-.-- , .; "IS.v ' 10 here, but Geoffrey felt that it would be too much in earnest if spoken, to he resisted the temptation. "What, Miss Granger," he said, "should & man say to a lady who but last night saved his life, at the risk indeed, almost at the cost of her own?" "It was nothing," she answered, color ing: "I clung to you, that was all, more by instinct than from any motive. I think I had a vague idea that yon might float and support me." ''Miss Granger, the occasion ii too seri ous for polite fibs. I know how you saved my life. I do not know how to thank you for it." "Then don't thank me at all, Mr. Bing ham. Why should you thank me? I only did what I was bound to do. I would far rather die than desert a companion in dis tress of any tort; we all must die, bntit would be dreadful to die ashamed. You know what they say, that if you save a per son from drowning you will do them an in i'ury afterward. That's how they pnt it lere; in some parts the saying is the other way about, but I am not likely ever 10 do you an injury, so it does not make me un happy. It was an awful experience; you were senseless, so you cannot know how strange it felt lyine upon the slippery rock, and seeing those great white wares rush upon us through the gloom, with nothing hut the night above and the sea around, and death between the two. I have been lonely for many years, but I do not think that I ever quite understood what loneliness really meant before. You see," she added, by way of an afterthought. "I thought that you were dead, and there is not much com pany in a corpse." "Well," he said, "one thine is, it would have been lonelier if we had gone." "Do you think so?" she answered, look ing at him inquiringly. "I don't quite see how you make that out. If you believe in what we hare been taught, as I think you do, wherever it was yon found yourself there would be plenty of company, and if, like me, you do not beliere in anything, why, then, yon would have sleet, and sleep asks for nothing." "Did you think of nothing when you lay upon the rock waiting to be drowned, Miss Granger?" "Nothingl" she answered; "only weak people find revelation in the extremes of fear. If revelation comes at all, surely it must be born in the heart and not in "the senses. I believed in nothing and dreaded nothing, except the agony of death. Why should I be afraid? Supposing that I am mistaken, and there is nothing beyond, is it my fault that I cannot believe? What have I done that I should be afraid? I have never harmed anybody that I know of, and if I could believe I would. I wish I had died," she went on, passionately; "it would all be over now. I am tired of the world, tired of work and of helplessness, and all the little worries which wer one out I am not wanted here, I have nothing to live for and I wish that I had died!" "Some day yon will think differently, Miss Granger. There are many things that a womanlike yonrself can live for at the least, there is your work " She laughed drearily. "My work! If you only knew what it is like you would not talk" to me about it, Every "day I roll my stone up the hill, and every night it seems to roll down again. But yon have never taugnt in a village school. Mow cin you know? I work all day, and in the evening perhaps you have to mend the table cloths, or what do vou think? write my father's sermons. It sounds enrious, does it not, that I should write sermons? But I do. I wrote the one he is going to preach next Sunday. It makes very little difference to him what it is so long as he can read it, and, of course, I never sav any thing which cau o fiend anybody, and I do not think that they listen much. Very few people go to church in Brungelly." "Don't you ever get any time to yourself, then?" "Oh, yes, sometimes I do, and then T go out in my canoe, or read, and am almost happy. "After all, Mr. Bingham, it is very wrong and ungrateful of me to speak like this. Phavemore advantages than ninc ttathsof the world, and I ought to make the best of them. I don't know why I have been speaking as I have, and to yon, whom I never saw till yesterday. I never did it before to any living soul, I assure yon. It is jnst like the story of the man who came here last year with the divining rod. There is a cottage down on the cliff it belongs to 3Ir. Davies, who li es in the Castle. Well, they have no drinking water near, and the new tenant made a great luss about it. So Mr. Davies got men. and they d g and dug and spent no end of monev, but could not come to water. At last the tenant fetched an old man from some parish a long way oft who said that he could find water with a divining rod. He was a curious old man with a crutch, and he came with his rod, and hobbled about till at last the rod twitched just at the tenant's back door at least the diviner said it did. At any rate, they dug there, and in ten minutes struck a spring of water, which bubbled up so strongly that it rushed into the house and flooded'it And what do you think? After all, the water was brackish. You are the man with the divining rod, Mr. Binebam, and you hare made me talk a great deal too much, and, after all, you see it is not nice talk. You must think me a very disagree able and wicked young woman and I dare say I am. But somehow it is a relief to open one's mind. I do hope, Mr. Bingham, that you will see in short, that you will not misunderstand me." "Miss Granger," he answered, "there is between us that which will always entitle us to mutual respect and confidence the link of life and death. Had it not been for you I should not sit here to listen to vour confidence to-day. You may tell me that a mere natural impulse prompted you to do what you did. I know better. It "was your will that triumphed over your natural" im pulse toward self-preservation. Well, I will say no more about, except this: If ever a man was bound to woman by ties of gratitude and respect, I am bound to you. You need not fear that I shall take advan tage of or misinterpret yonr confidence." Here he rose and stood before her, his dark, handsome face bowed iu proud hninilitjr. "Miss Granger, 1 look upon it as an honor done to me by one whom henceforth I must reverence among all women. The life you gave back to me, and the intelligence wh'ich directs me, is in duty bound to "you, and I shall not forget the debt." She listened to his words, spoken in that deep and earnest voice which afterwards became so familiar to Her Majesty's Judges and to Parliament, listened with a new sense of pleasure rising in her heart. She was this man's eqnsl; what he could dare, she could dare; where be could climb, she could follow aye, and if need be, show the path and she felt that he acknowledged it. In his sight she was something more than a handsome girl to be admired and deferred to for her beauty's sake. He had placed her on another level one, perhaps, that few women would have wished to