PAGES 17 TO 20. " 1 j THIRD PART. I last's Impressions on Yisiting , the Senate Arena. NATIONAL STYLE IN DRESS Suggestions as to the Enlargement of the White House. HOUSE OP GEOKGE WASHINGTON rcoBBisrojfDESCi or the DisrxTcn.1 """ "Washington, June 7. With profound regret I begin to observe many strikingly nnamerican traits in Mr. Nast's character. I don't know whether to lay them to his ex tensive travels in New Jersey and other loreign lands or to the influence of those multitudinous young men who flock to our shores to see the steamer irom England come in and to pick up a few cast-ofl" pat terns of cockney slang toeether with some styles of panties from which London re covered several seasons ago. But, whatever the cause may be, the fact is apparent that Th. East is not as truly a typical American as I could wish htm" to be. "Why, when the waiter in a fashionable restaurant the other day upset the olive oil bottle over the artist's clothing, Mr. Nast spoke to him about it spoke in language which left the amazed young man to inter that Mr. Nast did not like that sort of thing. I tried to pour oil on the troubled Nast by uttering the first pleasantry that came to my mind, but it was of do avail; he kepfcnientioning the matter to the servant and when the r.n .-llro tifil- ne if. is the ritrht of everv free and independent American citizen J - j" : n.;f;oi- tft thi1 table without giving any change to the astounded voung man. This U not Ameri can, and I told Mr. Hast; told him that if he did not wish to be regarded as either a foreigner or a crank Jie must not resent such little things as this. ' "How much better and bow much more American It would have been," I said to A SOLUTION OP THE him, "had you thanked the waiter forcatch ing the bottle before all the oil had run out upon youi How much pleasanter that would have made the waiter feell As it is you have hurt the tender sensibilities of a young man wbo is even now saying in his soul that you are a harsh and exceptional man. And had you ended the transaction, as Americans customarily do, by telling the youne man to keep all the change, yon would have reaped the priceless reward of consciousness that the waiter regarded Ancient and Modern Gladiators. you as a gcniai, good-natured gillie and a generous, whole-souled chump." I was in the lecturing mood and now was a good time to speak of auother little matter to Mr. Hast, "3Testerday afternoon you did a most un american thing, when that man from out West leaned over jour shoulder and watched ynu drawintr pictures of members of the House o Representatives. This is a de mocracy, sir, and he w.is a sovereign citizen of it. He bad a constitutional right to look over your shoulder and to stick out bis tongue and follow the meanderings of your pencil with it. He was not infrlering with your life, liberty or pursuit of happi ness, and you should not have been so crochety about it. When he said: 'Hub! Drawin' picturs, hain't ye?' you should not have answered, saying: "'Ho; I'm building a ferryboat, and by and by I'm going to erect an asylum for the feeble-minded.' That was ironical, Mr. Hast, and calculated to grieve the poor man. But it was nothing to the eccentric manner in which vou ob jected to that other man sitting behind you and putting his leet on the back of your seat. AVhat if he did wipe a little mud off Small White House for Large Blalexmen. on rour collar? You intended to put the collar into the wash that evening, anywav. When you are in America you must do as Americans do; you must graciously let people maul you around and inquire into your business and slap your hat down over your eyes, for this is a Iree country, you know." I hnd some hope that these remarks would do Mr. Hast good and tend to stop the en largement of his undemocratic notions. But Here we were at the entrance to the Senate gallery. "Shall we look in upon the arena where the battles of the people are fought?" I asked, by way of changing the subject. MODERN GLAD1A ORS "Arenal" said Mr. Nast, the soul of the artist lighting his eye with its divine bre. "Is this an arena? Do rladiators meet here to do battle? Ahl what a picture that word 'arena' calls up a picture of proudly erect gladiators, each having an equal chance in the combat and each wearing their chests op where chests should be worn. But can this be called an arena, where the gladiators meet on so unequal terms and where the chests of so many have dropped down into their pockets? "And yet," mused the artist, "there is something gladiatorial about them after all, standing as they do shielded behind the cast-iron laws that thev mate and, if not mm fi SISir 1 JlBJBi George in a Box. drawing blood from each other, at least bleeding the community at large pretty ireelv." "Shall we remain here?" I asked. "No; let us take a walk." Quite willing to take anything that Mr. Nast roicht suggest, I acquiesced, and we set out down Pennsylvania avenne, contin uing our stroll to the White House, where I explained to him that they are talking of building a new Presidental home because this one is too lilliputian for the brobding