"grerag-ss --( DISPi.TOH.SUNDAT,v AElHlW37, 'f .1890. -THE -PITTSBTJIIG -21 10W TO GET RICH. 'AdTice of Weil-Known Wealth Win ners to a Young Mechanic INVESTMENTS IN KEAL ESTATE. Banker Clews Disparates College Training for Business Men. PLACING MOKBI OUT AT INTEREST. PTBITTES TO TH DISF1.TCH.1 Some weeks ago the letter -which I append below was addressed to some half dozen of our best known millionaires in every in stance men of the people, who hare been the architects of their own fortunes and haTe raised themselves by their own exertions from humble, poor boys to an honored place among the moneyed aristocracy of onr country. This letter was written by a young mechanio of a "Western city, a fine specimen of the sober, industrious, thrifty American working man one who is determined to conquer fortune and to become wealthy and distinguished. Deae 8nt Knowing that you are a self xnada man and bare achieved wealth by your own exertions, 1 take the liberty of asking your advice. lam a young mechanic with a wile and child. I make good wages and am able, by strict economy, to save about 140 per month.' I now have about $500 (five hundred dollars), and am at a loss to know what to do with it. Will you kindly tell me what you con sider the best Investment for small savings with a view to making tbem the nucleus of a creat fortune? Would you advise that they be deposited in a savlncs bank, or invested in real estate or good slocks or bonds? Will you also please give me any general directions or advice that you think will aid a young man, just starting in life, to become rich? I inclose stamp and shall be greatly obliged for the favor of an answer. The following letters comprise the largest amount of the most valuable advice on making, investing and accumulating money ever published together. If generally fol lowed millionaires may be as plenty in the next generation as autumn leaves in Val lambrosa. Fbaxe: Fees'. EDUCATION A HINDRANCE. The College ! Not n MjbilUule for Bmluesi Trnlnlnc In Youth. The first reply received to the above letter was from the famous millionaire, banker and broker so prominently identified with public events in this country during the past quarter of a century, Mr. Henry Clews: "Banking House op ") Hekei Clews & Co. "New York, March 25, 1890. ) 'Deae Sie When old Meyer Rothschild was asked questions similar to those you have propounded to me, he said: 'I buys 'sheep' and sells dear.' Those who follow this method always succeed. Few things present better opportunities to 'buy "sheep" and sell dear' than stocks and bonds, and such securities when 'gilt-edged' not only pay interest on the investment, but they can also be leadily turned into money at any time if desirable. "In order to become rich the young man just starting in life should choose that occu pation or avocation for which he has the most decided preference. Many a man has his nose to the grindstone, so to speak, throughout life simply because he has chosen, or his relatives and friends have chosen for him. some business or profession to which he is not adapted, and which he ends is not congenial to him, while in a career for which nature and education had fitted him he might not only be happy and successful, but make his mark as a star of the first magnitude. The Good Book tells us that whatever our hand finds to do we should do it with all our might, but a young man is not inclined to do in that way things that he does not like. But whatever voung men do from choice they, as a rule, do well. It is, therefore, very important for a young man just starling in life to be sure that the calling in which he engages is thoroughly congenial to him and one in which he can put forth his bett efforts with the greatest enthusiasm and delight. "The utility of a collegiate education for success in business is now being largely de bated. As the college curriculum and training stand at present, the ordinary course is net iu general calculated to make a good business man. It is erroneously re garded by some people as a kind of substi tute for business training in the earlier years of the young man's life. There can be no greater mistake in the beginning of a business career. It is in many instances not only a hindrance but absolutely fatal to success. "Tours very truly, "Hexby Clews." FAITHFUL TO EUPL0XER8. Yoodst Men Should be Willing; to Earn Their Snlnrles Several Times Over. Mr. Charles A. Pillsbury, the millionaire flour king of Minneapolis, whose gigantic flouring mills the largest in the world daily turn out 10,500 barrels of flour, writes as follows: "PlLLSBTJJtY-WASHBURN "Floue Mills Co., "Minneapolis, Minx., March 20 "MyDeab Sie I am in receipt of your favor of the 20th instant. I think a first class savings bank as secure a depository for money as any place. There is not much use accumulating money if yon do not get in terest on it In reply to your request for general advice and directions to aid a young man just starting in life to become rich. I would say that if such a young man is in the employ of others it should be his aim to earn his salary many times over, and not be contented to earn it but once and merely give satisfaction to his employers. He should strive to do more. In my first years in business, thoueh neither asked nor expected to do so, 1 frequently worked all night. A young man who thus devotes himself heart and soul to his employer's in terest will soon find that his devotion is ap preciated, for, even if his employer should fail to reward it, some one els trill surely observe it and the way to pi emotion will soon be open for him. There are vacant places in the higher walks of every busi ness and profession for the young men who follow this course. "Some men fail because they overrate their own ability and underestimate that of their competitors. Such a mistake should be carefully avoided. Let a man with ever so great natural ability, but lacking a ca pacity for hard work, compete with a duller man, but one who toils early and late, and the latter will outrun him on the road to success every time. "Wed natural ability to hard work and you have a combination that nothing can defeat "Yours truly, "Charles A. PlLLSBUBT." IXTEST IN EEAL ESTATE. ttoivrcll r. Flower Would Always Pot fecial) (saving; In Land. Hon. Boswell P. Flower, the millionaire member of Congress from the Twelfth New York district, and an available candidate for the Presidental nomination on the Dem ocratic ticket, sends the subjoined response to my young friend's letter: "House of Representatives, TJ. S., ) "Washington, D. C, March 26. "My Deae Sir In reply to your letter of the 20th instant, I would say that it would seem to me, were I in your position, that I would buy some real estate in your city. J You cannot duplicate real estate. You can - duplicate any other kind of security, and as the country utows, real estate will improve in value. You could doubtless buy a small piece of property that would rent formore than enough to pay the taxes upon it and the