: . THIRD PART. j . THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH. PAGES 17 TO 20. PITTSBURG, SUNDAY, MARCH 29, 1891. MAROUESAN STORIES Robert Louis Stevenson De scribes His Trip to Atuona and Vicinity. THE NATIVE DEATH RATE. An Amnsinjj Experience With Younsr Man Mo Conld Carve. HOUSES HIDDEN IS THE FOBESTb. I fleet of Cannibalism Upon Beliefs and Superstitions. REGARD EXTERTALNED FOE THE DEAD IWEITTEX FOR THE DISPATCH.! letter No. 0. The road from Taahauku to Atuona skirted the northwesterly side of the an chorage, somewhat high up, edged, and sometimes shaded, by the splendid flowers ol the flamboyant; its English name I do nut know. At the tarn of the land Atuona came in view; a long beach, a heavv and luud breach of surf, a shore side village scattered among trees, and the guttered mountains drawing near on both sides above a narrow and rich ravine. lis iniamous repute perhaps affected me; but 1 thought it tne loveliest, and by far the most ominous and gloomy, spot on earth. Beautiful it surely was; and even more salub rious. The healthfulness of the whole group is amazing; that of Atuona almost in the nature of a miracle. In Atuona, a village planted in a shore side marsh, the houses standing everywhere intermingled with the pools ot a taro garden, we nuJ every conai nou of tropical danger ana discomfort; and yet there are not even mosquitoes not even the hateful day flv ofNukabiva and fever, and its concomitant, the island lefe, are unknown. A Very Wonderful Octogenarian. This is the chief station of the French on he man-eating isle of Hiva-oa. The ser geant o! cendarmerie enjovs the style of the nce-reident, and hoist the French colors 'ver a quite extensive compound. A China man, a waif Iron the plantation, keeps a reiaurat.t in the rear quarters of the vil i ige, and the mission is well represented bv .e b sters' school and Brother Michel's liuriu Tather Oreus, a wonderful octoge u nan, his frsme scarce boned, the fire of ) i! eie undimmed, has lived, and trembled, sod suflered in this place since 1813. Again and again, when JIoipu bad made i'Cua biandy, tie has been driven iroru his the nut for present refreshment, the sandal wood for a precious gift, and the stick, in the simplicity of his vanity, to harvest pre mature praise. Only one section was yet carved, although the whole was pencil marked in lengthi, and when I proposed to buy it, Poni (for that was the artist's name) recoiled iu horror; but I was not to be moved, and simply refused restitution, or I had long wondered why a people who displayed iu their tattooing so great a gift of arabesque invention, should display it nowhere else. Here, at least, I had found something of the same talent in another medium; and I held the incompleteness, in these days of world-wide brummagem, for a happy mark of authenticity. Neither my reasons nor my purpose had I the means of making clear to Poni; I could only bold on to the stick, and bid the artist follow me to the gendarm erie, where I should fiud interpreters and money; but we gave him, in the meanwhile, a boat call in return tor his sandal wood. The Whistle Slude a Sensation. As he came behind us down the vale he sounded upon this continually. And con tinually, from the wayside houses, there hrook and under fathoms of cool foliage, we struck a house upon a well-built paedae,tbe fire brightly burning under the popoi-sbed against the evening meal; and here the cries became a chorus, and the bouse folk, running out, obliged us to dismount and breathe. It seemed a numerous family, we saw eight at least; and one of these honored me with a particular attention. This was a mpther,of anagedcountenance.but withhiar still copious and black. On our arrival I could see that she remarked me, but instead of ofiering any greeting, disappeared at once into the bush. Thence she returned with two crimson flowers. "Goodbyl" was her salutation, uttered not without coquetry; and as she said it, she pressed the flowers into my hand "Goodby! I speak Inglis." Once Had a Whalcrman Lover. It was from a whalerman, who (she in formed me) was "a plenty good chap," that she had learned my language; and I could not but think how handsome she must have been in those times of her youth, and could not but guess that some memories of the dandy whalerman prompted her attentions to myself. Nor could I refrain from won dering what had befallen her lover; in the MUMMIES OF PERU. Fannie B. Ward Pays a Visit to an Aboriginal City of the Dead. THOUSANDS BURIED IN THE SAND. The Bodies Are Dried and the Eyeballs Chanced to Rich Jewels. HISTORY UNRAVELED FROM GRATES c. MSt3 HE BROUGHT T7S A COCOANUT. poured forth little groups of girls in crim son or of men in white. And to these must Poni pass the news of who the strangers were, of what they had been doing, of why it was that Poni had a boat whistle, and of whv he was now being haled to the vice refdency, uncertain whether to be pun ished or rewarded, uncertain whether he had lost a stick or made a bargain, but hopeful on the whole, and in the mean time highly consoled by the boat whistle. Whereupon he would tear himself away from his parti cular group of inquirers, and once more we would hear the shrill call in our wake. The next day I made a more extended circuit in the vale with Brother Michel. We were mounted on a pair of sober nags, suitable to these rude paths; he weather was exquisite, and the company in which I IK THE FOREST. bouse into the woods. "A mouse that dwelt in a cat's ear"had a more easy resting place; .md yet I hav never seen a man that bore !es mark of years. He must show us the hurch, still decorated with the Bishop's artless ornaments of