iiMvvjlBS&UjWaSSB T JliJr fT5 T SECOND PART. FUN WiLDS, Boger Casement's Unsuccess ful Hunt for Elephant PIKED ON BY THE BOXKIS. The Start From Equator for a Land Unknown to White Men. CEREMOXY OP BLOOD BROTHERSBIP rWElTIEX FOE THE DIErATCn.1 NO. 2. IFE at tlie equa tor, 7S0 miles up the Congo, was very different from my experi ences on the low er reaches ot the riyer. My friend, E. J. Glare, was in charge of our station, and was the "blood broth er" of many of the surrounding chiefs, and the friend of nil the natives. They daily crowded the precincts of the station, carry ing spears and shields and other implements of war, yet with friendly smiles on their faces and good will apparent in all their actions. They brought us fowls, goats, palm wine and eggs, either as presents, receiving in re tarn suitable gifts, or to sell for beads, cowries (small seashells, which are the cur rent money of many Central Afrcan tribes), brass wire or strips of different-colored cot ton cloths. Barely during my three nionchs' stay at Equator was the peace of the district disturbed by strife between neighboring vil lages or attacks from outsiders; and although we heard of the decapitation or slaves in Til lages not far distant, executed to accompany their masters to the spirit world, our pres ence and oft-expressed abhorrence of this custom restrained our more immediate neighbors from indulging in their head cutting propensities. THE TEIBAL DIFFICULTIES. Sometimes a canoe full of Bonkis natives of the banks ot the great tributary of that name, ibe Konki or Black river which enters the Congo only four miles above the equator would pass by our station, keeping well out in stream and challenge the natives of Waugatta, our nearest village, to come to their nyer in search of ivory and see the tort of reception they would get, and the Waugatta men lining the banks would shout themselves hoarse in burling back in sulting epithets at the Honkis, their mothers, grandmothers and entire line of female an cestors. Sometimes at night a descent of Ronki canoes would be made on some unprotected "Waugatta settlement and two or three women or children captured and carried off to slavery up the bis tributary. Glave and I remained perfectly neutral in these inter tribal conflicts, not wishing to identify our selves with one party, tor we were desirous of establishing friendly relations with the Bonkis, and we were sometimes able to pro tect a small party ot them who came to our station to trade or buy cowri s from the vio lence of our own friendly "Waugatta men, to whom the sight of any one bearing that hated name was as the red r3g is to the bull. Soon sifter my arriving at Equator we de termined to go on a hunting excursion to the north bank of the Congo, where ele phants were reported by the natives as being Tery numerous. Our way lay through a maze of channels between forest-covered islands or sedgy sandbanks which stud the placid bosom of the Congo at this point. A NIGHT IN CANOES. Owing to the great heat in the daytime we decided to start at night and paddle the greater part of the way before morning. Manning two canoes with about 20 men in A Srvth With the Honkis. all, friendlv natives of Waugatta who were always eager to accompany us on hunting journeys, lor the sake of the fun and the meat we were likely to secure, we started at 9p.m. one night early in October, 1887. A chief named Mongessi, with one ot his wives and two slaves, helped to sirell our party, for Mongessi was ever ready to show his liking ltr the white man, and it was a feather in his cap to be a sharer of our hunt ing exploits. My servant "Tati" (a coast native I had brought up with me) and Glare's little native cook, a youth of 12 or so named Mochindu, came also to attend on us. We paddled steadily on for several hours between thick walls of foliage through nar row channelsMrout upon the broad stretches of the river lit up by a glorious moon, Toward 1 A. M., the men feeling tired, they suggested a halt for an hour or two's rest, and seeing fires shining amid the trees on an island some half a mile off, we made toward them. As wc drew in nearer the Ehore we could see many figures squatting around the fires, which lit up the bare tree trunks of the forest background and re vealed several little grass huts scattered on the edge of the clearing. As onr approach became known, the gathering round the fires broke up. "Wild yells arose from a score of lusty throats, and voices in the Eonki dialect shouted to us not to dare to land, and that we should all have our throats cut if we put foot on shore. A THBEATENINQ DEMONSTRATION. Spears and knives were brandished, guns seized and pointed at us (old flintlock muskets from tar down the river which had passed through a dozen tribes in reaching their present owners) aud an indescribable hub-bub ensued. "We called out that we only wished to rest for a few hours, that we were friends and would do no harm, but it was all in vain. The fires were scattered and only a few red ashes remained, and we could see that any attempt to land on our part would mean a fight. So, calling ont that we were going sway, we shoved ofl and commenced pad dling out into the stream. As we got about 30 yards from land, bang! went a gun in among the trees and a charge of shot whizzed past us, followed almost im mediately by another report, and this time one of our men was wounded in the thigh. Glave and Z were in the same canoe, and, """Wmitirrsm JtSpSPMP with our headmen Bionelo and Bakunn.two "Waugatta natives who carried extra rifles of ours, we replied with our Express and Martini-Henry rifles, while the other canoe, ot which