' " Kmmmfflmmmtitrim' 20 called God. One sentence at this point caught my delighted ear. It was apropos of tome question of the judgment and ran: A Deity They Comprehended. "Nol I tell you God doesn't do,business that way." He was siring them a deity whom they could comprehend and a cold and jeweled heaTen in which they could take a natural interest. He Interlarded his performance xith the slang of the streets, the counter and the exchange, and he said that religion ought to enter into daily life. Consequently, I presume he introduced it as daily life his own and the lite of his friends. Then I escaped before the Messing, de siring no benediction at such hands. But the persons who listened seemed to enjoy themselves, and I understand that I had met with a popular preacher. Later on when I had perused the sermons of a gentleman called Talmage and some others, I perceived that I had been listening to a very mild specimen. Xct that man with his brutal gold and silver idols, his nands-in-pocket cigar-in-mouth and hat-on-the-back-of-the-head style of dealing with the sacred vessels, would count himself spir itually quite competent to send a mission ary to convert the Indians. All that Sunday I listened to people who said that the mere fact of spiking down strips oi iron to wood and getting a steam and iron thing to run along them was prog ress; that thfl telephone was progress, and the network of wires overhead was prog ress. They repeated their statements again and again. One of them took me to their City Hall and Board of Trade works and pointed it out with pride. It was very ugly but very big, and the streets in front of it were narrow and un clean. "When I saw the faces of the men who did business in that buildinjr I felt that there had been a mistake in their billeting. Writing Down to His Audience. By the way, 'tis a consolation to feel that I am not writing to an English audience. Then I should have to fall into feigned ecstacies over the marvelous progress since the days of the great lire, to allude casually to the raising of the entire city so many feet above the level of the lake which it faces, and generally to grovel before the golden calf. But you, who are desperately poor, and therefore by these standards of no ac count, know things, will understand when I write that they have managed to get a mill ion of men together ou flat land, and that the bulk of these men together appear to be lower than Mahajans and not so compan ionable as a Punjabi Jat after harvest. Just when the sense of unreality and op- fression were strongest upon me, and when most wanted help, a man sat at my side and began to talk what he called politics. I had chanced to pay about 6 shillings for a traveling cap worth 18 pence, and he made of the fact a text for a sermon. He said that this was a rich country, and that the people liked to pay 200 per cent on the value" pf a thing. They could afford it. He said that the Government imposed a protective dnty ot from 10 to 70 per cent on foreign made articles, and that the American manu facturer consequently could sell his goods for a healthy sum. Thus an imported hat would, with duty, cost 2 guineas. The American manufacturer would make a bat for 17 shillings and sell it for 1 15s. In these things, he said, lay the greatness of America and the efieteness of England. Competition between factory and factory kept the prices down to decent limits, but I was never to forget that this people were a rich people, not like the pauper conti nentals, and that they enjoyed paying duties. An Object Lesson in Trusts. To my weak intellect this seemed rather like juggling with counters. Everything that 1 have yet purchased costs about twice as much as it would in England, and when native made Is ot inferior quality. More over, since theno lines were first thought of I have visited a gentleman who owned a fac tory which used to produce things. He owned the factory still. Not a mau was in it, but he was drawing a handsome income from a syndicate of lir.DS for keeping it closed in order that it might not produce things. This man said that if protection were abandoned a tide of pauper labor would flood the country, and as I looked at his factory I thought how entirely better it was to have no labor whatever rather than face so horrible a future. Meantime do you remember that this peculiar country enjoys paying money lor value not received? I am an alien, and for the life of me cannot see why G shillings should be paid lor 18-penny caps, or 8 shillings for half-crown cigar cases. When the country fills up to a decently populated level a few million people who are not aliens will be smitten with the same sort of blindness. But my friend's assertion somehow thor oughly suited the grotesque ferocity of Chicago. Chicago Versus India. See sow and judge! In the village of Isser Jang, on the road to Montgomery, there be four Chanear women who winnow corn some 70 bushels a year. Beyond their hnt lives Purun Dass, the money lender, jrho, on good security? lends as much as 6,000 rupees iu a year. Jowala Singh, the smith, mends the village ploughs some 30, broken at the share, in 365 days; and Hukm Chund,.who is letter writer and head of the little club under the travellers' tree, generally cecps the village posted in such gossip as 'the barber and the midwife have not yet made public property. Chicago husks and winnows her wheat by the million bushels, a hundred banks lend hundreds of millions of dollars in the year and scores of factories turn out plow gear andmachinerv by steam. Scores of daily papers do wort which Hukm Chund and the barber and the midwife perform, with due regard for public opinion, in the village of Isser Jang. So far as manu factures go, the difference between Chicago on the lake and Isser Jang on the Mont gomery road is one of degree only and not of kind. As lar 3b the understanding of the uses of life goes Isser Jang, for all its sea sonal cholera, has the advantage over Chi cago. Jowala Siugh knows and takes care to avoid the three or four ghoul-haunted fields on the outskirts of the village; but he is not urged by millions of devils to run about all day in the sun and swear that his plow shares are the best in the Punjab; nor does Purum Dass fly lorth iu an ekka more than once or twice in a year, and he knows, on a pinch, how to use the railway and the tele graph as well as any son of Israel in Chi cago. But this is absurd. "What the Preachers Say. The East is not the "West, and these men must continue to deal with the machinery of lile and to call it progress. Their very preachers dare not rebuke them. Thev gloss over the hunting lor money and the thrice sharpened bitterness of Adam's curse by saying that such things dower a man with a larger range of thoughts and higher aspirations. They do not say, "Free your selves Irom your own slavery," hut rather, "If you can possibly manage it, do not set quite so much store on the things of this world." And thev do not know what the things of this world are I I went off to see cattle killed by way of clearing my head, wbicb, as you will per ceive, was getting muddled. Tbey say every Englishman goes to the Chicago stock yards. You shall find them about six miles irom the city; and once baving seen tbem yon will never forget the sight. As far as the eye can reach stretches a township of cattlepens, cunningly divided into blocks so that the animals ot any pen can be speedily driven out close to an in clined timber path which leads to an ele vated covered way straddling high above the pens. These viaducts are