& THE PALM-LEAF FAN Is One of Nature's Choicest Blessings In the Eyes of the Sick Person . ' in Snmmer's Heat. jgHOW HOSPITALS ARE KEPT COOL. lke Homeopathic Constructed So a Lower Temperature Can le Maintained With Closed Windows. 6ETTIXG BID OF THE TITIATED AIE. Cssnires la Pisease That Can he Predicted' From the Ittermometois Etcirds. rwarrrcK roB im aisrTCB.j HEN nature first grew the palm leaf, and man fashioned it into a fan, God must bare looked en with an approv ing eye. He fore saw the needs of a sick room, and created a bless ing in reserve. Somewhere among the fibers of the palm-leaf He hid the breath of heaven. No more gen- Itle, soothing or I effective gift goes into the large city hospitals than a cheap, trifling and homely-looking palm-leaf fan. In the last annual report of the trustees of the Homeopathic Hospital on Second avenue several pages are filled with the printed list of donations made by chari table men and women. There you will read of jellies, that were given to entice back .the weak appetite; of flowers and books to make irksome hours pleasant; clothes to fit out the convalescent for bis coming departure; provisions and other hospital supplies in every variety. iTjxxrnr op a pan. And opposite the name of the wife of a well-known wholesale grocer may be found this donation accredited: "Bunch of Fans." It don't sound very important, but in that bundle of palm-leafs there was as much solid comfort and luxury as in all the jellies, cordials and flowers that could be placed be fore a sick man. A gentleman who had recovered from a long illness once told me the most horrible experience he had during his siege. I asked him what the most pleasant thing was be conld recall of those weary months in bed. He smiled as he said: "As I think over it all now, nothing is more pleasant to recall than the days and nights when, with my face brilliant with fever, eyes restless, bead never still, every muscle strained and rigid, my brain a living hell when, through all these agonies, I suddenly saw a band reach out over me. and a great, big palm-leaf fan wave slowly to and fro over my brow. HOT VEATHEB IN HOSPITALS. "Steady, lingering, cool, delicious, heav enly draughts of air played, around me. They dried the beads of sweat from my flesh, stilled the torment within my head, and carried me gradually into a state of languor that was on the next half acre to Paradise. The regular motion of the fan became a lullaby to my distorted eyes, and I remember how I used to get fearful that it should suddenly stop, and the hand of the nurse be withdrawn, while I was yet una ble to speak. But as I stealthfully watched for any cessation of the motion, I would invariably fall asleep. The fanning wonld go on all the time, and I could yet write some ot the sweet dreams I had under the influence of its soothing effects." Pittsburg has had some exceedingly hot days this summer. When the mercury was up in the 90s, and people on the streets or in their shaded homes were actually suf fering from the heat, did yon ever think of what that day must be to the hundreds, of sick patients in crowded hospitals? VENTILATING A BIO HOSPITAL. "How do you keep your patients cool?" I asked Superintendent Slack, of the Homeo pathic Hospital, one sultry day this sum mer. "Principally with the fan," he replied. "A palm leaf is the nurse's most constant companion this kind oi weatber, but, of course, we have other methods of making the hospital wards as cool as possible. At any season of the year good ventilation is most important in a large hospital, but par ticularly so in summer. In the erection of this building care was taken along sanitary lines, and our fine system of warming, cool ing and ventilating was copied from the best hospitals of London." The snperintendent then showed me through the building, and explained the ventilating Apparatus. Ventilation consists of two operations the removal of foul air, andjthe introduction ol fresh air. To what nicety this double operation must be .brought in a hospital can be realized by reflecting a moment on the unhealthy sur Groundings of the average sick-room. XICETT OP THE TASK. The evil effects on a perfectly healthy man or woman of breathing and rebreath ing the air of an illy-ventilated bedroom are well known. It poisons the lnne. Tt has been estimated that the respiration of one Human ueing vitiates nonriy aoouiouu cubic (eet of air. How much worse is it iu the ward of a hospital where 25 or 30 persons are prostrated with disease? Their breath is almost poisonous itself. Every exhalation eoHttias an undne amount of watery vapor, Sand minute quantities of animal matter, ii nut V .ufl i Pwi'Jii which, unless the apartment was ventilated up to the highest degree of perfection, would form a clammy deposit on the furniture and walls, and by putrefying, become organic poisons. . ., A lack of heat in winter decreases the vitelitv of sick people. They must be kept warm. And in summer, sick people are more sensitive to the heat than well people, becoming restless, losing sleep, and suffer ing from enervation. So that the same hos pital wards, used alike lor the same disease in winter and summer, have to be suitable for the different seasons. LARGE AND ATBY WAEDS. These demands have been most admirably kept in the ventlating arrangements of the Homeopathic Hospital. The wards are large and have high ceilings. Tbey are well-lighted, thus leaving many windows to be utilized Tor air as well as light. Beside the upper and lower sashes in these win dows, there is in each frame a small panel of blue-glass at the top which was put there purposely for ventilating purposes. It is so operated as to shield the patients on the beds underneath from both draughts and light. On the inside of each window-sill is cut a long, narrow hole in which is inserted a sheet-iron vent TJp