Mongessi took command, poured in a dropping fire from four or five flintlocks. We were out in the full light of the moon, while our foes were completely hidden in the darkness of the forest bank." Loud cries of derisiou and shouts from the shore greeted our fusilade nnd.paddling up stream, we gave another broadside in the direction of the smoldering fires, which this time was received in silence. A BEST ON THE SEDGE-GEAS3. Eeeling we could do nothing that night, while if we remained near we offered a cap ital aim to our hidden foes, we determined to make for the opposite bank ot the chan nel, about 300 yards across. A thick, float ing mass of interlacing sedge grass clinging to the bank prevented us reaching the shore. Accordingly, fastening onr canoes to this, we stepped out onto the grass, which bore our weight, although it ro'c and fell be neath each movement We promptly stretched ourselves out on this grassy couch, and although a leg would sometimes break through and reach the river flowing beneath we man aged to keep afloat and get some sort of rest in spite of mosquitoes and a drizzling shower of rain. I had an india-rubber ground sheet with me, useful for stretching on the floor of one's tent or sleeping on at a pinch, and this I now endeavored to rig into a shelter from rain and mosauitoes by throwing it over my head ana huddling my knees up to my chin, while I could feel my self slowly making a deeper impression In the grass raft and gradually settling down in the sedge until I expected every moment to go through altogether and take a plunge in the riyer. My comfort was of short duration, for Mongessi objected to rain and mosquitoes as much as I did and observing that it was an unpleasant night for an al fresco entertain ment on a floating island, he, followed by his wife and two or three of the men. promptly crawled under my extempore tent ) 0p UNPLEASANT NIGHT QUAETERS. and huddled up close around me. I was MONGESSI AND HIS 'WIFE. banked in by a olid mass of warm flesh and could scarcely move a finger, and al though the mosquitoes were now effectually excluded from every square inch of my per son, I soon became aware oi the fact that there are things worse even than mosquito bites in this world of-ours, and among them I was competed to reVkoh "fhS" atmosphere under that ground sheet I delicately hinted to Mongessi, in broken tones, that I thought his wife a very nice woman at a distance, and that I should be delighted to see more of her and his companions on a fine day on shore when the wind was in the right direction and they were bearing well to leeward of me, but he only replied by digging me in the ribs and asking me for some tobacco and a match to light up his pipe and smoke. I abandoned the ground sheet to this happy family, and Blowly the night wore away, while Glave and I dozed or chatted alternately. Our Konki friend? across the water having relit their fires on our departure under the shelter ot one of the huts were now dancing round them and singing wild war songs, brandishing spears and knives as they hurled defiance at us across the intervening channel. With the earliest dawn we re-entered our canoes, loaded every gun and lifle and com menced paddling across to renew the fight, determined to punish the Bonkis for their unprovoked attack of the previous night They saw us coming, and renewed their wild dance and song, but as we came within 100 yards or so of the shore they one by one sidled off behind the tree trunks and into the forest, so that by the time onr canoes grounded on their beach we could not see a single foe. BEVENGE UPON THE BONKIS. We sent a volley in between the trees and then landed. Our natives promptly seized all the huts, which contained only a few paddles and some fishing tackle, and setting fire to them we pushed off, taking with us two canoes which we found up a little creek. These we sank in mid-stream, and then catching sieht of two big canoes full of men making off up river about 800 yards above us we gave chase, thinking them to be probably of the party which had fired on u. However, after half an hour's hard paddling we found we were no nearer, so we contented ourselves with seeing them turn up a side creek and disappear from view in the thick bushes of the island we had been skirting, and feeling that, having dispersed our enemies and suf ficiently punished their wanton attack by the capture of the two canoes and the burn ing of the huts, we returned down stream and continued our journey to the north bank mainland, passing the scene of the conflagration, on which the Bonkis were be ginning to reassemble to see what damage we had done. We paddled all that day under a burning sun until late in the afternoon, before we reached the mainland ot the north shore. Camping for the night in a thick forest, Glave shot a couple of monkeys, which the men cooked for their supper, and Bukunu bagged a horn-bill, which served Glave and myself an evening meal. NO ELEPHANTS OE BUFFALO. We spent the two next days paddling through a long succession of narrow chan nels of the ereat river, searching for traces of elephant ground and although we landed at one or two spots ana naa some hours of hard tramping through forest and swamp up to our waists in water and mud, or scrambling over roots of trees, we could find no recent tracks of either elephant or buffalo. The natives of a village we came to in our wanderings, named Bakanga, assured us that the buffaloes were so numer ous in the woods around that they were obligedto fence in their manioc and banana plantations with logs and felled trees to keep out these intruders, and following two of the men, who