two-storied. On the upper story tramp the doomed cattle, stolidly for the most part. On the lower, with a scufflme of sharp hoofs and multi tudinous yells, run the pics, the same end being appointed for each. Thus you will see the gangs of cattle waiting their turn as they wait sometimes for days; and tbey need not be distressed by the sight of their fellows running about in the fear of death. All tbey know is that a man on horseback causes their next door neighbors to move by means of a whip. Certain bars and Icnces are unshipped, and behold, that crowd have gone up the mouth of a sloping tunnel and return no more. "Watching Pig Sticking. It is different with pics. They shriek back the news of the exodus to their friends, and a hundred pens skirl responsive. It was to the pigs I first addressed myself. Selecting a vinduct which was full of them, as I could hear though I could not see, 1 marked a somber building whereto it rau, and went there, not unalaraed by stray cattle who had managed to escape Irom their proper quarters. A pleasant smell of brine warned me of what was coming. I entered the lactory and found it full of pork in bar rels, and ou another story more pork un barreled, and in a huge room the halves of swine, for whose behoof great Inmps of ice were being pitched in at the window. That room was the mortuary chamber where the pigs lay for a little while in state ere they began their progress through such passages as kings may sometimes travel. Turning a corner and not noting an over head arrangement of greased rail, wheel and pulley, I ran into the arms of four eviscer ated carcasses, all pure white and of a hu man aspect, pushed by a man clad in vehe ment red. When I leaped aside the floor was slippery under me. Also there was a flavor of farm yard in my nostrils and the shouting of a "multitude in my ears. But there was no joy in that shouting. Twelve men stood in two lines six a side. Be tween them and overhead ran the railway ot death that had nearly shunted mc through the window. Each man carried a knife, the sleeves of his shirt were cut off at the elbows, and from bosom to heel he was blood red. Stringing Up the Pigs. Beyond this perspective was a column of steam, and beyond that was where I worked my awe struck way, unwilling to touch beam or wall. The atmosphere was stifling as a night in the rains by reason of the steam and the crowd, l climbed to the be ginning of things, and, perched upon a nar row beam, overlooked very nearly all the pigs ever bred iu Wisconsin. They had just been shot out of the mouth of the via duct and huddled together in a large pen. Thence they were flicked persuasively, a fevr at a time, into a smaller chamber, and there a man fixed tackle on their hinder legs so that they rose in the air, suspended from the railway of death. Ohl It was then they shrieked and called on their mothers and made promises of amendment, till thetacklemau punted tbem in their backs and they slid head down into a brick floored passage very like a big Kitchen sink that was blood red. There awaited them a red man with a knife which he passed jauntily through their throats, and the lull-voiced shriek became a splut ter, and then a fall asot heavy tropical rain, and the red man, who was backed against the passage wall, you will understand, stood clear of the wildly kicking hoofs and passed his hand over his eyes, not from any feeling of compassion, but because the spurted blood was in his eyes and he had barely time to sties: the next arrival. Then the first stuck swine dropped, still kicking, into a great vat of boiling water and spoke no more words but wallowed in obedience to some unseen machinery, and presently came forth at the lower end of the vat and was heaved on the blades of a blunt paddle wheel things which said "hough, hough, hough!" and skelped all the hair off him except what little a couple of men with knives could remove. Losing His Individuality. Then he was again hitched by the heels to that said railway and passed down the line of the 12 men each man with a knife los ing with each man a certain amount of his individuality, which was taken away in a wheelbarrow, and when he reached the last man he was very beautiful to behold, but excessively unstuffed and limp. Preponder ance of individuality was ever a bar to for eign travel. That pig could have been in case to visit you in India had he not parted with some of his most cherished notions. The dissecting part impressed me not so much as the slaying. They were so ex cessively alive, these pigs. And then, they were so excessively dead, and the man in the dripping, clammy, hot passage did not seem to care, and ere the blood of suoh a one had ceased to foam ou the floor such an other and four friends with him had shrieked and died. But a pig is only the unclean animal the forbidden of the prophet. I was des tined to make rather a queer discovery when I went over to the cattle slaughter. A Judas From Texas. Iu the center of that yard stood a red Texan steer with a headstall on his wicked head. No man controlled him. He was, so to speak, picking his teeth and whistling iu an open byre of his owu when the cattle arrived. As soon as the first one had fear fully quitted the viaduct this red devil put bis Lauds in his pockets and slouched across the yard, no man guiding him. Then he lowed something to the effect that he was the regularly appointed guide of the estab lishment and would show them round. They were country folk, but they knew how to behave; and so followed Judas, some hun dred strong, patiently and with a look of bland wonder in their faces. I saw his broad back jogging in anvauce of them, up, up a lime-washed incline where I was forbidden to follow. Then a door shut, and in a minute back came Judas with the air of a virtuous plough bullock and took up his place in his byre. Some body laughed across the yard, but I heard no s'ouud of cattle from the big brick build ing into which the mob had disappeared. Only Judas chewed the cud with a malig nant satisfaction, and so I knew there was trouble, and ran around to the front of the factory and so entered and stood aghast. TUo Killing of Klne. Who takes count of the prejudices which we absorb through the skin, by way of our surroundings? It was not the spectacle that impressed me. The first thought that almost spoke itself aloud was: "Tbey are killing kine," and it was a shock. The pigs were nobody's concern, but cattle the brothers of the cow, the sacred cow were quite otherwise. The next time an M. P. tells me that India either Sultanizes or Brahminizes a man I shall believe about half what he says. It is unpleasant to watch the slaughter of cattle when one has laughed at the notion for a few years. I could not see actually what was done in the first instance, because the row ot stalls in which they lav was separated from me by 50 impassable leet of butchers and slung carcasses. All I know is that men swung open the doors of a stall as occasion re quired, and there lay two steers already stanued, and breathing heavily. These two they pole-axed, and halt raising them by tackle they cut their throats. Two men skinned each carcass, somebody cut off the head and in half a minute more the over head rail carried two sides ol beef to their appointed place. There was clamor enough in the operating room, but from the waiting cattle, invisible on the other side of the Jine of pens, never a sound. They went to their death, trusting Judas, without a word. Tbey were slain at the rate of five a minute, and if the pig men werespattered with