through this vent comes hot air in winter, and cold air in summer. It is connected with pipes which lead up from the cellar. In the cellar these pipes converge in an immense double chamber, which is probably 80 feet long, 30 wide, and 15 feet high. All doors leading into it are kept tightly closed. A VAST AIR CHAMBER. For instance, when Superintendent Slack took me into this underground apartment he quickly pulled the door shut after us. "We try to Keep tne piace as nearly air tight as possible," he explained. "Fresh air is sent down to this chamber by ducts from an opening in the building's walls 40 feet high. Then it enters these pipes and is distributed in the various wards through the vents which you saw. If all windows AMONG THE in the wards could be kept closed this sys tem will make the house cooler than the draughts from the windows themselves. "We have tried it this summer, and suc ceeded in lowering the temperature of the whole building considerably below what it is when the windows, are open, but the 'rouble is that,weajuip.t xatisfjrthe patients that they are going 'fobe cooler with the windows closed than they will with them open. They want to see the windows well up because it is summer. Open windows interfere with the draught that can be se cured from this air chamber." CARRYING OPP POUL AIE. In the same air chamber in winter the air from above is heated by a huge battery of boilers, and this hot air ascends throughout the building, finding egress throngh the window-sill vents. So successinl has it been in beating the great, seven-story structure that not for four years has a fire been main tained in any of the open grates that are in all the wards. These grates, therefore, serve only as ornaments. In the floor of each ward of the Homeo pathic Hospital there are a number of iron grated openings, exactly similar to heat registers. Through these all the foul air escapes. It is drawn into them by suction, which is created in the cellar by means of a draught From each of these register open ings a zinc conduit, shaped like a box-sewer, extends along under the floor. It empties into a huge brick smokestack which runs up through the center of the bnilding. This stack is about six feet in diameter. I put my hand into it at the opening on the third floor, and the suction I felt was remarkable. DABK AND BBIGHT PICTUBES. This cadaverous chimney is something awful to contemplate. Into it passes all the foul air of the big hospital. It roars with an artificial wind. It fairly reeks with rvnisnn. Onlv one thintr can snrnass it iu the building in uncanniness. Thst is the dead room, or oneratin? hall. The whitecapped lady nurses who flit throughout the building everywhere appear like sentinel angels against the somber background 0f suffering that a hospital always presents. One spot, it is true, seemed bright enough without them. That was the children's ward. But everywhere else In the fever ward, the convalescents' ward, the female ward their presence was necessarrto add anything like life among the dying. I watched them for a long time, and I saw that of all their duties administering med icines, smoothing rumpled beds, wetting wonnds, washing feverish faees, or singing lullabies to still some wild fancy of de liriumof all these THAT OP FANNING seemed to bring quiet easier, and make the rest of the sick person more gentle. "Set the fluctuations of temperature in a sick man or woman is one of our most valu able guides," said a hospital nurse" to me on one occasion. And going to her library she took down a medical book and pointing to ' HI T1 nr the childbed's wabd. . a couple of paragraphs said: "We can fre quently if not invariably know the condi tion of our patient this way:" In ague, the temperature of the body begins to rise several hours before the beginning of the paroxysm, and after the disease seems to have disappeared, a periodio Increase of the temperature may still be detected, and as long as this continues, the patient is not really cured. In typhoid fever, the rise of tempera ture, or its abnormal fall, will indicate what Is to happen three or even four dajs before any fsaL .1 I Eit'Firit Day Btttmg Up. change in the pulse or other sign of mischief has been observed. A snaden fall of tempera tnrehas thus denoted Intestinal hemorrhage several days before It appeared. IT POBEBODES DANOEB. When a person, who yesterday was healthy, exhibits this morning a temperature above 1M, It is almost certain that an attack of ephemeral fever or ague is coming on, and shonld the temperature rise up to nr beyond lOfi'.S, the case will certainly turn out one ot ague or of some other form of malarious fever, if during the first day of illness, the tempera ture rises to 100, it Is certain that the patient CONVALESCENTS. does not suffer from typhus or typhoid fever and if the temperature of a patient, who ex hibitsthfl ceneral signs of pneumonia, never reaches 101.7, it is certain that there is no soft infiltration In the lnngs. In typhoid fever.a temperature whieh does not exceed on any evening 10S.8. indicates a prob able mild courses! fever. A temperature of 102 in the evening or 104 in the morning shows that the attack Is a severe one, and forebodes dancer during the third week. A SURE SIGN. , On the other hand, a temperature of 101s. 7' and below, in the morning, indicates a very mild attack, or the commencement of conva lesence. In pneumonia, a temperature of 104 and npward indicates a severe attack. In acuta rheumatism a temperature of 104 is always an alarming symptom. In a caso ofjaundlce otherwise mild, an Increase of temperature in dicates a pernicious turn. In tuberculosis, an Increase of temperature shows that the dis ease is advancing, and Jtbat untoward compli cations are retting in. In short, a fever tem perature of 104 to 105 In any disease Indicates that its