offered to guide us to a spot where we should certainly find game, we spent three hours in a terribly hot crawl through a thick wood with dense under growth to an open patch of long grass with out coming across anything worth shooting, Beturning to the village, we determined to remain there all night and have a try at the buffaloes in the early morning, when the natives assured us their manioc plantations would be overrun by them. Mongessi, who labored under the delusion that he was a great sportsman, Ijad mean while primed himself with a bir r?onrd full of palm wine, and he now set off with Glave' Express rifle in a Email canoe, pad dled by his unwilling wife, to shoot a hip- TUT? popotamus which was playing about in the Congo opposite the village". MONGESSl'S UNLUCKT EXPEDITION. The canoe wobbled fearfully owing to Mongessi's wild attempts to stand upright in it, and long ere the canoe we promptly dispatched after him for the recovery of the rifle had been able to overtake them, he and his wife were floundering in the river; but the rifle, fortunately enough, was safe at the bottom of the canoe. Mongessi returned somewhat damped, and the poor wife con soled herself for her ducking by spoiling his evening meal and making herself gener ally disagreeable for the remainder of the evening. By this time we had had enough of Ba kanga, so we departed an hour later for the equator by a new route, through a different net-work of islands, in the channels between which we came upon herds of hippos, but very wild, owing to the presence of many fisning canoes. We succeeded in shooting a couple, bnt, although they were badly wounded, we could not tell it we had suc ceeded in killing them outright or not, and were obliged to continue our journey in or der to reach our station before night, where I arrived suffering from a severe touch of fever, brought on by exposure to the sun during our long passage of the river. Mongessi endeavored to share with the wounded native the honors of the expedi tion, but the production of the piece of stone shot from the Eonki gun from the latter's thigh finally raised him so high in popular estimation that Mongessi was compelled to admit he was not the hero of our fruitless elephant hunt. THE TItir TO THE UALINGA. On October 23 the long-expected Florida appeared in sight, steaming round the point below our station. We had been wearily waiting for her, Glave and I, to make our eagerly desired journey up the Lulungu river, which, with its main feeder, the Ma linga, native report described as being the richest ivory-producing affluent of the Congo. We "were anxious, too, to pen etrate the country of the Balolo, the strange people dwelling on the banks of the Malinga, of whom Rev. George Grenfell, of nie xjugusu xsapiisi Mission, naa Drought down some curious information from his trip up the Malinga on the little mission steamerPeace. His had been the first visit of a white man to that river, and we were anxious to see how the natives would now receive us, stopping at every village as.we intended doing, aud endeavoring to make friends by undergoing the ceremony of blood brotherhood, done by scratching the arm of each party and rubbing one abrasion against the other, and purchasing almost anything the natives would bring us to sell. Not wishing to provoke hostilities by in troducing a quarrelsome foreign element we left the regular Zanzibari and coast-native crew of the Florida at Equator, replacing them bv the best and most capable of our native friends fromthesurroundingvillages. There still remained the two Ligos men, from the British colony on the Gold coast, who acted as assistants to our white engi neer in looking after the engines and fires two or three Loaugo firemen from a district north of the Congo mouth and my Loango servant Tati, as well as one Zanzibari, An- ra. Making Blood-Brothers. drew, who had been educated at a mission in Zanzibar, but who unfortunately proved a great thief. DOGS OF THE EXPEDITION. And last, but not least, I must mention the canine members of the crew, Paddy, Snooks and Spot, a fox-terrier belonging to my friend, the engineer. Paddy, although in reality the uncle of Snooks, regarded the latter in the light of a son, and was re warded by the unfaltering devotion of the younger animal, who never shirked an at tempt to urge on his supposed father to wan tonly assault some snarling or fleeing native cur, when he would at once profit by the disturbance to lay hold of a hind leg or take a piece out of the fleshy part of the thigh of the unfortunate native dog. Spot was an older animal than either of the others,and contented himself with sneer ing at them, and most other things, too, or with squatting in the bows of the steamer and looking forward to the time when we should reach the evening's camping place. On Thursday, "November 3, a great crowd of natives came down to see us off and bid goodby to their iriends who were members of our crew. Bionelo, our native head man, and one or two of the other natives brought a wife each with them to look after cooking arrangements. Amid the cries of farewell and the waving of cloths from the crowd on shore we steamed ofl up against the strong current of the Congo. Soon passing the wide mouth of the Eonki, which pours a dark flood of water nearly a mile broad into the Congo, we ar rived off the grassy shores of the Ikelemba, a smaller tributary, and continued our way up toward Lulangu, a large village situated at the mouth of the Lulungu river, which we hoped to reach ere nightfall. A USEFUL GUIDE. On arriving at Lulangu next morning we procured a guide who had made several trading and slave-raiding