itself and hap piness? Another wants a learned man, who has read so much and knows so much that when he speaks words of wisdom drop from his lips like raindrops in a summer shower. All this sounds very fine, or would, if the man of erudition ever talked to her or to anyone else; but bookworms, as a rule, are reticent and self-absorbed, and in their abstraction and reticence are apt to become selfish and exacting, as was Carlyle, growling over bis toast and tea in that not very happy home at Craigenputtock. He was a man of learn ing and fame, and his wife was proud and fond of him, but, like. Dorothy in "Middle march," who, while honoring Casanbon, still had a hankering after his scanegrace nephew, with his magnetism and" frank, genial ways, she would have liked him more and been happier with him had he found time for those little attentions and courtesies which women prize, and which Keep love iresn ana young aown to a ripe old age. A THOBOUGH OENTLEMA1T. Said a sad-eyed woman, whose husband had been dead for years: "He was a gentle man in every respect, but I loved bim most for his kindness and thoughtfulhess, which never allowed him to forget that I was his wife and always made me feel that I was as dear to bim as the first day he called me by that name." And she, I think, sounded the keynote of me wnoie matter, -a. woman wno is wortny to be the wife of a good man likes to know that, however learned, or wise, or great, or busy be may be, there is still in his heart a spot where she reigns supreme, and from which neither business, nor greatness, nor fame, nor learning can dislodge her; that she is his queen, to whom he pays homage, whose presence he recognizes and whose ab sence he deplores. She maybe rjroad of AtVoaltUbfl Cheat Exposed by the Bird's Tratbfnl Talk. Philadelphia Inquirer. "Oh, it was so funny," smiled the jolly passenger as be left a Tenth street car at Chestnut street and launched a derisive smile at the bewildered conductor. "Two women rboarded ,;tbexar at Wallace street- They weighed an even 200 each, and besides carried two big valises and a parrot. Tbey were evidently uneasy at something and gazed at the bird as if afraid that his tongue would break loose. It did after a while, but it served the woman right When the conductor made bis way through the standing crowd and presented his hand for a fare the largest of the sisters handed him a silver dollar. The knight of the punch extracted 5 cents from the Bland and returned 95 cents in change to the passenger. "Then he applied to the other one for fare, and his Galway whiskers turned a brighter hue when she coolly said: 'My sister paid for me.' In vain he argued and protested against two people occupying three seats for one fare. As he turned despairingly away bis parrotshipr who had been fidgeting in his cage electrified the car by shouting, 'Mary, you're a dead beat.' It was too much. The women retreated, parrot and all, and as the smiles of the conductor and passengers fol lowed them an acquaintance said: 'One of the sisters taught the bird that sentence be cause they're always snapping at each other.' " BEATHLESS with suspense she gazed at the vision; and yet she would gladly have closed her eyes to avoid seeing it, and have shut her ears to the voice of tbe murmuring sycamore. Sud denly the glory was extinct, tbe figure had vanished, the voice of theleaves was hushed; she saw before her, in atuddier glow, the figure of the only man whose lips her own had ever kissed, sword in hand, rushing on an invisible foe at the head" of his father's herdsmen. The vision came and was gone as swiftly as a flash of lightning; and yet, even before it had vanished, she Knew all it meant to ber. This man, whom she had named Joshua, and who had every quality that could fit him to be the guardian and leader of his people, should not be led astray by love from the high task to which the Lord had called him. None among the Hebrews should hear the message he "had brought, and thereby be turned away from the perilous path on which they had entered. Her duty wasnow as clear in her sight as the vanished vision had been. And as though the Most High would fain show her that she had under stood rightly what the vision demanded of her, before she hadi risen from her Knees to announce to Joshua the sorrow to which she bad condemned him and herself, she heard Hur's voice dose at band bidding the crowd, which was gathering from all sides, to form iu order for their march. The way of salvation from herself lay be fore her. Joshua, meanwhile, had not ventured'to intrude on her devotions. He was wounded and angered to the depths of bis soul by ber rejection. But gazing down on her he had seen ber tall frame shiver as with a sudden chill, her eyes and hands uplifted as if spell-bound; and he had understood that something great and sacred was stirring in her soul which it would be a crime to dis turb; nay, be had been unable'' to resist an instinctive' feeling that be was a bold man who could desire a woman so closely ono with God. It would be bliss, indeed, to be lord of this sublime creature, but at tbe same time hard to see her prefer another, though it were the Almighty, so far above her lover. 