blood these butchers were bathed in it. The blood Kan in Mattering Gutters. There was no place for hand or foot that was not coated with thicknesses of dried blood, and the stench of it iu the nostrils bred fear. And then the samo merciful Providence that has showered good things on my path throughout sent me an embodi ment ot the city of Chicago so that I might remember it forever. Women come some times to see the slaughter, as they could come to see the slaughter of men. And there entered that vermilion hall a young woman of large mold with brilliantly scarlet lips and heavy eyebrows, and dark hair that came down In a "widow's peak" on her forehead. She was well and healthy and alive exceedingly, and she-was dressed in flaming red and black, and her feet (know you that the feet of American women are like unto the feet of lairies), her feet, I say, were cased in red leather shoes. She stood in a patch of sunlight, the red blood under her shoes, the vivid carcasses stacked round her, a bullock bleeding its lile away not six feet from her and the death factory roaring all round her. She looked curiously, with hard, bold eyes, and was not ashamed. Then said I: "This is a special sending; I have seen the cityNjf Chicago." And I went away to get neacc and rest Eudtaed Kipling. Simon's CtTRS" will Immediately relievo cronp,whooping cough and bronchitis. Hold by Jos. Fleming & Son. 413 Market at. THE SILVER TOOL TALK, Antipathy for Newspaper Men En tertained by David Littler, One of the Leaders in It. CAMEROS AND THE POKER GAME. The Late Secretary Windom's Opinion of Ex-Congressmen and the Looby at Washington. A CLERK WHO EEPDSED A BIG BEIBE. Senator lagalls Offered Fire Ceats aWcri for Letters ltd Other Gossip. tCOnnLSPOSDENCB OPTHB DISPATCH.! "WASHlNGTONyreb.?. The future of Senator Ingalls is one of the most interest ing subjects of gossip in "Washington. A friend of his told me last night that he could make $100,000 a year, and when I asked him how, he mentioned a number of contracts which had been offered the Senator which showed me he was not far wrong. "Senator Ingalls," said he, "could make 510,000 a year by his pen. He has a most versatile mind, nd he gets applications every day from editors of magazines asking tor contributions. Some of these letters in close checks with the amount left blank, and with a request that he fix his own price and fill in the check in payment for the article if he will only write it. He has a standing offer of 5 cents a word for anything he will write for syndicate newspaper publication, and a number of lecture managers of the country are after him. It is said that George Kennan makes 530,000 a year by talking on Siberia. Ingalls would draw everywhere on any subject, and he could make at least double this amount during a season's lecturing. He is a splendid lawyer and it not a bad business man. A Novel That Was Burned. "The manuscript of his novel was burned up in the fire which consumed his dwelling and his library a year ago or so, and it may be that he will take this up and rewrite it. It was a splendid story and would undoubt edly have paid well. Senator Ingalls would draw better as a lecturer than any other man in the country. He has made few general campaign speeches and he has never carted himself around from State to State as a prize show politician during Pres idental "ampaigns. He would be a new at tracUor, and his lectures would be such that he Cu-ad work the same towns over and over again." Senator Ingalls' successor promises to be quite as picturesque a character, as far as his personal appearance is concerned, as Ingalls himself. He is six feet tall, 18 inches across the shoulders and he has a beard about two feet long. His bair grows down on his forehead, so I am told, to with in one inch from his eyebrows, and he has a lean, lank frame which makes you think of a skeleton in clothes. His head is as queer iu shape as that of Ingalls, and Ingalls' head is the most curiously shaped one I have ever seen. It is narrow at the front and wide at the back. The hair comes low on the forehead. It is cut short, and is of a rich iron-gray. "Where the Contrast Is. Ingalls, however, is upon the whole a fine looking man, and he has a distingue air, which is not the case with Judge Peffer, who looks more like a Hoosier or a broken-down preacher, and who was, I am told, getting 525 a week as an editorial writer at the time of his election. He will bring a lot of new "isms" to the Senate, and will, I venture, be surprised at the small impression he makes. I saw Senator John C. Spooner on the street this rfcernoon. He very much regrets the political necessities which prevent his return, and he has a lingering hope that he will get back here at the next Senatorial' election. He has been saving some money within the past few years and is worth, it is said, enough to keep him, provided he lives plainly. He can make 520,000 a year at the law, and I was told the other day that be was offered this amount if he would take a position with a certain railway which has its headquarters at Chicago. He refused ou the grounds that he did not want to leave "Wisconsin, and if certain business interests in which he is interested with other Senators do not turn out well, he will probably be found practicing law iu Milwaukee. He will never be happy until he gets back into public life. Spooner's Worthy Successor. Senator Spooner has no mean competitor, however, in cx-Postmastcr General Vilas, who has been elected, for the next six years to take his place. Yilas is as cold as a wedge in December, and he is as sharp as the tack which sits with point upward incognito on your bedroom floor after house cleaning. He has had the education iu party management and the manipulation of political wires which go with the great Postofllce Depart ment, aud the defeat which he received with Cleveland at the last Presidental election has probably reduced the swelling which his enemies charge was going on inside of his cranium through the prominent position which he held here. When Vilas first came to Washington he had what is called a big bead. lie thought that because he was a member of the Cabi net he had lodgings among the clouds, but he soou learned that' the only way to succeed was by diplomacy, and by the time he left he was as suave and polite as au office seeker. He is a man of remarkable ability, and he can make an eloquent speech upon i occasion. He .lias a wonderful analytical mind, and. he understands how to get the meat out of a subject and to serve it up in such a manner as will suit the palates and understandings of those he is talkiug to. Beads Virgil for Amusement. He is about as good a lawver as John Spooner, aud he is fully as well educated a man. He has a library of about S,000 volumes, and he reads Virgil in the original for amusement. He understands the French and the German, and his favorite novelists are George Eliot and Charles Dickens. Senator Vilas is well-to-do now. He was making about 520,000 a year when he was chosen to take a place in Cleveland's Cabi net, and be has the money making sense in herited from his Yankee ancestors and de veloped by the atmosphere of the pushing Northwest. He made a big hit during the time he was here at Washington in the Gogebic iron region along L.ikc Superior. He had bought some lands here years ago, before the mines were discovered, on account of the timber, intending to keep them for his chil dren. The iron made them immensely valu able, and just how much be is worth he himself only knows. When Cleveland was making