paper the last work of industrious old hands, and the last earthly amusement of a man that was much of a t ero In the sacristy we must see his sacred vessels, and, in particular, a vest ment which was a "vraie cunosite." be cause it had been given by a gendarme. To the Protestant there is always something embarrassing in the eagerness with which grown and holv men regard these trifles; but it was pretty and touching to see Orens, his aged eves shining iu his head, display ins sacred treasures. A Hot-House Coiered hy Clouds. The vale behind the village, narrowing kttifilv to a mere ravine, ?as choked with profitable trees. A river gushed in the midst. Overhead the tall coca palms made a primary covering; above that, Iroru one vail of the mountain to another, the ravine was roofed with cloud, so that we moved be low, amid teeming vegetation, in a covered house of heat. On either hand, at every hundred ards, instead o the houseless, dis emboweling paepaes of Xukahiva, popu lous houses turned out their inhabitants to cry "ICaoha!" to the passers-by. The road, too, was busv; strings of girl', iair and lout, as in less favored countries; men bearing bread fruit; the sisters, with a little guard of pumls; a fellow bestriding a nore passed and greeted us continually, aud now it was a Chinaman who came to the gate of his flower vard, and gave us Good-day" in excellent English and a lit tle farther on it would be some natives who set us down by the wayside, made us a feast i mumniv at) pie, and entertained us as we cle with drumming on a tin case. Death Reaps a Itlch Harvest. With all this fine plenty of men and fruit, death is at work here also. "The population, according to the highest estimate, does not exceed O00 in the whole vale of Atuona; and vet, when I once chanced to put the ques tion, Biotner Michel counted up ten whom he knew to be sick beyond recovery. It was here, too, that I could at last gratify my runositv with the sight ol a native house in tne very article of disolution. It had lallen flat along the paepae, its poles sprawling ungainly; the raius and the mites contended against it; what remained seemed sound enough, but much was gone alieady; and it was easy to see how the inject consumed the walls as if they had ln-en bread, and the air aud the rain ate mm them like vitriol. A little ahead 01 us a young gentleman, erv w ell tattooed and dressed in a pair of vlnte trousers and a flannel shirt, had been marching unconcernedly. Of a sudden, uithout apparent cause, he turned back, look us in possession, and led us undis suadblr along a liypath to the river's edge. A Specimen of Native Canine. There, in a nook of the most attractive amenity, he bade us to sit down; the stream splashing at our elbow, a shock of non decript greenery enshrining us from above, and thither, after a brief absence, he brought us a encoanut, a lnmp of sandal wood, aud a stick he had began to carve found myself, no less agreeable than the scenes through which I passed. Penetrating the Interior. We mounted at first by a steep grade along the summit of one "of those twisted spurs, that from a distance, mark out provinces ot sun and shade upon the mountain side. The ground fell away on either hand with an extreme declivity. From either hand, ont of profound ravineB mounted the song of falling water and the smoke of household fires. Here and there the hills of foliage would divide, and our eye would plunge down upqn one of these deep-nested habitations. Aud still, high in front, arose the precipitous barrier of the mountain, greened over where it seemed that scarce a hare-bell could find root, barred with the zig-zags of a human road where it seemed that not a goat could scram ble. And in truth, for all the labor that it cost, the road is regarded even by the Marquesans as impassable; they will not risk a horse on that ascent; and those who lie to the west ward come aud go iu their canoes. I never knewa hill to lose so little on a near ap proacha consequence, I must suppose, of its surprising steepness. When we turned about I was amazed to behold so deep a view rain and tmire of what seaports he had tramped sincet then; in what close and garish drinking dens had found his pleasure; and in the ward of what infirmary dreamed his last of the Marquesas. But she, the more fortunate, lived on in her green island. Tne talk, in this lost house upon the mountains, ran chiefly upon Mapiao and his visits to the Casco; the news of which had probably gone abroad by then to all the island, so that there was no paepae in Hiva-oa where they did not make it the sub ject of excited comment. Not much beyond we came upon a high place iu the foot of the ravine. Two roads divided it, and met in the midst. Save for this intersection the amphitheater was strangely perfect, and had a certain ruder air ot things Roman. Depths of foliage and the bulk of the mountain kept it in a grateful shadow. On the benches several voung folk sat clustered or apart, and Tadema might have painted that scene of tempered light, and beautiful, bright clothed and pensive youth, scattered among ruins. Interested In the Girls. One of these, a girl perhaps 14 years of age, buxom and comely, caught the eye of juromer juicn.