interest upon the mortgage you would have to give. This surplus you could save, in addition to what you are now saving out of your wages, and you could apply it to paying off the mortgage. My answer, there fore, to the first question contained in your letter is that real estate is the best invest ment for small savings to make them the basis of a fortune. "I know of no better way for a young man, just starting in life, to become rich than to be always sober, honest, Industrious and economical, to be true to his employers and himself; to save all he can without being parsimonious, and to invest his savings judiciously in the way I have indicated. "Very truly yours, "ROSWELL P. FLOWER." A MAN WHO HAS TRIED IT. Ben Butler Advise Other People to Bay Property as He Hn Done. Hon. Benjamin F. Butler, the millionaire manufacturer, lawyer, soldier and states man, coincides with Mr. Flowers' high esti mate of real estate as an investment, as will be seen below: "Lowell, Mass., March 30. "Deae Sie All the improved real estate in Boston, as a rule, has paid its interest and taxes and quadrupled in value during the past CO years, while during the same period 90 per cent of all the merchants and traders in that city have failed, and 90 per cent of all the business corporations have either done likewise or gone out of business, so that their stock has been wiped out la view of these facts I think it may be un hesitatingly asserted that nothing else is so safe an investment lor small sayings as im proved real estate. Nothing is likely to grow in value taster. "You had thereiore better buy a piece of improved real estate, however small, that ia paying rent Pay in cash what little money you have, and give your notes, se cured by a mortgageon the property, for the balance in small sums falling due at short intervals, and then use all your extra in come from the rent of your property in pay ing them off. You never incur any risk in discounting your own notes, and when your friends find that you are placing your money where it is perfectly, secure they will be glad to assist you if those notes should come due a little too rapidly. Thus iu a short time and almost before you know it, you will have a considerable and perfectly safe in vestment "If you had a rich father who would fur nish the cash to start you iu business you would probably do better in the long run if you invested it in the way I have pointed out rather than to risk it in trade, mean while earning your living by working for a salary. For a young man just starting in life whose ambition it is to become rich, I would say, never do a mean thing for money. "Yours truly, "Benjamin F. Butler." IT WORKS WHILE I0U SDEEP. Showman Bnrnnm Says Money at Interest Is thn Beat Investment. Hon. P. T. Barnum, the famous million aire showman, answers in his usual pointed and entertaining style: "Bridgeport, Conn., April 7. "Deae Sib The safest plan and the one most sure of success for the young man starting in life is to elect the vocation which is most congenial to his tastes. He should then be carelul to keep himself in good health, for that is the foundation of success in life the substratum of fortune. Shun rum and tobacco. You must have a clear brain to make money. You cannot carry on business successfully if your brain is muddled and your judgment warped by intoxicating drink. Keep out of debt. Debt drags a man down more than anything else. It destroys his self-respect and makes him almost despicable in his own eyes. "Put what money you have and all you may save in the future at interest where it will be well secured. Heal estate is the nost safe of all investments. Money at interest with good security, will work more faithfully than anything else in the world. It never stops, day nor night, no matter if the weather be wet or dry. Engage in one kind of business only, and stick to it faith fully until you succeed, or until your expe rience shows that you should abandon it Whatever you engage in, make it your con stant aim to be and to have the very best in your line. When sure that you are in the right path, persevere. To make money dis honestly is the hardest thing in life. There fore, preserve your integrity. Remember that the road to wealth lies in expending less than we earn. Truly yours, "P. T. Babnum." PUT IT OCT AT INTEREST. The Baltimore Founder of Libraries Gives Ilia Advice n to Money. Mr. Enoch Pratt, the well-known million aire of Baltimore, who has devoted a large portion of his fortune to establishing the Enoch Pratt free libraries of that city, sends the following brief and pithy answer to the conundrums asked him: "Baltimore, March 28, 1890. "DEAR Sik My advice to young men who are anxious to advance in life has always been that when they earn S5 they should save and put out at interest SI of it Money at interest is like a calf of which an honest old German once told me. He said the purchase of that calf was the best thing he ever did, for the calf grew just the same whether her owner was asleep or awake, and almost before he knew it she had grown to a full-sized cow, worth many times what he had paid for her. If young men will pur sue the course I havead vised, and are other wise capable, they will become rich. "Ehoch Pbatt." SHORT AND SWEET. Clans SpreckeU Tells the Young; Man to Go to a Savins Bunk. Mr. Clans Spreckels, the millionaire sugar king, responds with an epistle that is char acteristically short, if not sweet -as brief, iu fact, as woman's love: "Philadelphia, Mareh 30. "DEAE Sts Your favor of the 20th instant has been duly received. In reply to the same I would say that I would recom mend a good savings bank. "Yours truly, "Claus Spkeckels." PATH WAITING HER CUE. Bow the SonBttrei Conducts Herself Just Before Appearlne on the Stage. New York Sun. 1 In a few moments Conductor Sapio wared his baton, the curtain rose and the opera be gan. Patti was walking up and down the dressing room with her head thrown back. She was gargling a liquid that looked like glycerine water in her throat. She always does thisjbefore see attempts any of those re markable flights of melody that set the great audiences applauding rapturously. She tapped her throat when Stage Manager Parry looked in at her with a smile on his lips. She meant that she was getting her throat in working shape. By and by he led her out upon the stage, and she stood just behind a door waiting her cne to enter upon the scene. She stopped gargling her throat with lotion, and shut her month to kiss one of Mr. Abbey's prin cipal women singers. Then she opened her mouth and began to gargle again. A group of Italian gentlemen with wide trousers crowded around her. When a laughing look came into her eyes they seized her hand and kissed it fervently. They were personal friends, and kissed her hands in the fine Italian style of gallantry expressing delight that she was feeling quite well. An instant later she had cleared the lotion from her throat and had darted out upon the stage and was pouring out a flood of