.18 THE PITTSBTJEG- DISPATCH, r- SUNDAY, ZXJKtiWb? 1890 each a scolding on your account! Here comes your betrothed, and quite unneces sarily tells the Colonel that you have been here. Is that the way you reward our good ness?' And thus he talked on till he shut the door and bade me go instantlyl Oh, Countess, save the Count; for God's sake, save Nicholasl" Jana was terrified, hut not specially sur prised. Since that scene in the coach she had nerer again fully trusted Falkin, in spite of all his assurances ot boundless de votion. She had, however, kept silence, hoping thus to keep him from injuring her or her husband hereafter. Now she Quietly rose and said to Helen: "X shall at once go to the Governor. So just a man will surely not deny ns his sup port. Do you, in the meantime, go into town; you will surely meet my husband and Dr. Haas. Tell them all, and beg them at once to come here. Ton will easily find the doctor, because everybody likes and honors him for the good he has already done." Helen could not recover; she was still trembling all over with excitement and tear. Jana tried to calm her and to encourage her, and did not leave her till she had at least partially succeeded. Then both these good and noble women left the house. Irkutsk has like most large Bussian cities, a main street, which consists of splendid, symmetrically built palaces. From this street smaller ones branch off with poor log houses and then follow mudholes and so-called suburbs. Every great town, however, has at least one square built after European models. The main street of Irkutsk crossed the street in which Jana lived, which at the corner especially looked very much like the main street. Seven supurb mansions rose on both sides. They were of massive struc ture, had several stories and possessed real architectural merits. At the house of the Countess the symmetry ceased. After it followed only poor, smoke-blackened huts, and the end of the street encountered a hill utterly uninhabited. The house which immediately adjoined r Jana's dwelling, although looking very in significant and even poverty-stricken, was in reality not so badly arranged. It -was a 4 one-story log house, surrounded by a small garden. Here lived the captain of gen darmes. Jana did not know this. Her servants were all aware of the tact, but they did not know of the ill-feeling that existed between the two families. f Helen, when she left Jana's house, looked ,. ail around, to see 11 sne couju perceive any trace ot the Count or of Dr. Haas. She saw in the door of the Captain's house a woman fc standing -who was idly gazing at the pass- ersby. Helen approached her and asked. k "Pardon me, dear neighbor, but you prob- w ably know Count Lanin and Dr. Haas?" 4 "Very well," replied the woman, looking eatrerly at tbe girl, who noticed nothing, r occupied as she was with her great grief. "Did you notice in what direction they went?" The woman became more attentive as she , perceived Helen's anxiety. "I have seen no one, as I have but just come out But my husband has been stand ing a whole hour at the door, smoking his pipe, and has but just gone in. Step in a moment, my child!" Helen accepted the invitation. When the two women were in tbe front room the kind i neighbor suddenly turned to Helen, asking: "Why do you want to know that?" Helen drew bock a step. "I am the Captain's wife, and your con duct makes me very suspicions. Answer me candidly. Why'doyou want to know where the two men are?" - Helen tried again to get to the door, but t Caroline prevented her. She remained standing on the threshold, laughing loud k and cruelly, one saia: "'you shall not get away from here till my husband returns; he has just gone out on business about your master!" "But that is vulgarity," cried Helen. . "I am in a great hurry!" I "Ha, hal" laughed Caroline. "Just wait, ft child, and amuse yourself as you can." In an instant she had slipped out, closed the door behind her, drew the key out of the lock, and left Helen imprisoned. In the meantime Jana had driven to the Governor's palace, and asked for an au dience. The Governor sent an excuse; he could not possibly receive her. Jana begged and implored in vain. She next hurried to all the upper officials who had been kind to her. No one received her. Two hours she had wasted thus, and now returned in great anguish and utterly exhausted. Lina told her that Dr. Haas had been waiting for some time. "Your husband has been arrested," he told Jana as soon as she entered. "Tbe per secution begins anew. After I had gotten the money irom tbe bank I accompanied the Count to his dwelling. We found a gen darme there, quite at home. He took no excuses. The Count had been caught away from bis house. The soldier, ot course, acted under orders. It was Inckylhad money, or matters might have been much worse." Conflict had a different effect on Jana from the general effect; it roused her ener gies and inspired her instead of casting her down. "We have nothing more to hope from the authorities. If law and order forsake us we must seek help with the rebels what else can we do? Doctor, procure me a man's costume! I shall go to-night to the Tartar mound. My husband cannot invoke Mil ler's assistance from his prison it is my duty to do it for him!" "Oh. Countess, how can you? Ton alone! At night! Consider to what danger you ex pose yoursell!" "Do not prevent me.doctor; I must do it." "Let me go in your place." "Miller does not know you. You would make no impression upon him, while I per sonify, to his mind, his conscience! He mnst obey me!" "No one can resist you, Countess! But at i least do not forbid me going with you. I shall accompany you to the mound!" ( She held out her hand and said simply, f "I thank you!" The nights at the North, where all life ceases and every noise is silence, are in- l finitely more impressive and grander than those of more southern countries. As soon as the vast plains of Siberia are overshad owed, you hear your own breathing; you notice your heart's pulsation; you count tbe echo of your footsteps upon the hard snow; the ear is susceptible of perceiving the faintest noise. , The whole Tartar mound trembled when Jana, at 10 o'clock at night, three times re peated the magic name: "Ienar! Ienar! Ienar!" The name came back echoed from the hills and tbe mountains, from the valleys and the frozen waters ot the Angara, like three shots fired from a. mortar. Then all . was still as before. ' Jana appeared in the full costume' of a - colonist By her side stood the faithful s doctor. Both had found no difficulty in i leaving tbe city, because neither of them was subject to the strict laws by which the 8" exiles were bound. ' They did not know how long a time might have passed, when suddenly steps became audible on the snow, and like a spirit of the grave the dark form of a Guogus be came