-i. wny was sue not at school? she was done with school cow. What was she doing here? she lived here now. Why so? no answer but a deepen ing blush. There was no severity in Brother Michel's manner; the girls own confusion told her 6tory "Elle a honte," was the missionary's comment, as we rode away. Near by in the stream a grown girl was bathing in a goyle between two stepping stonea, and it amused me to see with what alacntv and real alarm she bounded on her many-colored clothes. Even in these daughters of cannibals shame was eloquent. It is in Hiva-oa, owing to the inveterate cannibalism of the natives, that local be liefs have been most rudely trodden under foot. It was here that three religious chiefs were set under a bridge, and the women of the valley made to defile over their heads UDon the roadway; the poor, dishonored fel lows sitting there (all observers agree) with streaming tears. Not only was one road driven across the high place, but two roads intersected in its midst. Theie is uo reason to suppose that the last was diue of purpose, and perhaps it was impossible entirely to avoid the numerous sacred places 01" the, islands. But these things are not done without results. Their Regard for Their Dead. I have spoken already of the regard of Marquesans for the dead, making (as it does) so strange a contrast with their uncon cern for death. Early on this day's ride, for instance, we encountered a petty chief, who inquired, of course, where we were go ing, and suggested, by way of amendment, "Why do you not rather show him the cemetery?" I saw it; it was but newly opened, the third within eight years. They are great builders here in Hiva-oa; I saw in my ride paepaes that no European dry-stone mason could have equalled, the black volcanic stones were laid so justlv, the corners n ere so precise, tde levels so true; but the retaining wall of the new graveyard stood apart, and seemed to be a work ot love. The sentiment of honor lor the dead is tbereiore not extinct. Aud yet observe the consequence of violently coun tering men's opinions. Of the 'four prisoners in Atuona jail, three were of course thieves; the fourth was there for sacrilege. He had levelled up a piece of the graveyard to give a feast upon, as he informed the Court and declared he had no thought of doing wrong. Whv should he? He been forced at the point o'f rCOKBXSFOXDXXCB OP THE DISPATCH. 1 San Marcos e Akica, Chile, March 2. O my mind there is so more interesting region on the western sideof the continent than this which by right belongs to Peru, but was seized by Chile during the re cent war. Approached by steamer, the most conspicuous feature of the shore is an enorm ous promontory just south of Arica, called the Morro, which rises almost perpendicularly out of the Pacific to a height of 1,200 feet, and then slopes ofi at a steep grade in the sandy plain behind it The face of the great rock is seamed, wrinkled and corroded, and it is full of dark caverns and inaccessible grottos, where thousands of sea-birds, and nobody knows what strange forms of marine life, find re fuge. Behind the town, sweeping back from the Morfo, is a great windrow of yel low sand which forms a kind of amphithe ater, unrelieved by tree or shrub or blade of grass. eyes were preserved, but it is now a com monly accepted theory that they were never human optics, but those of cuttle-fish, with which the more perish able eyes of the subject to be mummified were re placed. But they are none the less curious, and are really beautiful things flat on one side, round and smooth on the other, bright, amber-lice yel low, holding light as an opal, and varying in size from the tip of your little finger to the end of a man's thumb. They areeagerly sought for the settings of pins, sleeve buttons, etc., and are durable as most jewels. Everybody remembers the story that went the rounds of the press a few years ago how Tiffany, the New York jeweler, was sent a number of these mummified eyeballs to be made into a necklace lor some fair lady; and how two or three of the workmen em ployed in polishing them died before it was discovered that their sudden demise was due to the fine dust which flakes off from these relics of the tomb. E5 w THEKULESOMUGBL Wakeman's Second Letter From the Great School of England.- THE ABSENCE OF FLDNKEYISM. ALQKO THE BEACH AT ANTOITA. behind, and so high a shoulder of blue sea crowned by the whale-like island of Mol tane. And yet the wall of mountain had not visibly dwindled, and I could even have fancied as I raised my eyes to measure it, that it loomed higher than before. A Halt in the Forest We struck now into covert paths, crossed and heard more near at hand the bickering of the streams, and tasted the coolness of those recesses where the houses stood. The birds sang about us as we descended. All along our path mv guide was being hailed by voices: "Mifcael Knoba, MikaeTl" From the doorstep, from the cotton patch or out of the deep grove of island, chestnuts these friendly cries arose aud were cheerily answered as we passed. In a sharp angle of a -leu. on a rushinc a bayonet to destroy the sacred places of his own piety; when he had recoiled from the task, he had been jeered at for a supersti tious fool. And now it is supposed he will respect our European superstitions as by second nature. Bobert Xoms Stevenson. A Preposterous Request New York Telegram. Photographer Now, my friend, keep your eye fixed on that picture and look pleased. Victim (recogniziug portrait of his wife's mother) Say, mister, you don'l happen to have anything else you can nail up there, do you askull and cross bones, for instance? j All this ridge, and the desert for miles around lt.is one vast cemetery of the ancient inhabitants, crowded with the dried-up bodies of tbose who once fished from their balsas in the bay, or cultivated the narrow valley on whose borders they were1 bnried. When workmen were digging up the sand to fill Arica's nier. and were opening a track for the railway that leads to Tacna, they found mummies everywhere not only humble fishermen wrapped in their nets, and lowly tillers