occupy. But Beatrice was thankful to him. It was the first taste of supremacy that she had ever known. It is something to stirthe proud heart of luch a woman as Beatrice, in that moment when for the first time she. feels herself a ronqueror, victorious, not through the vul jar advantage of her sex, not by the sub mission of man's coarser sense, but rather y the overbalencing weight of mind. "Do you know," she said, suddenly look ing up, "yon make me very proud," and she stretched out her hand to him. He took it, and, bending, touched it with his lips. There was no possibility of mis interpreting the action, and though she colored a little for, till then, no man had even kissed the tip of her finger she did not misinterpret it. It was an act of homage and that was all. And so they sealed the compact of their perfect friendship forever and a day. Then came a moment's silence. It was Geoffrey who broke it. v "Miss Granger," he said, "will you allow ae to preach youalecture.a very shortone?" "Go on," she said. "Very well. Do not blame me if you don't like it, and do not set me down as a prig, though I am going to tell you your own faults as I read them in your own words. You are proud and ambitious, and the cramped lines in which you are forced to lire seem to strangle you. You have suffered, and have not learned the lesson of suffering humility. You have set yourself up against Fate, and Fate sweeps you along like spray upon the gale, yet yon go unwilling. In your impatience you have flown to learning for refuge, and it has" com pleted your overthrow, for it has induced you to reject as non-existent all that you cannot understand. Because your finite mind cannot search infinity, because no an swer has come to all your prayers, because you see misery and cannot read its purpose, because you suffer and have not found rest, you have said that there is naught but chance, and become an atheist, as many have done before yon. Is it not true?" "Go on," she answered, bowing her head to her breast, so that the long rippling hair almost hid her face. "It seems a little odd," he said with a short laugh, "that I, with all my imperfec tions heaped upon me, should presume to preach to you but you will know best how near or bow far I am from the truth. So I want to say this. I have lived for 35 vears, and seen a good deal and tried to learn from it, and I know this. In the long run, unless we of our own act put away the opportunity, the world gives us our due, which generally is not much. So much foV things temporal. If you are fit to rule, in time you will rnle; if you do not, then be content and acknowledge your own incapacity. And as for things spirit ual, I am sure of this though of course one does not like to talk much of these matters if you only seek for them long enough in some shape you will find them, though the shape may not be that which is generally Elizabeth Entered Silently. recognized bv any particular religion. But to bnild a wall deliberately between oneself and the unseen, and then complain that the way is barred, is simply qhildish." "And what if one's wall is built, Mr. Bineham?" "Most of us have done something in that line at different times," he answered, "and found a way round it." "And if it stretches from horizon to hori zon, and is higher than the clouds, what then?" "Then you must find wings and fly over it" "And where can any earthly woman find those spiritual wings?" she asked, and then sank her head still deeper on her breast to cover her confusion. For she remembered that she had beard of wanderers in the dnsky groves of human passion, yes, even Msenad wanderers, who had suddenly come face to face with their own soul; and that the cruel paths of earthly love may yet lead the feet which tread them to the ivory gates of heaven. And remembering these beautiful myths, though she had no experience of love, and knew little of its ways, Beatrice grew sud denly silent. Nor did Geoffrey give her an answer, though he need scarcely hare feared to do so. For were thev not discussing a purely ab stract question? CHAPTER X. , LADY HONOEIA MAKE3 ARRANGEMENTS. In another moment somebody entered the room; it was Elizabeth. She had returned from her tithe-collectine expedition with the tithe. The door of the silting room was still ajar, and Geoffrey had his back toward it So it happened that nobody heard Elizabeth's rather cat-like step, and for some seconds she stood in tbe room trithout being perceived. She stood quite still, taking in tbe whole scene at a glance. She noticed that her sister held her head down, so that her hair shadowed her, and guessed that she did so for some reason probably because she did not wish her face to be seen. Or was it to show off her lovely hair? She noticed also the half shy, half amused, and alto gether interested expression upon Geoffrey's countenance she could see that in the little gilt-edged looking-glass which hung over the fireplace nor did she overlook the gen era', air of embarrassment that pervaded them both. When she entered the room.Elizabeth had been thinking of Owen Davies, and of what might have happened had she never seen the tide of life flow back into her sister's veins. She bad dreamed of it all night and had thought of it all day; even in the excite ment of extracting the back tithe from a re calcitrant and rather coarse-minded Welsh farmer, with strong views on the subject of tithe, it had not been entirely forgotten. The farmer waB a tenant of Owen Davies, and when he1 called her a "parson in petti coats, and wns," and went on, in delicate reference to her powers of extracting cash to liken her to a two-legged corkscrew, onjy screwier," she, perhaps, not unnaturally, reflected that if ever pace Beatrice certain things should come about, she would remember that farmer. For Elizabeth had a very long memory, as some people had learned to their cost, and generally, sooner or later, she paid her debts in full, not forgetting the overdue interest. And now, as she stood in tbe room unseen and noted these matters, something occurred to her in connection with this dominating idea which, like ideas in general, had many side issues. At any rate a look of quick intelligence shone for a moment in ber light eyes, like a sickly sunbeam on a faint De cember mist; then she moved forward, and when she was close behind Geoffrey, spoke suddenly. "What are you both thinking about?" she said in her clear thin voice; "you seem to have exhausted your conversation." Geoffrey made an exclamation and fairly jumped Irom his chair, a feat which in his bruised condition really hurt him very much. Beatrice, too, started violently; she recovered herself almost instantly, however. "How quietly you move, Elizabeth," she said. "Not more quietly than you sit, Beatrice. I have been wondering when anybody was going to say anything, or if you were both asleep." For her part Beatrice