bis -last campaign, Vilas had no idea but that he would be re-elected, 'and he confidently expected to be continued, as Sec retary of the Interior. His confidence in this matter was so great that he rented a magnificent house on Sixteenth street in Washington nnd took a four years' lease on it It is now occupied by one of the South American Legation, but whether thev rent It oi Vilas or whether be compromised the' matter and threw up bis lease 1 am unable to say. Vilas Oratorical Start. Speaking of Vilas as a prospective Sena torial orator, he made his first national reputation as a speechmaker when he deliv ered his famous oration on Grant to the Army of Tennessee, and he again came to the front as tho President of the convention which nominated Cleveland. He was looted upon as an austere man when he first came to Washington, but he developed sociable traits later on and became quite a story teller. I remember an anecdote con cerning bis first speech after he lelt school as he told it one day after a Cabinet meeting PITTSBTJUG - DISPATCH, at the White House and as Colonel Dan Lamont repeated it to me. Said Mr. Vilas: "It was on the occasion o' a new railroad coming into the town, and for some reason or other I was chosen as the orator of the day. I got through and was most highly complimented by a backwoodsman of rr,v acquaintance who ran to me as I came down from the platform, and, putting a strong T on the end of the French words he used, said: 'I want to shake yer hand, Billie; I've heered yer debut and ye've come out with a big eclat.' And," continued Mr. Vilas, "I don't believe I will ever get a greater com pliment than that" Cameron and Draw Toker. The absurd stories that gain currency and are even believed by many people in Wash ington are decidedly interesting. Every act of a public man is attributed to some under handed motive or personal pique or feeling. I heard it solemnly asserted only last night that the secret of Don Cameron's going against tho force bill was because he had had trouble with Senator Aldrich over a little game of draw poker, and that such games were the cause of much internecine warfare in the Senate. 'No one would imagine that so ex emplary a character as Aldrich had any thing to do with a game of cards, and there is no doubt that Senator Cameron, however unfair he may play the game of politics with his constituents, would not do other wise than play fair-at cards with a Yankee from Bhode Island. As to Senator Cameron's silver speculation and his agent, the Hon. David Littler,! had a queer conversation with this man iu New York about the time ha was iu the thick of it I could not understand his actions then, but they are more apparent now. Mr. Littler is a big bepry man with a red face, iron gray hair and heard, and a general bullying air about him. littler and Newspapers. He was sitting in the lobby of the Fifth Avenue Hotel where I was stopping when I saw him, and went up to him, aud calling him by name bade him "good morning." He looked at me as though I was a bunco steercr, and upon my telling him that I bad met him at Denver when he was on the Pacific Kail road Commission, he gave me his hand and asked me what I was doing. I replied that I was corresponding for the newspapers. As I said this he drew back suddenly, and said: "I don't like to talk to newspaper men." "You don't?" I replied; "and why don't you? What have you- been doing that you are alraid to talk to newspaper men?" "Oh, nothingl" said he, somewhat indig nantly, aud then changing bis tactics made an evident attempt to be friendly. I then went on to ask him a number of questions, not with any idea of getting anything lor publication, tor I did not believe he had anything in him worth publishing, but merely for pastime. I asked what he was doing, and upon his telling me that he was practicing law at Washington, I innocently asked whether he was making any money at the law, and as to what kind of law he was practicing. Afraid to Talk. He evidently thought I was probing too close to silver 'and he said: "Now, I don't want to be interviewed, and what do your people care whether I am making any money or not?" "Well, Judge," I replied, thoroughly disgusted with the man's egotism, "I had no idea of using your remarks, and I can emphatically tell you that iu my judgment the readers of the newspapers don't care a cent about you or what you do. Good day." Littler's law nractice seems to be that of the score ol other broken down politicians J who nang about Washington. They get a taste of public life and imagine themselves to be great men until the tidal wave of pub lic opinion turns them down, and they wake to find themselves noboddies and their bare feet on the pavement They have not sense enough to go back home and try again, but tbey hang about, the Capitol looking for crumbs from the political tables, aud ready to do anything or to go into anything which promises to keep them alive. Itoscoo Conkllng's Big Fee. The lobby and the law are in Washington to a great extent synonymous terms, and I know of men who are really great lawyers who find plentyto do. In presenting a case to a committee of Congress an ex-Senator has a pull that the ordinary lawyer could not have, and it is said that Boscoe Conk ling at one time got a 550,000 fee for arguing a case for the Apollinaris Water Company before the Secretary of the Treasury. He often came here to Washintr ton to practice before the departments and he could command his own terms. A great many people, however, have the idea that money will do anything in Wash ington. There never was a greater mistake. The majority of the Congressmen and the majority of the Government clerks are hon est. I passed a man on the street to-day who is'now working for the Government at 1,400 a year who I know, refused a bribe of 530, 000 to say just one word a few years ago. He was at the time the confidential clerk of Mr. Jeuks. the Assistant Secretary of the Inter ior. The Bell telephone cases had been be fore the department and had been decided, but the decision had not yet been -given to the public. They were locked up in this young man's desk and the Assistant Secre tary had gone home, leaving him iu charge. Tho Story of a Bribe. No one outside of the department knew that the cases were decided. He was sitting at bis desk when two well-dressed looking men entered and after waiting a moment came up to the desk and asked if the assist ant secretary was in. He replied that Mr. Jenks had left the city and asked the men to be seated. They then engaged in general conversation and npon learning that he had lived in Minnesota claimed to have come irom that State. After a ievf words about the Northwest one of them broached the subject of stocks and very adroitly referred to the Bell telephone case and said that a man could make a pile of money if he knew how It was going to be decided. "How so?" said the other. The first man then explained how the set tlement ol the case would affect the stock market and then asked the clerk if the case had been settled. He replied that it had, and that it was that moment locked up in his desk in the room in which they were sitting. He had no suspicion at this time what the men were after, and he was frightened when the man sitting nearest him leaned over and pulling open his coat showed him an envelope stuffed with thous and dollar bills and said: Thirty Thousand for a Word. "I want to know whether that decision is in favor of the Bell Company or not, and I have jnst 530,000 here to pay for the in formation. I only want you