nagian statesmen who arecalled to occupv it. "Is it really too small?" asked Mr. Nast "Too small? I should say so. Why last summer they drove the red ants out because they took up so much room." t "I thought they drove them out because the President was a raid he might be charged with nepotism if he permitted them to stay there," said Mr. Hast. "Ho; it was because there was not room for the ants and the other occupants at the same time. Why, I am told that during President Cleveland's administration Andy RACE PBOBLEM. Welch, of Illinois, once lighted one of his Yorkville clears in the East Boom and the odorot it filled the entire mansion. A great and glorious country like this ought to have an executive mansion that could not be so easily filled.This one will do very well for the Presidental offices, but when you come to adding sleeping and cooking, and laundry accommodations, it is easy to see what a plight the Chief Execu tive and his household are in." "Being the capital of the nation, "Wash ington, I supDose, is, like London (.jS Paris, and Berlin, the place to come to see the best development of national style of dress as well as of general culture," said Mr. Nast "Oh, ves, ol course." Mr. Hast grabbed me by the arm and be gan singing to a familiar air the words: "Where did you get tnat ?" "Shi" I cautioned him. "That is Senator Hiscock, and it is highly improper to ask him where be got it. It may be all right to ask yourself in silence why he got ii, and why, hiving got it, he persists in wearing it pulled down to the bridge of his nose, but where he got is a question that does not con form to the dignity of a United States Sen ator." "But not the hat alone," said Mr. Nast "The tout ensemble! Is it not a rare com bination of taste and elegance?" "Yes; the ongsomb is very tout indeed it is, as we say in the French, tout, utterlv tout tout" "I notice one thing in Washington that can not be seen in any other capital in the Apollo Adorned. world," said Mr. Nast. "And that is?" "Utter freedom from all rules and conven tionalties in street attire." "See that man going yonder that one with the silk bat and the pea jacket There is a combination which I venture to say is produced in no other capital of the civilized world." "Yes, we are ahead of 'em all in the mat ter ot broad and comprehensive tastes," I acknowledged. "We Americans combine all the gentility of the silk bat Tith de mocracy of the pea jacket, and we are proud of it." "And there comes another man. Look at him, with a Prince Albert coat, full dress shirt, an evening vest and a broad-brim slouch hat," said Mr. Nast. "Only another evidence or our great breadth of mind. "We, as a peoplt, Bir, comprehend, as it were, the entire day. We combine the morning coat with the evening vest, and cap these off with the midnight hat; aud we jab our hands up to onr elbows Into our trousers pockets, and don't care a continental who look at nj in wonderment J-T" ill I tell you, sir, we are a broad-minded peo ple, we Americans." "Don ,you mean to tell me that these two creatures ith these outrageous costumes which make them look like animated comic valentines, are broad-minded men?" asked Mr. Nast, disgust oozing from his every pore. I could see that Mr. Nast was tending toward another of his crotchety spells and threw a mint julip into him. After he was somewhat cooled off when we stepped out upon the street again. "What sort ot thing is that coming down street?" he asked. "That is what we call a masse Ameri can." "Why masse?" "Because there is so much English on it, you know." "What part of England should you think he was from?" "That part lying between the Missouri river and the Arkansas line, I should say." Just then the crook of the ponderous cane which horizontally accompanied this mag nificent spectacular panorama caught in the trouser-leg ot a fellow-citizen." "Ah," exclaimed Mr. Nast, "I never could understand before why the cane should be carried in that manner, but now I see it is done with the eood and generons in tention ol helping others along. I shouldn't be surprised if in time this method of lug ging walking sticks would Bolve the race problem." I don't believe Mr. Nast spoke in direct seriousness. He says so many cruelly sar castic things that I am always a wee bit dubious of'his meanings. As is usual with Mr. Nast and myself when we take our walks, if we walk long A Washington Fashion Plate. enough in this city of magnificent distances, we came back to our starting point and found ourselves at the Capitol. "What is that new-looking building over there?" he asked as we stood looking from the east portico of the great edifice. "That is George Washington's house." "Did George ever live in that thing?" "Lives in it now." "Goon; you're joking." I took Mr., Nast across the open space and boosted him up to the window of the house. Sure enough, he saw George seated inside, cool as you please cool, first because he was marble, and next because he had on no clothes to speak of. When I let my friend down to the earth he asked why they had put the statue in that little house." "They