expeditions up as far as Malinga town on the main branch of the Lulungu, which, as I have said, is called the Malinga riyer. Onr gnde namql v jl r cs - ss? PITTSBURG DISPATCH PITTSBURG, SUNDAY, was Eleng Minto, literally "Young Man, and we subsequently found him a very use ful companion. The Lulangu people had been accustomed to the sight of an occasional passing steamer going up the Congo to Bangala or Stanley Falls; but we were now leaving the great highway and following where only Grenfell and Vaugeli (a Belgian officer who ascended the Lopori, a second and smaller tributary of the Lulungu than the Malinga) had gone before us many months previously. The Lulangu natives were very friendly, and crowded the banks in long lines of aged and youthful loveliness as we steamed past the two or three miles of huts fronting the Lulungu. At noon we arrived off a village we were informed by Elenge Minto was called Bolongo, on" the left bank. We put in here and halted for the day. The chief, an old man named Nzeniba, insisted on making "Mood brothers" with us, and then regretted his inability to give us anything save fire wood, on account of the siege his village was enduring, owinjr to the attacks of a neigh boring settlement NOVEL PEOTECTION AGAINST INVADEES. Landing, we found that the place con sisted of about 200 huts, surrounded by a high barricade of tree trunks, old canoes and banana stems, and beyond this lay a cleared space and then an encircling wall of forest. Climbing over the fence I jumped on the ground outside, but cries from the natives who followed my movements ar rested by steps. One man climbing the barrier came after me, and stooping down, with a smile, revealed many sharp splinters of bamboo hidden beneath the grass, and so pointed that they would enter the unpro tected feet of an advancing enemy. I thanked the friendly natives,butshowed them the thick soles of my shoes, which were a sufficient protection against bamboo. Isaw, in Bolongo, the highest and biggest native house I ever came across in Africa. The center pole was a good thick tree about 30 feet high, the roof was of grass thatch. circular, aud reaching to within one foot of the ground where it was supported by a circle of upright bamboos, with two low en trances into the interior. Inside was a blacksmith's shop and room for a couple of hnndred people if closely packed. We quitted the friendly Bolongo people early next morning, and steamed np between forest-clad islands, and banks of hich trees amid which troops of silver-gray and black monkeys were sporting. THE TILLAGE OF BUKUTILA. Toward 9 o'clock, as we steamed up the broad channel of the Lulungu, we observed a long line of brown huts crowning the high left bank of the river, and almost overshad owed by the bright green foliage of the ba nana and plantain groves which here supply the natives with the chief article of their diet. The district we were approaching, we learned from our guide, was Bukutila, and on drawing near we were greeted by an im mense crowd of men, women and children,, calling out to us to come on shore, and by a regular flotilla of small canoes which put off tons. On putting the steamer in to the bank, and coming to anchor alongside the shore, we were crowded by the numbers of people desirous of seeing us and selling us pieces of firewood (of which our stock was never too ample), and eggs. These latter we purchased for a single cowrie shell each, which gives about 22 or 23 eggs for 2 cents. The population of Bukutila struck us as being of a somewhat finer build than the Bolongo or lower river people, although they cut their leatures with the same tribal marks as do the natives of the Equator and Lulanga districts a series of horizontal in cisions about an inch in length extending down the forehead from the hair to between the eyes, with similar incisions on each temple. HOW THE WOMEN DRESS. The women were generally clothed in grass string cloth. a costnme.consisting of a belt of woven grass the thickness o'f a piece of twine from which depended innumerable strips of dried grass, dyed either black, red or yellow-brown, reaching to the middle of the thigh, and entirely encircling the per son. Some of them were not content with only one such costume, but had supplemented the original black garment by attaching a second red, and even a third yellow herbal arran gement on top of it, so that they pre sented theappearance of a row of lightly clad premieres danseuses of the comio opera stage; and the agility with which they changed their reposeful attitudes of rapt ad miration or wondering regard of our strange looking selves when the engineer blew the steam whistle, into frantic attempts to es cape up the bank or disappear behind brushes or huts, heightened the resemblance. How we laughed at this sudden disappearance, and how timidly the affrighted ladies, alter quiet had been restored, would peep out to see if the coast was clear, or if there was any likelihood of a recurrence of that dreadlul sound, ere they again surrendered themselves to their nat ural curiosity to observe the strange white creatures who had come to their village and returned to their posts of vantage on the river bank. The men were nearly as frightened as the women on first hearing the steam whistle and we found it a never failing source of amusement. And then it was we learned the true value of a steam whistle on board a steamer. Eogee Casement. HISTORI OP AN EAK TOMB. A Cnrloni Japanese Slonnment Thnt Recnlli Barbarisms of the Pant. Detroit Free Press. Near by the temple of Sanjinsangendo, in Japan, is a curious monument called Mimi Zuka, or ear tomb. It is a small