'Men and beasts were already trooping in crowds past the sycamore, and when at. leneth Joshua-decided that he-must speak to Miriam and remind "her of the gathering throng, she rose, and turning to him, spoke these vehement words: "I have spoken with the IiOrd, Joshua, hastily explained, greet bis father and re quest him to call a meeting ot the elders. But be 'ore he had done speaking the quarreling herdsmen came crowding round Hur that be might decide what place in the procession it behooved each tribe to take; so he went with them; and as soon as Miriam found herself alone with the soldier she said beseechingly, but in a low voice and with imploring eyes: "A hasty deed has broken the bonds that united us, but a higher tie still holds us together. As I have given up that which mv heart held dearest to be faithful to my God and my people, so do thou sacri- nce mat to wnicn tny soul clings. Obey toe Most High, who hath named thee Joshua! This hour hath changed our glad ness to bitter grief; may the good of the peo ple be its fruit! Bemain a true son of the race which gave thee thy father and mother, and be what the Lord hath called the 3 to be, a captain of His people. "It thou abide by the oath thou ha', sworn to Bharaoh, and reveal to the ciders the promises thou hast brought, tbey will goover to thy side; that I know lull welt Few will stand up against thee, but foremost of these few will be thine own father. I can hear bim lift up his Voice in anger against his own beloved son; and it thou shut thine ear even to his admonition, then the people will follow thee instead of following tbe Lard, and thou wilt lead the Israelites as a mighty man of valor. But then, when the day comes aim in life, and, besides this, he had the as surance that he might hold himself-a worthy as Hur or as any other man.- Nom could depose him. from this high pIao but the glorious twain to whom be would dedicate his blood and his Ufa. HI Go and his people. He was amazed to discern how greatly tai new enthusiasm cast into tho shade every thing else that stirred in his breast No and again, indeed, be bowed his head laser row as he remembered his old father? stilll he had done right in setting aside1 his long, ing to press him once more to his heart. The old man would scarcely have nndertiee4 his motives, and it was better for them. t vlit jMf fife; Prince Beptah Ordering the Removal of I Chains Jirom Joshua ana pnrom.t 4 j Kasana Going Forth to Meet Joshua. in which the Egyptian lets bis promises fly to thetfeur winds, thou wilt see thy people more cruelly oppressed thaa even heretofore, and when they turn aside from the God of their fathers' to worship the gtids with the J beads of beasts, tbe curse or tny utner snail fall upon thee. The wrath of the Most High shall be visited upon the freward. and de spair shall be the lot of him who snail lead the foolish folk astray after that the Lord hath chosen hist to be the captain of His" people. I, a weak woman, the handmaid of the Lord, and the daauel who loved thee better than life I cry unto thee,- 'Beware of the curse oi thy father; and the hand of (he Lord! Beware lest thou lead' the people WHAT A SEA COW IS LIKE. A Strange Animal Thai Uvea in the Rivers of Florida. New York Tlmcs.l On my first trip up the Manatee river I fully expected to see a manatee, or sea cow, raise ber big-horned head out of tbe black water and bellow a warning at us. The name leads -one to look for a great creature with the hairy skin of a cow, with horns and a frisking tail, a terrible animal big enough to swallow tbe boat and all its con tents, wading along the shallow shore per haps and nibbling at grass and hushes. But the sea cow of reality is a very different thing from the sea cow of imagination. There was little danger of seeing one of any sort, for it is years since the last one was taken in the Manatee river, except one sol itary specimen that was considered rare enough to be taken out to the semi-tropical exhibition at Jacksonville. I saw it there, and now my idea of the sea cow is clearer. It does not roam about the country bel lowing and swallowing whole sheep; it has no nair and no horns, nor hoois, nor angry tail. In appearance it is no more like a cow than it is like a chicken, and its name comes not from its shape, but from its habit of living on grass and green vegetables, in stead of eating fish or flesh. Imbrication. Mrs. Megrim Lemuel, what air you a doin'? . Mr. Me?rim .Annle-iankin' these utIm If th stuff makes them wheels go th way it Joshua and Ephraim Marching to the Mine. and I know His will. Dost thou remember the words with which God called thee?" He bowed his head and she went on: "It