speculated how long her sister had txeu in the room. Their con versation had been innocent enough, but it was not one that she would wish Elizabeth to have overheard. And, somehow, Eliza beth had a knack of overhearing things. "You see. Miss Granger," said Geoflrey coming to the rescue, "both our brains are still rather waterlogged, and that does not tend to a flow of ideas." "Quite so," said Elizabeth. "My dear Beatrice, why don't you tie up your hair? You look like a crazy Jane. Not but what you hsve very nice hair," she added, crit ically. "Do you admire good hair, Mr. Bing'ham?" "Of course I do," he answeted gallantly, "but it is not common." Only Beatrice bit her lip with vexation. "I had almost forgotten about my hair," she said; "I must apologize for appearing in such a state. I would have done it up after dinner only I was too stiff, and while I was waiting for Betty I went to sleepj' "I think there is a bit of ribbon in that drawer. I saw you put there yesterday," answered the precise Elizabeth. "Yes.here it is. If you like,and Mr. Bingbamjwiil ex cuse it, I can tie it back for you," and with out waiting for an answer she eame behind her, and, gathering up the dense masses of her sister's locks, tied them round in such a fashion that they could not fall forward, though tbey still rolled down her back. Just then Mr. Granger came hack from THE his visit to the farm. He was in high humor. The pig had even surpassed her former efforts, and increased in a surprising manner, to tbe number'of 15 indeed. Eliza beth thereupon produced the two pounds odd shillings which she had "corkscrewed" out of the recalcitrant dissenting farmer, and the sight added to his satisfaction. "Would you believe it, Mr. Bingham," he said, "in this miserably paid parish I have nearly 100 owing tome, 100 in tithe. There's old Jones, who lives out toward the Bell Bock, he owes three years' tithe 34 Us ii. He can pay and he won't pay says he's a Baptist, and ain't going to pay no parson's dues though, for the matter of that, he's nothing but an old beer tub of a heathen." "Why don't vou proceed against him, then, Mr. Grang'er?" "Proceed, I have proceeded. I've got judgment, and I mean to issue execution in a few days. I won't stand it any longer," he went on, working himself up and shak ing his head, as he spoke till his thin, white hair fell about his eyes. "I'll have the law of him and the others too. You're a lawyer and you can help me. I tell you there's a spirit abroad which just comes to this no man isn't to pay his lawful debts, except, of course, tbe parson and the 'Squire. They must pay or go to the court. But there's law left, and I'll have it, before they play the Irish game on us here." And he brought down his fist with a bang upon the table. Geoflrey listened with some amusement. So this was the weak old man's sore point money. He was clearly very strong about that as strong as Lady Honoria, indeed, but with more excuse. Elizabeth also lis tened with evident approval, but Beatrice looked pained. "Don't get angry, father," she said: "perhaps he will pay after all. It is bad to take the law If you can manage any other way it breeds so much ill blood." "Nonsense, Beatrice," said her sister sharply. "Father is quite right. There's only one way to deal with them, and that's to seize their goods. I believe you are a socialist about property, as vou are about everything else. You want to pull every thing down, irom the Queen to the laws of marriage, all for the good of humanity, and I tell you your ideas will be" your ruin. Defy custom and it will crush you. You are running your head against a brick wall, and one dav you will find which is the harder." Beatrice flushed, bnt answered her sister's attack, which was all the sharper because it had a certain spice of truth in it "I never expressed any such views, Eliza beth, so I don't see why you should attribute them to me. I only saia that legal proceed ings breed bad blood in a parish; and that is true." "I did not say you expressed them," went on the vigorous Elizabeth; "you look them they ooze out of your words like w?ter from a peat bog. Everybody knows you are a radical and a freethinker and every thing else that's bad and mad, and con trary to that state of life in which it has pleased God to call you. The end of it will be that you will lose the niistresship of the school and I think it is rery hard on father and me that you should bring disgrace on us with your strange wars and immoral views, and now you can make what you like of it." "I wish all radicals were like Miss Bea trice," said Geoffrey, who was feeling ex ceedingly uncomfortable, with a feeble at tempt at polite iocositv. Bnt nobodr seemed to hear him. Elizabeth, who was now fairly in a rage, a faint flush upon her pale cheeks, her light eyes all ashine, and her thin fingers clasped, stood fronting her beautiful sister and breathing spite at every pore. It was easy for Geoffrey, who was watching her, to see that it was not her sis ter's views she was attacking; it was her sister. It was that soft, strong loveliness and the glory of that face; it was the deep, gentle mind, erring from its very greatness; and the bright intellect, which lit it like a lamp; it was the learning and the power that, give it play, would set a world a-flame as easily as it did the heart of the slow-witted hermit squh-e, whom Elizabeth coveted .these were the things that Elizabeth hated and bitterly assailed. . ' To be continued next Sunday? WEEDS OF SARG0SSA SEA. They Grow at One End, Decaying at the Other. Youth's Companion.! In the midst of the North Atlantic there is a large patch of floating seaweed, which has kept its place for centuries, with only slight driitings up and down according to the changing winds and currents. It was crossed by Columbus on his first voyage, and its position and extent have been known ever since, xt occupies an immense eddy between the equatorial current on the south, and the Gulf Stream on the north. The name is from tbe variety of seaweed which forms the "sea," Sargassum bacciferum, the berry bearing sargasso. Much diversity of opinion exists as to tbe origin of this floating mass. Hnmboldt believed it to be de tached from rocks at a considerable depth in the latitudes where it floats; others suppose it to come Irom the shores of the northern seas, having been detached from the rocks by the violence of the winds. Some again imagine that it comes from the rocky shores of the Gulfs of Mexico and Florida, while manv believe that it has never had any other than its present place of abode. No one has ever seen it attached to the rocks, nor have roots ever been discovered belonging to it The lower end of the stem always has a whitish, decayed appearance, just like a piece of tangle which has been some time cast on shore, while the extremi ties of the branches are universally of a very fresh and healthy