didn't," I told him; "they put the house round the statue." "Ah, I see," said he; "Anthony Corn stock has been here and they have 'boxed George up to keep from offendingAnthonv's delicate sense oT propriety. It was lucky that Comstock-wasa't around at the time o'f the creation, or Adam aud Eve wouldn't have been allowed to run about as they did. Somebody would have been arrested maybe not Adam and Eve, but some body." "You are mistaken, Mr. Nast Washing ton was not thus housed in deference to Mr. Comstock's sentiments. It was because" "Oh, yes; I see. It must be that the Ee bellion isn't over yet, and there is no telling where it will break out next I see, I see. George was a Virginian and they can't tell what he may " "No, no; that Isn't it, either. This house was built last fall and has been standing over the statue all winter. Some say it was built to keep George warm and it must be conceded that he is clothed a leetle lightly for winter but it is -my own opinion that the purpose was to keep him from hearing some of the debates in the big building in ront of him; for George Washington, you know, was a great General, who delighted to wage war with the enemies of this, his native land." Willis B. Hawkins. STATUE OF GEKEBAL GORDOff. A Wonderful Piece of Art Unveiled by tbo Prince of Wales at Chatham. Pall Mali Budget The statue of General Gordon, which his Eoyal Highness the 'Prince of Wales has nnveiled at Chatham, certainly occupies a unique position among the works of art ol this description which have been erected in England. Mr. E. On-.low Ford, A. B, A., the sculptor selected to carry out the work, emoraced the opportunity for launching out in a bold and fearless manner from the com monplace conventioualities in this form. Gordon is represented as the Governor-General of the Soudan in his official dress, wearing a fez, with his well-earned medals on his breast, and mounted on a camel whose handsome trappings likewise bespeak the rank of the rider. The lace is an ad mirable likeness of Gordon, while the figure has an easy and natural pose, the Statue of Charles George Gordon. whole effect produced being that the rider is perfectly at home on the backol the animal. It is well known that Gordon was a great camel rider, for in his correspondence he frequently alludes to the fact; in one letter he states that it was only by hard camel riding that he held his position among the people in the Soudan, and in another be suggests that he enjoys it because it enables him to think in peace and to mature his plans. In this, therefore, as in all the minor details such as the camel's headgear, the single guiding chain, the leathern Son dan water bottle, "the historical rattan seen in Gordon's hand and in other conspicuous features of the work there has been no de parture irom absolute' fidelity to tact, al- made kuuugu ww uuiw to tuv3i ant 3 tic jxi juuiu liis model irom & liye camel in the Xoadt?91 vogjugicax vraraens. flSIf -ym "lxS-'fi?MTv 7ilft Si? Tyw PITTSBURG, SUNDAY, JUNE 8, 1890. CASH GOING ABROAD. The European Exodus Viewed From a Financial Standpoint! II MAKES US $60,000,000 POORER. New lork is as Good a Place as Any to Spend the Hot Months. TROUBLES OP BDBDEBAN RESIDENTS icoBKXsroxDxxcx or thi disfxtch.1 New York, June 7. The annual Euro pean exodus of American citizens has fairly began. The steamships sailing from this port last Saturday carried over 1,000 saloon nassengers. There were quite as many second cabin and steerage who ac companied them. While most of these sum mer wanderers are from New York and im mediate vicinity they really come Irom all sections of the country. New York at this season of the year is a great clearing house of pleasure-seekers departing for new scenes and new countries. This simple statement does not fully con vey the idea. To quite understand the sig nificance ol the spring stampede a visit to the great docks where lie the European steamers would be necessary. These on Saturday and Wednesday mornings, which are the two great sailing days, present the liveliest scenes imaginable. The roadways approaching the docks swarm with trucks and truckmen bearing supplies for the ships, and amid this swarm excited passen gers find their way to the piers. These piers seem at first Bight to be a disorderly mass of workmen, passengers, visitors, boxes, crates, trunks and every conceivable sort of luggage entangled in one chaotic mass. EVERYTHING SYSTEMATIC. As a matter of fact, however, there is a system underlying the whole, and this sys tem is the one which experience has demonstrated the best adaptation of condi tions to the desired end. The close ob server will note that the movements of every gang of men are regulated so as to "get there" in the shortest possible space of time. If you are a stranger loafing on the pier out of idle curiosity, or for the purpose of seeing friends off on the- departing steamer, you had better look out for your shins and your bodily belongings gener ally. Truck loads of baggage and truck men are no respecters ot persons. The long 'line of them that crowd upon the pier must be constantly