to say 'yes' or 'no' and the money Is yours." The clerk thought a moment and then said: "Wait a minute and I'll tell you!" He then went in to see Secretary Lamar, but could not find him. He passed on into Secretary Mnldrow's office and told him there were a couple of men in there who had tried to bribe him. Muldrow rushed in with him to catch the men, but they had jumped out of the window and got away. They had first tried the door, but be had told the messenger to keep this locked until he came hack, and they had risked the breaking of their legs by the window. The clerk was highly complimented by Lamar for his action, and he deserved it Speaking of shady law practice in Wash ington and how broken down ''statesmen en gage in it, recalls a remark of the late Sec retary Windom in regard to his action in keeping away from the capital when he was not in public life. Said he, just before be took his place in President Harrison's Cabi net: "I bave never been back to the Senate Chamber since my term expired. I used to see so many ex-Senators hanging around the chanibeV interested in some job that I resolved never to be in their company. A man ,of honor can never afford to ruu sus picious &isks." .Frank g. Carpenter. Reputations Made in a Bay Are procious scarce. Time tries the worth of a manor medicine. Hostetter's Stomaoh Bit ters is a 30 rears growth, and like those tardy lichens that garnish the crevices of Alaska's rocks it flourishes perennially. And Its repu tation has as firm a base as the rocks thorn (elves. No medicine Is more highly regarded as a remedv f or f ever and lague. bilious remit tent constipation, liver and kidney disorders, nervousness and rheumatism. SUK)AYV IFEBRTJAftY GOLD DREAMLAND Is as ftubslitnlial as Uiclics From Tan-American Railroading. THE PLAKS LOOK KICE ON PAPER Bat the Great Amazon Isn't Going to Consent to Be Paralleled. DIFFICDIiT IS THS CONSTRUCTION rcOnBESFOXDZHCZ Or THE DISPATCH. 1 PABA, BRAZIL, Jan. 22. E AZIL is a wonderland, especially the part of it called Amazonia. There are a thousand times more marvels in it than Captain Mayne Iteid has told. But marvels don't rnako good ballast for railroad tracks except on paper. Much of the "Pan American" literature that is being palmed off on the trading public of the three Amerlcas,when Brazil, for example, is the topic, reads very much like a Jules Verne story to one who is on the spot, and a wierd suspicion forces itself upon the reader that the "pan" at tachment is principally for "scooping" pur poses. The great "Pan-American Kail way" is a beautifully, taking conception. The American eagle shivers in every pin feather, rfbd his teeth chatter with delight at the mere suggestion. "Trans-Andine," too, not trans-across, but trans-lengthwise from peak to peak and from crag to crag in the aerial path of the condor; what wouldn't the Fourth of July bird give for such rail roading in a Pullman sleeping car and an early morning hand shake with the biggest bird that fliei, right on the wing and hard by his snowy equatorial roost. The Pan In Railroading. But however glorious this may be for the great American eagle, when the average American citizen proposes to send his own priv.ite "ten dollar eagles" a railroading, especially a pan-railroading, he wants to know how it is going to pan out and where the "pan" is going to dump after the "scoop" is made, and where the eagle is going to light when he comes down. Not long since my attention was called to certain articles published in New York on this subject, whose author has the reputa- SECTION OP BOAD tion of knowing pretty near all that is worth knowing about Brazil, and which treated especially of the most necessary and most promising of Brazilian railway schemes, as he thinks. The roads which he suggests, or some of them, would be situated so they might be utilized as pirt of the great Pan American Eailway, if that is ever con structed. "If?" some readers may exclaim. "Whv, of course it will be constructed." A continuous line of railway may, some time in the far distant fnture, be in opera tion from New York to Buenos Ayres, but it will never be used for carrying through freight between those two points. As long as half an ounce of coal can be made to move a ton of cargo a mile on the open ocean, no born Yankee is going to send his freghtby rail to the Amazon Valley or to Bio or to Buenos Ayres. Only a Itallway Bream. The Pan-American Railway will never be for Pan-American trade. An ocean steamer can beat a freight train by 50 per cent as to speed, and by agreaterdiflerence in cheapness oi' carrying. Consequently, it is nonsense excuse" me it is pure poetry this Pan American Bailway dream. Amazonia has 50,000 miles of avail able river navigation; and by the coustruction of GOO or 700 miles of railroad to get around the rapids ot the Madeira, Tapajos and Tocantins rivers, several thousand miles more wonld be added to Amazonian navigation. With 00,000 miles of waterway, every man can have a steamboat at his front door, as often as he needs it, the year round. There is only one steam railway in the Am azon valley the Bragauca Railway, run nine out 40 miles from Para. This road has never paid balf of its running; expenses. The deficit is paid by the State. - The trouble is that in all Brazil there is no pop ulation back from the riyers and the coast to support a railway, except in a small part of Southern Brazil. In nearly all the rest . it t ui:.. u.l. . .1... :.. ! OI mis Jtepuuiiu, uAvn iiuui tuu ncr mar gins, there are forest-covered mountains. What lies back of these mountains is still as unexplored as the interior of Airica. Lines Alone Mountains. When the highlands of the interior are peopled, they will need railroads to give them communication with the water course', which will always bo the grand trunk lines of communication of Amazonia. Except on extensive plains, the rule of railroad building is to follow the water courses. To follow the course ot therangeof mountains, tunneling the spurs and bridging the mountain valleys is to multiply by 1,000 the cost of building. But that is juswlint is d(3nc in much of the present railroad build ing on paper, for Brazil. The watershed between the Amazon basin and that ot the Elver Plate Is a mountainous region, and its flanks are cat ou either side by the valleys tributary to the Amazon and Plate rivers respectively. Still the New York Pau-AmericanJEtailway dreamer proposes to shove a railway more than 1,000 miles lengthwise through those mountains, irom Ouro Preto, the capital of Minas Geracs, westward to Coyaz and Cuyaba, cutting at right angles every valley and hill he meets, through a nearly uuiuhabited region for most of the distance. The two objects pro- 8, 189L posed are to reach the possible mineral wealth of the region to be traversed, and especially to give to Bio direct communica tion with CisandineBoIivio, which is locked in by the rajii! tf the River Madeira. Tho Natural Route. It is perfectly safe to predict that no rail road will be built aling that route very soon. The natural outlet of that part of Bolivia, which is two weeks nearer to Eu rope and the United States than the one proposed, is down the Mamore and Madeipa rivers. A short railroad past the rapids is the solution of the problem for Bolivia. The same writer has another railroad "castled in the air," to run from Manaos, on the Amazon, to Paraniiribo on the coast of Dutch Gtiintia. The distance is an insig nificant 1,000 mile Nothing would have to be paid lor "right of way," for there is no one living on the route, and no