of the soil in shrouds of braided rushes, but now and then the body of a chief or other personage of extraordi nary consequence, enveloped in a thin layer of beaten gold. These fared worse than the humbler cadavers, for while the latter were left comparatively undisturbed, los ricos now grim and ghastly as the poorest were stripped bv rude bandsof everything valu able, and their crumbljpg., bones tossed, un covered, by the wayside. " T It seems a strange thiqg to deliberately set out on a grave-robbing expedition; but in this part of the world it Is fashionable to go mummy-hunting, and to search the ab original cemeteries for the curious articles they may contain besides dead Indians. The Arica burying ground must once have been of enormous extent, lor though a large portion of it has been washed away by the sea during the last century or two, miles of it yet remain. The spades of inquisitive people have dug up considerable areai, in places here and there; yet the great bulk of it is entirely undisturbed, and will doubt less remain so until, in the lapse of ages, the slowly encroaching Pacific shallswallovr it all. A Mummy Hunt In the Desert We went out on horseback, about five miles from Arica, having sent some peons ahead with shovels. It is not quite safe for one or two persons to go by themselves, for highwaymen are abroad in the land, and even the workmen might be tempted to mis chief if anything valuable were unearthed. However, people bent on such gruesome errands as disturbing the dead are not likely to hunt alone, but prefer plenty of company to keep their spirits up. Arrived at the desert, you may dig any where and cannot go amiss of a grave. In this rainless region, protected by the mag netic sand, nothing can decay, and the con tents of the tombs look as if they were put there yesterday, instead of . many centuries ago. There is no consuming insect, and no moisture to produce decay. Flesh dries without decomposi tion, wood and vegetable matter petrifies, while fab rics and articles ot stoneor clay will "keep" forever. The earlv Peruvians pre served their dead some thing after the manner of the Egyptians, except that these are always in a sit ting posture, knees drawn up to the chin, and hands clasped about the knees, head and all enveloped fiist in dyed cotton cloth, bqund arouud with braided ropes of llama wool much like the ropes made by Andean Indians to-day the whole uncanny bundle Inclosed within another netting of ropes, or en a basket-like case of braided rushes. How the Bodies Are Found. Remove the cloth and the features are found well preserved even, to their expies siou, which is usually that of extreme ter ror and agony, confirming the assertion of historians that those about to die were placed in what was considered the proper position for mummifying and firmly bound with ropes before breath had left the body and death stiffened the muscles. The teeth are always perfect, and the hair sometimes grown unnaturally long in the grave has generally turned a reddish-brown by con tact with the nitrous earth. A clew to the extent of the aboriginal population, and some knowledge of their re ligion, arts and customs, mav be obtained from the millions of bodies that are buried in the drifting sands. As the soldier going on a march, takes his cooking kit, canteen, blanket and other portable treasures, so did the belief in a future life cause these dead Peruvians to be well equipped lor their journey from this world to another. One may find in their craves weapons' for war and for hunting, fishing tackle, apparatus for cooking aud weaving, water jugs, copper knives and other utensils, cuds and clatters I of gold and silver, spoons, strings of, beads, r H aI m A A tt lis 4 a n "L . A. . l S iuuia, buiuus, iingi iu euuri, everyiniujj supposed to be required by the spirits of the dead to set up their primitive housekeeping anew in she Happy Country. A Find of Petrified Eyeball. Our peons dug down about five feet deep, in several different places, and unearthed half a dozen well-conditioned mummies two of which I afterward shipped to the United States with their wrappings undis turbed. The most curious things we found that day were not the rings of beaten gold encircling bony fingers, or water jars of quaint designs in molded clay, or spindles with thread still on them, just'as the weaver laid down her work some hundreds ol years ago but the petrified eyeballs, which a careful digger may always find, seldom in serted in the fare oflhe mummy, but fallen mlf nmnntr thn urpiinniiimr KTnr!in science cannot comprehend how these J The Station of the Cadavers. The quality of the wrappings, and the various articles found in the graves, enables one to judge pretty correctly what wa3 the condition in life" of the" occupant. The plebeian dead were buried in such shallow graves that sometimes earthquakes tossed them up to view, or winds uncovered them. In order to utilize all the arable land, the ancient inhabitants used to pile up the stones that encumbered the ground into great heaps. There are thousands of stone piles all over the country, and nearly every one, holds mummies. CiMr. E.'G. Squier's description ot one that he uncovered answers well for the rest. He says: "Tne dead man sat alone among the stones, wrapped in rustic cloth, with some beanpods and ears of corn pressed between his breast and knees. At his feet, enveloped in coarse cotton cloth. were two objects ot interest, obviously con nected with his superstitions. The first was a kind of mask, or idol, cut out of wood, bearing a resemblance to the carved idols brought from distant Pacific islands. It is painted on the face and