restrained by policemen and ships' officers to prevent an inextricable jam of matter and bodily injury to those on loot The huge swinging cranes that grasp their truck with iron hands creak merrily to the time of the donkey engines as they dump their loads down the hatches. The crowds of passengers and visitors creeping slowly up the eangways are greeted by other crowds already in possession of the decks. A little hit 'of pasteboard is necessary in order to allow you to go aboard. A petty officer in uniform at the foot of the gang plank collects this, and glowers upon you as if you were an inconsiderate bore and better be some place else. From the decks of the ship, however, is a finer view ol this pier pandemonium. THE SCENE ON SATURDAY. On Saturday the same scene may be wit nessed Irom a hall dozen ships, which will presently steam side by side or one after an other down the harbor. Five hundred to 1,000 people will wave handkerchiefs from each pier, and thousands of tears will add their quota to the briny deep. A fleet of tugs and other small vessels will accompany each ship to' the lower bay. These will con tain the many friends ot the more fortunate or more notorious of the ship's passengerV List Saturday was but a counterpart of many Saturdays yet to come. It is estimated that the average number of persons who go abroad at this season ot the year will reach at least 1,000 per day. This means that from the middle ol May to the middle of July up ward of 60,000 Americans will have de parted from their native shores in quest of pleasure and health on foreign soil. While the exodus will continue during the sum mer there will be a considerable falling off Irom the middle of July. So you realize what all this.means from a financial point of view? From the poor steerage passenger who will blow in a couple of hundred dol lars in a visit to his fatherland to the mill ionaire and his family whose expenses mean that much every day of absence, it is a mod erate estimate to place the average expendi ture at $500 each for the trip. MILLIONS FOE FOREIGN POCKETS. Eor 60,000 this means 530,000,000. For the entire summer's crowd 560,000,000 will be a more accurate estimate. And this is for New York alone. All of this money, mind you, goes into foreign pockets and should be carefully set down in figuring the balance of trade between the United States and foreign Governments. There is enough expended on loreign pleasures every year by Americans to create a respectable navy and sea coast de'enses, if spent at home for that purpose. It would seem worth the while of American statesmenship to provide some means by which, through an American mer chant marine, a large portion of this annual expenditure might be retained at home. The annual exodus from .New York does not simply mean that part of our population which goes to Europe. It "is the most ob jectionable feature. But that portion which leaves the city on pleasure bent within our own domain is a much larger one. It is a great pity that some statistics can't be had as to nearlv the exact number of people who leave the TTuited States every summer for loreign travel. It would also be interesting to know just how many people leave our great cities to spend their time in the mount ains and at fashionable watering places. So far as New York is concerned the number is simply marvelous; if the empty houses of tnese people could be collected In a single neighborhood, they would form a vast and silent city of themselves. SEW YORK'S MANY ATTRACTIONS. Yet New York in summer is one 'of the most delightiul cities to live in, and pre sents fewer excuses for its inhabitants to get out of town than most any other city. With sea water qn both sides of it and Central Park in the middle of it, with a hundred desirable resorts within a half hour and 50 cents reach ot it, there is little occasion for a business man to desert his desk or a family to pull up stakes, except the decree of fashion. There are probably 100,000 New Yorkers of the middle class w"ho can't afford to go to Europe, or in any way break connection with their commercial life, who swarm to the suburbs in the attempt to extract there by a temporary pleasure. Of all those we have alluded to this class is the most mis guided and to be pitied. I have tried suburban life myself since I have'been in New York. From the glowing accounts of friends 1 sought one summer to bask on the banks of the Hudson. Every day at 4 o'clock I joiued the rabble that rushed for the rail and ar rived at my country place , begrimed with coal dust and steaming with perspiration. Every morning during that time I ate a hasty and indigestible country breakfast and bolted for my train along with the rest on business to the great city. It was only an hour's ride and yet the memory of the disagreeable features of those three short months lingers with me still. FLED TO THE SEA. The next summer I sought the sounding sea. Very fond of the water am I and for days I dreamed of the delightful sails from Pier One on lower Broadway to the iron pier at Uong Branch. And verr dellzhtful JsoILi theie proved