progress is not checked, and that com plications may still ocenr. All the hospitals in Pittsbnrg and Alle gheny have admirable arrangements for ven tilation. In fact few cities in the country can compare with them. L. E. STOPIEL. ATHLETIC GHOSTS. After Abandoning Table-Tipping They Have Taken to Stonr-Throwing. Parts Edition Mew York Herald. There has been for some years an "obvious neglect of atbletio sports among ghosts. Formerly the ghosts' favorite amusement consisted in upsetting beds containing timid people and in throwing heavy articles, in cluding bricks and stones. Of late years the ghosts have wholly abandoned these sports, and have devoted themselves to liter ature, public speaking and quiet, social games of table-tipping and levitation. But now we are apparently about to wit ness a great athletio revival among the ghosts. Tbey have begun by establishing a range for throwing stones at a mark in the gronnds ot Mr. Piddock, of Clapham. The nark is rather a large one, being Mr. Pid dock's honse, bnt they are rapidly acquiring so mneh skill that they seldom tail to hit it, and frequently make the bull's-eyes on the drawing room windows. In time they will choose a smaller mark, and will doubtless strive to hit Mr. Piddock as he moves across bis lawn. Every intelligent man, so long as some other man's' bouse is selected as a mark, will be pleased at this revival of ghostly athletics. It is much better than table tipping and infinitely superior to ghostly literature. EXPAHDIHG TEE BEAUT. A Paris Dootor Bu Found a Way to Blake l-tntemen ot Idiot. Paris Edition New York Herald.l A Parisian surgeon has discovered a sew method of developing the brain. Noticing that the head of an idiotie little girl was ex tremely small be removed part of the sknll in order to give the brain room to expand. It duly expanded, and the girl is now qnite as intelligent as there is any real necessity that a girl shonld be. This successful ex periment not only shows how idiocy may be cured, but it also seems to establish the fact that a man's intelligence varies as the size of his brain. t If, therefore, any man wishes to increase his brain power all he has to do is to have, say, half ot his skull removed. General Boulanger might be converted into a new Napoleon by simply removing his skull and by expanding the brain artificially. Tbe discoverv is one which promises to be of great nttlity, and can hardly fail to make the discoverer wonderfully popular in "idiotie" circles. A Lady Newspaper ArtUt. West Shore. 1 Eose Maury, who Illustrates for five of the best Parisian journals, is the danr1 ' station master in France. Sb of M. Durny, Minister of tion. who happened to see when she was 7 years old. future is prophesied for i Durny had not happened to way, sne mignt sun oe , oi; in the old station house, thoi .is seldom entirely overlookecl ARTHUR AND TELLER. How the Colorado Senator Was Forced Into the Cabinet in '82. D0K CAMERON HELPED TO DO IT. A Story About the Biggest Sheep Owner In the United States. 8ENAT0E EYARTS AB A BON YIYANT rcoKBisPoinjBNCx or the msr-i.TCH.1 WASHINGTON, August 22. The Colo rado United States Senatorship will be settled within a few days. It is generally believed here that Senator Teller will suc ceed himself. He is by all odds the clean est and most able man that his State has ever sent to Washington, and I am told that his onlv onnonent of anv orominence is Tabor, who has to buy all the votes that be gets.. Senator Teller is one of the most re markable men in this country. He is the son of a farmer in "Western New York, and he has the bine blood of the Knickerbockers In bis veins. His ancestors came to this country from Holland in 1639, and the present generation is the first that has not been able to speak the Butch language. His father was in ordinarily good circum stances and young Teller got a good educa tion, studied law and went by stage to Den ver in 1858. Central City was then a great mining townnd Teller moved there and practiced law. He is one of the brightest lawyers in Colorado and he has made several fortunes in his practice. He has lost as well as made, and he is now a comparatively poor man. He left his law office in 1876 to be one of Colorado's first Senators and he left the Senate for the Cabinet in 1882. couldn't haemonize. "When Teller was a Senator, the million aire, N. P. Hill, was also in the Senate, and the two did not eet alone well together. Hill was jealous of Teller and he was so angry with President Arthur when Teller was made Secretary of the Interior that he became Arthur's enemy as far as he dared to be. He never got over his disgust at Teller's appointment, and he is now oppos ing Teller's election to the Senate. The story of Senator Teller's appointment as one of President Arthur's Cabinet Min isters his never been published, and the in side history of it was known only to three or four statesmen. These were the President himself. Senator Teller. John A. Logan and "Don Cameron. Now Arthur is dead, Logan is dead, and Senator Teller, at my request, gives the story through me to the public. The truth is the place was forced upon him. I had a chat with him regarding it the other night. Said he: "I had not the slightest desire for the-position, and it was ten days after the place was offered to me that I con sented to accept it, and I could not well afford the expenses of a Cabinet Minister. My wife did not want me to take it, and I refused to accept it as long as I dared. Ex-Senator Chaffee was a candidate for the the place and so was Senator Logan. Bon Cameron and myself were pushing Chaffee for it. SOBT OF A JOHN ALDAN. "One Monday morning I was called out of the Senate by the President's private secretary, Mr. Phillips, who told me that President Arthur would like me to come to the "White House at 10 o'clock that night and talk with him about