one has ever been oyer tbeground, so that it is im possible to prove that the plan is not feasi ble. There is a range of mountains to cross; but he has the general direction of water courses in his favor. He is crossing the mountains, .and not riding them astraddle, as in his Southern plan. But the great puzzle is to know what use the railroad could be put to after it were built He thinks that it would give to Manaos quicker communication with New York; but that is an enormous mistake. Better Time by Water. New York steamers sail direct to Manaos 1,000 miles np the Amazon the year around. They can make the distance from Manaos to Paramiribo, via Para, in five days, and be there as soon as his overland freight train, with much less than half of the expense, and with no resliipments of cargo, the c.irgo going unbroken by steamer from Manaos to New York in ten days. The whole scheme seems like a desperate attempt to dispense with the Amazon river, by carrying the Amazonian products from 1,000 to 2,000 miles overland, either to Bio de Janeiro, or to Dutch Guiana before shipping them. But the Amazon will not be dispensed with. It has not only the right of way, hut will hold it exclusively. No railroads need apply They can't be built down the valley proper, for the river rises 30 feet or more annually, and over flows its plains, changes its channel, tears out its islands, builds others, and plays the mischief generally. At low water, this year, a steamer may find 15 fathoms of water, where last year there was a forest with trees CO feet in height. Trlth of Forth Bridges. Over the bluffs that flank the flood plains, a railroad would have to tunnel and bridge without end; aud on crossing the tributaries of the Amazon there would have to be Frith of Forth bridges, built on mud and miles in length, 50 feet above low water mark; for those tributaries annually rise from 30 to 40 feet, and overflow their flood plains for miles in width. The Amazon will never al low an east and west railroad as its rival, nor allow itself to be bridged after it leaves its cradle in the Andes. There arc railroads to be built in Brazil, howevar, as already indicated, to pass the NOW BUILDING. rapids of the" river Tocantins, Tapejos and Madeira. These three abort railroads will add immensely to the material wealth and resources pf Brazil and Bolivia; for the ter-, ritory thus opened up is inhabitable and very rich in its soil, forests, pastures and mines. None of these railroads is now con tracted for, although two of them have been. Skeletons Along the Path. The Madeira and Mamore Bailway for passing the rapids of the Madeira river was a most disastrous enterprise. Fortunately for Brazil she was not to blame for the fail ure. P. & T. Collins, of Philadelphia.were the contractors for building the road. En glish bondholders laid -an injunction on the funds and the work stopped. Five miles of finished tracfc, seyeral ship loads of rails, locomotives and other 'appurtenances still lie in the forest at Santo Antonio, ou the Madeira river, where thev were abandoned 12 years ago. Seven years ago the Brazilian Government sent a commission of civil engineers to sur vey the" route. Alter returning to Rio there were charges cf "sham survey," etc The commissioners quarreled, the survey was pigeon-holed, and is still there where it was put seven years ago. The Alcobaca Railway, on the river Toc antins, has fared no better; present prospects are dubious, although the Federal Govern ment is promising that it shall soon be built It was to have been built by the Para Trans portation and Trading Company, an organi zition chartered by the State of Wisconsin, and said to have a nominal capital of 510,000,000. Acted in Bad Faitlu This company obtained theilrst choice' of large tracts of land at a nominal price, ex clusive privileges for the road for 90 years, and other advantages that would have made its stockholders immensely rich, in all prob ability, if its plans had been carried out. The grant was obtained In a marvelous easy manner, toall'appearances. Butjust as the company w'ere about ready to begin actual operations, the Government ol the State of Para suddenly and rather mysteriously voted repudiation of part of the" privileges Granted. " The bad faith implied In this partial re pudiation caused the company to abandon everything, aud let the grant collapse by neglect It the history of the Para Transportation and Trading Company could be written out in full, both on the side of the company and that of the Brazilian Government, it would, in all probability, serve as a most valuable guide book for future railroad contractors in Brazil, as to what ought not to be done by either business men or governments under any circumtance. Colossal bad faith is the mightiest obstacle that hinders Brazilian railroad building. The illustration shows a section of road in the Ainaziu Valley. The vegetation is marvelous in its luxuriance. Railroad builders will have to tunnel the forests aud make a new tunnel every day. The growth is so rapid nnd (dene that a swath cut in the morning is overgrown at evening of the same day. J. O. KERBET. A census of Charleston, S. C, just taken with great care, makes the population of that city 05,173, against a Uttle over 3,000 by Porter's census. GOSSIP OF GOTHAM. The Veteran, Max Uarelzk, Tells a Story of Christine Kilssun. POLITICS 'WAY DOWN IS DIXIE. Stanford Feels Encouraged Over Bis Money Lending Projsct. THiJ SCnOOIi 1SSTJB IX WISCONSIN .-COnRESPONDKNCE or THE DISPATCH.1 New Yokk, Feb. 7. In my wanderings over this big town during the week I gath ered the following short interviews, which are of more than local interest: MaxMaretzek, the operatic conductor Yes, I have jujt published another volume of musical memoirs. A man who first in troduced Pntti to an American audience and first conducted "Faust" has aright to be garrulous In 1819 I always conducted with gloved hands. The fashion was prev alent iu London, and I followed It in New York. The best seats at the opera cost only fl iu those dayi We never allowed flowers over the footlights except at benefit per formances. We allowed the artists only their salaries and their fares when travel ing. No extra pianos. No hotel expenses. Prima donne and tenors had from SC00 to $800 a mouth; members of the orchestra from $50 to $C0 per month, I remember an incident about Christine Nilsson that may interest you. When she was in this country under the management of Max Strakosch, and I was musical con ductor, we traveled irom Cincinnati to Buf falo. On the road, about half way, I got out and bousht a bit; sausige and a loaf of rye bread and when the train began to move nirain I becan to eat with great relish. Nilsson, who sat almost directly opposite, turned around with a grimace of disgust on her face. "Who is eating garlic, or sausage or something?" she asked bitterly. "Is it you. Max? Bahi" and out she took three or four flaconsand sprinkled perfume all over the car. "Couldn't you wait till we get to Buf falo?" added Nilsson. "Must you buvsuch awful stuff? No; you had to buy that aw ful stuff and make me sick." Nilsson contiuued iu this strain for some time. I put the rest of the'sausage into my pocket I apologized. I felt rather sheep ish. "Now it happened that just as we were a few nours irom isulialo. a ireisrht train broke down and we were hemmed iu. Everybody was excited. We would bs late. Wo were hunjry. Ac about 10 o'clock I fell asleep. I had eaten, the others had not. I felt comfortable enough. At about 2 in the morninji I felt a touch on my arm. I rubbed my eyes and stretched. "Who is itT What's the matter!" said L 'Huihr' answered someone. "It's I, Jfaxl It's Christine. Say. Max, I'm awfully hungrv. Can't you let me have that bit of sausage I saw you put Into your pocket when I scolded you so? Do let mo have it. Max." John Sherman's Publlo Life. Ex-Congressman Amos Totvnsem, of Ohio Many havo asked me whether I thought Sena tor John Sherman wuuld retire from active politics after his term In the Scuato expires. 