to be for a limited tlmet But the novelty soon wore off. I found that so far as comfort was concerned it was a great deal hotter at Long Branch aud Asbury Park than it was on the West Side in the city. After a fair trial, therefore, the next summer was passed at home and it proved the most agreeable and comfortable that I have ever enjoyed. Let me say that my experience is the ex perience of hundreds of thousands of people of thiscjty to-day. Yet I could not speak so positively without the actual knowledge thus gircn. The man who can content him self for two or three months at Long Branch, or any other watering place, must be a very peculiar sort of a man. Those who, having dues lived near Ne-.r York, struggling for the trains and boat twice a day, are still morejeculiar if they do so for the second time. BETTER STAY AT HOME'. The men of means who go abroad oc casionally have some excuse tor the trip and receive something for their money. The men who store their furniture in the city and throw up their leases for three or four .months' li e in the country or some ad jacent suburb, have no such inducements. They are simply fools, whom the census taker would do well to enumerate for the benefit of the scientific statistician. I know of no other mode of life which combines a greater variety of discomforts than that of living in the country and doing business in the city. This does not apply.of course, to people who live in Philadelphia and do business in New York. The dis tinction should be drawn, however, between a purely country life and this combination of city and country. It is the latter 1 de test. As lor country life and its restful qui etude, whether on a farm or in the mount ains, it is not to be belittled. It is tbis daily struggle for rest which the city man goes through that aggravates bis ailments. If be cannot get away from business and the city entirely, he had better stick closely to good dinners, wholesome hours, decent cock tails, Havana cigars and similar comforts of a home. Charles T. Murray. TOBACCO AND THE NEOB0. These Tito Element! Kerp the Northern and Southern RIetbodUla Apart. Speaking of the proposed union of the M. E. Church, Bev. T. E. Pearce, of Dallas, Tex., is quoted as follows: You say that the slavery question is settled, and there fore there is no reason why the Northern and Southern Methodist Episcopal Churches should not coalesce. I tell you there are several reasons why the union of the two branches of what essentially is the same great denomination is impracticable, if not impossible. First Tobacco. The Northern Church forbids its ministers the use of the weed. But what can we poor Southern Methodist preachers do? Why, sir, many of us first saw the light in tobacco barns, and we grew up like untamed colts in tobacco fields. Second The Northern Methodists believe the negro is every bit as good, if not a little better, than the white. We don't believe he is as good as the average white man, by a large majority. Then, all the old smoldering passions and prejudices north and south of Mason and Dixon's line would be revived again and again, until we would have engendered rancorous hate and jealousy instead ot the present Christian fellowship and good-will existing between the two churches. I say, let well enough alone. BILLIARD CUE TIPS. They Amount to Quite nn Item and Have to be Specially Prepared. "Few people," said Harry Davis the other day, "understand anything about the tip to a billiard cue. I dare "say there are hun dreds of the best players in Pittsburg who know only that the tip is made of leather. As to where it comes from, hovr.it is made, or what it costs, they are totally Ignorant There are several grades of tips, costing from $1 50 to 53 per 100. The 51 50 kind are very inferior and are not used in first-class rooms. It is economy, in the best billiard rooms, to use first-class tips. Take a room Un:M '-.-.. 1R in OO tallica -i n A U. , -f liOVlUg ll.W AW -v --w ..-.. uuu bile 1ICU1 Ul tips ii a big one. In a year it will reach at lane 050 . 'WO "Ordinary leather is not used in the man ufacture of billiard tips. A very choice quality has to be used, and it is tanned and otherwise prepared by a special process. There are no billiard tips made in this coun try; tbey come mostly Irom Paris, where much care is used in preparing them. Paris turns ont the best tips in the world. There is a loss, however, to the purchaser, in the very best tips of about 10 per cent, because of imper.ect ones. A &ivt is generally the result It is fonnd in the pasted section holding the leather tip proper to its base. A tip with a flaw in it makes a very unsat isfactory cue." CHUTESE FUNISHKEBTS So Barbarous and Inhuman That Travelers Conelnde They Have No Nerves. The Chinese have no nerves; neither have they sympathy with the sufferings of their fellows, and the spirit of charity is conspicu ously absent, says a traveler in the St. Louis Glole-Democrat. This lack of common humanity is specially observable in their punishment of criminals. The cruelty of their punishments is almost incredible. A favorite method of