the appointment of a Secretary of the Interior. I supposed that he referred to Mr. Chaffee's candidacy, and when Xaaw himIagain presented Mr. Chaffee's case. "We were discussing the matter in the little private room which Arthur reserved for himself, in one corner of the Presidental Mansion. As I was going on about Senator Chaffee, President Arthur said: " 'There is no use of talking of Mr. Chaffee's appointment. Ihave decided that I shall not have a man for my Secretary of the Interior who is not a lawyer, and who is not fresh from a good practice. Ex-Senator Chaffee has not the qualities that I want for my Secretary of the Interior.' "I was rather nettled, at this," Senator Teller went on, "And I referred to the fact that a nnmber of the past secretaries had not been lawyers when the President said: 'I will tell yon the elements that I want in my Secretary of the Interior and the kind of man I propose to appoint. The Secretary of the Interior has to settle more important eases during the year than' the Supreme Court, and he investigates twice the num ber of legal questions as the Department of Justice. Hence the man must be a good lawyer. He must have some experience with public affairs and with public men. He must come from the West,' and Presi dent Artbnr went on to tell me the other qualities which be wanted his Secretary of the Interior to possess. STRUCK ALL IK A HEAP. "As he went on I saw that he had some one in his mind, and I racked my brain to figure out who he was driving at. I ran over man after man from my locality, but I could find none who had the qualities he mentioned. His talk grew hazier to me as he went on, and at last he concluded, lean ing over and putting his band on my knee, and saying: 'Now, Senator Teller, I have decided that you come the nearest to filling these requirements ot any other man I know, and I want to offer you the place.' "I was thunderstruck. I jumped to my feet and excitedly exclaimed: 'But I don't want it, Mr. President I am in the Senate and I can't leave it. I cannot afford it, and you must not offer me the place, fori cannot accept it. Besides, I am here to push the claims of Mr. Chaffee.' "The President begeed me to sit down and talk over the matter. I complied with his request, tbongh I said there was no use in talking about it, and onr conversation lasted until 2 am. As I left I begged the Presi dent not to tell anyone he had offered me the position, and reiterated my statement that I conld not take it. BEPEBBED XO CAMERON. "President Arthur replied: 'I don't want yon to decide to-night. Think over the matter until Thursday night On Thurs day I met my appointment and npon my again refusing, the President asked me to go and see Don Cameron at the Senate and talk over the matter with him, and to tell Cameron to eome and see mm after he had had his conversation with me. I saw Sen ator Cameron and Cameron urged me by all means to take the place, He said: 'If the President will not have Chaffee, yon must accept the place and I am lor you.' "I gave Senator Cameron my reasons for not wabting it He said: 'You cannot help yourself. You will have to take it,' and with that he left to go to the White House. The next day when I came ont oi the Senate Senator Allison met me with a sly wink in his eye and asked me if the Governor of my State was a Republican and whether be would appoint a Hepublican successor to my place in tbe Senate. I saw from this that the story was out, and the next there was a line in a New York newspaper saying it was rumored that I had been offered the portfolio of the Interior. CONSTITUENTS FT'"'" PROM. "This statement was telegraphed to Denver, and I got ,100 telegrams next day ' -ging me to accept the position. In the time Don Cameron telegraphed Chaffee, was in Florida, to come to Washing- laying that while he could not have appointed Secretary of the Interior, resident would make an appointment i would be perfectly satisfactory to He came and hs also urged me to ac- -he position. the meantime the telegrams from tdo continued to come in. It was the first time that a Cabinet office had been offered to a man from Colorado, and the peo ple of my State wonld have considered it an honor to have" a man in the President's Cab inet The pressure became so great that I could not refuse it and I went to the White House and told tbe President that I would accept the position. I found the office a very pleasant one and my relations with President Arthur were of the most pleasant nature. I lound that what he said as to the legal requirements "of the office was true and I don't believe there is a more important position, in the appointing power of the President from a legal standpoint than that of the Secretary of the Interior." AN INTEBESTING PABMEB. The question of the wool tariff has brought one of the' most remarkable farmers in the United States to Washington. This is David Hamster, ot Northern Ohio. He is onr of the millionaire sheep raisers of the country. He has large estates scattered over other parts of the Union, and to look at him you would not suppose him to be worth a dollar. He is abont five feet four inches high, is as broad as he is long, and has a round cannonball bead, pasted down unnn a nair of broad fat shoulders. His roly-poly form is clad in rough goods which might have been put together by his wife and a big derby hat comes well down toward his ears and shades his fat florid face. Harpster is a great friend of Senator Sherman's. He was' sitting the other day iu Senator Sherman's committee room when John B. Alley, the ex-Congressman from Massachusetts, who was so prominent in the days of the Credit Mobilier scandal, came in. Alley is a millionaire. He is proud of his riches and he is, I am told, a little in clined to pose. When he entered Senator Sherman's room, Mr. Sherman introduced him to Dave