artificial hill of soil, on the top of which is a monu ment, the form of which dates back to Aryan times. The Aryans used to express unlimited time and space by a circle; a tri angle with apex upward signified fire, or with the apex downward, water; ana the creative power, a composition of fire and water, was denoted by two triangles -.Chapter -iftGWirrH. -.HTfWFtr'es .WavVaiei. -t-fe'Eartji side by side. The Hymalayans modified it by inventing a five in one (see sketch.) The Mimi-Zuka is very nearly the form of the sketch and similar symbols are found on many Japanese tombs. The story of this tomb one founded on fact is that the two Japanese Generals, Konishi and Kato, who invaded Korea, near the end of the sixteenth century, cut off the ears and noses of their prisoners, brought the trophies back to Japan and buried them in this hill. In those times prisoners of war were not spared. Their heads were kept as trophies of victory. In this case the Japauese victors, being so far away from home, could not even transport the heads of their enemies, so had to content themselves with the noses and ears. This happened only 300 years ago, and it seems quite possible that soon, in a fit of rriendli- ,j.ea 4l,a .Tan,nA n,a, en...) lin.1. f. i ..... UCMi ,UW VMpHUVUW UIAT DCUU UdUh MJ H.U1CH the land of the morning calm, these ears ana noses, as napoieon toe (ireat noses, as .napoleon the Great was finally sent home from St. Helena. MABOH 9, 1890. FOUK VERY EICH MEN. The Fortunes of Rockefeller, Astor, Yanderbilt and Gould. RICHER THAN THE ROTHSCHILDS. The Standard Oil and Western Union Mag nates Inherited Nothing. THE! WILL BOON BE BILL10NAIEES. ICOItnESPONDEKCE OP THE DIBPATCH.I New Yobk, March 8. There are at least four men in America richer than the richest man in Europe. They are John D. Bocke feller, the President of the Standard Oil Trust; William Waldorf Astor, who has just succeeded to the fortune of John Jacob Astor, his father; Cornelius Vanderbilt, the head of the Vanderbilt Bystem of railroads, and Jay Gould, the speculator and railroad magnate. The aggregate wealth of the Bothschilds reaches nearly 51,000,000,000, but no individual Eothschild is worth over 575,000,000. Here is an estimate, obtained from the most reliable sources, of the for tunes of the Americans named: John D. Rockefeller 5135,000,000 William Waldorf Astor 125.000.000 Cornelius Vanderbilt 110,000,000 Jay Goald 90,000.000 It has been supposed that the lateJohn Jacob Astor was the richest man in the world, and so he was for a time after the division of the wealth of William H. Van derbilt, who, at the time of his death, was worth $200,000,000. John D. Bockefellcr has made money faster in the past few years than any other mortal ever made it. He is so rich that he cannot count his own mill ions. He Baid under oath in a legal pro ceeding not long ago, that he could not esti mate his fortune within $10,000,000 or 12, 000,000. The estimate of $135,000,000 is not considered excessive. If anything, it is under the actual amount. ONCE A NEWSPAPEB BEPOBTEB. Eockefeller was once a newsper reporter, and less than two decades ago was a busi ness man of only moderate means in Cleve land, O. His attention was attractedto the opportunities for making money in the handling and refining of the product of the John D. Rockefeller. Pennsylvania oil fields. He started a com paratively small refinery, and from that grew the most powerful monopoly on earth the Standard Oil Trust. How rapidly the Standard has grown is shown by the fact that in 1880 its capital was only $3,000,000, whereas it is now $90,000,000. The par value of the stock is $100 a share, but it is quoted at $170. It pays dividends amount ing to 10 per cent per annum. Eockefeller owns more than a majority of the stock so that something like $100,000,000 of his fortune is represented in the trust. He also has extensive natural gas interests in Ohio, and in addition is a large owner of Govern ment bonds and the securities of railroads and other corporations. It has been said, and it is probably a fact, that the Standard Oil Trust is the best managed corporation in the world. John D. Eockefeller is the directing spirit. He looks and acts more like a preacher than a schemer. He is in fact a deacon in a Baptist church. He has stooping shoulders, drooping eyelids and a face that is almost sepulchral. He lives in a handsome house in West Fifty-fourth street jnst around the corner from Fifth avenue. It is in this neighborhood where the Vanderbilt man sions, the finest in New York, cluster. HE KEEPS VEST QUIET. His diversions are few. Little is heard of him and less is seen of him. He is inac cessible at all times. He wields the enor mous power of the Standard Oil Trust from behind portals. And this power is proved by the irresistible way in which opposition to the Standard in ail forms has been crnshed ont. There is, however, one thing to be said of the Standard. If an opposition pipe line or refinery is started and assumes proportions sufficient to make it formidable, an offer, and a fair one at that, is made for its purchase. If the offer is refused the Standard pnts down prices, interferes with facilities and makes its competitor's busi ness unprofitable. The competitor in the end cives up. The Standard never was a producer in Pennsylvania, bnt when the Ohio oil field was discovered it proceeded to William Waldorf Astor. secure all the productive territory, and now controls the situation there absolutely. William Waldorf Astor's wealth is prin cipally in real estate. The original John Jacob Astor bought farm after farm along the King's Highway, the old post road, ex tending