punishing a crime of un usual atrocity is to condemn the criminal to death In a wooden cage of such a height that when his head projects through a hole in the top the wretched criminal can neither stand upright nor sit down, but, with his legs half bent must endure the most horrible tortures until death comes to relieve him. But a still more terrible punishment is that em ployed for the most depraved criminals, guilty of some unusual and unnatural crime. It is called .death by wakefulness, and when inflicted a number of guards take turn an noying the prisoner and keeping him awake, and after a few days' of this treatment, the severest tortures will scarcely suffice to pre vent the miserable wretch from falling asleep, He becomes insane, and finally succumbs amid the most dreadful Bufferings .conceivable py tie human mind. A ROMANCE OP RUSSIA AND SIBERIA BY PRINCE JOSEF LUBOMIRSKI, Author of "Safer-Hadji, a Story of Turkistan," Eta TBAIESLATEO FBOM THE RUSSIAX FOB THE DISPATCH BY META D VERA. SYNOPSIS OF PREVIOUS CHAPTERS. Valdlmfr Lanin, of noble nlrth, weds Jana Wernin, daughter of a rich resident of St Peters burg. Ontphri Bchelm. the villain ot the story. Is high In authority. He had souzbt Jana's band and was rejected with scorn. Bcnelm'sllte work seem to be to revenge himself on Lanin and his bride. He purchases the services ot Miller, a schoolmate of bis aid ot Lanln's. Under Scbelm's instructions Miller, in the guise of a fiiend. betrays Lanin and has him taken prisoner with a band of conspirators, tbe head of which is The Ace otClubs. Lanin Is sent to Siberia. Miller bad Scbelm's promise o( help but he knows too much to suit tbe latter and be, too. Is sent to the mines. Nicholas PnpotF, a discharged employe "f Schelm's, gets papers showing that Lanin is innocent of part in tbo conspiracy. These papers fall into tbe bands of Colonel Palkin, also high in authority. Scbelm bribes Palkin, Rets back the papers and sends PopoS to Siberia. Then he gets Palkin transferred to Siberia. Jana gets the Czar's consent to join ber husband and sets out with Dr. Haas, her friend, Popoffs mother and his sweetheart. Palkin falls in with them and, partly out of passion for Jana and nartly oat of hoDe he can use them to avenge himself on Scbelm, acts as their escort. Once he betrays bis desiens to Jna, but frightens ber so she dares not tell of It Tbey find Vladimir the victim ot the brutal wife of an inspector, whose advances of love he had ignored. Jana rents a beautif nl bonse and for a time Vladimir is happy again. Then come orders from Scbelm that Vladimir most be treated as a most danger ous criminal and forbidden his visits to Jana. Desperate, be joins an exile conspiracy. Miller Is at the bead of it The men meet and Miller craves Vladimir's forgiveness, and, after telling his story, is freely forgiven. CHAPTER XXI. Morning began shortly to dawn, and the landscapes, though still veiled in a white mist, grew lighter and lighter. The frozen bed of the Angara looked like a second high road by the side of the great post road. Down on tbe wide bed of the river the narta of. Ienar-kus was flying toward Irkutsk. All around still asleep, tbe narta alone, like nn evil spirit fleeing before the light of day, was an exception. The Prince of the Gunguses had given Vladimir his swift-footed dogs and sleigh. In the narta sat Miller at his side. The white walls of the city were already visible in the distance when Miller, who did not seem to feel the cold in the least, con tinued: "It is certainly most fortunate that you have joined us. Wo had an organization and men, but we lackedtill now both money and arms. Now you will furnish both. This will help us greatly. The Countess and her friends will enable ns to purchase arms. As the merchants are permitted to sell carbines to the Tartars iu the Chinese Empire, Ienar-kus can be onr agent Now 1 feel our strengthl You cannot imagine what 100 resolute men can do in these vast deserts, where the Czar can hardly raise 1,000 men in all." "You speak of a hundred but count onlv 20?" "You have seen only a part of the con spirators. In all the districts where exiles are living we have branches. To-day we count a hundred; to-morrow there mav be 5001" Vladimir interrupted him. "Look here. Miller, I promise you every assistance to enable you to flee from here. I am ready with my wife to accompany vou as far as the Siberian frontier. But mind, you must not raise your hand against the Czar or our mother country. Will you promise?" Miller made no reply. They had just then passed a snow-covered hill, which rose abruptly from tbe banks of tbe Angara Miller pointed it out to his companion and said: "Do you notice this Tartar tomb? Here von must come whenever yon wish to see me. Every night a man of the tribe of Ienar stands guard here. This Gungus knows where I may be found. .The mound is hollow inside, although the Bnssians have not yet discovered this. Ienar-kus, a de scendant of the former rulers of this coun trv, told me so on the day when we swore brotherly friendship and sealed it with our blood. You need only go to the esst