appearance. Such being the case, we can scarcely help believing ;that these remarkable plants have existed since the time of their first creation to the present period as we now find them, floating always in this revolving Gulf Stream and undergoing a perpetual change from decay at one extremity, and growth at the other. Ther e is nothing unreasonable in this opinion, as seaweeds are not like land plants, which derive nourishment from the spot to which they are attached. THE BUI AND THE H0E8ESH0E. A Slorr Bhowlnc How Lszy People Take the Most Pains. A little boy was walking with his father one day. As they trudged along the father saw an old horseshoe lying in the road, and bade the boy pick it up and take it along. The lad looked at the shoe carelessly, and replied that it was not worth carrying, whereupon the father said nothing more, but quietly picked it up himself. He pretty soon sold the old iron for a penny at a road side smithy, and invested the coin in cher ries. The day was hot, and presently the man noticed that his son was beginning to, cast longing eves upon the box of cherries, but did not offer any to his son. He made pre tense of eating them, and dropped one to tbe ground as if by accident The boy piefced it up quicklv and ate it with relish. A little further on another dropped, and this too the lad lost no time in securing. So, one by one, all the cherries were dropped and picked up. "Well," remarked the father, when the last one had been eaten, "it did not pay to Eick up that horseshoe perhaps; but if yon ad stopped once for that, you wouldn't have needed to bend 20 times for the cherries." X0 HOD CARRIERS IN JAPAN. Ther Stake the Mortar Into Balls and Toss Them. "I saw the other day," writes a Yoko hama correspondent of the Detroit -free JPres$, "three men repairing the roof of a one-story building by resetting the heavy black tiles in mortar. The mortar was already mixed in a pile in the street One man was making this up into balls of about six pounds weight which he tossed up into the right hand of a man who stood on a lad der about midway between the- ground and the roof, and he in turn tossed it up into tbe hand of the man who stood oh the roof." PITTSBURG - DtSPATCJS. BOUTS IN THET DARK. i Wrestling the Best Defense Against Cowardly Assailants. EOEBEE AND CARKEEK SHOW HOW. The Yarious Holds Shown bj Means of a Flash-Light and Camera, MATSADA'S BATTLE WITH EUPFIANS fWBITTEN FOB TITS PISPATCH.1 "For self-defense against an assailant who makes his attack in the dark, there is noth ing to compare with wrestling." The speaker was a brawny professor of the most exact'of athletic sciences. "But suppose the assailant uses a pistol or a knife ?" I suggested. "I would seize him in such a way as to pinion both hands until he dropped the weapon. I should try to throw him at once. If unarmed, a simple lock would settle the business; if not, and if he happened to be unusually ugly, I would give him the 'strangler's hold, which would end him in a twinkling. There would be very little fight left in him after being half choked, you may believe. That is the advantage of wrestling in the dark. It is the highest grade of self-defense. The best evidence of 27ie Strangler's Bold. this is that the leading pugilists all learn wrestling nowadays." I had a novel ocular demonstration of the fact that wrestlers can work as scientifically in the dark as in the glare of tbe footlights yesterday afternoon. With the instantane ous camera and magnesium. light as umpire and referee, Ernest Boeber, the Gnecc Boman champion of New York State, and Jack Carkeek, the champion catch-as-catch-can wrestler, stood stripped to the waist in a darkened parlor on Wes Twenty-fifth street Boeber is a Hanoverian, 25 years old and limbed like a Hercules. He weighs 184 pounds, while Carkeek, who is a native of Michigan, 29 years of age and somewhat taller than Boeber, weighs 181 pounds. Both men wore dark trunks. Boeber began wrestling at 15 and has suc cessively encountered Sebastian Miller, the "Strong" Man of Munich;" Sorokichi, the "Jap;" "Strangler" Evan Lewis, Greek George and a score brothers. Carkeek. who has been 14 years a professional, has com peted in over 100 matches -here and in En gland. , WHAT THE FLASHES DISCLOSED. Sufficient light was admitted to permit of poising the camera, after which the room was again obscured in darkness, and tbe men went to work to illustrate the intricate and dangerous holds, including those that are forbidden by the rules and claimed as "foul." At the sicrnal the flash-light re vealed Boeber fast in the deadly "strangler's The Double Helton Lock. hold," with Carkeek's rifht arm over his neck and his left arm under his throat, the knuckles of both hands being pressed re lentlessly on Boeber's diaphragm, while the latter vainly strained and struggled to es cape from the choking embrace. A second flash disclosed a variation of the same forbidden hold. Carkeek was on his knees with Boeber's right arm hugging his neck and his letf encircling the Michigan man's throat iu a vise-like grasp. This is tbe hold which Evan Lewis introduced and which made him feared byall who met him. Most referees declare it foul, but some are latitudinarian enough to allow wrestlers to use almost any tactics they please, although they are distinctly barred by the rules. "This hold," panted Boeber, as the men paused for breath, "is simply choking a man to death. When I wrestled with Lewis he tried it on me twice. I broke away the first time, but couldn't wrigelo out the second trip. We were wrestling catch-as-catch-can. All the professionals Bide Holl From the Bridge. have got the hold now, but they rarely try to use It THE DOUBLE NELSON. Again the men set to work in the dark ness. A third flash showed Boeber in the throes of the "double-Nelson" lock a neck breaking, crushing holdfrom which there is no escape, unless the victim's strength is greatlv superior to that ol his opponent. The "double-Nelson" is used in both Grteco-Boman and catch-as-catch-can wrest ling. Carkeek stood immediately behind the Hanoverian with his arms under Boe ber's armpits around the back of his neck and clasped behind the Iatter's head, which was forced forward on his breast Boeber's arms were apparently powerless in their ter rible hold. In this hold, which is barred in England and Canada, but allowed here, although many judges consider it arr unfair one, as liable to inflict serious injury, the fingers must not be interlocked. Clasping the fingers is barred "foul" at all times,, for the double reason that snch a clasp cannot be parted and that it enables the owner of the StfKDAY, EEBRTTABY stronger wrist io bend hack and even break the fingers of his rival. The moment such a clasp is observed it is the duty of the ref eree to award the match to the other man on the "foul." DANOEB OF NECK-BBEAKIKG.