has holes on the top and sides, through which thin cords, still remaining in place, were passed, as if to attach them in front of some object. A projection be neath the chin, apparently designed to fit into a socket, suggests the possibility that it was carried sur mounting a pole, or staff. There was also a wooden bow), carved with a border repre senting birds running around its rim, packed full of layers of vari ously colored alpaca and vicuna wool, in perfect preservation. Between each layer pebbles were deposited that bore some faint likeness to animals, a little strengthened by art. There were frag ments of crystallized quartz, and a very good carving of an ear ot corn." Household Deities of the Peruvians. Father Arriaga, in his rare book on "Idolatry in Peru," calls these pebbles, (canopes) the household deities of the early Peruvians. He says that bezoar stones and small quartz crystals were most esteemed; and that a stone, carved in imitation of an ear of corn, was considered a great treasure. In the cemeteries around Lima the mum mies areometimei put in layers of tombs, one above another, three or four deep. Per haps the most interesting one which Mr. Squier opened in the second layer down, andevidently belonging to a family in mid 'dle"circumstances was about four feet square, three feet deep and walled with aaobes. It contained five bodies, a middle aged man; a full-grown woman, a girl of 14 years, a boy some years younger and an infant. The baby was placed between the father and mother; the boy by the side of the man, and the girl cuddled up close to the woman. Each was enveloped in a braided net-work of coarse grass, bound closely around the body by cords of the same material. Under the man's outer wrapping was another, of stout, plain cotton cloth, fastened with a variegated cord of llama wool. Next came an envelope of cotton cloth of fine texture, which, when removed, disclosed the mahogany-colored corpse,dried and shrunken, but well preserved. Must Have Been a Fisherman. Passing around the neck and carefully folded oyer the knees, on which the head rested, was a fishing net, made of the twisted fiber of the agave, the threads fine as the finest used to-day and nicely knotted. Wrapped in a cloth at his feet were some fishing lines ol various sizes, copper hooks, barbed like ours, and copper sinkers. Un der each of his armpits was a roll of white alpaca wool, auu behind the calt ot each leg were a few thick, short ears of corn. A small piece of copper had been placed in his mouth, corresponding, perhaps, with the "obolos" which the ancient Greeks put into the mouths of their dead for a fee to Charon. The wife, beneath the same coarse outer wrapping of braided reeds, was enveloped in a blanket of alpaca wool, finely spun, woven in the style known as three-ply, iu two colors, brown and white, and an elab orate, diamond-shaped pattern, in which were representations of monkeys climbing up and down. Beneath this was a soft, closely woven cotton cloth, 20 yards long, rolled" round and round the woman's body. In one hand she held a comb, made bv set ting the rays of fishes' fins into a piece of dwarf palm trees, and in her other hand were the remains of a fan with a cane handle, Irom the upper points of which radiated the faded feathers of parrots and humming birds. Bound her neck was a triple neck lace of shells, and between her body and bent-up knees were several domestic imple ments, among them some spindles half cov ered with spun cotton. A Wallet of Thick Cotton. The most interesting article was a wallet, made of two pieces of thick cotton cloth oi different colors, ten inches long by five broad. The lower end terminated with a fringe, and at the upper end ol each of the lour cor ners was a braid, the strands neatly plaited to- wrthpr higher lin. Trip whole was carefully folded and tied by the braids, and contained soiu lima beans, a few nods of cotton, some chalcedony beads and several thin pieces of silver, each pierced with a hole. The cirl-mummy was seated on a box of braided reeds, which was 38 inches long, 14 inches wide and 8 inches deep, and hud a cover, hinged on one side'and fastening on the other. In it were childish playthings, rude specimens of knitting, with places showing where stitches had been dropped; tiny spindles, 'implements f6r weaving, and braids of irregularthickness, evidently kept for the sake ot contrast with others better cone. There were needles of bone and of bronze, a comb, a little bronze kni.e, and a fan similar to that of the mother, butsiualler. The body was wrapped precisely like the woman's; her hair was braided and laid around the forehead, encircling which was also a cincture ol white cloth, ornamented with little silver spangles. A thin, nanow bracelet of silver still huug on tier arm, and between her feet was the dried body oi a parrot, which had doubtless been her pet. Having spent a Iougdaya't mummy-hunt-jng, we rode'back to Arica, across the desert in the gathering twilight somewhat awed by what we had seen and by thoughts nat urally induced of the mutability of all thincs earthly; but feeline; ourselves im measurably richer, not only by reisonof the two mummies before mentioned, but with a treasure-trove ot petrified eeballs. spindles, combs, needles, water jars and a carved wooden face (whether mask or idol I do not know) to add to my already hetero geneous "collection" ni "home. Drawings of them are sent to illustrate this article. Fasnie B. Ward Something Abont the Gaines That Have Hade Jl World-Famous. RUM CUTS FROM SIXTH FORM LADS rCOltRESrOXDKfCB Or THE DISPATCH.! Bugbt, Esc, March 20. AH boys at Rugby school must enter between