tuneful notes. DRESSING THE HAIR. A Glance at the Fads Upon Which Dame Fashion Smiles. r OLD STILES COMING BACK AGAIN. Changes Necessary to Harmonixe With the Adopted Costumes. PRETTI CURLS OP PRETTT MISSES The right tight, snug, shiny little knot of hair, with its secure fastenings, which the tailor-made girl wore above her jaunty man nish rolling collar is indeed an anachronism above the clinging draperies and high puffed sleeves of a Josephine gown or in juxtaposition to the classic Grecian outlines of the ponular, artistically draped costume. The ideal coiffure of the season, says the New York Sun, finds its prototype only on some old Parthenon frieze or group of graces chiseled about an antique monument or altar, and the worst of it is that only a maiden sculptured in gleaming marble ought to attempt the style of coiffure, tor on any live, breathing, moving girl tnc graceful arrange ment comes tum bling down about her ears iu an hour. The long, wavy lines of hair out lining the graceful coutour ot a wom an's head and twisted softly in a mass of ringlets low in the neck or just high enough to allow the lowest of the depending cnrls 271e Greek Coiffure. to brush the nape of the neck, the pretty con ceit of apparently securing the whole thing with a simple bit of ribbon tied inlront, the brushing of the wavy ? Te.r th. e u to tie it ud carelessly in the back, the soli fall ot light, wavy fringes upon the forehead all these were known centu ries ago by the fair Athenian maidens who walked the street bon neted only in the beauty and sheen of their tresses, instead of putting on a wreath and a few butter flies as a head covering forontdoor wear. They knew the secrets which thA mnriprn pirl is 110W learning, that ugly foreheads may be shaped to beauty with a fluff of curls, and that the curling iron is indeed a clever and artistic substitute for nature. Now the first essential of a really stylish coiffure is that the hair of which it is com posed should De cuny, or, perhaps, as girls say, "fluffy." If you are endowed by nature with that kind of hair which two years ago you brushed and wet and oiled to make it smooth and glossy, all you have to do now is to keep all the oil out of it by frequent wash jvj ings, let it tangle and fly at will, and gather lt np in a sou unot w","" . "?- where it will look as if it were going to fall down entirely every minute, and put just enough pins in it to prevent that catastrophe and nothing more. . I saw a sweet, oval-faced young girl at Sorosis the other day with exactly this style ot coiffure and the most sesthetic dress of black, embroidered with trails of yellow marguerites. If your hair be as straight and sleek as that of a Puritan elder ora Com raanche sauaw, your hairdresser will make it ripple and wave and flow like that of the heroine in a three-volume novel. Then, if you haven't been blessed with too large an allowance of it, she win gamer up the shimmerine. waving strands into a coif ture like that I saw recently on a young girl whose hair, brown in shadow, revealed glimpses of gold in the sunshine. Back from her forehead and up from her neck the wavy strands were brushed, whirled into a single light puffy knot, from which three soft curls fell, and a gold arrow held the whole in place. Then there is the Greek coiffure proper, or rather an adaptation of it, which was ar ranged by a famous Parisian hairdresser for a noted American belle. It resembles the Psyche knot, which was o travestied in New York a few sea sons back, and which women with snub noses insisted upon affecting because it was becoming to their classic sisters. Tt is indeed a sort of a first cousin to tho Psyche, but it belongs to a dif ferent branch of the family, and is made of a mass of solt curls and frizzes waving oyer the head from the temples and twisted into a flu fly knot held by chains of pearls. On top of the head pearl combs hold the waves of hair close to the head and soft curls fall over the face. In Paris the hair is worn low in the neck, almost universally simply looped and fast ened with ornamental pins of shell, but the fashion gains ground slowly among Ameri can ladies, who insist that it is untidy and inconvenient,and takes away something from their dignity and smartness. As a rule, hair dressed high on the head is more be coming to the Ameri can physiognomy. It was a little Spanish beauty, with an oval olive face, who attract ed so much flattering attention in an opera box because above the simple low-necked gown a faultless head, exquisitely poised, had the dusky hair simply parted in the center, waved down either side the face, twisted low in the' neck, and bound about with a fillet of delicate white blossom, strung together like a child's 'daisy chain. For ladies on dressy occasions there is the empire style with its light fringe of hair Drought rather low down to a point on the forehead. Grace ful cnrls lightly grouped together surmount the fringe, and at the sides above the ears the hair is prettily waved in the fashion now so generally adopted. Another arrange ment of the same mode has a tiara of jet above the fringe, which may be re yA placed by diamonds on dressy occasions. At the back the hair is dressed in a series of puffs or rolls terminating near the nape of th ncct In two Greek enrls. which fall slightly away from the neck, giving the 7 w ALlIr. coiffure a distinctive little air of its own and a quaint and chio effect A combination of the catogan and empire style is favored by some ladies as better adapted to them, giving them the becoming neignt in trout and the graceful fulness in the neck as well, which is quite ad vantageous when wearing the new crownless bonnets, as it is pleasant to feel that you have something on yona head. A new comb has been de signed with three substantial rings, through which the loops of hair are passed to 'form a double, eight-shaped ar rangement on the head, and a Grecian bow and Alsation bow swell the list of coiffures which can be arranged only by the skill, of the professional hair dresser. The present picturesque and extreme styles of dress necessitate a correct arrange ment of the bair to insure their effective ness. The reason so many women fail in this is because they lack originality and a knowledge of outlines. A style of hair dressing that they admire on a friend's head they imitate themselves, with most disastrousresults. The occasionally gifted woman has nice intui tions which she may not be able to formu late in words or ex plain, but which ef fectually prevent her from making blun ders of this kind. She who has not should, it she is able, consult some artist concerning the peculiar style best adapted to her, for hair dressers in New York are not artists, nsi they of the profession are in Paris, and they cannot al ways be depended upon for suggestions. There has been something of a revival of the old custom of floral decorations in the hair during the past season, a single rose, a wreath of fine flowers, or a half wreath rest ing