from the Battery in New York to Albany. TheKing's Highway is now known as Broadway. His heirs followed his ex ample, and thus it is that the Astors have, at one time or another, owned THE BEST PAST OP BROADWAY. People who dosired to put up residences or business structures would obtain ground leases from the Astors, and on corn fields and potato patches reared buildings, which, at the expiration of the leases, reverted to the Astors. As a rnlc these leases ran for 21 years. The Astors have never been specu lators, and as a consequence their fortunes have never been impaired by the mutations of Wallstreet. They have never been obtrus ive and the only one of the family who has ever aspired to political honors is William Waldorf, who served n both branches of the State Legislature and was also Minister to Italy. He is not likely to figure in politics again. He made something of a name as a novel writer, but his literary as well as his political aspirations seem to have recently subsided. He is under 40, tall, well-built and agreeable in manner. He wears eye glasses and dresses very quietly. His home is a double brown stone house in East Thirty-third street, three doors from Fifth avenue. He will soon take possession of his father's mansion oa Filth avenue, f ffF 4L large and substantial, but rather old fashioned house. The Astor property is easy to manage, for it involves merely the collection of rents with the occasional sale or purchase of a building or lot. Probably no individual fortune of any magnitude, either in America or Europe, is so secure as William Waldorf Astor's. Only an earth quake devastating Manhattan Island could wipe it out. THE VANDEBBILT WEALTH. Cornelius Vanderbilt inherited $80,000,000 from William H. Vanderbilt. He was pre viously the possessor of about $5,000,000. Interest and appreciation in the value of the bonds and stocks left him by bis father makeup the balance of the $110,000,000 with which he is credited. His fortune is very sagaciously invested. It is principally in stocks and bonds, but of a class that in Wall street are known as "gilt edged." Even a panic in the stock market would not be apt to diminish the value of his for tune over 10 per cent, and this impairment would not be permanent. He was the favorite grandson of old Com modore Vanderbilt, whose name he bears, and he was likewise the favorite son of his father. He is an excellent business man. His methods are conservative. Vanderbilt is unassuming. He has never sought polit ical preferment, nor, for that matter, has any member of the Vanderbilt family. He is Cornelius Vanderbilt. an ardent churchman and his contributions for church work are large. He attends the fashionable St. Bartholomew's Church in Madison avenue, and may be seen any Sunday afternoon on his way home from service with his prayer book and hymnal in hand. NOT A PUBLIC SPEAKEE. He is never heard as a public speaker ex cept at the meetings of the railroad branch of the Young Men's Christian Association, which he provided with a handsome build ing. He and Chauncey M. Depew lunch together every day that they are both at the general offices of the Vanderbilt roads in Forty-second street. He depends on Mr. Depew for counsel, as his father did before him, and he is as fond of Mr. Depew's clever sayings at an assemblage of ban queters. The estimate of Jay Gould's fortune is made up on the "market value." In one way it is a precarious fortune. It is com posed almost entirely of the securities of the corporations controlled by him, and these are speculative in the extreme. A panic in Wall street might reduce his for tune one half. Gould has practically re tired. His health is not good and he has put the active management oi his properties in the hands of his two eldest sons, George and Edwin. He has contracted rather than extended his interests during the past three or four years until now bis holdings of stock are not great outside the Western Union Telegraph Company, the Missouri Pacifio Bailroad and 'the elevated rail roads in New York. HIS SIGHT HAS FAILED to such an extent recently that he wears gold-bowed spectacles almost constantly. He has grown rather tired of his yacht, buj in the summer finds it convenient in going between New York and his country place at Irvington-on-tbe-Hudson. Eockefeller and Gould have made their fortunes in a single generation. Astor's fortune represents the accumulation of four generations and Van derbilt's of three generations. Rockefeller's fortune probably yields, at its estimated value, 5 per cent. Vander bilt's yields about the same. Astor's for tune is calculated to yield 6 per cent. In asmuch as many of the stocks and bonds owned by Gould pay no interest at all, it is not probable that he derives 3 per cent on his total wealth. Taking these figures the annual and daily income of the four men, compounding the interest semi-annually to allow for reinvestment, are as follows: TEAELT AND DAILY INCOMES. Yearly Dally Name. income. Income. John D. Rockefeller 16,831,000 $18,715 William Waldorf Astor 8,612,500 23,593 Cornelius Vanderbilt 5,560,000 15.219 Jay Gould 2,718.000 7,8 If the rule of natural increase were fol lowed, the four great fortunes would be as follows at the end of the periods named, counting the interest at the rates named above aud compounding it semi-annually: JOHN D. EOCKEFELLER. One year. (141,831,000 Five years 172,800.000 Twenty-five years 403,779,000 WILLIAM WALDORF ASTOR. One year.... 183,612,500 Five years 167.937,500 Twenty-flve years 617,900,000 CORNELIUS VANDERBILT. One year. 5115,5Cfl,000 Five years 140,800,000 Twenty-five years 377,b94,0OO JAY GOULD. One year. $ 