visible on the white background. He bowed to the Countess as it waiting for or ders, f "My friend," she said in Bussian, "I stand in need of Miller s assistance. I am - the Countess Lanin." tf The Siberian looked at her in amazement, cut did not say a wora. "You snrely know where he is? I must see him and speak with him as soon as pos sible. The young native made a sign with his hand, that he did not understand a I- word. "You do not understand me?" asked poor Jana. He repeated the same unmistakable sign. She tried once more to make herself , understood, repeating very slowly all she ;. had said. In vain! Tbe poor woman sank V overwhelmed, on her knees. t "Oh, God, enlighten me that I may know what to do! Must we perish thus?" .' Haas now walked up to the native, and f -, touching his arm. he said: "IenarJ" The Siberian repeated the name. Then the doo- , tor sat down on the snow and tried to slide down the hill. The Gungui laughed joy fully and disappeared in a crevice of the rocks. "He will take me to his leader. It that man does not speak Bussian he will at least know Miller." "Oh, doctor, certainly Providence has sent you to me. Betnrn now to town; I'll go with this man." "No, Countess, you cannot do that; I de mand it in my quality as your protector! I am responsible to the Count for your safety. Believe me, besides tbe Count might not like your going with this man! You are a lady." and have to think ot that!" Jana at last understood the doctor, and gave him her hand, saying: "You are right, doctor. Go, then, with God! If prayers and threats fail, use money; use it lavishly. I leave the fate of my hus band in your bands. I shall do, on my part, what I can. We have hardly 48 hours be fore us; let us make good "use ot them." The Siberian appeared as suddenly as he fore, but now with a smart sleigh and rein deers. Haas took leave of Jana, sat down by the Gungus, and whispered once more the I magic word "Ienar 1 The Siberian looked assent, and whistled fiercely. The reindeer flew down the slope to the river bed, and then galloped alongon the smooth ice as upon a level road. Jana remained standing still, almost life less, following the quickly vanishing sleigh as long as her eyes could discern the faint outlines. Then she knelt down on the snow and sent a fervent prayer to God's throne on high in behalf of Vladimir and the doctor. After having crossed herself she rose and returned to Irkutsk. CHAPTER XXIIL In Vladimir's hut the twilight had long changed into night More than a quarter of an hour Nicholas Popoff had waited for the Count, according to his promise, paying no attention to the increasing darkness. At first he wondered why Lanin had not ap peared, because he had charged Helen very specially to mention the hour at which he would be there. He had obtained two hours' leave and no more, and knew per fectly how dangerous this step might be come for him and for Palkin himself. "Oh! these women!" he thought to him self. "No doubt Helen has blundered. I ought to have done it myself. Why, it is perfectly dark!" Nicholas rose, looked for a piece of light wood, kindled it with, the aid of a match and put it into a beam. Thus the smoking, flittering light illumined the hut at least after a fashion. -N o otner iign. is mown in the Siberian villages. "Why does he not appear?" Nicholas continued his musings. "I have been wait ing an hour now. What can have hap pened to him?" He waited half an hour longer. As no one came, he thought it high time to retnrn home, so sb to cause no suspicion of his pro longed absence. He went to the door, opened it, and started back with a cry of surprise and horror. Colonel Palkin was standing on the threshold and behind him he saw Beveral men who were walking up and down. "Colonel! You here!" he exclaimed. The colonel walked up close to him and pushed him with his whole strength back into the room. "Are you surprised?" "Where is the Count? What do you want here?" "Ha! ha! The inquiry begins! Well, I can give you an answer. I am here to take those documents which I need. Oat with them I The Count will never return here!" "Why?" "Unnecessary curiosity! Out with those papers or " "That is treachervl" "Call it what you choose! I have no time for discussion. Hand me the papers!" Now Popoff saw clearly that he had been caught in a trap, and that Palkin was his enemy. With the strength of despair he seized the Colouel by the throat, crying: "You shall at least pay for the others!" The Colonel, however, a man of herculean strength, pushed the poor, weak man easily back, seized his hands and pressed them till his joints cracked and he sank down on the floor. "Hel Peoplel Here!" In a moment two gendarmes had seized Popoff, who was crying for help with all his might, hoping to attract the attention of neighbors or passers by, and bound him with ropes. "Now search him accurately! This time nothing shall escape me!" Nicholas, however, when thus confronting .imminent danger, had recovered his presence ol mind, and a scornful smile even played on his lips. The gendarmes began to search him. He was stripped of his clothing; pockets, boots, even his hair was thoroughly searched. Nothing was found but a tobacco bag and a penknife. Palkin was foaming with rage. "You think, perhaps, you will cheat me once more. Well, we 11 see. All has not been tried yet And if I have to kill you I must have those papers. Speak, where are they hid?" Nicholas silently shrugged his shoulders. This gesture made the Colonel furious. "Tie him to that bench and fetch a na gaika." Nicholas turned deadly pale. The na gaika is a knout, a strap of leather with two knots, the end of which is forked, like the tongue of a serpent. After 100 blows the flesh is generally gone from the bones, and no man is able to bear 500 blows. Nicholas was tied to the bench, and they only waited for the man who had been sent for the knout, which was kept at the in spector's house. "Obey me!" said Palkin to Popoff. "You have a moment's time yet to consider. Don't be obstinate! Tell me your secret" "You may murder me, wretched hang man," rtplied Popoff; "but you shall never learn my secret I'd rather bite off my tongue, you wretched spy and traitor! I shall vet live to see you overthrown." Palkin laughed cruelly and sat down, facing the bench. The nagaika was brought in. "Well! Now begin and strike slowly, so he may have time to reflect and give me the answer I want" The knont whizzed through the air and fell upon the bare back of the wretched vic tim. Instantly a dark bine mark appeared, and Popoff uttered a heartrending cry. He bit into the wood of the bench and did not complain further. Alter the twentieth stroke the blood poured forth in streams, and large fragments of flesh were torn off. The pain was top fearful. Nicholas let go the bench in which his teeth had made deep indentations and began