lightlv on the bangs and lost in the loops and curls at the back. The most ar tistio and beautiful of all hair dressing, however, is that seen on children s heads, because thehairwhen wavy isn't dressed at all, but exquisitely cared for and left to follow its own sweet will and pleasure, only slightly cut in a bang in front to keep it from the eyes. In the early hours of the morning the nurses bring their charges to the hair dress ers for attention that once was never consid ered necessary. Bangs are cut, curls are trimmed and brushed, straight locks are coaxed into waves by carelully heated irons, and little misses go through almost as much of a process as their mammas and big sisters. Babies, both boys and girls, not more than 2 years old, are frequently seen sitting in the hair dresser's chair with a. patience born only of experience. Young girls in school wear the Marguerite braids or asingle braid looped under and tied with a velvet ribbon around the neck. For dressy occasions little girls wear a ribbon of bright color tied about the head in the old-fashioned way, just back of the fringe, or, more artistic still, liko the child in the cut, with half short hair the ribbon is tied over the curls about the head like, a sword. The "Lord Fauntleroy" and little page's style of hair is the popular style for little boys, and is generally worn until the instinct of freedom inherent in every Ameri can laddie rises up in revolt, and the curls are sacrificed to a saucer bang with closely cropped hair at the back. TflB-COST OP LIYIXG. Two Exnmplca of Economy From the Quiet City of" Philadelphia. Philadelphia inquirer.: I have a iriend who some 20 years ago found himself in this city with wife and children two, suddenly called upon to "make both ends meet" on a salary of $850 per year. As it was a principle with him that persons dependent on wages should each month save a portion of their income for a rainy day he determined to live on $700. Here follows a statement of his expenses lor that year as taken from his book: Rent 5150 00 Coals, live tons at $6. 30 00 Kiudliug 1 60 Soap, etc. 4 7 60 Clothes husband, S30; wife, S25; chil dren, $23 80 00 Shoes 15 oo Newspapers 5 00 Doctor and medicine 31 00 Household linen 12 00 Light. 3 uo Furniture. 10 00 Food 340 00 Sundries 17 00 Total (69100 It must bo remembered that in those years foods were considerably dearer than at present. Let us turn to another picture of life. I know a gentleman, alone in the world, with poor health and a great strnggle on his hands, a death struggle, a hand-to-hand conflict for justice. I happen to have had access to the accounts of the cost of his living for ten weeks of the present winter. He liberally supplied himself with nutritious food at a cost of 39 cents per week, as per the following account: Stale bread J2 11 Peas, 8 ct.; milk, 24 eta.; syrup. 7. 39 Prunes, 50 cts.; apples (dried), 00 cts 1 40 $3 90 Coals cost him 13 cents per week, and oil for light, 2 cents; rent cost him $1 per month. THE PADS OP A QUEEN. Victoria Uaea Elht Tain of Blankets a Illonth and Oil Feet Warmer. New York Herald. J Queen Victoria has to have blankets es pecially woven for her. ' She sleeps in them instead of between linen sheets, like us everyday people. Indeed they are more like woollen sheets which we know as blankets very soft and fleecy and quite tbin. And as the never uses them after they are lanndered she has about eight pair of new ones a month. The old ones? Oh, they go to the hospitals. Then she has queer little contrivances in which to keep her feet warm, for such a thing as your much heated rooms is un known in her palaces. So she sits with her feet tucked into these fur-liued bags, foot muffs. I suppose you will call them. These and the blankets are made for her by a very renowned firm, which has supplied her wants in this line for the last 40 years, SCRATCHES LIKE A SCHOOLBOY, What the Printers soy Abont Editor Henry Wattprnon'a Handwriting. Atlanta Constitution. "Every few days," said an old-time prin ter who has spent many an hour over Henry Watterson's "copy" last night, "a printer in our office would be fired out of the compos ing room for bulling Watterson's copy. It was horrible. His editorial always went .through a regular course of proof reading, ana men came out nap-nazara. xnere was one old printer in the office in 1886 that had been connected with the Journal and Cou. rier-Journal for CO years, and he was the only man that could read Mr. Watterson's copy. "He writes with ink, and scrawls, and scratches, and blots, like a schoolboy. We used to dread his copy." ?M 1 CAPITAL AND TOIL Moneyed Men of Pittsburg Have Never Feared Manual Labor. AN AUTHOR'S VISIT YEARS AGO. Wealth With Refinement Contrasted With Wealth Without It. A SINGER'S IMPRESSION OP THE CITI tWKlTTIN VOB TUB UISrATCH.1 One day a good many years ago, James Fartoo, the well-known writer of books and magazine articles, made his appearance in Pittsburg. He had come to "write up the town" for the iffaiittc Monthly, and with out delay he sought the newspaper offices as being the most copious sources of such in formation as he desired. More than one newspaper man went with him on his various expeditions, acting as guides to the most striking and representa tive points of interest. I believe, by the way, his very first request was that he be directed to a tack lactory. He thought the machinery for putting the heads and points on little one ounce tacks must be the epitome of all the most wonderful manufacturing machinery to be found any where. He found what he cameto find, and an exceedingly interesting descriptive article was the result. It described, and described well, the phasesof Pittsburg life and activity that would most'strongly impress a stranger; aud the method of making tacks was dealt wlth'in an interesting manner. But the Pittsburg he described was necessarily the external Pittsburg, with only here and there an imperfect glance into the inner character of things. No doubt it was more interesting so to the general reader; for strangers are desirous of knowing the things that would impress them on a similar visit. They might not value the deeper insight of tho more intimate and leisurely observer. CAPITALISTS -WOUKED TOO. But the observation which was really the most significant ot all made by the distin guished visitor I don't think got into his article at all. I heard him talking about his visit to one of the creat iron mills, and he mentioned a thing that had surprised and interested him very greatly. He and his guide had encountered in the mill a 'man who seemed to be in authority, but whose face and hands were grimy with work. Some emergency had arisen, it seemed, and this man, not content with giving orders how to meet it, had tnrned in and helped as actively and effectively as any mill hand of them all. He left his work and devoted himself with cordial courtesy to the visitor, giving clear and masterlyl and very practical in formation so long 'as the visit lasted. And