- The next rift in the darkness showed a re markable sight Boeber was. standing on his head, bracing himself on his hands, both feet straight in the air and describing a curve outward to the floor. Carkeek, on his knees, had Boeber's right arm and neck partly in a "single-Nelson" lock, from which the latter was breaking awav. The only way to escape from the "single-Nelson" effectively is by bendingdown low, jumping on yonr head and turning a somersault to the floor. This is called "the spin," and 37ie Spin, should not be attempted by any man who has not the strongest kind of a neck. Other wise the chances are even that he will be picked up with a broken neck. One of the most dangerous of ail holds, "the back heave," was next illustrated by the athletes in tbe dark. Carkeek had grasped Boeber bv the right arm and shoul der, and with the'aid of the "reverse heave" a combination movement of arm and hip to elevate an opponent, had hoisted him on his back. When tbe camera caught the pair Carkeek was straining to throw Boeber over his head, but in vain, for the Hanover ian had secured a hold on Carkeek's left leg with his rieht foot that effectually stopped the Iatter's tactics. A "back heave" at the hands of a strong wrestler would place his rival hors de combat iu a twinkling and might disable him. THE CHOKING PEOCESS. "The most effective hold," said Champion Carkeek. "is the neck lock. In Graco- 'Boroan wrestling you are not allowed to catch the legs or to clasD bands so as to ureas fingers. In making the 'bridge' that is, The Sack Heave. arching the back and resting on bands, elbows, head and feet, so as to avoid a fall the man on top is allowed to press his fore arm against the under man's neck, but he must not press his fingers." 1 "Would not the forearm pressure choke a man as quick as the knuckles?" "Yes; but there's nothing to prevent tbe under man from rolling over. Tbe 'side roll' is one of tbe ways of escaping from the bridge. Sebastian Miller is the greatest roller I know, "American wrestlers are cleverer than the English now," Carkeek continued, as he rubbed down his big arms. "The greatest wrestlers to-day are George Stedman, who is the champion of Cumberland and Westmore land style better known as the 'back-hold' style and Tom Bragg, tbe Cornishman. Now we have Lewis, Greek George, Miller and myself, and we have all beaten them at their own game." ONE OF THE JAP'S FEATS. "Now," said my chaperon, as we came away, "you have had au illustration of what can be done by skilled wrestlers in a friendly bout in the dark. In an encounter in dead earnest with an assailant tbey would not be so. gentle. I have known a single wrestler to floor five men in as many seconds simply by using ordinary tactics and they were tough characters, too. Depend upon it they would hare stood even a poorer chance in the darkness than in daylight, for while his science never deserts him, they would have fought at random. The man who used up the five ruffians was Matsada Sor akichi, the little Jap." G. H. SANDISON. PRICES IN JAPAN. A Married Couple Cnn Bestn 'Housekeeping for 53 SO There. An idea of prices iu Japan is furnished in the following sent to the Detroit ' .Free Press by a correspondent at Yokohama: A pair of sandals made of straw cost i cents. Three men with two jinrikisha drag two persons and baggage four miles up a steep mountain road for 34 cents. A servant girl for one month's service gets 125 yen, equal to 98 cents. She is furnished also bath money and hair-dressing money, about 20 cents. A new tooth brush, six fori cent Four boxes of matches for of a cent Cloth cotton with a pretty figure enough for a girl's kimono or dress, 60 yen. equal to 45 cents. Day's board for a jinrikisha man and tbe laboring class, lodging and two meals, 1 cents. The outlay for commencing housekeeping for furniture, bedding, mats, cooking uten sils, table service, such asneededbyayoung couple of tbe laboring class, costs 'S3 86. The pay per day for laborers and artisans is about as follows: Blacksmith, 22 to 37 cents; painters, 18 to 28 cents; caolies, IB to 22 cents; gardeners, 18 to 37 cents; carpenters, 30 to 45 cents. The rent of a neat house, with pretty gardens, containing one room of eight mats, one of four mats, one of two mats, and three rooms of six mats each, be sides kitchen, 750 yen, equals -$5 62 per month. It Puzzled Her. "How do yon manage to find your way across the ocean?" said a lady to s tea cap tain. "Why, by the compass. The needle always points to the north." "Yes, I know. But what if yon wish to go south?", 1890. OYER THE ISTHMUS; The Railway That Connects the At lantic and Pacific Oceans. DAGGERS THAT BESET TEAYELEES. The Industrious Jigger, Wicked Flea and the Agile Tarantula. iIOEGAN'3 SACK OF ANCIENT PANAMA lCOMlESrOMDINCB or Till DISFATCB. J Panama, TJ. S. Colombia, January 4. This Isthmian railway is a far greater in stitution than the world at large Is aware of. Its managers have discreetly chosen to keep their affairs to themselves, as other Wise Men of the East have been known to do in various kinds of remunerative busi ness; and should you ask one of them about it, you would doubtless somehow receive the impression that it had been a losing invest ment The facts in the case are that ever since its completion (in 1855) this railroad ha3 been one of the most profitable in the world. For nearly 20 years the local fare between Aspmwall and Panama was $25 each person for a ride of 47 miles, or more than 50 cents per milel During those days the traffic was much heavier than now, and each month thousands were carried over the line every thousand passengers yielding to the company precisely $25,000. At that time the Pacific Mail Steamship Company was carrying steerage people, as they now carry first-class passengers all the way around from New York to San Fran cisco, a distance of 5,500 miles, including passage across the Isthmus by this same road, and the best of board and lodging during 32 days, for only ?80; while for four hours suffocation in a crowded second-class car, with no food or other comfort, one was required to pay $251 With tbe completion of the Pacific rail roads across the United States, it was deemed advisable to come down a little and the fare across the Isthmus was reduced to $10 per ticket The difference, however, is largely offset by a charge of 6 cents per pound for "extra baggage" (only 100 pounds being allowed gratis) which generally doubles the price of tbe ticket A lady of my acquaint ance lately crossed with three trunks of or dinary size and a small box of curios and her bill for extra baggage was $45, American gold, for a distance of 47 miles. BETTEB THAN NO KOAD. But the old price trebled would have seemed cheap in the days of '47-'49, to the thousands who flocked across this highway to California, when men were crazed with the gold fever. Then the trip occupied a week at tbe best, there being no road