to cry madly. Palkin was calmly smoking his cigar. "At last!" he exclaimed. "Have you opened your mouth at last? Perhaps you will now be kind enough to answer?" With a gesture of the hand he ordered the gendarme to stop. The fellow coolly wiped the leather strap with his fingers. Pieces of flesh came off, which he coolly threw aside. Popoff s throat ' rattled like that of a dying man. "Where is the paper I want?" asked the Colonel. Nicholas turned his face to the cruel man, and in his bloody, tearful eyes invincible resoluteness still spoke clearly. "You shall get nothing irom me, cursed hangman," he replied. "Well, let us see!" And down came the nagaika again. The torture was all the more cruel, as it had been interrupted. At the first blow Popoff uttered a perfectly fearful heartrending cry. Palkin laughed. At each blow Popoffs cries became less violent, his trembling less perceptible. At last he hardly breathed. Palkin thought the gendarme was tired. "Strike better!" he ordered, "or you share Popoffs fate!" The gendarme struck with all his force. He struck the backbone. Popoff uttered such a terrific cry that tbe soldier himself was terrified. "Will you answer now?" "Never!" breathed Nicholas, who was dying. "Strike! strike! I say!" shouted Palkin. "Below, at his legs and feet! Make him feel the nagaika!" At this moment the door opened and Dr. Haas entered. Ho slowly walked up to Paltin. "When doM this Ban coat from7" "Who let him in? Aha! the doctor." In the meantime the nagaika had regu larly fallen and risen. Nicholas gave no longer any sign of life. Haas went to the bench and put his hand on Popoffs head. "Enough of this torture!" he said iu a tone of command. "Your victim is dying!" "Go on! strike hard!" cried Palkin, furi ous at the interruption. "I can talk to the doctor afterwards." . Tbe gendarme raised the knout, hut at the moment Haas snatched it from his hand and threw it aside. "Enough!" he exclaimed. "Why, the poor unfortunate man is giving up the ghost!" Palkin approached the doctor and seized him by the arm. Tired and disgusted with the punishment he had been compelled to inflict, the executioner looked in amaze ment at the man who dared defy his Colonel, and never thought of picking up the nagaika. Haas quietly confronted the Colonel. "Do you know, doctor, that vouare cuiltv j of resisting the authority of the Govern ment, ana that, you may nave to pay dear for it? How did you get in? Answer." Haas disengaged himself calmly and said: "Allow me first to assist the dying man." "A man who is dving and yet takes his secret with him into the grave, you mean. But do you know what is awaiting you yourself, old quack?" Haas cast a cold look at him, and replied with unaffected calmness: "No one knows his fate. Allow me just now, however, to assist this poor man." This calmness inluriatcd the Colonel be yond control. "He and you and your Count, you are all of you simply a band of traitors. You say he is dead. Well, then you no doubt know his secret, and will perhaps reveal it to me. Hallo, there! untie that dying man there and go to work on this mad fellow in his place. That'll give us new pleasure. Hal ha!" he laughed wildly, "after all I shall attain my end!" Haas measured him with a look of con tempt "You, insane man, threaten me when you oucht to be very humble. Listen " "Do you think I'll listen to your empty stuff? Bind this old man. You are too tired," he said to the man who had beaten Poooff, and called another gendarme. "Now it is your turn!" The man was slow to obey the Colonel. Haas rose to his full height now, and said: "I do not like to take vengeance. As you, however, will not give up your intention, your wish shall be fulfilled. . . Help!" he cried, with a thundering voice. Instantly a rattling noise was heard, as if windowpancs were broken, and in tbe open ing appeared two rifles pointed at tbe Colonel. At the same time the doorwas burst open violently, and soon 30 exiles, armed with clnbs and swords, filled tbe room. Palkin was at first confused, but soon recovered his insolence. "Here is the rebellion! Aha! We are only three of us, but this unarmed rabble we shall soon master. Come on, children! We shall soon have assistance sent from town!" The gendarmes obeyed, but they fell al most instantly, being shot down by the two riflemen. The exiles surrounded Palkin, Haas busied himself with the dying man, as if the combat did not cdhcern him at all. "You must take the Colonel alive," or dered a voice from tbe window. "If ten of you fall, you muit take him alive." "We shall see that," replied the gen darme, undaunted. "You have not gotten me yet" He fired a pistol twice into the thickest of bis assailants. Then he alone resisted the overwhelming force of exiles. Gigantic as he was, he struck with his sword right and left, and fought on, even alter he had been seriously injured by heavy clubs. He tried to gain the door, wounding and killing who ever was in his way, and all the time shout ing for help. Blood was flowing in streams. A certain mistrust seized upon the exiles. Eight men had fallen under the blows ot the colossal, raging soldier. Palkin had actually reached the door, when all of a sudden, he lost his balance and fell to the ground. A new enemy had appeared and struck him down with one powerful blow The gendarme roaied like a wild beast "At last I have you, vile vermin!" ex claimed Miller. It was he who, watching the fight from the window, had used a favor able moment to attack Palkin from behind. In a moment the Colonel was disarmed and bound in spite of his violent resistance. Now Miller went to the window, and, tak ing off bis kospak, he said: "Countess, there is no danger now. You can enter!" A fearful scene it was that struck the eye iu the interiot of the small hut. The bodies of the dead gendarmes wer lying under the bench on which Popoff had been tortured. Dr. Haas had brought his surgical instru ments, and was exclusively occupied in assisting the poor secretary, whose wbole body was one vast wound. The walls were spatted over with blood and mud. Four of the exiles lay lifeless on tbe floor, others were trying to stanch the blood that was abundantly flowing from their gaping wounds. The Colonel was tied to the cen tral post, which in Siberia supports the ceiling. He writhed like a snake and ut tered tearful threats and curses. Miller stood facing him, his hair pushed back from his forehead; all around stood the exiles, and the hut resounded with cries of revenge and of triumph. The light wood was near extinction and dispensed but an indistinct and flickering light Now and then the room was bloodily lighted up, and then again it sank back into deep darkness. The exiles, however, had brought lanterns which they now hung on the central post. Jana entered with Helen. "Where is my husband? Where is Vlad imir?" asked the Countess, full of appre hension. "You need not fear, Countess," said Mil ler, bowing before her as he used to do in Petersburg salons, "the Count is not here and was not present" "And my poor Nicholas?" asked Helen. The stillness of the grave gave the only answer. Miller hung his head; Helen, at one glance, counted tbe dead bodies and saw seven; she examined them one after another. Palkin's corses continued. All looked lull oi pity at the poor girl who had followed her betrothed to Siberia and now looked for him among the dead. She soon approached his bloody remains. Haas raised his hands to heaven. At once Helen understood it all and fell in silent de spair on her knees. I To be continued next Sunday. BEATS IN THE EXCHANGES. Statistics on the Frices Paid la New York, Boston and Philadelphia. Boston Herald. 