side of the hill and call Ienar's name Hires times; one of bis men will, after a while, come out from within and tell yon what you may wish to know." "So near the city?" asked Lanin, cau tiously. "This desert has many other mysteries yet unknown to the conquerer. And this is my power. During the two years that I have been living here I have not ceased try ing to find out these secrets, until now I probably know this land of snow and ice as well as those who were born here. Bemem ber, whenever you need me. hasten to this mound and 24 hours later I shall be at your service. Every order of yours will be ful filled. Prom this hour Miller, tbe traitor, is your slave. Never forget that, Vladi mir. , YThey stopped under the walls of the city. "Here my dominion ends," said Miller, checking the fleet dogs. Parewell.Vladimlr. You are almost in town." They shook hands. Once more the Count turned round aud said: "My first care shall be now to purchase arms; I am told there is a merchant Lap teff, who mainly furnishes arms to the Tar tars." "Yes! Bat be cautious I Bemember that I an. exile la not permitted to bar aimI" "Never mindl My wife has an old friend, a Dr. Haas, who has accompanied her to this place. He will not be suspected." "GoodI But make haste, for I burn with the desire to be iree once morel" They parted. As Miller drove off he once more beard the warning words: "Bemember, Millerl'Nothing against the Czar and holy Bussial" Miller did not seem to have heard these words, which once before he had apparently disregarded, and soon the narta had disap peared behind the mound. Lanin went into tbe city. For two days Jana had been anxiously expecting him. Now he told ber all. He spoke of 'his hopes, his meeting with Miller, how he had forgiven him and had joined him in tbe conspiracy. He bad been afraid Jana would disapprove of this. All the more he rejoiced now, when she said: "A man such as Miller is does nothing by halves. Betrayed Dy officials, he will never become a spy. His very crime proves that he is honest now. Yon mnst never be a traitor to your native land, but you must and mav try, by all means, to recover vonr I liberty." THE KWOUTOTG OP POPOFF. Dr. Haas was summoned. His answer was calm and dignified. "Countess, I have devoted myself to your service, and I am not a Buss. What you approve I am prepared to approve, and what you order I shall try to do. lam an old man, and my last sacrifices are made for you. Do not ask my opinion, therefore, but simply command!" It was now decided that Dr. Haas should draw from the Bank of Irkutsk enough of Jana's money to purchase arms and then return with the Count to bis hut in the village, in order to calm the Governor, and to take other precautionary measures. The day after Dr. Haas was to open negotiations with Lapteff and buy 500 rifles, intended for a khan of the Catehas who had risen in rebellion against the Chinese authorities. Lanin and Dr. Htas bade Jana farewell and then went to the bank walking down Main street Tbe town clock wss striking 10. Almost at tbe same time when Count Lanin returned from Lake Baikal, Fopoff and his betrothed entered the offices of the head of the gendarmes. Palkin was out, having been ordered to appear before tbe Governor, be had directed his secretary, on leaving, to continue tbe work begun the day before. Popoff wanted to have one more long conversation with his betrothed, and in order to interrupt his work he had called Helen in, and now was distributing several papers in her presence. Palkin, when he left, had said he would hardly be back be fore two hours, and Popoff, therefore, thought he would have time to explain his plan to Helen. They had been conversing a good hour, and Popoff bad told his be trothed that on the following Sunday be would have to meet theCouut, and in speak ing of the document against Schelm, which he still had in his possession, he said: "The less this paper meant at that time the more formidable it has since become. The receipt and the forged signature prove beyond all doubt that I was Schelm's ac complice. He never prosecuted me. He only had me arrested as a dangerous man, not as a man who had stolen money and forged a signature." "But, Nicholas, how could you keep this paper?" "That I'll tell yon," he said, and his eyes glowed in triumph; '1 used to carry this paper about me, and it kept me anxious iu the day and prevented my sleeping at night One night I dreamt I had lost it, and I should be drowned in the Neva. I started from my sleep bathed in perspiration, and next morning I had a terrible toothache. This gave me a mad idea. T went to Sebas topol, where I knew an eminent American dentist I got him to draw two of my teeth, one per ectly healthy, the other slightly diseased. Then I ordered a very small box ofivorytobe made, shaped outwardly ex- acny iikc me two teetn. xne paper oi tbe copying; book is very thin; I folded my precious paper my small, pat it into ft MB1L T fSBf ' iff ! EfBi& m ' diminutive bladder and then went back to my dentist. I asked bim it he could put the little box back into my jaws to look: like the two missing