Harpster, saying, "Mr. Alley, I want to make yon acquainted with one of our representative farmers, Mr. Harpster." A MILLIONAEE nUMBLED. "Ah, indeed," replied Alley as he shook hands. "You are a farmer, are you. I am always glad to meet farmers, for I am some thing of a farmer myself. I have a farm in Texas consisting of 40,000 acres." "You have," muttered out Harpster, "and where Is it." "It is in such a county," said Alley, naming the county, "in the central part of Texas." "Indeed!" replied Mr. Harpster, "it must be good land, for I own the whole county next to it" This surprised Alley and took the wind out of his sails. He said little more about his farms, but his actions showed that his respect for Mr. David Harpster, the Ohio farmer, had perceptibly risen. There is no man in Washington who en joys a good dinner more than Senator Ev arts. He is one of the highest livers in Washington, and notwithstanding that he is six feet tall and does not weigh more than 125 pounds, he can eat all aronnd Phi letus Sawyer, who weighs 300 and has a stomach so large yon could-roll Evarts up like a watch spring and coil him within it and have room to spare. He shows in fact no sign of his epicurean tastes, and once while speaking in New York a Yankee who bad arrived alter the meeting had be gun, asked the name of the man on the platform. He was told it was Evarts. "Whatl" said he. "You don't mean to say that that lean little thing is E-vartsI Why, he looks as if he boarded." Fbank O. Cabpentbb. BZEMB T.nrR SUICIDE. The Freak of a Peculiar Mountain Bird That Hants Food In tbe Water. Away np on the mountain side is the natural borne of the water ousel, the strangest of all strange birds. Yon seldom see more than one of them at a time. They are oi a dark blue color, and are easi! recognized by a. pecnlar, Quick, jerkiff motion which they never seem to tire of. And as they flit from rock to rock they are continually bobbing up and down, perform ing sikh a polite little courtesy- as wonld make yon smile to see it. Owing to their peculiar habits and the isolated spots they select to bcild their nests no one bnt the most ardent sportsmen and naturalists succeed in finding them. Hence a water onsel'a nest with two of their eggs in it has a commercial value among nest collectors of $2,5. They always build their nests just back of some waterfall or under some overhanging bank, where they have to go throngh or under the water to get to it Another strange habit of this bird is the deliberate habit in which they appear to commit suicide. They will start slowly, very slowly, to wade right down into the water until they disappear from view, but if the water is clear, and you have a sharp eye, you can still see their little dark forms clinging to the bottom in search of their morning repast, which consists of peri winkles. SHE'S WOBXH F0UE MHXI0HS. Pretty Florence Bljllir, Whom the Conrta Have Made an Heiress. Florence BIythe, who is now to be placed in possession of the four-million-dollar estate of the late eccentrio millionaire, Thomas H. BIythe, is quite a handsome young woman. This, together with the gold she now commands, oueht to bring her a first class foreign lord, if she inoliues that way. SITE OF THE MOSQUITO. If Ton Lie Still and Let tbe Beait Have Its Fill Ton Are Jill Right. New York Bnn.J The cauje of the irritation from a mos quito's bite was for a long time a subject of discussion and frequently of dispute. "The secret was first discovered," 'says- Prof. Ma closfcie, "by the observation of fine droplets of a yellow, oily looking fluid escaping from the apex of the hypopbarynx." "It has been demonstrated in many in stances," comments Mrs. Aaron, "that if the female be allowed to drink her 11 and to flv away unmolested the effect' ot the I poison is very much reduced; in some cases entirely so. it is tne interrupted periorm ance which produces the greatest itching. This seems to prove that, if allowed to finish her meal undisturbed, the mosquito will pump back the venimo salivary secretion, whereas a quick withdrawal of the tube re sults in tbe consequent abandonment of this irritating fluid to be a sonrce of annoyance in tho flesh." Baron Kothschlld's Clock. Jewelers l Weekly. Baron Alphonse Bothscblld has lately bought a clock made by that royal and most luckless clock maker, Louis XVI, , with his own bands. It is not particularly beautiful, bat being unique and the object of mneh competition among collectors, it bronght the remarkable price of $163,000, Florence BIythe, the Betrett. IN THE POSTAL CAH Busy and Hard Life Led by the Clerks Who Handle the Mail. PHYSICAL AHD MENTAL STKAffl. How the Men Are Tested as to Their Fitness for Their Important Work. THE NEW T0BK BLEEPING APARTMENT rcoBBXsroxnraca or the dispatch.! New Yoek", August 23 Amid the rush and roar of Park Bow, Broadway, Fulton street and all of that maelstrom of metropol itan business life focused on the city build ings very few people think of the complex machinery in operation in the granite build ing known as the Postoffice. If they do think of it the subject is too vast jn all its ramifications for even the best-posted human mind to grasp. The Government official who works in the bnilding probably knows as little about it as a whole as a department clerk at Washington knows about tbe work ings of the department m which he is em ployed. He knows his own branch, or nar row routine no more. He is a good clerk if he knows that thoroughly. The operations of the railway mail service in the New York division alone are enough to tax the executive abilities of the best men the meager Government pay will buy. Even the small armvof railwav postal clerks have dailv tasks more difficult than the trials of most men in private business. 