1 do not know positively. I do not think he will, for two reasons. First, he is in full possession of his vigorous mental faculties, and is a power in the Senate: an J, second, the people of Onto will not consent for hiu. to retire jnst let. John Sherman bat been in public life many years, and has reflected great credit upon the State that so honored him. The people arc not prepared to shelve him wbilo he is so active and in the zenith of hi-. Illustrious career. All he has to do is tn halfway consent and ha will cer tainly go back to the Senate. I do not think he will be a candidate for the Presidency. Indiana's Natural Gas. Judge C W. Fairbanks, of Indiana, a great Gresham boomer Although Indiana is a great State for politic?, the people there are very much more interested iu the development of the State than In political matters. When an election occurs, of course it absorbs the atten tion of everyone, but the supposition that the Hoosier State is a political kindergarten all the season round is one ot those pleasing fictions which the Indlamanj rarely ever taKe tne trouble to contradict It used to be that you could not meet a mau In Indianapolis without the subject of conversation being more or less political. Now it is natural gas. And natural gas is developing onr country wonderfully. The ephemeral booms of the far West are heralded with noise, but onr growth is going forward rapidly without advertisement and the usual hippodrome connected with booms. Nd; I can't talk about Presidental candidates. A year from now w.ll be time enuugh. liancroft's Volume of Foeras. Andrew D. White. ex-Minister to Berlin. ex President ot Cornell I knew the late George Bancroft well. He wm a man of great dignity of manner. His memory was marvelous, even in his latter years. He spoke German and French fluently and read Greek readily. Old Emperor Wilhelm twice inquired after Mr. Bancroft Did you know that Mr. Bancroft once published a volume of poemsj He did. when be was in the twenties and later bought up all the copies he could lay hands on. He was always a great realtor of poetry. You re member he quoted George .Eliot's "Spanish Gipsy" in bis history, and he always loved roses. Kepubllcans In the South. Ex-Governor Knfus U. Bullock, of Georgia, Government Director of the Union PaclHc What the South wants is capital from the North, and not politics. Now I am a Demo crat in local politics, but a .Republican when national questions are involved. I havo lived long enough In the South to know that only one thing keeps the whites Democratic, and that is the negro question. Eliminate the negro from politics and there would be more white Re publican' in the South than Democrats. I know scores of prominent white Democrats in At lanta who would vote the Republican ticket to morrow on tbe issue of protection and free trade if the negro question were eliminated. It would be far better for tbe South if tbe colored man. were not in politics, because as long as be is he will be tbe bone of contention, and the true issue will be overlooked. Thousands of Democrats have Interests tbey wish protected. New England has bad tho benefit of protection 50 year.", and now the South wants it. I think in a few years a great change will occur in the political complexion of the South If the negro supremacy question can only be relegated to a secondary place. Let the South Alone. Ex-Congressman William Whitney, of Holyoke. Mass. I cannot say that I am sorry that tho elections bill has been practically killed, although I am a Republican. It seems to me a short-sighted policy to stir up sectional feeling and disturb the relations between the North and South. The laissez-faire policy is a splendid ooe to pursue at present in regard to the South. Our relations commercially and socially with tho South wero never better, and just when sectionalism was fast dying out up pups the Federal elections bill. If it bad be come a law I mink it would bave done more harm thin good. Wisdom frequently consists in not doing things. Many years ago such men as Evarts. Blaine and Hoar opposed a force bill, but now two or these, at least have changed front and advocate strongly a bill as drastic and as dangerous as the first pne. Let well enough alone. Catching Vp a Manacer. e David Belasco, playwrinht In my early days I used to be indefatigable In bringing plays of mine to managers. One manager 1 suspected of never reading any plays. So I tried a trick on him. One day I gave him a roll of blank paper tied with red ribbon; be received the roll politely and told me to call in two weeks. I called as be had requested and be said he had read the p'ay. bnt unfortunately it would not dn. Then 1 slowly unrolled tbe blank paper before his rye, held It up to him and en joyed the comedy situation. One Way of Making a Living. E. Frank Harris, wire artist Hoffman House Yes you'd be surprised at the demand for these Uttle trinkets made here. 1 have, as you see, a large assortment of feminine names "Daisy." "Maggie," "Charlo:te,""Marguente," "Cora," etc., on hand, but my customers very often bave tbem made to order. I can make one while you wait In almost any name. Tbe wire Is copper and rolled gold. I also make bracelets and rings after almost any design in a very few minutes. These slngl names sell forEO cents and the tracelets for from SI to $2. It is a passing fancy with some people to bave something of this kind made as a souvenir of a New York visit. Yon will bo surprised, per haps, when I tell you that I often take in from $20 to Sfll per diy for tbee little things. As tho wir cost very little, I can make no com plaint about the prunts of the business. The Result of a Bow. Frank 21. Reynolds, Business Manager Eden Musee The French ball row in which Otero figured created a sensation. It Is funny bow these things work. She danced to "stand ing room only" for several nights thereafter. Onr place was packed the following nights A trifling episode that was so magnified by the newspapers resulted In a perfeet crush for us. Otherwise there was nothing In it Some peo ple said it was a put up job; but It wasn't Never Head the Newspapers. Daniel Leach. Custom House Talking about professional jurors reminds me that whenlwas connected with the Smithsonian Institute at Washington! knew a man by the name of Scrivener, who perhaps served more times on a jury than any other man at the capital. If any body approached him with newspapers after a crime bad been committed, he would waive him aside majestically, saying: "I don't want to know anvtning about it or discuss the mat ter. You see, I may be called to serve on tba jury, and a juror never discusses thesa things. Nothing could Imlnce him to read tba "news papers, because it Interfered with his pro fessional duties as a juror. I think that man served about 20 days out of a month on an average. He could always answer the usual questions as to his opinions on a case satisfac torily to tbe counsel on both sides and the Court That was the only man 1 ever knew who made serving on a jury a profession. He as a very intelligent man, and