1 During the year 1S89 the prevailing price for seats in the New York Exchange was $20,000, in Boston $12,000, and in Philadel phia $2,900. In 1899, it was for New York, $22,000, Boston.' $12,500, Philadelphia, $2,500. When the market is on an even keel, the price of seats is regulated bv the supply and demand, and the same as any commercial commodity. , The highest price ever paid for a seat in the Boston Stock Exchange was paid by Mr. W. H. Mick for Mr. O. H. Paine's seat The price was $19,500. When the bargain had been consummated, Mr. Paine purchased a seat in the New York Exchange, for which he paid the sum of $22,500, which is about $10,000 less than the highest figure paid for such a prize. MEASURING ELECTBIC UGHT. The Stnndnrd Candle Power Gives a Terr Inadequate Idea to the Laymen. Did you ever meet a man who has a prac tical idea of what amount of illumination a 100-candle power light ought to provide? Of course, there is a scientific standard, and ancient legislation defines a legal candle as a sperm candle weighing a little less than three ounces, and burning at the rate of 120 grains an hour. But this gives little in formation, and the candle is such an nn. "known quantity in tbis country that as a atanuara 01 ngni it is absurdly inappro priate. ' A scheme has been devised where by electric light may be measured, and new standard will probably be the result. shouted the Colonel OUR CHIEF MAIL MAN. Postmaster General Wanamaker's Tablic and Trivato Business. AN INCOME OF ABOUT $2,000 A DAI. His Department Should Clear $10,000,000 Per Tear for Uncle Sam. HOME LIFE AND DUTIES P0S SUHDAI, CoazESPOXDXircx or the &mfatc8.i Washington, June 7. X all odos the most unique character in American politics is John Wanamaker, the Post master General of the United States. A man whose whole life has been that of business, who has had nothing to do with politics nor politicians, he is made the head of what has always been the big gest political machine of the Government. There are more than 150,000 em ployes who are more or less directly under the control of the Postmaster General and his big red fingers rest upon the keyboard to which is attached the wires reaching out to every city and village in the country. It was indeed a curious appointment Still, Benjamin Harrison has in John Wanamaker his closestally and his strongest friend. He has in him, perhaps, the hardest worker of his Cabinet and one of the strongest forces of his administration. Wan amaker is a man of ideas and he believes in runuinc his department on business princi pies. ple is cnaied every day by the clogs which the necessary consultations with Sen ators and Representatives throw in his wav, and he says if he could run the Postoffi'ce Department on his own plan, he could make 510,000,000 a year for the Government TITBITS EVERYTHING INTO GOLD. - I don't doubt that he is correct For the past 40 years everything he has touched has turned into gold, and now at 52, he is said to be worth $15,000,000, and he has an in come of about $2,000 a day. Still, it is only four decades since he was carrying the clay which made tbe bricks in his father's brick yard, and about that time he engaged to clerk in a bookstore lor a less sum Der week than the scrub women of the Postoffice De- Eartment get for a day. He is called by is enemies a counter-jumper, and sneering remarks are made about his store in Phila delphia. All the world knows that he has a store there, and the fact was pretty well advertised before he became Postmaster General. Few people, however, appreciate the im mensity o! his business and the wonderful system on which it is run. It is the big gest establishment of its kind in the world. It far outranks the great Bon Marche of Paris, and it is, I am told, five times the size of Jordan & Marsh's great Boston es tablishment It clears, I am told, $1,000, 000 a year and it does a business of $25, 000, 000 annually. Its roof covers acres, and on an ordinary week there are 25,000 engaged in buying at it at one time. You can find anything in it irom a fish hook to a steam ship's anchor, and its mighty growth has been the outcome of the brains of this man. FAT JOB3 'WANAMAKEB LOST. It is a mistake, however, to suppose that it does nny business for the Government There are two other Wanamaker firms in Philadelphia, and it is these which have caused tbe accusation that the Postmaster General is a competitor for Government contracts. The fact is that prior to his ap pointment as Postmaster General the firm put iu bids for many kinds of Government supplies and they made a great deal of money out of them. When Mr. Wana maker accepted the Postmaster Generalship he gave orders that no bids were to be made either for supplies to the Postoffice Depart ment or any other department of the Gov ernment, and I am told that this order has reduced the profits of the firm during the past year fully $100,000. The only way in which the Government can now buy anything at Wanamaker's store is by its agents purchasing over the counter like the ordinary shopper. To give a further idea of this establishment, it h the largest retail shoe business in this coun try. It has the largest retail book business in the United States. Its cellar contains the biggest electric light plant of the whole world, and urder its one roof more than 4,000 employes work during the ordinary season and this number is -increased to 5,000 at Christmas. BELIEVES IN NEWSPAPEB ADVERTISING. Wanamaker believes in advertising, and his advertising manager gets a salary of $12,000 a year. He pays each of the Phila delphia papers from $2,000 to $4,000 every mouth for advertising, and one of his prin ciples in advertisements is that they shall tell the truth. Among his principles of success are application, integrity and ad vertising, and he ranks these high in the advice he gives to young men. He is inter ested lareely in other establishments. John Wananlaker, however, is best known from this big retail store. Be owns most of it, though Bobert C. Ogdeu