92.718.000 Five years 101,445.000 Twenty-five years 189.458,000 HAY BE BILLIONAIRES. The foregoing figures show how fast for tunes mount up even at ordinary rates of in terest. Every one of the four greatest for tunes in America is likely to be augmented beyond its natural increase by advantageous investments. If Eockefeller keeps on piling up money as he has in the past, and there is reason to believe he will, he can count his wealth at $200,000,000 in two or three years. Jay Gould. If he lives 25 years, as every one of the four great millionaires is likely to do, and his success keeps up, there is no telling how rich he will be. He may be a billionaire. H. I. S. Cozy corners in hotels are hard to find, yet anyone stopping at the Sturtevant House, Broadway and Twenty-ninth St., N.Y., will be able to find a good many ot them. Moderate prices ana central location, WEITTEN FOE SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. The story opens at Bryngelly, on the Welch coast. Geoffrey Bingham, a very promising yonngLondon barrister, is taking an outing at Bryngelly with his little daughter, Effie, and LadyHonoria, his titled wife. She manned him for an expected fortune, which did not material ize, has little wifely feeling, frets abont poverty, and makes her hnsband generally miserable. Geoffrey is cut off by the tide one day, and Beatrice Granger, the charming, beintllaL but some what eccentric, daughter of the rector ot Brvneeliy, undertakes to row him ashore. The canoe upset?, and Geoffrey is knocked senseless. Beatrice rescues him, and he is taken to the vicarage to recover. Here Lady Honoria and Geoffrey have several scenes, after which the former bun dles off. to Garsington to visit wealthy relatives, leaving Effie with her papa. Geoffrey and Beatrice learn to admire each other. 'Squire Owen Da vies, honest, stupid and very rich, is madly in love with Beatrice. She can scarcely bear his society. Elizabeth, Beatrice's sister, is ambi tions to become Mrs. Owen Davies. The latter makes np his mind the crisis is at hand, and ap points a meeting with Beatrice. The girl, of course, rejects him. but. touched by his wretched ness, she gives him the privilege of asking again in a year, though holding out no hope. Eliza beth, from a hiding place, sees the meeting. After Beatrice goes she comes to Owen and he tells her Beatrice has refused him. This is her opportunity and she plots accordingly. On her way home Beatricemeets Geoffrey and almost unconsciously confides in him the story of the meet ing. Along talk on religion follows. Geoffrey seeming to make some impression upon the pretty little unbeliever. As time goes on Geoffrey and Beatrice are more and more tog'ether. The brief in a celebrated law case arrives for Geoffrey, and Beatrice helps him with it, displaying; great ingenuity and really Dutting him on the track that afterward led him to fame. In a mob collected by an attempt to 'distrain a tenant Geoffrey is reported shot. Beatrice is shocked al most into insensibility by the news. CHAPTER XV. NOT SHOT AFTEK ALL. A few yards from the path grew a stunted tree with a stone at its root. Thither Bea trice staggered and sank upon the stone, while still the solid earth spun round and round. Presently her mind cleared a little, and a keener pang of pain shot through her soul. She had been stunned at first; now she felt. Perhaps it was not true; perhaps Eliza beth had been mistaken or had only said it to torment her. She rose. She flung herself upon her knees, there by the stone, and prayed, this first time for many years she prayed with all her soul. "Oh, God, if Thou art; spare him his life and me this agony." In her dreadful pangs of grief her faith was thus reborn, and, as all human beings must in their hour of mortal agony, Beatrice real ized her dependence on the Unseen. She rose, and weak with emotion sank back onto the stone. The people were streaming past her now, talking excitedly. Somebody came up to her and stood over her. Oh, heaven, it was Geoffrey. "Is it you?" she gasped. "Elizabeth said that you were murdered." "No, no. It was not me; it is that poor fellow Johnson, the auctioneer. Jones shot him. I was standing next him. I suppose your sister thought that I fell. He was not nnlike me, poor fellow." Beatrice looked at him, went red, went HEK THOUGHTS WENT white, then burst into a flood of tears. A strange pang seized upon his heart. It thrilled through him, shaking him to the core. Why was this woman so deeply moved? Could it be? Nonsense; he stilled the thought before it was born. "Don't cry," Geoffrey said, "the people will see you, Beatrice" (for the first time he called her by her Christian name.) "Pray do not cry. It distresses me. You are up set and no wonder. That fellow Beecham Bones ought to be hanged, and I told him so. It is his work, though he never meant it to go so far. He's frightened enough now, I can tell you." Beatrice controlled herself with an effort. "What happened," he said, "I will tell you as we walk along. No, don't go up to the farm. He is not a pleasant sight, poor fellow. When I got up there Beecham Bones was spouting away to the mob his long hair flying abont his back exciting them to resist laws made by brutal, thieving landlords, and all that kind of gibberish; telling them that they would be supported by a great party in Parliament, etc. The people, however, took it all good naturedly enough. They had a beautiful effigy of your father Swinging on a pole, with a placard on his breast on which was written, 'The robber of the widow and the orphan, and they were singing Welsh songs. Only I saw Jones, who was more than half drnnk, cursing