the surprise in the visitor's mind war occa sioned by learning that this most interest ing entertainer was not a very exception ally admirable foreman, but one of the pro prietors ot the mammoth establishment, and one of the wealthiest men in the city. That was a fact which a stranger within the gates might Well ponder anddigest at his leisure. I remember once bearing Hon. James Lowry, when he was Mayor of Pitts burg, sav with gieat pride to a party of "vis itors, "The richest men we have are work ers; and the best workers are likely to be come the richest men." WORTHY OP CONGBATUIiATIOir. And that is the fact or was then; for all this, be it observed, refers to a time more than a tcore of years back in the past. Things may.be different now, in this as in most other particulars. But at that time, I think, a shrewd comnarison'of Pitts burg with other cities would have brought out this fact as the characteristic which most sharply distinguished "old smoky" from her cotemporaries. Labor and capi tal were not divorced. They had quarrels sometimes; but capital remembered its work ing days, and labor hoped for its days of moneyed independence, and so they were not at hopeless odds. But Mr. Parton, or any other observer, would have noted only half the fact if he had stopped with the grimy proprietor help ing his hands iu the mill. There was more to it than that, and the rest was quite as sig nificant and quite as interesting. If the visitor could have gone home with the rich mill worker, he would have had another im pressive revelation. He would have seen this man surrounded by all the best results of intelligent and wholesome refinemeut. And he would have seen further that the man fitted these other surroundings of de lightlul home aud social life as perfectly as he was fitted to the requirements of mill emergencies. This was another phase of .Pittsburg s distinguishing characteristic. Not only did work win money, but it knew bow to use it and how to enjoy it. The shrewd wit and the broad intelligence that knew bow to plan success wrought also in other directious. It did not expend itself wholly in accumulation. It had plenty of force left to bring its possessor well to the front in matters of general ENLIGHTENMENT AND CULTIVATION. The rich worker could talk about and en joy plenty of other things beside his ma chinery and his contracts. Of course all this refers to the best representatives of the order described. Other sorts there were, undoubtedly; for money-grubbing and shoddy are everywhere. But the men I have spoken of were numerous enough and strong enough to constitute a definite local class; while the others belonged to a class as old as civilization and unhappily peculiar to no one community on the face of the earth. I am tempted to emphasize this repre sentative Pittsburger of the past (and also ot the preseut) by contrasting him with another moneyed worker whom I rame in contact with very recently. Far enough away trom Pittsburg this last specimen dwells, but he is, and always has been, withiu a dozen miles of a big city, and could easily be iu constant contact with the best which to-day's civilization affords. He, too, represents a class, but it is not a local or restricted class. He is simply a rather pronounced type of those people whom Charles Lamb must have had in mind when he said, "the Lord showed what He thought of money by the sort of folks He gave it to." To begin with, he owns a large and valuable farm, which is no small wealth in itself. Beside the farm he has at least $100,000 securely and very profitably in vested in mortgages. HIS HOME LIFE. He is well euough along in years; and he and his poor old wife live all alone, their children having all married and strnck out independent paths. It is worth noting that the children married and got away from home as early as was at all practicable. One by one they discovered that they had had enough of the old homestead. There was no poetical or romantic gtamonr about it for them. The homestead is a compara tively new house, built under protest to re place the cabin in which the children grew up. It has a good maDy rooms, but only two ol them, I believe, are furnished; these are the kitchen and one bedroom. The "parlor" no person ever looked into except the members of the family. The old man had a row with the builder about this Jront part of the house. He did not want the expense of having a front chimney put up, because there would never De any use for it. But the builder declared he had never put up a house without a front chimney, and he never would; and he had his way, to his patron's great distress of mind. Guests; when they come, are entertained in the kitchen. This is a small enough space to begin with, and it is reduced a good deal by a wainscotting of crates and boxes placed against all the four walls, and filled with potatoes, turnips and other matters very desirable in their way. A stove, four modern chairs and an uneasy rocking chair which the master occupies when he happens to come in, and which neither his wife nor any guest drops into in his absence, constitute the rest of the furni ture. VOX X O.BKAT BKATVBB. Kot ft book or a larap of printed matte la visible anywhere. Once in a long while the old man gets a glimpse of an old newspaper by some accident, and it is startling to hear him announce, as a bit of late news, some-1 thing which he has just read, and which the rest of the world has quite forgotten. He washes himself and combs his hair on Sunday, and that does for the week. His heavy boots of cowhide are never replaced by any neater footwear on week days at least and I don't think that the legs of his trousers have ever appeared outside of them. He works hard, he eats, he sleeps, he makes money, and he saves it. But what for? In the wise economy of nature what is the use of such a man on the face of the earth? In a certain sort he also is a com bination of labor and capital; but what a difference in the two sorts of combinations! It is curious what surprising impressions transient visitors in Pittsburg receive. They are as various as the moods and predielctions of those who receive them. There was Bafph Waldo Emerson, for instance. Many years ago he visited the city to deliver a lecture, and he seemed to pay but very slight attention to the smoke, the noise, the fiery illumination, the iron statistics or any thing else that interest most people. But a grave and venerable gentleman was intro duced to him. Emerson discovered that this Pittsburger was a scholar, and shortly he declared that he should always remem ber Pittsburg with delieht. because it had revealed to him an Orientalist who was rich beyond measure in Eastern lore. That one fact was of signal value to the visiting phil osopher. a singer's imtbessioks. The oddest and most mistaken impression imaginable was that which oppressed Parepa, the glorious singer whom all Pitts burgers so loved to honor. In a confi dential moment she declared that she? always appeared before a