has a large in terest, and he has the entire management of the store, now that Wauamater is a Cabinet Minister. It is true that there is a private wire running from the Philadelphia house to the Postoffice Department, but only three or four messages pass over this a day, and these are more often social messages than business ones. If Mrs. Wanamaker or the girls are going to Philadelphia the Post master General will send a line announcing the fact, or if be wants some special ar rangement for Itis Sunday school his private wire is called into requisition. As to or dinary business matters, he is seldom con sulted, and it is only as to questions ot gen eral business policy, large purchases or the buying of a corner lot that his partners have to telegraph him. HIS TWO HEIGHT BOYS. Bis two sons are members of the firm, and though I have not met them I am told they are men of more than ordinary business ability. Both are still under 30 and both are graduates of Princeton College. Tom Wanamaker is in tbe house at Philadelphia, and Bodman spends most of his time in PariB as the foreign purchasing agent of the establishment Both of the young men are married, and both have babies in short clothes. Tom Wanamaker married a Miss Welch, of one of the old families of Phila delphia, and his brother Bodman has a French lady for a wife. The Postmaster General has an eye for the beautiful in woman, and is very fond of his daughters-in-law. He dotes more over his grandchil dren than President Harrison does over Baby MoKee, and he is essentially a family man. Probably no nubile man In Washington has a more pleasant home life than John Wjanaaaktr. He is thoroughly in love rm Jtr mm&i Mr. Wanamaker at Work with his wife and family, and he has two charming daughters who are good old-fashioned girls and with whom he loves to romp after his day's work is over. Everyone knows where "he lives. It is in the historic Frelinghuysen mansion which Mrs. Whit ney made snch a social center during the last administration and which Mr. Wana maker has improved at an expense of about $50,000. A GRAND ABT COLLECTION. This house is one of the most elegantly furnished houses of the Capital. Its walls are hung with satin and it has rooms so large that you could turn a wagon-load of hay around in them without touching the walls. It has a picture srallery as big as a barn, and this is now filled with some of the precious art works owned by the Postmaster General. He has little pieces of canvas hero which have cost $200 an inch, and lam told by an art friend of his that there are at least $200,000 worth of pictures in this room. Still these paintings comprise only a part of his collection, and he is, you know, the pos sessor of Mutikacsy's "After the Wedding," which bangs on the left wall of the gallery. There are more than ou pictures on tbe walls of this ballroom, and though they are all very valuable, I do not think that some of them are as beautiful as those which hung in it in the days of the Whitney own ership. Secretary Whitney had a remarka ble taste in art, and in his collection are many masterpieces. He had a Millet which Vanderbilt considered finer than any paint ing he owned, and some of his pictures of the French school were wonderfully beauti ful. The Postmaster General is a good judge of fine paintings. He has made a study of artana can tell a good painting without asking tbe advice ot a picture buyer. He knows most of the great artists of Paris personally, and he is a haunter of studios when he is" in Europe. SPLENDID ENTEBTAINEES. The Postmaster General and his wife have entertained more lavishly than any otfcer family connected with the administration, with perhaps the exception of the Mortons, They have kept open house, have given many dinners and receptions andat the close of not a few of their parties this pict ure gallery ball room has been thrown open for dancinsr. The Postmaster General is noted asa Sun day school maa. He is, I believe, a gen uine Christian, and his cloak of religion has not been donned with his official ap pointment nor his business success. He is not so straightlaced, however, as were our Puritan fathers, aud he does not consider dancing sinlul. He will not use wines, however, at his state dinners, and he con fines his own drinks to apollinaris, haw thorn water and the succulent soda. He believes in the observance of the Sabbath, and he will not allow a letter or a telegram to be delivered at his house on Sunday, nor will he talk business on Sunday. He runs his Christianity, too, on business principles, and he says that ministers would get along better if they had more business tact ONCE PELTED WITH MTJD. Few people have any idea of tbe Christian work which he is doingin his Sunday school at Philadelphia which he started in the "Five Points" of that city when he was working on a salary of lets than that re ceived by the average Government clerk. His first Sunday school was held in a tent, and he 'was a successful Sunday school teacher when he was 30 years of age, 20 years before anyone imagined that he would be a rich man, and when the wildest dreamer wonld not have pointed him ont as a Cabinet minister. I am told that Wanamakerrisked his life in starting this Sunday school, and tbat tbe toughs of the (Quaker City used to pelt him with mud when he began" with the ragged children and tried to influence the drunkards to build up a Sunday school. It was perhatXthis pelting that made him work the harder, for Wanamaker isa fighter from tbe word go, and opposition only made him tbe more anxious to succeed. He has two granite tabernacles, one of which is the Bethany Church and the other the Sunday school. There are about 3,000 pupils in the Sunday school and there are something like 300 teachers. Mr. Wanamaker opens it every Sunday and then swings across to the Bethany Cbnrch, where he has a Bible class of 1,000 men and women, HIS PERSONAL HABITS. Postmaster General Wanamaker snends as many hours at his desk as any Postmaster General we have had for years. He rises at about 6:30 o'clock, shaves himself and takes a good, plain breakfast He rides down to the department in the department coupe, and he is ready for work at 8:30, 30 minutes before his force of clerks have begun to ar rive. He has a private secretary, Mr. Mar shall Cushing, whom he pays himself to at tend to bis personal matters. The Postmas ter General gets about a cartload of marked newspapers every day. The Postmaster Gen eral writes some letters himself, and is well advanced with his mail by the time 9:30 has arrived. He has had perhaps a counsel with his bureau chiefs and at this time is ready to re ceive the stream of Senators aud represent atives of office-seekers and others who then begin to come. From 9 until 12 he is ac cessible to everyone. His talks are not always politic, for Mr. Wanamaker is