and swearing in Welsh and English. When the auctioneer began to sell, Jones went into the house and Bones went with him. After enough had been sold to pay the debt, and while the mob was still laughing and shouting, sud denly the back door of the bouse opened and out rushed Jones, now quite drunk, a gun in his hand, aud Bones hanging on to his coat-tails. I was talking to the auction eer at the moment, and my belief is that the brute thought that I was Johnson. At any rate, before anything could be done he lifted the gun and fired at me, as I think. The charge, however, passed my head and hit poor Johnston full in the face, killing him dead. That is all the story." "And quite enough, too," 3id Beatrice, with a shudder. "What times we live in! I feel quite sick." Supper that night was a very melancholy affair. Old Mr. Granger was altogether thrown off his balance, and even Elizabeth's iron nerves were shaken. "It could not be worse, it could not be worse," moaned the old man, rising from the table and walking up and down the room. "Nonsense, father," said Elizabeth, the E radical. "He might have been shot before e had sold the hay, and then you would not hive got your tithe. Goeffrey could not help smiling at this way or looking at things, irom wnicn, cow. jeyer, Mr. Granger seemed to draw ft little I mgra; gsiipiS m& t p PAGES 9 TO 16. THE DISPATCH. comfort. From constantly thinking about it, and the daily pressure of necessity.money had come to be more to the old man than anything else in the world. Hardly was the meal done when the three reporters arrived, and took down Geoffrey's statement oi what had occurred for publica tion in various papers, while Beatrice went away to see about packing EfEe'a things. Tbey were to start by a train leaving for London at 8:30 on the following morning. When Beatrice came back it was 10:30, and in his irritation ot mind Mr. Granger in sisted upon everybody going to bed. Eliza beth shook hands with Geoffrey, congratu lating him on his escape as she did so, and went at once; but Beatrice lingered a little. At last she came forward and held out her hand. "Good night, Mr. Bingham," she said. "Good night. I hope that this is not goodby also," he added, with some anxiety. "Of course not," broke in Mr. Granger, "Beatrice will go and see you off. I can't, I have to go and meet the Coroner about the inquest, and Elizabeth is always busy in the house. Luckily they won't want you; there were so many witnesses." "Then it is only good night," said Beat rice. She went to her room. Elizabeth, who shared it, was already asleep, or appeared to be asleep. Then Beatrice undressed and got into bed. but rest she could not. It was "only good night," a last good night. Ha was going away back to his wife, back to the great rushing world, and to the life in which she had no share. Very soon he :llinliiiiirJ OUT IN THE NIGHT. would forget her. Other interests would arise, other women would become his friends, and he would forget the Welsh girl who had attracted him for awhile, or re member her only as the companion of a rough adventure. What did it mean? Why was her heart so sore? Why had she felt as though she should die when they told her that he was dead? Then the answer rose in her breast. Sha loved him; it was useless to deny the truth she loved him body and heart and soul, with all her mind and all her strength. She was his, and his alone to-day, to-morrow and forever. He might go from her sight, she might never, never see him more, but love him she always must. And he was married! Well, it was her misfortune; it could not affect the solemn truth. What should she do, how should she endure her life when her eyes no longer saw his eyes, and her ears never heard his voice? She saw the futnre stretch itselt before her as in a vision. Sha saw herself forgotten by this man whom she loved, or from time to time remembered only with a faint regret. She saw herself growing slowly old, her beauty fading yearly from her face and form, companioned only by the love that grows not old. Oh, it was bitter, bitterl aud yet she would not have it otherwise. Even in her pain sha felt it better to have found this deep and ruinous joy, to have wrestled with the Angel and been worsted, than never to have looked upon his face. If she could onlv know that what she gave was given back again, that he loved her as she loved him, she would be content. She was innocent, she had never tried to draw him to her; she had used no touch or look, no woman's arts or lures such as her beauty placed at her command. There had been no word spoken, scarcely a mean ing glance had passed between th'em, noth ing but o frank, free companionship as of man and man. She knew he did not love his wife, and that his wife did not love him this she could see. Bnt she had never tried to win him from her, and though she sinned in thought, though her heart was guilty oh, her hands were clean! Her restlessness overcame her. See could no longer lie in bed. Elizabeth, watch ing through her veil of sleep, saw Beatrice rise, put on a wrapper, and going to the window throw it wide. At first she thought of interfering, for Elizabeth was a prudent person and did not like draughts; but her sister's movements excited her curiosity and see refrained. Beatrice sat down on the foot of her bed and leaning her arm upon tha window sill looked out upon the lovely, quiet night. How dark the pine trees massed against the sky; how soft was the whisper of the sea, and how vast the heaven through which the stars sailed on. What was It, then, this love of hers? Was it merely earthly passion? No, it was liiimnmii! It'fntimnrrJ ? n i t i tf