Pittsburg audi 'ence with tear and trembling, apprehensive that the verdict should be against her. True, the people had always been kind, but she teared'that an unhappy moment wonld come when she would forfeit their favor. She could not account for the feeling, and she could not banish it. I think she bet tered her impressions at last. But perhaps the most startling impres sions received were those described, not by any visiting stranger, but by a native ot Pittsburg whom I met not very long since. He had grown up iu the city, and had lived there for a time after the war. Then he went away, and through varied stress of cirenmstances he has remained away ever since until the year 1890. I met him after his visit to the old home, and he seemed disappointed and ill at ease in his mind. It was not so much that there had been changes; he expected to find changes. It was not so much that the place had grown; that also was to be expected. He had known, of course, about natural gas, and was quite prepared to accept all the marvels resulting from it. But it was the unexpected changes, those that he had not prepared his mind for that unsettled him; and it was fairly pathetic to hear him lament the dis tresses that had come npon him. And what do you suppose was the change which hid most stunned him with surprise? "Why 1" he said to me with a very long face, "they've moved the Mayor's office! I suppose I heard about it at the time, but I'd forgotten it, and it just knocked the breath out of me!" It is not difficult to imagine what must have been the general effect of the present Pittsburg upon an old resident who ex pected to find the present Mayor's court still sitting in the Wilkins building on Fourth avenue! James C. Puedt. HOW SEKAT0ES WRITE. None of Tbem Coma Up to tho Standard Set by the School Teachers. Washington Poit: "I've been thinkin'," said my old friend, Uncle Jabey Larrabee, of Illinois, in the Senate gallery yesterday, "what'tarnal non sense it is for us to teach our children how to write accordia' to rule, for no man ever got to be great, seems to me, till he un learned all tbem rules an' went to writin' accordia' to his own idee of how it should be done. "Naturally ef we was lookin' fer great men, we'd come to the United States Senit to find 'em; so it's wuth while to watch how these Seniters write. Look at Seniter Dolph over there now. He's holdin' his pen like he was afraid somebody was comin' to take it away f 'm im. See 'm grip it! An' look bow he sets, eortV quarterin' at his desk with nothin' but about half or his forearm restin' on it. You notice he holds bis pen holder 'way back 'most two inches f 'm the pen, and his hand is all clinched up. "Then there's Seniter Wolcott He sets hunched up over his desk with elbows on it an' writes in any fashion that comes handy. First he writes awhile with his right hand and then with his left Jest now he's holdin' his pen between his thumb and fingers, but in a minute, like as not, he'll grab it up between his second an' third or third an' fourth fingers an' slash right along 'a if it was all the same. He ain't got rules enough to put in tea. "An Seniter Teller look at him, sittin' there writin' like a-woman on a book in his lap an' holdin' bis pen atween his first two fingers. Look at Seniter Hawiey, too, holdin' his penholder pointm' 'way off to the right instead of over his shoulder. Seniter Pierce comes nearer rememberin' the way he was learnt at school than any other Seniter there, but even he'd make a writin' master desperate, for he sticks out his little finger fer a guide an' holds his penholder slantin' way off to the right" AN OLD SCOUT'S TRICK. He Uroasht Down Foar Redskins Who Were Hnrd After His Scalp. Philadelphia Press. General Crook and a party were riding along a spur of the Black Hills one day, some 12 years ago. when down on the plain they caught sight of four mounted Sioux chasing a white man who was astride a mule. After getting pretty close to the white man the foremost Indian fired a shot at which man and mule dropped. Then the Indians pressed forward, yelling like fiends. Suddenly the redskins and ponies began to fall. By the time General Crook and his party reached the plain all the red men were down, and the old scout was laughing like a lunatic. "That's great," said the scout "To think that them cunning Sioux should be fooled bv such an old trick 1" 'Three dead Indians lay on the ground, the fourth was dying. The scout went over to the chap about to leave lor the happy hunt intr ground and asked: "Say, red, aid you ever see a wnue man afore?" "Lots of 'em," gasped the brave. "Didn't yer ever hear o' that old trick?" "Isn" thepale face wounded?" asked the dying warrior. "Not a bit," replied the scout. "Yer didn'tcome within a mile of me. I jess gave the old mule the hunch to squat and down he squat 'Twas jess to draw ver on. Your pards are dead, aud you won't live long. I hate like the old scratch to hurt a dying Injun's feeling, but it was enough to kill to see you ducks open your eyes when I began to pop. Funniest thing I ever seen." The poor Indian gazed at the old scout for a few moments; put his hand to bis fore head as if in deep thought, then closed his eyes and died. X0 TIPS SEEDED HOW. Walter Are to be Supplanted by Iilttlo Electric Cars. New York Bnn.l The new departure that was made the other day at a dinner in Baltimore opens up a vision of blessed relief to those to whom the average waiter has always been a bete noir. Instead of the supercilious and in dependent servitors who usually administer to the wants of the hungry public, an elec tric car darted out of the pantry, and is said to have served the course with neatness and dispateh. This exemption from air and tips at the tame time Is an admirable recommeadatloa of ihk botsI platf. WHAT MEN BELIETED Away Back Beyond the Days When History First Was Written. SUPERSTITIONS OP SCANDINAVIA Spirits of Fallen Braves Fought All Day and Feasted All Slsht. LEGENDS OP THE BRITISH ISLANDS rwniTTEN von Tint DiarATcn. 