more of a business man than a politician. He has the faculty of deciding a thing right off. He is too much of a civil service man to suit many of tbe politicians, though he does not believe in the civil service as at present constituted. He thinks that every Cabinet minister should have the right to look a man in the eye before he appoints him, and tbat clerks should be examined by men in the departments in which they are to work rather than by one 'board which examines for the whole country. ALWAYS HUNTING NEW IDEAS. The Senators and Bepresentatives keep the Postmaster General busy until noon, and it is 1 o'clock before he gets home to his lunch. He comes back at 3 and works away steadily until 7 or 7:30 in the evening, doing the best part ot his work alter the rest of the clerks have gone. He is always after new ideas. A man who tried to get work ot him the other day was asked by him whether be had any new ideas and what he conld do for him, and when the man really showed that he had some originality he wa's at once given a job. Postmaster General Wanamaker was surprised to find when he first came into office that a number of the ideas that he supposed were his had been formulated and discussed by other Post master Generals. Tbis was so with the Postal Telegraph and Postal Savings Bank. The idea in his Postal Teleeraph scheme ot having the competing telegraph lines do the business and having the postoffices merely deliver the messages is his own, and his scheme for appnintingagcneral manager for the Postoffice Department, who shall have a term 01 omce lor ten years at $10,000 a year, is also his. Socially he is a jolly good fellow, and he gives away a great deal of money in charity every year. Feank G. Cabpentee. THE CHAMPION -HAILST01IE. A Storv From Kansas of an Icy Meteor That Welfflied Eighty Pounds. Becent hail storms have revived a story from Salina, Kan. The facts in the case are substantially as follows: Iu July, 1882, a party of railroad sec tion men were at work seven miles west of Sauna, when a temhc bail storm went over. Martin Ellwood, the foreman, relates that near where they were at work many chunks of ice foil that would weigh from 5 to 15 pounds, and that in returning toward Salina they saw immense hailstones scattered about everywhere. When six miles out from town they found hundreds of them larger than a man's head, besides one monster chunk which they esti mated weighed at least 80 pounds. This frigid reminder of the awiul storm was loaded on the handcar and taken to Salina, the combined strength of two men being re quired in the loading act. Near the mam moth 80-pounder Mr. Ellwood discovered a hailstone in the shape of a cigar about one foot jong ana tour inches in diameter, Upon arrivlnc In town a wheelhsrrow was secured and the big hailstone taken to W. J. Hagler's store, where; crowds of people visited it all afternoon. In the evening, after being on exhibition five hours, it measured 9x16x2a tnohes. THE SOLDIER'S DAI. Old-Time Prophecies That It Wonld Lose Its Significance. DEMONSTRATIONS IN PITTSBUBG. The Part Taken bj the Ladies in the Erection of the Monument. STORIES OP WOMEN OP TfliS WAK rWBITTIX POB THE DISliTCn.1 . I remember, when Memorial Day was first instituted, hearing men in Pittsburg declare that in ten years it would have lost all its significance, that before that time had passed there would be no great amount of mourning in anybody's heart for the soldiers who were dead. And I heard others protest that the fixed observance of such a day was wrong in principle and in policy. It was not well, they urged, to deliberately seek to perpetuate tbe war feeling. I heard more than, tone old soldier reason in that way in those early days. Well, more than ten years have passed, and Memorial Day seems to have no less a place in people's thoughts and affections than at first There may be less of publio demonstration in certain quarters, but not less of general and thoughtful observance. And those who looked with apprehension to the future have had their fears proved groundless. North and South tbe honors paid to tbe dead soldiers have served rather to promote harmony than to perpetuate en mity For somehow, in both sections, the "soldier feeling" is a very different thing from the "war feeling." The one lives and the other dies; and tbat seems well. SOME OLD DEMONSTEATIOSS. What old PIttsburger will ever forget the earliest demonstrations there? Some of them were very imposing and wonderfully impress ive. u.ne wnoie community seemed filled with earnest enthusiasm, and intent on giv ing the utmost expression to it. It was notable, in this time of peace so closely fol lowing the time of war, that the women were foremost in doing honor to the dead soldiers, as they had been foremost in ministering to the living soldiers when they needed the ministrations of thought'ul, practical care to make them more comfortable. In this later style of campaigning the women had the direction of affairs. They planned tbe work that was to be done, and did a wonderful amount of it themselves. And every man in a position to know the history ot those early events must have an abiding conviction that women Pittsburg women at least have practical ability and executive capacity which a large portion of mankind might wish for in vain. I have thought many, many times in re cent years every time Memorial Day comes around ot one of those early Pitts burg demonstrations which I remember more vividly than any other. The reason of that, I suDpose, is because it was tbe first after Memorial Day became an established anniversary. The ladies of the Executive Committee had made elaborate plans, and they carried them out in the most effective manner, by dint of hard work, long continued. The people of the two cities, and even in the neighboring country dis tricts, co-operated with enthusiasm. And the result was such a day of well-ordered celebration as one may not hope to see sur passed many times in the course of any or dinary career. THE GBEAT PABADB. The march to Allegheny Cemetery was especially noteworthy. All the way the street was crowded with people assembled there to see the procession. And a proces sion well worth seeing it was, too. Soldiers there were more of them than there are now, alas marched in column with the old army swing and to the old army tunes. And they carried, not the weapons of death, but fragrant offerings for those already dead. Other soldiers whose marching days had ended on some battlefield whence they had come alive but maimed, were bestowed In carriages. How many of them carried flowers that day? How many of them have had flowers laid above them since? Carriages, many of them, were filled with ladies; some old, some young; some sad with memories of recent heartbreak; some grave with sympathy for the general pain ot loss; all eager