'HANDLING DUMM.T MAILS. The unhappy probationer is given several thousand cards addressed to all of these offices, stood on end in front of this memory machine and told to fire away. The accur acy and speed with which he can do this will determine his efficiency. His dummy mail represents just what he will be called upon to handle in a railway car running from 40 to CO miles an hour. The real mail has been first assorted by routes and through mail in the big'distribut ing room of the New York Postoffice. In this mail car distribution he is handling only bis share and doing what is being done night and day on every postal car in the country. It never stops. The day shift is succeeded by the night shift, and day again follows night The rest of the world sleeps, sits down to breakfast, works, comes home to dinner, plays and sleeps again. The postal world sleeps and eats in wayside gangs its work goes on unceasingly, ou a thousand cars rusmng tnrongn snnsnine and darkness, hither and thither, and the steady chuck, chuck, chuck, ot the swaying clerks among the railway pouches is never stilled. POSTAL CLEBK BEQTJIEEMENT3. There are 4,544 postoffices in Pennsylva nia, for instance. Think of the job of a postal clerk between New York and Pitts burg, who must be so familiar with these (only a part of his route work:) that he can instantly tell into what pouch a letter must go in order to reach anyone oi these offices by the shortest branch lines. Tbe severe civil service examination that he goes through to get his place ou tbe probation ary list is but the stepping stone, as it were, to harder mental work. The first test a man who has passed the civil service examina tion for the railway mail service is subjected to is that of reading quickly and clearly tbe addresses on 100 envelopes, all in different handwriting, and the addresses taking in every portion of the country. Probationary men, the stage of the first Bix months, are subject to examination every 30 or .60 days as to their knowledge of their routes. A pigeon-holed case arrangement is set up in tbe chief examiner's (War ring's) office. The holes represent the dis tributing offices along the route, and each one of these distributing offices represents from 6 to 20 subordinate offices. WONDEBFT7LLT .ACCTJBATE. The accuracy of these human machines is something wonderful. Let but a single in competent man get in a mall car and the peace of mind of the whole business world is broken. Therefore this ceaseless drill. And when this clerk has mastered that one route he must master the distributing offices of the entire country if he would go up higher in grade and salary. When a postal clerk has boarded a western-bound train, say at 2 o'clock in tbe afternoon, has gone into his traveling post office and worked till he gets to Pittsburg, about 9 o'clock next morning, without even having a chance to sit down, and all this time under tbe mental strain of several hun dred postoffices, to say nothing or the ardu ous physical labor of catching, sorting and throwing off, it may be fairly presumed that he earns his salary. But tbe railway mail service man may not yet be through. He mav possibly have three or four hours "rest" in Pittsbnrg. Then he gets on his car again to go through the same laDor on the return trip. THE CLEBK AX BEST. When he arrives here in tbe night he directs his footsteps to the postoffice. He takes the elevator up to the top floor where a cice, clean bed awaits him. He enters a small reception room where hotel keeper O. D. Turner awaits him. There is a register here, similar to tbe ordinary hotel register. In this register he writes his name, the name ol tbe postal route with which he is connected and the hour at which he wishes to be called in the morning. Opposite this entry the keeper places the number of his bed, just as the hotel clerk assigns a room. There is but one room in this hotel and no discrimination as to accommodations. He is then conducted across the way over a marble-tiled floor to the dormitory. This is a large room containing 65 beds. These beds are substantial cots with springs, mat tresses and pillows, aud sport the snowiest, of linen. The windows of the room are heavily shaded to keep daylight out lor many ot the men'mnst sleep daring the day. The greatest quietude is observed. It is as if you were entering the critical ward of a hospital. KEEP THE BEDS PILLED. Every minute of sleep is valuable to the man who works at night and especially to one of irregular hours. Here;come in when you will, nearly every bed is full day and night For the moment you may think tbese tired sleepers are the same men, bnt they are not There are 3S0 railway mail service men who use this room. There are but 65 beds. But then there are always some getting up and always some going to bed some coming in and some going away. F.verv honr of dav and night they pasa up Land down a set ot tired.or refreshed, home less railway wanaerers. It is to enable the men to catch these few hours of much needed rest that the system has sprung up. For the privilege they pay the nominal sum of 75 cents a month. The linen of each bed is changed as soon as the nreient occupant is through with it which opens to the newcomer a more inviting pros pect than he could get anywhere else at 75 cents a night. A NICE PLACE TO SLEEP. Here, high above the noisy traffic of the streets, he can lie down in a clean, fresh bed in a shaded room where every sound is ex cluded, as tree from disturbed slumbers as if he were camping in the piny woods of the Adirondack, Snperintendent Jackson, of the second division, is a hard worker and an untiring drill master, but he takes a lively personal interest in the welfare of his men and lor that reason is very much liked by them. His employes are paid bv check on the Sub Treasury, but these checks are usually cashed by. the proprietor of an all-night honse on Park Bow, where the men often get their first or last meal of the day's ran. Ckabtvbb T. Uubbax. ifrfMflfc? 