is well. Then learn now what it is that the Most High God hath said to thy father, and to Moses, and to me. He will lead us forth from the land of Egypt, far, far away,, to a land where neither Pharaoh nor his rulers shall have dominion over us, and He alone will be our king. This is His will, and if thou desire to serve Him thou shalt follow us, and, if we have need to fight, be captain over the men ot our peo ple.'' At this he. beat bis breast and cried in great trouble: "I am bound by an oath to return home to Tanis to tell Pharaoh how the leaders of the Hebrewsliave received the message which I have brought them. Yea, and even, if it snouid Dreas my neart x can not be forsworn." "And rather Bball mine break," Miriam moaned, than I break my vow to the Lord. We have chosen. And here, in the presenee of this heap of stones, all the ties are cut which ever bound usl". At this he was beside himself; ha eagerly strove to take her hand, but she repulsed, him with an imperious gestnre, turned away and went forward towards the throng of people who were crowding round the well with the cattle and sheep. Great and small respectfully made way for her as she walked with proud dignity towards Hur.lwbo was giving orders to the shepherds. He came to met her, and when he-had heard tbe promise she made him in an undertone, he laid bis band on ber head and said with grave solemnity: ''May the Lord bless our union." Then, hand in hand with the gray-haired man to whom she had plighted her'trotb, Miriam tnrned to meet Joshua, and nothing betrayed the deep agitation of ber soul but the fluttering rise and fall of her bosom, though her cheeks were indeed pale; her eyes were tlry, and her demeanor as unbend ing as ever. ' She left it to Hur to tell the lover whom she had rejected, now and forever, what she had done; and when the warrior ieard it he started back as though a gulf had yawned at his feet His lips were bloodless as he gazed at the unequally matched pair. Scornful laughter seemed to bim the only fit answer for snch an announcement, but Miriam's earnest face helped him to suppress it to coneeal his painful aeitation under some trivial SBeeeh. However, be felt that he oonld bk for long A. slave g&rEee Basse ooMe Miriam tor bid her to .to the. old Deole. so she ealv d4MwTee''fewr more.' If taoa wotuaet wove iminu'awieer wMt than, tee ws-man whose oppeetttos awved thee to anger, renounce thine own will for tne sake ot the multitude or tnr brethren.; Lay thine hand on this: heap, and swear tome" But the prophetess' voice failed her. Her hands felt about vainly for some support, and. with a cry she fell on her knees close to Hur's .heap of stones. Joshua hastened to raise her. holding her in -his strong arms, and at his call some women hurried up ana soon revived the fainting girl As she opened her eyes they, wandered vaguely from one to another, and it was not till her gaze fell on Joshua's anxious face that she fully understood where she was and what had happened. Then she hastily drank a deep draught of the water which a shepherd woman offered her. dried her eyes, which were streaming with tears, sighed bitterly, and with a wan ssaile said to Joshua: "lam after all hut a weak woman," Then she went toward the house, hut after walking a few steps she turned round, signed to Joshua, and said: "You see tbey are forming ia ranks. They are about to set forth, Are you still ot the same mind? There is yet time to call the elders together." But he shook his head in denial, and, as be met her eye glistening with gratitude, be softly replied r "1 will ever bear ia mind this hea'p, and this hour, wife,of Hart Greet xaf father from me, and tell him thai I love him. Tell him, too, the name which his "son is henceforth to bear by the command of the Most High. Ia that name, which promised me the help of the Lord.be shall put his trust when he hears whither JT, go, to keep the oath I have sworn." He waved his hand to MirisjB.aad turned to go to the camp, where his horse had been fed and watered, but she celled after hiss: "One last word. Moses left a letter for you in tbe hollow of the tree." At this the warrior went to the sycamore and read the message which the man of God had left lor him. "Be steadfast and strong," was the brief separate without meeting rather ths. ij open dissension. .. Sometimes it seemed to him as though ati that had happened could be but a dreoatti and as he was still intoxicated, as it were,4 J bvtheaeitatiousoi the last few hours, nis 2 talnart frmA wa bnt litttA Mnvfrmi n ' the fatigues he. had gone through. At a.? well-known inn on theroad. where he fous several warrinrx. and traon? thefis CArtaJa rantaina va1 (nnm in him. TlA fl. Timsfcka allowed himself and his hone to rest and eats and ss be rode on, refreshed, daily life as-d serted its nehts. ae passed various oe panies of soldiers on the way to the city Tanis. and was informed thit they were w der orders to join themselves: there to Ait troops which he himself had brought he from Libva. Atlastherode into the town, and as JmT went past the temple or Anion he ; loud wailing, though he had learned est Mil way that the-pestilence was well nigh at asil Ann ITmrn manv! slimi Ha cr.t1iAAj3 AeW$ ,. .