what ever; first a tedious journey up the Chagres river in native bongors, and thence by horse or mule through slimy swamps and tangled thickets, where the trail was' soon well marked by graves and bleaching bones. As there was no accommodation for travel ers along tbe route, tbey were compelled to sleep in the open air; while the price of a horse or mule and enough feed to keep soul and body together during tbe learlul pas sage almost equaled the sum that the most' sanguine lunatio might reasonably expect to reap in the gold regions, if he lived to get there. And so many perished by the way side, from camping nights near the deadly river, that the "Isthmus fever" became known to the world as a distinct malady and one almost incurable. But the road was built under discouragements that would have ruined most men and therefore the un daunted few who carried it to successful completion are fairly entitled to a rich re ward. At present it transports an annual average of 340,000 tons of merchandise and 6,000 passengers from ocean to ocean. A -WAGON EOAD POSSIBLE. Along its course there are 25 villages and stations, each possessing some featnre of in terest peculiar to itself. A few months ago Senor Bicardo Bemero, an intrepid ex plorer of Panama, determined to seek out, amid the tangled growths of centuries, one of the ancient trans-Atlantic roads which the early Spaniards are known to have made. Starting from a point on the eastern coast called David, he succeeded in crossing the Isthmus in nine days, cutting a path as he went for his cattle to pass. He contem plates making another attempt soon, with a larger body of men, mules, horses and cattle, to improve and widen the same trail. Being assisted by several men of means and promi nence it is not improbable that a wagon road across the Isthmus may one day dis pute the railway's exclusive right of trans portation. Passengers on the trains are crowded in, ofUn three in a car seat all jabbering in every known language. Despite the exces sive heat every head that can find room for itself is thrust out of a window, in vocifer ous admiration of the beautiful scenery on every side. The abortive ship-canal follows us most of the way. Orchids are every where, in infinite variety of shape and color. It is said that at least 24 species of the palm family may be found here more than are collected together anywhere else in the world. IMPOBTANCE OF THE PALM. The palm tree plays an important part in this section. Domestic utensils and weapons of war, pins, needles, cloth and thread, boats, houses, roofs andfurmture are made from it, and in many instances It answers also for food and drink. Children are born under its shadow, cradled in its leaves, reared on its fruit and sap, clothed-in its woven fibers and finally co to the last sleep in a coffin made of its bark. The railway villages are all populated with blacks and tbey are usually only half clothed. Nearly every village has its little "store," containing small stocks of irrocer ies, liquors, tobacco, soap, candles and the cheapest drygoods, bnt apparently with no patrons. Every now and then we saw a negro policeman perambulating his beat, barefooted and in short white trousers, armed with rifle, sword and brace of pistols. At every station men and women scam pered through the train, offering cakes, like brick bats, to the hungry passengers, drinks of various kinds, tall, cone-like cups made of cocoauut fiber, paper fans with advertisements printed on them, evidently intended for gratuitous distribution, but which readily sold in this sweltering heat at from 25 to 60 cents each anything to turn an honest penny. Parrots of various species make the forest ring with their unmusical cries. We saw humming birds of gorgeous hues, scarcely bigger than bees, and great toucans whose ugly beaks seem especially designed for the gobbling of tropical fruits. Tapirs abound in the marshes, and we are told that their flesh, which greatly resembles pork, is rel ished by tbe natives as well as coon in Ken tucky. There is also the wild hog, or pec cary, which is hunted for food. Boa con strictors and other big snakes are not un common, but are not nearly so much to be dreaded as the tiny asps and vipers, some not longer than yonr finger, and the exact color of the dead leaves or bits of moss under which they hide. LIKE BOASTED BABY MONKEY. There are lizards without nnmber, some whose bite is deadly Jrom slimy reptiles to scaly six-foot-long iguanas, whose flesh is considered the greatest possible delicacy, next to the juicy white breast of a roasted baby monkey. By the way, the eggs of the iguana may be found for sale in the mar kets of Spanish-America and command a hieh price. Of course there are scorpions, centipedes, tarantulas et al, for which we are warned to keep a sharp lookout, even in the cars; but they are not a circumstance compared to "the wicked flea," with which every grain of sand and particle of dust is loaded. They are too tiny to he looked out for, but every one of us is a living and speckled monument to "their persistent industry. Even smaller than the flea, and more enter prising in pursuit of business, is the jigger, whose native name is chigoe. So tiny is tbe pestiferous little wretch that .'he cos crowd In between the seams of your gar ments, or between the sole and upper of your shoe. He entertains an especial fond ness or the humah foot, and will invariably confine himself to 'that part of your anatomy if you give him a chance. So slight is his sting, that you scarcely feel it; yet all tbe same he gets in his work, depositing an Infinitesimal eeg beneath a toenail, or somewhere under the cutis. Presently a slight itching ensues, and in a day or two a membraneous sac is formed, which must at once be pierced deep with a needle, and afterward thoroughly washed with tobacco juice. If the sac is allowed to remain, a huge ulcer forms, and the victim is likely to lose his toes; Tor tbe infant jig ger that issued from the first egg is a most astonishing propagator, capable of raising several interesting families and becoming a hale and hearty grandmother in a fortnight's time. SIB HENEY HOBQAN'S CABEEB. Most celebrated of the mountains of the Isthmus, from which Balboa caught his first glimpse of the Pacific is the Cerro de Ins Bbcaneros, or Hill ot the Buccaneers, from wbose top the pirate, Morgan, had his first view of ancient Panama, and at wbose base he encamped tbe night before his at tack upon that city just 221 years ago. As that old-time buccaneer played so important a part on the Isthmus at one time nearly depopulating it, having destroyed tbe proudest city in all the Spanish colonies, whose fall gave rise to the Panama of to dayperhaps it may be well to recount a few of his exploits. For a partial compila tion thereof we are mainly indebted to Mr. Thomas W. Knox and his inimitable "Boy Travelers." In those