to do ahectiouate honor to those dead boys out there. In still other carriages, and on horseback, were many citizens of dignity and importance; for this was an occasion all men felt it an honor to participate in. Societies marched or rode. Delegations of citizens marched or rode. The line seemed almost without end. And every man and woman in it carried flowers. Flowers were piled into the car riages with the ladies, and there were wagon loads of flowers forming part of the proces sion. ,And many of the people on the side walks were also laden with flowers. These joined the moving column as it passed; and so there were more and more people march ing to the music of the many bands. DEDICATION OP THE MONUMENT. There were other Memorial Day celebra tions almost, if not quite, as fervent and in spiring as this. But the Memorial Day on which the soldiers' monument was dedi cated saw the climax and culmination of such observances. The founding and con struction of this monument may also be de scribed as a women's enterprise. Women originated the purpose of a monument to the dead soldiers of Allegheny county. Tbey formed a Monument Association which, with the willing co-operation of the people, carried tbe purpose into effect Many men were active and hard-working members of the association, but I doubt if they would have won the success finally achieved without the active energy ot the women. While on the other hand I am not at all sure that the women would not have conquered success even if the men had kept out of the work! But both worked together, and worked hard and for a long time. The task was not a holiday pastime by any means. Its suc cess required the utmost efforts of all con cerned. There must be plenty of money raised. Part of this came in the form of liberal subscriptions. A fair was held, and the proceeds were nobly generous. Other methods were devised in the active brains engaged in the enterprise, and every effort resulted in more or less of success. If the association members were active and ener getic, the people at large were certainly liberal and enthusiastic. ' SELECTING THE SITE. I think determining the site of the monu ment was a task more difficult than the raising ot funds for it A strong party of earnest workers wanted it placed in the Al legheny Cemetery, where so many of the soldiers were buried. Others urged the claims of other locations, and a good deal of rather excited discus sion took place. When the final de cision was made, and it was determined to place the shalt wnere it now stands, on the height overlooking the river and the Alle gheny parks, all opposing preferences were put aside, ana every worKer joined in hearty fellowship with every other worker to in sure the best success of the object all had been so anxious to see accomplished. .All parts ot Allegheny county contributed people to participate in the ceremonies of dedication; and the occasion was nothing less than stupendous. The dedication was, in the widest sense, a public event. Both cities made it the chief and commanding work of the day. Flags aud decorations adorned the streets along which the great procession passed, and it seemed almostas if nobody had been left at home or in the mills or in the shops, so great were the crowds in the streets and on the ground where the ceremonies of dedication took plaoe. A WOMAN OP THE WAS. I suppose in tbe latter part of May every old soldier finds his thoughts turning with much obstinacy back to "war times." And U he had the fortune to he sick or wounded both in tbose times, and to cass some of his time in hospital, some of his memor ies are sure to cluster about the part which kindly women took In this portion of his experience. How would behave fared but for the helpful work they did? No need to specu late about that, for they did tbe work, and would be sure to do it again in case of such need, and again and again, as many times as the need might arise. They were the soul of sanitary commissions, and they were the heart and the hand of volunteer nursing systems. More than once, to my knowl edge, Southern women came in among the wounded in Federal hospitals, bringing flowers and good things to eat, and pleas ant words, which were better than either. To be sure one of these Southern women got mixed in her impulses one day, and staid away everalter. It was in Louisville. A very pretty and spirited girl contracted tbe pleasant babit of frequently coming in among the wounded men of a certain hos pital ward, and brightening an hour for them. She would bring them flowers; she would bring in nicely cooked dainties for some of the worst cases; she would sit by some helpless fellow half tbe afternoon, and read to him or write letters for him. Alto gether she was a delightful visitor, though she took no pains to conceal the tact that she was a Confederate, ont and out SANG THE -WBONO SONG. By some strange chance there was a piano in this room. One day, by way of com pleting her charming visit, she sat down be fore tbe piano to give us some music. She sang admirably. Bat the very first, and the very last piece she sang was "The Bon ny Bine Flag 1" And she sang it with such vim and snch audacity tbat every one of us had to applaud her. We were all sorry she did not come back. But it Was net nf Tior T pl nnt in itmxiV but of a woman whom the war made almost J as tamous as it made General Sherman Mother Bickerdike. I saw her first at some point on the Mississippi river. She had come thus tar with a large shipment of sani tary supplies, prominent among which were sundry barrels of onions. She was impetu ously eager to get to the hospital she was bound for so that "her boys" could have the benefit of those onions right away. But there was some difficulty about transportation for her and,her freight I don't think such a dffi-. culty ever stood very long in the way of" Mother Bickerdike. It certainly did not on this occasion. She mastered it with such promptness and energy that she was on her way down therivcr or wherever she wanted to go before the Quartermaster could make out how it had been done. AN ANGEL IN TEE HOSPITALS. Eved among the soldiers who had never been in a hospital Mother Bickerdike's name became as familiar as a household word, and more than one of them wished she had the ordering of tbe particular cam paign which might provoke his criticism. But the boys in hospital got another view of her character. And how tenderly lovable was the side of it that was turned toward them! They learned to love and revere her as a particu larly enterprising and eminently practical saint No difficulty was sufficient to daunt her will and courage when "her boys" were to be benefited. And it would be interest ing to know how many useful citizens of to day were brought alive out of the war by the untiring energy and the motherly ten derness of "Mother Bickerdike." A WIPE IN THE HOSPITAL. But after all the woman who brought the greatest good and the greatest happiness into a hospital, of all that I remember, was one whose name was never known outside her own small circle of acquaintance. It was shortly after a battle in which many I fearfully many men had been wounded. One of these hapless men sat at the lower end of the long ward, shot through the breast in snch a manner tbat he could not lie down, but had to be kept propped up in a chair. A doubtful case the surcreons called him. One day a woman came alone through the door at the upper end of the ward, cast a. quick glance all about, and then, be ore steward or nurse could ask her errand, she started swiftly and silently toward the man in the chair. He did not see her coming. He did not know that his wife was near him until her arm was about his neck and her kisses were on his face. Even then he did notspeak to her. How could he? He was crying so in his joyful surprise that he could not utter a word. And nobody else uttered a word either; bnt every man there did a great deal of thinking. The nurse spoke some very serious words to the wife afterward about the danger of shock. Bnt she knew what she was about, and the event proved it. That man began to get better that very hour, and was soon out of danger. And the rest of us, who had no wives.had to suffer in loneliness, and get better the best way we could. James C. Pubdt. HTTKTIHfJ THE KEY-HOLE. A Plttibnrcer Who ling a Good Deal of Trouble Owlnc to Electric Lights. "For a man to say he is not pleased with the change from gas to electricity for street lighting is to get himself styled an old fossil, and so forth, but for my part," said a well known Pittsburg druggist the other day, "I see decided objections to the new system. One is the great difficulty in finding a key hole in a door, which is some distance from the nearest lamp. A man who knows he is sober hates to have to stand several minutes trying to get his latch-key to do its work, and that is what I have to do nearly every night To get over the difficulty I have painted round tbe key-hole with aluminous paint, which works like a charm. I antici pate dnite a bnnm in this minmnitv nnv that electricity with its weird shadows, has become the illuminating power." "This paint absorbs light during the day and gives it off during the night. Hitherto it has only been made at one small factory and the price has been too high. Now, however, a way to manufacture the paint cheaply has been discovered, and I believe every drug store in town will soon be hand ling it." MB. 8TAKLETS BLACK BOY. The Interesting Elsbieen-Tear-OId Who Sllnlmera to the Explorer's Wants. Below is a sketch of Mr. Stanley's black boy, reproduced from the Pall Mall Budget, whose artist was given special permission to take his likeness by the explorer. Mr. Stanley calls his boy Sal!. He is a native African, is about 18, he speaks English, and is a genial lellow, with a bright eve and a Iileasant smile. He accompanies Mr. Stan bt to all parties and functions. F0K A GIFT LIBRAET. A More Modest Building Than the One Mr. Carnegie Proposes, BUT VERY PBETTI NEVERTHELESS Intended by a Retired Ksrehast Presentation to Bb Town. fir AREAH6EHI1NTS FOB THE I5TEBI0B v'BilUVX.N FOB THX DISPATCH.! The management of a library, including the selection of books, is or much greater importance than the building. The libra rian should be a man of liberal education, enthusiastic in his work. He should hava such genuine sympathy for good literature as to create a taste for it among his patrons. Tbe desultory reader who inquires for "something interesting" (there are many such) should be provided with a fascinating book of history, biography, travel, or of one of tbe trades or useful arts, so nicely suited to his taste as to inspire him with a desire) for careful and methodical reading. Light and trashy fiction should be ex cluded. The habitual novel reader would be disappointed not to find the opium drug of literature in the library, but the libra rian of tact may induce him to try solid reading and thus reclaim him. This building was designed for a retired merchant who is erecting it for presentation Ferapeclive. to his native town. Following will be found a somewhat detailed description: General dimensions Width, 17 feet t inches; depth, including porcb, 41 feet 4 inches; height of story, 17 feet Exterior materials Foundation, all walls and gables, brick; pressed brick and stone trimmings; roof, tin. Interior finish Yellow pine flooring with underflooring and lelt between. White pine trim, gallery and steps. Outside doors, oak. All woodwork finished with hard oil. Sand finish tinted plaster walls and ceilings. Stained glass in all windows and doors. Colors All brick and stone work cleaned down at completion; pressed brick and stone work left natural color; the body brickwork neatly repainted aud evenly stained red. Outside doors and framei. finished with hard oil, natural color. Trim, casings, cornices, bands, sashes and rain conductors, dark green. Tin roof painted dark red. Accommodations One large room with a gallery eight feet above vzeeMs WAWA CjiTCCErBQSSi I m z i o FMbkkbs. 3 . a B v ' "IS z ? (Librarian1; ' IS V V, s. ? TBCfg; liaj;: 2 r I o z ig Br Rdrch t Floor Plan. the floor; staircase leading to gallery. All of the space on the main floor (except that marked public) and jn galleries is in tended for bookcases. It is intended to heat the building by a stove set about tbe middle of the main floor, the pipe to descend into a sunken brick flue leading to the chimney thus avoiding an unsightly stove pipe. Cost $1,500, not including heating ap paratus. The estimate is based on New York prices for materials and labor. In many sections the country the cost should be less. Feasible modifications Height of story, general dimensions, materials and colors, may be changed. Cellar maybe placed un der a part or whole of building, Main floor may be concrete with removable sec tional top floor. B. W. Shoppell. Copyright 1S90. A Regulator. A few Hamburg Figs will care the worst cases of constipation and indigestion, and their occasional use will prevent the recurrence of these troubles. 25 cents. Dose one fiff. At all Druggists. Mack Drug Co., N. Y- ttsu ' Porter, these Shoes are Blackened with WolffsAGMEBIacking Sponze them with clean water, and they win bs beunifnUr poliihed. Yon will m toot quarter mot thlil time 1 BT thm WAT. Pnrtwr tjjl vnnrT inn Stable friends tht tt is the Bat Harnett Drtulxg la the world Pre tried nil A&for Pft-Ron, wlicS willStsin Old niw runnrrvitc wiu. tim Glass hd Chinawahc will Stain Tinware, will stair tour old baskets will Stain dast-s Coach ans YarnitJi atVit mam time. JELIIK ON Jr AZ'!!TJ'!tAT' - , rrAovs.! rjr.v7 W0L7P b EJlITDOLPS, Pbflnlelplua. sa&3-XTf Cs jrr;'i If iKJ