the ages of 12 and 15 years, and must leave the school at the end of the next term after they have reached the age of 19 years. There are 96 boys who are schooled free, or partially so', on behalf of the Laurence Sheriff foun dation fund. These 90 boys form three classes, known as "old foundationers," "major" and "minor" "foundationers." The old foundationers nnmber 50, and they must be the sons of persons who have lived in, or within five miles of, Kugby since 1868. These receive instruction free of all charge. The major foundationers are 12 boys selected, on examination, from the townsfolk aud people living within the five mile limit, and qualified by attendance at the subordinate school, who, 1 ike the old foundationers, receive their instruction free. The 24 minor fonndationcrs must have the same qualifications as to residence and preparation as the majors. These secure their tuition for one-balf the usual fees. The 96 foundationers may compete with all other students for the many Bugby prizes. Prizes Almost Innumerable. Probably no other boys' school in the world offers so many and such varied prizes. To name them in the brie'est manner would require more than a column's space in this paper. Aside from the Queen's gold medal prize for an English essay on some histor ical subject, I have had counted out to me by my companions upward of 75 prizes, the value of the lowest of which is two guineas. On the, line of excellence iu scholarship there are numberless gradings and distinc tions. The great goal to be reached in Bugby school life in the "Sixth Form" of the upper school, and the life ofa prtepostor in that. There are 15 praepostors. These con stitute the "upper bench" of the upper, or highest school in Bugby. The dignity and privileges obtaining are alone secured through splendid scholarship; and all Bugby traditions warrant tbe lad who has reached thih emiueuce through intellectual pluck in the ree and ungrudged exercise of his rights to "fag" those beneath him to the very limit of his inclination. It is not car ried to tbe same extent it was in "Tom Brown's" time; but his experiences, though somewhat exaggerated, give the best de scription extant of theevery-day workings of the system in Bugby school. Means Both Honor and Cash, Tbe next aud the hizbest reward be stowed upon superior scholarship at Bugby is that ot "Exhibitioner." It is not only a great honor in English school life to be kuown as a "Bugbv Exhibitioner," bnt it is by no means an empty honor. There are two classe?, major and minor "Exhibi tions;" and three "majon" and four "mi nors" are awarded each year, on election by "external examiners" appointed by the Bugby Governing Board, Every major ex hibitioner receives 60, and every minor exhibitioner 30 per pear, practically ?300 and $150 per year scholarships, good any where that proper use may be made of them for four years; their full vaiue therefore be ing respectively ?1,200 and 5600. Oxford and Cambridge secure these splendidly trained youths iu about equal numbers. As was noticed in my preceding article on Bugby, Dr. Arnold, as long ago us 1828, removed all the irresponsible boarding house vampires wno tattenea upon Kugby scholars and put in their places masters of the school. This not only created direct responsibility, but insured good treatment to the boys. The more popular a master made his house, the higher he stood socially id Bugby, with tbe students, with the gov erning board, and besides it increased his profits through an increase of boarders. The system has been maintained, and from time to time commodious halls have been built. There are now seven of these ex clusive of the "School House" proper, and tbe boys living at each house are dis tinguished by their "colors," and each house takes the name of the master in cbarge, while the boys at each boarding hall receive the house name as a general appellative. One Daj's Routine at Rugby. I give the everyday routine at Rugby just as my young "LowerMiddle" Iriend rattled it ofi to me: "Well the 6:15 morning bell wakes us, but we don't want to get up. Then another bell rings at 6:50 for five min utes. We've got to get in our places in chapel in that time to be 'called over,' aod if we're too lazy to make it, it means a 'lick in;r,' that's all. A'ter service we march in order to our different 'form' rooms, and say lessons till 8:15. Then we have 15 minutes to buy any little luxuries, like penny loaves the house-bread's prettv dryl and then comes breakfast. From 9:15 to 1:15, lessons; and dinner at 1:30. We get a rest-spell Irom din jer until 3, and then lessons go on again until 6, except Tuesday, Thursdays and Saturdays. Them's half-holidays." Every boy has to join the games then, unless he's got good excuse. Sometimes we get off by shamming a sore foot, and many other way, well ki.own to us hovs. But whatever we're doing at G o'clock games, sauntering or study, everything's dropped, aud we give a grand rush for 'tea.' After tea in winter, and alter 7:15 iu summer, tonied Jockiug-up. JNououy likes that. Then we have to pitch in on 'prepantiou' that's getting onr lessons for tbe next fore noonuntil 9 o'clock, when they give us a very light supper that don't make anybody dream. Then it's go to bed, and no fooling, or it means another 'licking,' sure as fees and marshals, that's all!" Known Everywhere for Its Games. The supervision of all Rugby games is wholly in the hands of the bovs themselves. This also includes the management of the great "School Close," the uueqaled play ground ol Rugby. The details oi the man agement are delegated to a committee of five boys locally called the "Big School Levee." This board