days piracy was fashionable, and it wjs not long after "the treasure galleons began to traverse the "Spanish Main" be fore piratical crafts were in hot pursuit. Many of them brought their families to the New World or married Indian women; and while these remained on shore, hunting wild game and raising crops for the sus tenance of their fellows at sea, the more adventurous sailed in search of plunder, returning occasionally to the colony to de liver their share of spoils to the settlers on land, from whom provisions were obtained for another voyage. Sometimes prisoners were brought to the colonies and kept as slaves, some of tbem scions of the proudest houses of old Castile; but as a rule they were released on payment of a heavy ran som, or put to death if no ransom was forth coming. A BECOBD OF ATROCITIES. Morgan had earned an excellent reputa tion as a buccaneer, the stories of whose atrocities would fill a volume. He had cap tured several cities and murdered many people, often under circumstances of unpar alleled cruelty, all his prisoners whom he could not Bell into slavery, men, women, children and priests, being slaughtered without mercy. He was a Welshman of low birth and most of his followers were outlaws from that country and others of tbe British Isles. At one time he had 2,000 men under his command, and a fleet of 37 ships; but as his piracies were directed against the Spaniards, with whom the English were at war, Albion looted upon him with a kindly eye. Therefore, when he organized theexoedition that ended with the destruction of the proud old city of Panama, the Governor of Jamaica ordered an, English vessel of 36 guns to go along and help him, and conferred authority on Morgan to act in English interest. Before proceeding to Panama the fleet of legalized pirates captured Maracaibo, Saint Catharine's and several other places, com mitting innumerable atrocities and murder ing many people. After capturing the city of Chagres at the mouth of the river of the same name, Morgan rebuilt its fort, garri soned it with 500 men, left 150 more to take careot the ships and with only 1,200 men started across the Isthmus. They ascended the Cbagres river as far as possible, and they marched through the forest, cutting a path before them. Ther nearlv starved to death during the terrible journey, but, apparently bv direct aid of the Evil One, they lived through it somehow, and upon the summit of the "Hill of the.Bnccaneers" looked down upon the richest city of New Spain. THE SACK OF PANAMA. An army of 3,000 Spaniards came out to the defense of Panama, but within three hours after the firing of the first shot the handful of half-starved pirates were in full possession. They plundered the churches and convents and tbe houses or the wealthy and tortured many of the priests and citi zens to make them disclose more hidden treasures. The wise Panamaians, in antici pation of such an emergency, had previously loaded a ship with the gold and silver and jewels of the churches and convents, the King's plate and precious stones and private valuables of every kind, which set off for Spain the moment the tide of battle turned in favor of the invaders. Apprehend ing something of this kiud, Morgan had sent out a ship on purpose to intercept any departing vessels; but her officers and crew, eager to do theirsbare in plunder ing the captured city disobeyed orders; and thus the richest treasures were lost In a fury of rage at finding themselves thus thwarted of the objects of all their toil and creed, the disappointed robbers ont-did themselves in deeds of barbarity and at last reduced the once splendid city to ashei. They carried away 600 prisoners and 175 beasts laded with plunder and left behind a wide swath ot rapine and desolation. These distinguished services were promptly recognized by the British Government and the murderer, Morgan, was at once knighted by King Charles II. The war with Spain being over, his occupation as a buccaneer was gone; and so he was given an important commission and to the end of his days figured as Sir Henry Morgan. Fannie B. Wabd. HAELNG FISH PASTE. A Cnrioun Process and a Strange Food Prod- net of Japan. "I sawjone day," says a Yokohama corre spondent of the Detroit Free Press, "in a small shop here, three boys vigorously beat ing something in a large wooden mortar. One of the pestles bad its upper end inserted in a hole in the ceiling, tbe other two only followed the base of the first one as it moved around the surface of the mortar. It was the first time I ever saw three pestles going in one mortar at once. Interested in the process, I found they were beating the flesh of a small fish, termed janago in Japanese, together with that of some species oi snare, xnis paste, maae up into rolls about 8 inches long by 3 inches in diameter, has a small piece of sugi wood fastened ou one side. It is then baked and sold as kamaboko. It is highly esteemed and brings about 9 cents a pound. A bet ter variety is made of shark flesh only. Another variety of fish paste, called hampen, is made in similar manner, except the form, this being square and thin, 6 inches by I inch. These forms of fish food are cooked in various ways and served with soy or other sauces, and are often partially baked as breakfast hashed meat is with us at home. PILE DRIVING IN JAPAH. The Men Slake Play oi It and Sloe Continu ously. In making the foundation for a house in Japan, according to a Yokohama corre spondent of tbe Detroit Free Press, a heavy upright piece of timber eight inches or so in diameter, with a stone foot, is used to heat down the earth to more solid condition. The manner of using this pile-driver, or rather earth-settler, is curious and novel. A framework is erected about ten feet above the ground, supporting planks parallel to the foundation and wide enough apart to allow the driver to project up between them. On the elevated platform stand about 15 men, each holding a rop ;, one end of which is attached near the base of tbe driver, and at intervals of about 20 seconds, at a given Bignal or shoot, they Ml lift together and let it fall by its own gravity. Meanwhile cer tain of the men keep up a continuous song, tbe rising and falling of the driver being like bass note of the drum. Tbe whole thing seems more like play than, work. THE SOCIAL PKOBLEff Mr. Bellamy's Ideas Are Attracting a Great Deal of Attention. THE EQUIVALENT OP AKAECHISM. Salyini Took His Famou Death let From a Scene in a Hospital ST0EIE3 OP THE LATE EUFTJ3 CHOATE CCOBBZSFOXBEXCX 07 TBS SlSTATCHl BOSTON, January 31. The Nationalist movement, so-called, has of late been re ceiving a good deal of attention here, which is justfied, it is to bs supposed, by the fact that it seems to have gathered in so many discontented men and women, who are mora or less consciously inclined to accept the proposition "whatever is, is wrong," and who seize upon