1 Mankind has from all ages been prone to the most lamentable superstition. The most enlightened nations of antiquity were as liable to it as the ignorant. The Hebrews, according to the Bible, could scarcely be re strained from following after the golden calf, Baal and other strange gods. They probably had some taint of superstition left in them alter laboring for 400 years for the Egyptians, whose whole system was a mass of mysterious observances. "With all of their advanced civilization and great learn ing, the Egyptians possessed a remarkable belief in dreams, omens, magic, charms, lucky days and astrology. The Greeks and Bomans learned all of the black arts from Egypt, and added many of their own. They believed in the power of insects and of animals to give warning of approaching danger, and the appearance of comets and eclipses put them into wild frights as indicating great national dis aster, and every brain seemed to be fertile with superstitions, delusions and faith in divination and oracles. The grossness of these superstitious beliefs was relieved by the refinements of advanc ing Christianity, but astrology and alchemy held their own until the eighteenth century, when they gradually died out, especially alchemy, which claimed to make gold out of baser metals. But even to this day there is a trace of superstition in the hearts of al most everybody in every civilized Christian nation. THE EARLT SCANDINAVIANS. The superstitions of the early Scandi navians accorded with their cold and stern country. They, too, had abodes for their gods, which they called Asgard aud Val halla. Odin, their principal deity, was a distinguished chief and warrior bold of past ages. The Scandinavians believed that the universe was originally a chaos of confused vapors inhabited oy a race of evil spirits of vast bulk. Odin was born from these gi gantic monsters and commenced war against them, and overcoming their great chief made the world out of him. He placed four dwarfs called North, South, East and West at the corners of the world whose duty it was to hold up the dome, after which the luminaries were appointed. Every great body was represented by a divinity. Frigga, the earth, became the wife of Odin, and through them came the inhabitants of the world. The fabulous Asgard was represented as containing many beautiful palaces and halls, the chief of which was called The Mansion of Joy, where Odin cat on his throne, which was called the Terror of Nations. Two ravens sat always at his ear telling him of everything then going on in the universe. Among the deities in Asgard was Thor, son of Odin, and Warrior, god of the Scandinavians. Thor was the God of Thunder, and when he moved the earth trembled. He always held in his hand a great hammer called the crusher, which was invincible, and had a boomerang tendency of returning alter being thrown, to the hand of its powerful wielder. Thor rode in a chariot drawn by two powerful goats named Sangniostr and Tangrisuer. THE BEALM OF BEAVE SPIRITS. The great hall appointed for the reception of the spirits of the brave when they left the earth for the realms of the gods, was called Valhalla. Twelve beautiful but awful Nvniphs called Valkyries, sur rounded by lightnings, rode "forth with bloody corselets and radiant spears to choose on every battlefield those who should fall. and lead them as chosen heroes into Val halla. Thry were there occupied all night drinking mead, the northern nectar, and of eating the fat of the wild boar Serimner, which, like the cruse of oil failed not, but filled up again and be came whole every night. This drinking and eating refreshed the noble warriors whose pleasant duty it was in Valhalla to ficht until nearly all of them were cnt to pieces, which was not of much consequence, as those ethereal spirits soon recovered them selves and were always ready to attack the feasts which followed those dreadful battles. The skulls of their enemies upon earth were used as drinking cups, and the warriors were almost always in a state of spiritual inebriation. When the cock crew for day light these heroea would hurriedly abandon their seats and rush out through the 640 gates of Valhalla and hack each other to pieces again. This was the eternal round ot pleasures assigned to departed heroes of Scandinavia. V Hel was the Scandinavian goddess of the dead, and her residence was called Hell hiem. Gloomy rivers flowed hround her world, one of which ran through valleys filled with swords. A dog stands guard at her cave, whose bark awakes the goddess and also gives warning to all who hear it that death is at band. Niord ruled over the elves of light and controled the winds and waves. His sister and wife, Freyza, was the goddess of love. HeJ chariot was drawn by cats who are the emblems of fondness and passion. f QUAFFING BBAOI'S CUP. Bragi was the god of eloquence and when men drank Bragi's cup, they vowed to do some great thing. Even the heir apparent was not allowed to take the throne until he had quaffed Bragi's cup. (From this came our word "brag").- His wile, Idun, guarded the basket of apples which gave to those who ate them perpetual youth. The Scandi navians believed that the spirit of evil was bound, but that his progeny would prevail over the gods and the world. This will be a period of great destruction, the twilight of the gods, which will be marked by years of hard frost and sunless air, when there will be great bloodshed ia the world. The great wolf will devour the sun, and his brother the moon, while the world is in darkness and the stars will vanish from heaven. The heavens will burst asunder while the ship NagUar, which is made of dead men's nails, will float on the waters, while the gods will ride across the rainbow bridge which will disappear behind them. After the destruction of the universe there will be left dwellings'for the evil and the good, the worst of which is Nostrand, where serpents' heads line the walls spit- ting venom; while in Gimli the good and virtuous will nnd pertect peace and repose. But another earth verdant and fresh will arise from the deep ocean; the uncultivated fields will bear fruits and strife and evil will cease; and recovering their records the gods will await the coming of the All father who will pronounce judgments and establish peace that shall endure forever. THE FOBMS OF WOBSHIP. The worship ot the gods was always cele brated in spacions temples or on stone heaps near some sacred grove where the offerings could be suspended after being eleansed in a neighboring fountain by the priestesses. Human sacrifices were offered in limesof great danger or distress, while horseflesh was highly esteemed as an offering. They periodically sacrificed a hog,.wbich was sa cred to Frey, on the assumption that the swine first taught mankind with his nose to p,Iow the eartb. The people had such a deep rooted love for their gods that the early Christian missionaries had to conform their religion somewhat to the usages of the simple people, for they stood as loyally to their beliet as the followers of any faith do nowadays. Thus the black dwarfs, elves, giants and subterranean spirits with which the Norse man peopled earth, air and water were de clared by them to be fallen angels and devils, To this day belief in these raysteri. owbtUf ttlita ia the minds of the ifaor. ant, and the people of more intelligence re late stories of them to their children. Feast ing, dancing and yule games still occupy most of the merry months of winter, and the mistletoe is a part of the ceremonies. A little mystery is enjoyed by all nations It adds the sparkle and sharpness to the wine. In this enlightened age many otherwise in telligent people believe in omens, in astrol ogy, in communication with the spirits of the dead through the agency of an Indian princess or a bootblack. ANGLO-SAXON FAITHS. The Anglo Saxons also believed intha myths of the Scandinavians, and worshiped idols emblematic of the tan, moon, earth and the various seasons. Until