consists ot the head of the school, the head of tbe school house, the captains of football and cricket, and one other chosen by these four. This games' board levies taxes to be paid by all lor the support oi school amusements, subject to approval by the head master. J t is also, from the boy's standpoint, the grand coun cil or senate of the school, to be called to gether at any time to consider any matter per taining to the scholars' interests at the insti gation of all, or lor ordering any action where it is desirable the whole school shall share such us rebellion against too dry bread or ancient prunes, boycotts upon tuck shops lor unsavory or underweight penny loaves; or lor thrashing tbe insolent "luuts" (uon-schoolmen) of the village. The head lellow of the House arranges the games, and, as my young iriend apprNes me, by universal consent "does the licking." I , when called on, jl boy does not play, but "iuiiks" and goes botanizing, swimming, or fishing, a note is sent to him containing the dread words: "See me at mystudy at2:15." The boy goes and is given "200 lines" to write; a terrible puuislimeut to any lad. But if he has committed the unpardonable crime of "minching" 'roai cricket, in the language of my young friend, "you are or dered to kneel on a stool, bend over a chair, while a 'Sixth Form' fellow fetches out a sixpenny cane a yard and a bait long, and gives you six rum cuts; so of course, you ain't in love with the 'Sixth-Formers V " . .Edqab L. Wakeman. AW A FANTASTIC TALE, INTRODUCING HYPNOTIC THEORIES. "VyKITTES FOB THE DISPATCH BY F. MABION CRAWFORD, Author of "3Ir. Isaacs," "Br. Claudius," "A. Roman Singer," and Many Other Stories That Have Taken Rank as Standard Literature. CHAPTER XVIL "She hates me with an extreme hatred." said Kafka to the Wanderer. "Her real interest lay in sbowing you how terri ble that hatred could be. It is not pos sible to conceive of anything more diabol ically bad than what she did to me. She made me her sport yours, too, perhaps, or she would at least have wished it. On that holy ground where my people lie in peace she made me deny my faith, she made me, in your eyes and her own, personate a renegade of .my race, she made me confess in .the Christian creed, she made me seem to die for a belief I abhor. Can you conceive of anything more devilish? A moment later she smiles upon me and presses my hand, and is anxious to know of my good health. And but lor you I should never have known what she had done to me. I owe you grati tude, though it be for the worst pain I ever have suffered. But do you think I will for give her?" "You would be very forgiving if you could," said the Wanderer, his own anger ris- assistance of his people. The matter would end in a few days in the Wanderer being driven from tbe country, while Israel Kafka would be left behind to work his will as might seem best in his own eyes. There was Keyork Arabian. So far as it was possible to believe in the sincerity of any of the strange person among whom the Wanderer found himself, it seemed certain that the sage was attached to Unornaby. some bond of mutual interests which he wou!d be loth to break. Keyork had many acquaintances and seemed to possess every where a certain nmount of influence and command a certain amount of respect; whether because he was perhaps a member of some widespread mysterious society of which the Wanderer knew nothing, or whether this importance of his was due to his personal superiority of mind and wide spread experience of travel, no one could say. But it seemed certain that If Unorna, could be placed for the time being in a safe refuge, it would be best to apply to Keyork to insure her further protection. Meanwhile that refuge must be found, and Unorna must be conveyed to it witnout delay. The Wanderer was admitted without question. He fodnd Unorna iu her accus- 8HHl:i ZJmmM mm TJKOKKA IN THE COKVFKT CELL. ing again at tbe remembrance of what he had seen. "And do you think that I can love stU17" "No." Israel Kafka walked the length of the room and then came back and stood before the Wanderer and looked into his eyes. His face was very calm and resolnte, the flush had vanished from his thin cheeks and the features were set in an expression of irre vocable determination. Then he spoke, slowly and distinctly. "Yon are mistaken. I love her with all my heart. I will therefore kill her." The Wanderer had seen many men in many lands and had witnessed the effects of manv passions. He gazed earnestly into Israel Kafka's face, searching in vain lor some manifestation of madness. But he was disappointed. The Moravian had formed his resolution jn cold blood and intended to carry it out. His only folly appeared to lie in the announcement of his intention. But his next words explained even that. "She made me promise to send you to her if you would go," he said. "Will you go to her now?" "What shall I tell her? I warn you that since " "You oeed not warn me. I know what you would say. But I will be no common murderer. I will not kill her as she would have killed me. Warn her, not me. Go to her and sav, 'Israel Kafka has promised be fore God that he will take your blood in ex piation, and there is no escape from tbe man who is himself ready to die.' Tell her to fly for her life, and that quickly." "And what will you gain by doing this murder?" asked the Wanderer, calmly. He was revolving schemes for Unorna's safety, and halt amazed to find himself forced iu common humanity to take her part. "I shall free nivself of my sbameiu loving her at the price of her blood and mine. Will you go?" "And what is to prevent me from de livering tou oyer to safekeeping before you do