-.- - j' -..- . a-rr-i tact wnicn was presently announced h-ss-k;-, first prophet, Buie, had just died uttheMSk ? year ot nis age. and uaie, tne prophet, who had so warmly asemrel hte of ' bis friendship and gratitude- ad, wh counted on his cooperation inadaagewM.iS enterprise, was nis successor niffst.. pnc3fc ftuu juugc, ca uomtvt u wuuuakui in short the most poweriai emx 1b vmi kingdom. ; CHAPTBSXVTL "He whom Jehovah helps!" BinnMll a chain-lades prisoner with s bltiereeilijj as five days later, he, with 49 fellow JM ers, was led throKgb the Woaphalaralteai Tanis toward the Bast- Their destination was the mines est thai peninsula of Sinai, whew freeh-eioed iSj borers were needed. The smile oa the vietia's fe see ' ished; then he drew up his ssweakc fnm'i while his? bearded line-muttered, then "StiMtsais&eisg!"shewhlsss.ta .uwyoua woa w.-wwuag m.mmj wsgh ne-wMMdto convey 1M 'i the strength that hg bad lesaveiedi" ' age, Ephraim, courage; look; spasriisefwi the dust come what mavl" " "Silence while marching!" cried mm jfe Bphraim Contemplating Sit Jro$piiStgj jLtcope. WM '131 K99 KSrfrZjS' Mil WsBkct The Kctee Jrteer Watchtop XMtmcC JMer view WiihJoa&ua. injunction, aad Joshua raised his head, aad cried joyfully: "The words are a comfort torrayjouI;and if it is for the last time that we have met, wife of Hur, it I sew go to my death, be sure that I shall know-how to be steadfast and strong, evea to the end And do yon do all yea eaa tor say -old. father." Herewith he sprsar oa horsshsek, and as he made his way to Tanis, fWehfvl to his oath, his seal vw free fms fears, althoagh he did net coaeeal from himself that he was riding forth to geat peril. His highest hopes were destroyed, and yet glad excite ment straggled with tea grief of his soul. A new aad gtorieos eaetie had Hs birth theae: JUtlne hit whaie beiasr.aad It was SMey)lnaifrd thong, he Jfad salbMd s nis talents, proaa cr.nisnsaieand proud .did. mv.head.iast night,Z'H riU' tewai preserve . thet semblance f iattMteeaee, so waaad teeael eaaagk S ewkea she SgU af 1, of his looks, but ifothesehadds neglect ij'ilMPuck, 4i$ MJSt S? - i " " ' jwwataaii the armed Libya guards who gang, to the. elder prisoner, aad swi his whip with Btesscinsr seetai'S. was tbe saaahe threatened, aad Us panieu wasBsralm. who aad dessned to share his fete. Iflf Every Egyptian child kaew whspS meant, ior -oeaa me to tne rainesi was sbsb people's most dreadful IsaareeaUaa.aaAnai prisoner's lot was half so hard, m Ism, af fsW condemned state criminal. l series oi ingauui anmmasiiSM i hardshiee awaited these at the strength ot the healthiest was rained. sy,a swn ot overwore, aaa tne tuuee tims were forced to 4o thines as far has their power that they soon sank iekxijl everueuag rest ior waiea weir : seals had leag pined. Joshua's eneouragiar words had eaect upon Ephraim;. bat wbe a fewi utes later a chariot, saaded ay an. i drove pt the gaat, andia it. charioteer and a matron, steed young woman, he tnrned roaad aaMdy aasji gazed aner tne vehicle with saar fcliac ej until tne das oa tbe read Bid it Ma i The lady was thickly Tle.yat-shal youth taeagat that fee had rooosjaiaadl ior wnose sace nenaa russed ise , j wuwiAxaMsk Mgu.n Tvusffne mt asj to ooey. .ABU .cpnrain no, fsee rectly. for the younsr lad via tbe was. Kaeaaa, the daughter of Oe Csisaj the archers; the eider womb was her sansj Oa reaeMaft- a little tesspla oa H i near a tnicnet or acacia, antes wate i a well lortae nee of travelers,! chariot had left tbe priseaers at si tanee behind. Kasaaa begged the i wait. Thes, springing out lightly road, she walked to aad fro with, a I head under the shadow of the trees aatst s knew by a rellins; cloud ot d sat that criminals were approaching. Then, takinsr out of her aarstaat m gold rings which she had broaght wife lor tne purpose, ae went up to aae a of the atelaaeholr proceseioB as be- near on an ass. aad while she talked tV and pointed to Joshua the 2adeaati1 . - - " ... . A . -- - . - stolen giaaee at the nags wntca aM.aajpi siippea into nis nana, txis naasserisa only allowed hiss to expect silver,, aid! i;e k owe aaessea a ineaaiy j teous expression at the sight or taatrj lag yellow glitter. His eoaateaasee. certainly again at the demand Kasana atasVtbsstl it nrignteaea enca mors at a farther larnsss ires the yaaac) "xaae ue secies to tae weui thes driakl Tbey shall ga healthy un4rreaad!" xnea ne rede an to the called to Joebas: "Ton, whs bare j once ruled ever mbt aeosle. aeass awre stiaebed UU thaa tagaeeiftrj or see. Tea, g sards, look after the cab i will -watea aU eae: X aaf a lwi say to bint" The baaiaaawd bis bassis aa JCibat swiviag aoatii teaas.a - . - S a Sf J '