probabl v a f air juror, too. Hobbies in Books. Duprat, bookseller. Fifth avenue The taste in rare books has changed. Fifteen years ago collectors used to go in for Elzevir, Aldus, Baskervllle and Pickerings. Now Dickens, Thackeray, Burns. Shelley. Keats. In the orig inal editions, are tbe rage. Collectors don't care for a book except It has the hrsc imprint I saw a Hawthorne's "ScarletLetter," Brst edl tion. which brought 510 the other day. xon can buy a second edition for S2, It you wish. All Is fancy, you see, and hobby. Kcady to Fight McAuliffe. Jim Corbett, the boxer and pugilist Yes, I'm heavier than I was last year when I visited New York. I've gained about 17 pounds. I'm ready to have a go with McAnliffe If the preliminaries are satisfactorily arraneed. The fight between Dempsey and Fltzsimmons was a rattler. I ued to ba in tbe life insurance business out in 'Frisco. I tell you if I'd been a company I wouldn't have granted a policv to Dempsey after the sixth round. Fitz was too much for him from the start. Tho Bartender's Secrets. Jerry Fiizpatrlck, bartender at the "Pick wick" Many bartenders work in winter and layoff ind play the races in the summer. Cremo u months was the fashionable drink last summer. Whisky sour has gone out of fashion. Gin fizz. Manhattan cocktail and wnl3ky straight hold their own. Most profit is made on green chartreuse. We buy that tor S3 20 a bottle and sell it at 20 cents a glass. You can easily calculate the profit Some of the Collectors. Alfred Trimble, art critic and connoisseur of bric-a-brac Man has been called a scraping and a collecting animal." and tbe definition is true. Take tbe collectors of Gotham. Inspec tor Byrnes collects murderers' and criminal tools. Brayton Ives goes in for books and miniatures. Astor collects real estate deeds. Moroilni collects old armor. Dr. Emmett col lects Dickens. Thomas J. McKee col'ecls Foe and John Howard Payne. Lawrence is proud of hU death mask collection. Mrs. Paran Stevens has old jewels. John Taylor Jobnon prides himself ou old laces. Charles A. Dana is the happyposscssur of old china and porce lain and so on. Ada Behan's Wit Wilton Lackayc. actor When I wasatDaly'i 1 found MiS3 Rehan quite as cbarming a lady as I had always considnred her a charming comedienne. One day. during a cause of ths rehearsal, I was standing on tbe stage with her, and we had a chat. "Are yon quick study!" I asked, in an oil-hand tone. "Oh, yes. very," sli- answered. Then I looked at ber and satd: "How long do you tlilnc it will take youto learn to like me!" "Absent or present!" says she. Ibat floored me. Pronunciation in Dixie. George W. Cable, of Massachusetts, creols novelist Although I do not live In the South now, yet I have not lost an interest in the peo ple. It is not difficult for me to tell by tbe pro nunciation what section ot country any South erner is from. The Virginian has bis accent distinct from the South Carolinian and the Lonlsianian. And, of course, tbe Creole has bis delight! ully mnslcal accent or intonation. Not long ago I met a young man. and, after hearing bim speak. I said: "Yon are from Northwest Louisiana, the Parish ot Bossier, and your ancestor! were Anglo-Saxons who lauded in Virginia jnst prior to the Revolutionary War." He replied that I was correct. I am rarely ever mistaken in placing the different tvpes in tbe South. The ethnological stndy of the South is most Interesting, Wisconsin's Educational Issue. Senator Phlletns Sawyer, of Wisconsin A great deal was said in tba last election in my State about the little red scboolhonse. The Republicans certainly favor the red school house and believe In ourpublic schools, but the Democrats defeated them. You see, the Re publicans were misunderstood by the ioreign voters, who really believed that tba grand old party of freedom and education wanted to force educational matters to a fanatical ex treme. And some, notably an old German whom 1 heard of. said that the Bennett law was to force him to speak English or go to jaiL Com pulsory education does nut mean that none but public schooli shall be patronized, or that parents cannot send their children to any school, no matter bow far from home, but the Democrats tried to make the foreign voters In New York State think to. Stanford's Land Scheme. Senator Leland Stanford, of California I re ceive on an average 200 letters a day commend ing the bill I introdnced In the Senate by which money can ba borrowed on land from the Government at 2 per cent per annum. It is impossible, of course, for ma to read them all, but I do the best I can. Tbe interest shown erery where in tbe bill 1 introduced is very en couraging and proves that the financial ques tion is really uaramount to all others now be fore tbe country. The farmer, of course, will be benefited by my bill, should It become a law. and Indeed every man without capital. Any one who has tillable land, or ever buys It on a credit will be able to burrow money from the Government at such a low rateot Interest he can afford to go into debt a little. Someone asked me what would be done in case a land owner should become insolvent and unable to pav tbe interest to the Government That is very easy to answer. There wonld be plenty of men ready to bey in the land, borrow money at 2 per cent from the Government and go ahead as if tbe insolvency had never occurred. Tbe sub-Treasury bill advocated by tbe Farmers' Alliance simply hypothecates products. My bill, if it becomes a law, will not bring about tbe mlllenium. but it will give the people money and forever do away with money panics. The Negro Dialect Thomu Nelson Page, ot Virginia, author of many negro dialect stories In my opinion, dialect stories are very much overdone. Of Uto many dialect stories bave appeared, and more orles surfeited the public Sometimes they are very readable, especially when they are true to nature. I never like to get away from the real talk ot the colored man when writing a story where be has to be quoted. Tbe origi nal Virginia darkey Is a good model to follow. He is. as a rule. If he is old. full of pleasing reminiscences and is always contrasting tbe present with the past, mncb to tba disparage ment of the former. I think it will not be Ions before the old type of Virginia darkey will dis appear. A younger generation Is coming on and they have nothing to make tbem especially original. It is melodious to the ear to bear an old darkey talk. He drops all bis gs and deals chiefly with vowels. Ho never utters a guttural word. His sentences flow like a phonetic vocabulary sliding down a river of vowels. t The Actor's Clothes. Robert Hilliard. tbe dude actor Well-mads clothes are of Importance to juvenile men. Tba men of fashion about town criticize the fit ot an actor's trousers and coats. I never wear a pair of trousers longer than a month on the stage. Always lay your trousers flat before retiring. Coats can be cnt to hlda adiposity. I hear Theodore Thomas always wears a Prince Al bert of a certain cnt to hide his paunch. An actor on the stage ought never to raise his coat tails when he seats himself during a scene. You know the story told of Lester Wallack and Os mond Tearle during a rehearsal. Tearle. dur ing a love scene, raised bis coat tall prior to sitting down on the sofa next to his lady love. "That won't do. Mr. Tearle." exclaimed Wal lack. from an orchestra chair where ha was re hearsing the play; "that won't do at alt Don't bo afraid to sit on your coat tails. Don't bs afraid of tbe coat A gentleman should have a dozen coats iu bis wardrobe." CHARLES T. MVBSAT.