4mJ1wmg?h---: Yti?iS0 lWBITTEir Ton THE DISPATCH. PABTL In the year 1840 I sailed in a fine brig named the Laughing Creole for a passage to Kingston, Jamaica, where lived an uncle of mine who had been for many years estab lished there as a merchant. I had not set eyes on him since I was 6 years old, bnt in writing to ask me to visit him he talked as though be intended I should be his heir, and in this there lay encouragement enongh to me to attempt the voyage. In those days there were no great steam boats trading in the Antilles. The West India merchantman was still afloat, but her sailings were at intervals not always con venient, and people who were unwilling to lose time were glad to take the first vessel that ofiered. Thns it happened that I was a passenger aboard the Laughing Creole the only passenger, as it chanced, though there was accommodation for three or four others, . The captain was a square, mahogany faced man of the true deep sea type; his large, damp, blue eyes seemed to strain in their sockets as he rolled tbenvalong the horizon or directed them at his sails; his teeth were black with the tobacco he incessantly chewed, and his attire was always the same wet or dry, hot or cold a long pilot cloth coat, a rnstv beaver, very large at the crown and the sides dandily curledup; an immense cravat or neckcloth, wound round and round his throat, and so stiffening him-about the neck that he was unable to move his head without turning the rest of his body with it He had built the Laughing Creole and owned her. and I had not been long on board before he informed me that the cargo in. her was entirely his own venture. With him was what is called an Only Mate a slow and heavy man belonging to South Shields? bnt as fine a sailor as the coal trade could breed or as could hail from a part of the coast which for generations has produced the noblest race oi seamen that "ever bled under the white flag or toiled under the red. The captain's name was Larkins; his ,oa Wnarrier. The carpenter of thebrig acted as second mate and relieved Wharrier A LABGE TIGEB LEAPED on deck when the change of watch came round. There were six or seven of a crew at this distance of time I forget tbe nnmber, butlrecolleet that they were very smart fellows, hairy and tarry, nimble as monkeys in the rigging, swift as bluejackets in reef ing down or in furling, "every finger a fish hook, every hair a rope yarn." THE LAUGHING CEEOLE. The brig was a clipper of the old school, sharp as a knife at the forefoot, with a sturdy round of bow over it, coppered high and painted black with a white line. She needed but a brass gun forward or the muz zles of a few carronades projected through her high bulwarks to give her a genuine piratical aspect She carried skysail poles, which topping masts usually lofty for a craft of her dimensions, lilted her canvas to the very stars, as I wonld sometimes think when I looked on high on a fine night, and marked tbe dim spaces of her cloths sway ing under the brilliance of the heavens, with here and there an expiring scar of meteoric dust, that seemed within reach of the arm from her little skysail yard. Nothing whatever noteworthy happened nntil we were well within the tropics. The northeast trade wind had swept ns smartly along, and for several days and nights the cheerlnl humming in the rigging, the seething and washing noises over the side had gladdened me as an assurance of a swift passage. But one morning when I came on deck I found the wind gone. There was a troubled swell running, as though the heaveof the waters were from two distinct points of the compass. The sea was of the color of lead; there was not the least draught of air to freckle .or tarnish the folds, and they swept along soundlessly, polished as liquid glass, without a break of foam the wide sea over. The sky had a strange, wild, ngly look; there were layers of clouds down in the west whieh made one think of matting formed of twisted horsehair; then breaks of sickly blue that merely accentuated the storm dark face of a spread of clond bend ing down into the north, where the rim of it turned into a huddle oi sulphur colored stuff which looked like volumes of smoke, that having steamed out of a colossal dung hill there, now bung motionless jin the stag nated atmosphere. The sailors were aloft reducing canvas. Old Wharrier paced the deck athwartship to and fro, occasionally bawling an order. The captain stood near the wheel with his beaver hat pulled well down over bis brow and his hands clasped behind bim, and the energy with which he chewed the hunk of tobacco that made a lump in his cheek un der his ear satisfied me that his mind was not without excitement SIGNS OP A STOBII. "What's going to happen7" said L "Looks like a revolving storm a-brew log," said he. Captain Larkins was not a highly educated man, and having made his way from the forecastle to the quarter deck he had brought with him many of the quali ties and graces of Jack's sea parlor. "There is some theory about revolving storms," said I, sending a concerned eye round the sea. "They have a center, and the job is to know how to bead so at to keep clear of the vortex." "Here It is I" said he. with a not of grum bling in his voice. "Wortex. How is a plain sailor man to deal with snch mean ings at lay locked np in words of that kind? Bnt wortex or no wortex, it'i going to blow." Even as he spoke the scowl of the sky darkened, the dim breaks of the heavens grew yet more filmed, if I may sse the ex pression, like to tbe blue eye of a dying woman, and there was a sharp, brassy glare of lightning down in the southwest, bnt no note of thunder aa yet, save what came from the lofty hoist of main topsail, that was still !lnln """ wl0 YAFftr VfcirfJVfffdSSEit. to be reefed or furled, as the weighty can vas