any scheme which is offered with the promise of bringing about a dif ferent state of things. In the current At lantic Monthly not only has General Francis A. Walker, who to the country at large is generally known in connection with his work in the Census Bureau, taken up the restate ment of old dreams which now goes by the name of "Mr. Bellamy's theory," and with all seriousness shown how ntterly fal lacious is the whole scheme from the point of view of practical common sense; but in an inimitable bit of satire Dr. Holmes, too, ha3 a fling at the impossible and tedious perfections of Mr. Bellamy's social paradise in a picture of a state in Saturn where equal'ty in all things prevailed to such a degree that to have a pocket would have been looked upon as conclusive proof of an intent to steal, since except for tbe purpose of secreting ill gotten gains no one could have use for such a thing. On Sunday last Mr. Edward Atkinson took up the ball in an address before the Free Beligious Association upon "The In terdependence of Man," in which he very justly classed the Nationalists with the An archists as far as the logical outcome of their position goes. Both inflame the poor against the rich; both are totally at vari ance with existing conditions and encour age discontent; both teach that the individ ual is nothing, the State all; and both are in their intentions thor oughly dangerous to the State a3 it at present exists. Of course it is to be allowed that in the case of the Nationalists! tbe intention is less consciously destructive! than in that of the Anarchists, bnt this, after all, only lets tbe former out on the moral count at the expense of tbe intellec tual. The Nationalists pretend to be de lighted with the attention they are receiv ing, but the novelty is already wearing off, and there will not be much more notice taken of them until they are able to prove by some decided movement that they really possess power and stability. STOBIES OF BUFUS CHOATE. There are in circulation among the law yers here a good many stories of the late Bufus Choate which are said not to have been in print On one occasion in court, when Mr.Choate had no particular case.and was manifestly talking with a single intent to conceal that fact, Chief Jnstice Shaw, be fore whom he was pleading, at length lost patience with the flow of words, and inter rupted. "Mr. Choate," he demanded, "do yon not mean so and so?" "Yes, your Honor." "Then why don't you say so?" "1 should, Your Honor, "replied Choate, with his inimitable manner, "if I had Yonr Honor's power of expression." On another occasion the Chief Justice was for some reason still more annoyed at some thing Mr. Choate did or said, and adminis tered a snnb which was delivered with an emphasis which the irritation of the moment made rather more emphatic than was wholly warrantable. Mr. Choate sat down im mediately, murmuring sotto voce: "His Honor is a pertect gentleman, but he knows no law," a comment to which Judge Shaw'3 singular eminence as a lawyer lent point. SAtVTNl'S DEATH SCENE. Now that Salvia! has published his fare well to America it seems to come home to those who are lond of him that we have really lost him. We know so well that we sball never see bis like, and that we are now embarked upon that elderly course of say ing to a younger generation that they were born too late, since tbey have missed him; that we would fain disbelieve still that this is indeed his last tour in America. When be was in Boston, earlier in the season, a friend, a physician, said to him that he could not in the least comprehend how an. actor could understand the physical aspects of death so well as it was shown in the powerful death scene in "La Morte Civile"" that Salvini did. "I studied that death in the hospital," the actor answered. "I happened to see an old man die there. He was au old priest wbose niece had left him to make a runa way marriage with a man of whom he dis approved. The grief which he felt broke him down, and when they found at the hospital where he was, that he could not live, they sent for the young couple to come and beg his forgiveness before he died. I was there when they came. The old man caught sieht of them, raised himself up in bed, ancL Jbr an instant all his fire and force seemed to come back; then it went out like the flicker of a candle. That was here I learned the death in VLa Morte Civile.' " THE GBEAT ACTOB'S FINANCES. Salvini has of late years been ambitious first for his art, which he loves in a way which seems almost to belong to a brgone age, so single and intense is it, and after that for bis family. He has saved for the sake of leaving them independent, and it is Erobable that his efforts in this direction ave been successful. He is, while iu this country, beset with all sorts of beggars, whom lie is too good-natured to deny; and one of the droll incidents of his last visit to Boston was the call of an impudent youth, who insisted upon his buying tickets to a. drygoods clerks' ball. In the evening of that day I saw him play "Samson," and the absurdity of his, having two tickets to the drygoods clerks' ball came over me just as he was about to enter for the first time, so that I expected the play to he spoiled for me, Fortunately he carries one awav in spite of incongruous thoughts. Abxo Bates. STOVES E0E THE POCKET. A Japanese Article That' Qnlto a Ziuxary In Cold Weather. Washington Star. ' "Why, how warm your hand isl""ex claimed young Noodles, upon clasping hands with his friend Timpkins on F street one day during the recent cold snap. Timpkins grinned. "You haven't your gloves on, either; and yet, while my gloved hands are like icicles, yours are as warm as toast Do you carry around stoves in your overcoat pockets?" "That is precisely what I do." replied! Timpkins, laughing. "Your random guess struck the fact squarely. I carry a stove la each Bide pocket of my top coat Here la onfiortbem." With this Timpkins drew forth and ex hibited to view a enrious little tin box about 6 inches long by 4 in width and 1 inch la thickness. It was slightly curved in shape and appeared to be covered with some stuff" like glazed calico. When the top was slid off the inside was seen to be made of tin per forated with a great many holes. It con tained nothing but a round stick of some queer looking substance, which was burning at tbe end with a bright redness, but with out any flame or a particle of smoke. "What do you call it?" demanded Noodles wonderingly. "It is a Japanese stove a device that has been used in Japan very commonly for centuries. You see, it is simply a tin box with holes in it, covered on the outside with this calico stuff to help retain the heat It Is really quite hot, you observe, and it -will remain so for five hours with the burning of single fire stick. They are so small and. sa flat that they don't even make one'i pocket bulge.". r. -