this day the old families of England bring in the yule log in the Christmas season, a custom which represents the ancient ceremony of cele brating the return of the sun with his light and heat on the turn of the year. They also believed in elves, dwarfs and giants; in fact, tho familiar superstitions of Britain are .based on their histories of these fairy creat ures. The legendary history of the British Islands is interfaced with all sorts of wizard storiei of these queer creatures and of the "Old Boy" and his connection with them, and with the monks who often tried to in crease the belief of the ignorant and super stitious people in such things. The old story of Sc Bunstan, Archbishop of Canter bury, is a specimen. He died ia 988 A. D., but when a boy he studied so hard that he was reduced very much, but an angel took him medicine in a great storm. StDunstaa ran toward the church to return thanks, when he was met by Satan and many black dogs. He was enabled by faith to fight off his pursuers, when the angel carried him through the roof and set him down in the church. Another time the "old gentleman" came to get the saint when St. Dunstan took the devil's hot tongs and seized the fiend by the nose with it, causing his hasty retreat. FAIRIES AND THE BABIES. Great fear was always upon mothers that the fairies would steal their infants from the cradles, and even men and women were supposed to be carried away by them. They had to make a septennial present of one of their number to Satan, and they preferred to present one of the human family instead. They carried away young married women to be nurses for the fairies' infants, and in Ire land it is yet believed that when a young married woman dies of puerperal fever that the fairies have carried her off for their peculiar uses. The land of the fairies was situated some where under ground, where tbey had splen did palaces and rbere their kings and queens held brilliant court with wonderful processions, magnificent dressing, princi pally of a bright greeu color, and many rode on beautiful milk-'white steeds. When they came on top of earth among the shady groves, they would mingle in the dance to such delicious and ravishing music as mortal ears never heard. All early visitors do not agree on the many features of fairy land, but they all give their king and queen the names of Oberon and Titania. Early Ger man and-French writers speak of them, and the French say that Oberon was a tiny creature of great loveliness, with a crown of jewels and a horn in his hand, whose sweet music set everybody dancing. In Scotland it was the custom to roast the supposititious child whentheimposterwould disappear and the real child would reappear, loadstones were considered an infallible preservative as against fairies stealing the children. Education has not yet been spread far enough in the British" Isles to wholly eradicate the superstitious belief in fairies in their various forms. Bumbaxo. HE CUT OFF BIS THDMB. Oesperato Means Taken by a nihilist to Ecape Siberia. Petrovski was the most magnificent man physically that was in our miserable party bound for Siberia from Moscow under a strong guard two years ago, says a Russian exile in the New York Herald. Unlike tho other prisoners, Petrovski and his party were handcuffed to each other. They were under a double guard, as it was known that they would make an attempt to escape should the opportunity offer. No chance offered, however, until the day of starting for the mines arrived. The soldiers who were guarding the party appeared to be rather under the influence of liquor, and were not so vigilant as usual. I stood on the stoop of a small inn within ten feet of Petrovski and from the expression on his face I knew that something was in the wind. The officer who had charge of this part of the prisoners, who was noted for his brutal ity, had mounted his horse and stood near the party. The guard had walked off some distance and were conversing together. I saw Petrovski working at his handcuff, and then I saw bim draw a common dinner knife from bis jacket The movement did not attract attention, and he then turned slightly, so that his back was toward the officer. Then I saw that he was going to attemptone of the most desperate escapes ever heard ot. The man was certainly amputating his thumb with the table knife, so as to allow the handcuff to slip over his handl He worked at it, never flinching, until the thumbs dropped at his ieet. The blood was flowing from the wound in a stream, but he tied if up with a rag after drawiug the skin over the sicken ing wound, and had slipped the handcuff off. His companion was aware of his move ments, but stood like a statue. The sup pressed excitement I was suffering from, to gether with the daring bravery I was wit nessing, almost made me faint I saw that the dare devil was as pale as a sheet, but without the slightest sign of fear. He stood for a moment irresolute, and then began a slow side movement toward the mounted officer. When within a few feet he turned with the fury of a tiger and seizing the officer dragged him from the horse. Before the guards could recover their senses be had mounted the horse and started off at a run down the street. A fnsilade of shots followed him, but he escaped them all. His friends aided him, and he eventu ally made bis way to Paris, where he still lives, with his wife and family, but minus his right thumb. ' STANDING ON CEBE1I0NI. A Slorr by tha Elder Dnmaa Illmtratlnsi English Stlffbeis and Reserve. Dumas the elder often laughed at English stiffness aud reserve. One of his stories was ' this: "One day Victor Hugo and I were invited to dine with the Duke of Decazes. Among the guests were Lord and Lady Palmerstoa of course this happened before the Febru ary Revolution. At midnight tea was handed round. Victor Hugo and I were Bitting side by side, chatting merrily. Lord and Lady Palmerston had arrived very late, and there had, consequently, been no oppor tunity to introduce as before dinner. After dinner, it seems it was forgotten. English custom, consequently did not allow as to be addressed by the illustrious couple. All at once, young Decazes came np to us, and said: " 'My dear Dumas, Lord Palmerstoa begs you will leave a chair free between yon and Victor Hugo.' "I hastened to do as he wished. We moved away from each other, and placed a chair between us. Thereupon Lord Pal- ' merston entered, holding the hand of his wife, led her up to ns, and invited her to sit down on the empty chair all this without saying a word. " 'My lady, he said to his wife, "what time have you?' "She looked at her watch and answered! " Thirty-five past twelve " 'Well, then,' said the great minister, remember well this day, at 12:35, you were sitting between Alexander Dumas and Vic tor Hugo an honor which you will prob ably never enjor again in your lifetime.' "Then he offered his arm again to his wife, and took her back to her seat without saying a word to u, beeaut Vt had set been ptMstU" ' 3 4 1