slapped the mast to the staggering and helpless rolls of thebrig upon the oil smooth swell. Before two hours had passed the gloom had so deepened that the like of It should have held impossible in the daytime. It was of the darkness that hovers betwixt twi light and night The mastheads were scarcely to be seen; the sailors moved in shadows, blending easily with the obscure details, nntil you could not tell a man from a coil of rope hanging by a belay ing pin. xnere was a aeatnuse nusn npon the ocean that rmt a new ele ment of horror into this blind, dark, eclipsed rooming. Every sonnd, the noise of straining timbers, the beat of such pinions of canvas as were left unfurled, the sudden, fierce tension of the jerked shrouds smote and startled the hearing as though a pistol were discharged close to one's head. A coil of brown vapor of aa sooty a complexion as the smoke that over hangs a manufacturing town lay poised upon the near horizon, so narrowing the diameter of the circle of swelling, sulky, lead colored waters, in the heart of which the brig wallowed, that one was sensible of an oppression in looking at it, as though it were some hell born, imprisoning girdle, pestiferous and suffocating, through which our little vessel would never be able to thrnst her way. THE STORM BREAKS. Presently some immense drops of rain fell and I went below. Five minntes later there happened a dazzling glare of lightning, fol lowed by a near and terribly loud crash of thunder. The electric brand appeared to liberate the rain, and down it came in a whole ocean, in the midst of which thalight ning began afresh, attended by on incessant raging of thunder. Peal followed peal like the broadsides of a line-of-battle ship, and the lightning was terrific and appalling to me, who had never before witnessed a trop ical storm, and whose notions of lightning did not go beyond the spectacles which the English skies provide us with in that way. There was no wind; it was a breathless elec tric outburst, an inexpressibly furious flour ishing of liehtning and a continuous cannon- I ading, as stunning and confounding to every PBOM THE STEANGE CBAPT. sense as the fire of a hundred parks of artil- On a sudden there was a flash crimsoned, spiral! It seemed to leap in 20 corkscrew shapes of fire out oi the deck and sides and ceiling of the cabinet in which I sat I thought I could catch a splintering timber penetrating the blast and shock of thunder that followed. The atmosphere was full of sulphur. I could scarcelv breathe, and, convinced that the brig had been struck and might be on fire even as I sat thinking of it, I fled to the companion steps. THE BOLT STRIKES. The rain had ceased, but there was still no wind. The air was aflame with Hgnt ning. A single glance sufficed to assure me that the brig had been strnck, and struek with a vengeance! Forward she was completely wrecked. Her foremast was gone some leet under the top, and the. spars, which had crushed the length of bulwarks flat in their fall, lay in a hideous litter over the side. The jibbooms were torn off the bowsprit and on the main everything from the crosstrees upward bad vanished snapped off as a clay pipe stem is broken by the drag upon it 'of the lightning blasted fabric forward. Tbe crew had vanished, but a seaman stoutly clung to tbe wheel, and side by side near him stood Captain Larkins and old Wharrier. My good sense told me, spite of the desperate promptings of my terror, that this was not the time to bother the captaim with questions. I stood at the companion way sheltering my sight with my hands, and very shortly after I had emerged some order was delivered by the eiptain, where upon Wharrier rushed forward, roaring out as he ran. The men who had sprang ont of the way of the falling spars came tumbling out on to the deck on hearing the mate's cries, and with a sort of fury in their man ner went to work with knives and hateheta to free the brig of the wreckage that was grinding alongside and threatening-to open her seams for her, the captain mean while stimulating them by bawling out that a hurricane of wind was coming along) that it would be down upon us in a breath; that if it canght us with all that raffle alongside we were lost men, and the like. THE CYCLONE. v There was nothing else, I suppose, to ta done in the face of the lightning and the lowering sky, black with the menace of the cyclone. Certainly if old Larkins could, have saved bis masts by hoisting them in board he would have done so. There was time to cut the wreckage clear before the wind came; time for that, I say, hut nothing else. The lightning ceased; the swell miraculously flattened; it grew brighter in a phantasmal sort of a way iu the west, and then came the wind! I have no language in whieh to express -the fury of this first outfly. It heaped the" water into a tall, boiling ridge, which one could see miles distant approaching when there was not a breath of air where the briz' was. Down lay the vessel to the flash of the tempest and I could hardly see her for the white thickness of tbe flying spray. It caught her right abeam, and in a breath, away went onr mainmast, parting its strong fastenings as though they were pack thread. - What followed I recall but Indistinctly. My senses were stunned by the suddenness of our calamities, by the lightning- that had withered ss aloft, and now by this tssapeet of wind that made by its, own fearful rush ing as wild a noiseofthnndtrln thesky as' ever had attended the electric play that was passed. Bnt our sailors were all fine fel lowsable, eool and daring. Old Larkins roared at them throngh a speaking trumpet, and Wharrier was everywhere, yelling a eouragement, flouruhiajr a hatchet, knowing exactly what to do and setting the most la-' spiriting example that could be IsaagiaeeVi V leoaidbeofaonaeoadeck.aadprsseaUi'yf 1 i 2 4 4 m r