teeth. He thought me at first half mad, bat when I offered him 200 roubles he agreed to humor me. When ever now I think I am in danger I put in my two teeth, hnd so far providence has been mercilul to me, and my treasure has never been detected. I confide my secret to you. my Helen, for the hour ot the conflict is approaching, and I know not what may be my fate. Bemember, thereiore, that X am in'your power, and not I only, but the fate also of the whole family of our bene factor." He had barely ended these words when he, accidentally looking out of the window, saw Palkin's sleigh beiore tbe door, and tha Colonel with the captain of gendarmes get ting out o. it "What can that mean? The Colonel back so soon? Helen, get away as fast as you can and consult with the Countess -Sunday in the twilight I'll go out to Krowa to see tbe Count Perhaps the Countess would be so kind as to be there at the same time. Maks baste, Helen, the Colonel must be angry that I let you in." "It is too late. I must hide somewhere." She pointed at the curtain of coarse linen which hung in the corner of the room and screened piles of papers. "Are you mad?" cried Nicholas. "Those are the archives of the corps of gendarmes." She smiled and insisted. It was high time. The Colonel's voice was heard quite nearby. Helen ran to the corner and hid behind the curtain. "Even if he finds me, what can he do to me?" she whispered into PopofFs ear. He was terrified. Popoff bent over his papers and gave him self the air of being very busy. The door opened and the two officers entered. "Popoff, jump into the sleigh, drive to the prison, get them to give you a list of all the prisoners and bring it to me at once. It will not take much ot your time and yon will have a chance of drawing a breath of fresb air." Popoff bowed, but could not rejoice, so great was bis fear for Helen. He remon strated a moment, but in vain; he had to leave her. ' "The fool thinks I show bim so much con sideration from sheer goodness ot heart," said Palkin to tbe Captain, wbo accom panied him. "Listen to me; I can speak openly to you, for you are an excellent officer and know that he wbo wants promotion mnst be supported by influential per sons in high offices. So far I have asked nothing ol you, but now I shall want you. Are you ready to comply with my wishes?" "Most assuredly; I know what inflaence you wield; you are the poor gentleman's only protector. Order and I obey." "Count Lanin mnst be arrested before Sunday; I give yon three days' time to do that." The Captain hesitated. "Colonel," he said, "I should be glad to do that, for I can bear that fool as little u typhus or cholera, but the Governor favors him greatly." "You are mistaken! That was so yester 4day that is not so to-day. He can no longer protect him. I promise you nobody will henceforth have anything to do with that man. I promise yon, beside, to as sume the whole responsibility. We lovs and we hate people here, not as we like, but as we are ordered Irom Petersburg. I rely upon it; you must arrest the Countl You can easily find a pretext He is hardly ever at home; you need only appear unexpectedly in Krowa; the law is on your sidel" The Captain's eyes blazed at once. "I shall go there from here. The matter is settledl" "Weill And once in jail, yon have the house watched, and let no one enter. Have a few men on hand, moreover, in case I should need them." "Very well. Colonel!" "I rely on you, and now yon can go, but come to-morrow and reportl" The gendarme left, and the Colonel walked up and down in the room, meditat ing on the blackest plans. Like all men, who pursue their thoughts energetically, he spoke to himself aloud. "I must get that paper from Popoff, by cunning or by force, it I shoul'd have to kill him! Schelm can no longer be dangerous to me; he will have reason to fear me. We shall both of us make a brilliant career. I do not bate him. I only want to prevent bim from injuring me. Let him take Lanin. What do I care? He was useful to me as a weapon so far. If I find a better weapon, what do I care for him? I'll give Schelm the husband; he'll give ma tha wife as my reward, and all is welll" Palkin, having just returned from tha Governor, was still in full uniform. He' went into bis chamber to relieve himself of his sword and heavy boots. No sooner had he disappeared than Helen's pale face peeped from behind the curtain. She . looked around, and, seeing nobody, she slowly opened the door to the salon. Here also nobody. She had come to see her be trothed often enough to know the house. She slipped down the stairs to PopofFl room. Alas, it was empty! CHAPTER xxrr. Not ten minutes bad elapsed since Lanin and Dr. Haaa had left Jana when Helen rushed in, pale with excitement, to tell her all she had beard. "I hardly knew how I escaped. I waited a whole hour for Nicholas, but he did not return. I asked one of tbe gendarmes, who generally are very kind to me, to call the Secretary out 'Ab, here you kre, you nice little damsel I' he shouted at me. 'Clear out irom here, and never show yourself again in this honsel We bare all ol bj gottea i 1 1