this deed?" "You have uo witness," answered Kafka, with a smile. "You are a stranger in the city and in this country, and I am rich. I shall easily prove that you love Unorna, and that you wish to get rid of me ont of jealousy." "That is true," said the Wanderer, thought ullv. "I will go." "Go quickly, then," said Israel Kafka, "for I shall loilow soon." As the Wanderer left the room, he saw the Moravian turn toward the place where the keen, splendid Eastern weapons hung upon the wall. ( As the Wanderer left the room, he saw the Moravian turn toward the place where the keen, splendid Eastern weaponB hung upon the wall. He knew that the case was urgent and the danger great. There was no mistaking the tone of Israel Kafka's voice nor the look in his face. Nor did the savage resolution seem altogether unnatural in a man of the Moravian's breeding. The Wan derer had no time and but little inclination to blame lnuiselt lor tbe part he had played in disclosing to the principal actor the na ture of the scene which had taken place in the cemetery, aim tne immediate conse quences of that disclosure, though wholly unexpected, did not seem utterly illogical. Israel Kaika's nature was Eastern, violently passionate, and, at the same time, iong-sufleriiig in certain direc tions as only the fatalist can be. But there was scant time for reflection as he hastened toward Unorna's house. His pres ent mission was cle.ie and simpie enough, though by no means easy oi accomplish ment. What Israel Kalka had told him was very true. Should he attempt a de uuuciition lie would have little cbauco of being believed. It would be easy euongh for Kafka to bring witnesses to prove his own love lor Unorna and the Wanderer's intimacy with her during the past month, and the Iatter's consequent interest in dis posing summarily ol his Moravian rival. A stranger in the land would have small ljope of success against a man whose an tecedents were known, whose fortune was reputed great, and who had at his back the whole gigantic strength of tbe Hebrew in terest in Prague, if he chose to invoke the tomed place. She had thrown aside her furs, and was sitting in an attitude of deep thought Her dress was black, and in the solt light of the shaded lamp she was like a dark, marble statue, set in the midst of thick shrubbery in a garden. Her elbow rested on her knee, her chin upon her beau tiful, hcivy hand; only in her hair there was bright color. She .knew the Wanderer's footstep, but she neither moved her body nor turned her head. She lelt that she grew paler than be fore, and she could hear her heart beating strongly. "I come from Israel Kalka," said the Wanderer, standing still bctore her. She knew from his tone how hard his face must be, and she would not look up. "What of him?" she asked, in a voic- without expression. "Is he well?" "He bids me say to you that ha has prom ised before heaven to take your life, and that there is no escape from a man who is ready to lay down his own." Unorna turned her head slowly toward him, aud a very toft look stole over her strange face. "And you have brought me his message this warning to save me?" she said. "As I tried to save bim from you au hour ago. But there is little time. The man is desperate; whether mad or sane I cannot tell. Make haste. Determine where to go for safety, and I will take you there." But Unorna did not move. She onlv looked at him, with an expression he could no longer misunderstand. He was cold and impassive. "I fancy it will not be safe to hesitate long," he said. "He is in earnest" "I do not fear Israel Kafka, and I fear death less," answered Unorna deliberately. "Why does he mean to kill me?" "I think that in his place most very human men would feel as he does, though religion, or prudence, or fear, or ail three together, might prevent them from doing what they would wish them to do." "You too? And which of tbe three would prevent you from murdering me?" "None, perhaps though pity might" "I want no pity. least of ail from you. What I have done, I have done for you, and for you only." Tbe Wanderer's face showed only a cold disgust. He said nothing. "You do not seem surprised," said Unorna. "You know that I love you?" "I know it" A silence followed, during which Unorna returned to her former attitude, turning her eyes away and resting her cam upon her hand. The Wanderer began to grow im patient "I must repeat that, iu my opinion, yon have not much time to spare," he said. "If vou are not in a place of safety iu half an hour. I cannot answer for the consequences." "No time? There is all eternity. What is eternity, or lime, or life, to me? I will wait for him here. Why did you tell him what I did, if you wished me to live?" "Why since there are to be questions why did you exercise your cruelty upon an innocent man who loves you?" "Why? There are reasons enonghl" Unorna's voice trembled slightly. "You do uofknow what happened. How should yon? You were asleep. You may as well know, since I may be beyond telling you in an hour from now. You may as well know how I love you, and to what depths I have gone dowu to vin jour love." "I would rather not receive your confi dence," the Wanderer answered haughtily. "I came here to save your life, not to hear your confessions." "And when you have beard, you will no longer wish to save me. If you choose to leave me here, I will wait for Israel Kafka alone. He may kill me it he pleases. I do not care. But it you stay you shall hear what I have to say." She glanced at his face. He folded his arms and stood still. Whatever she had done, he would not leave her alone at tbe mercy of the desperate man whom he ex pected every moment to enter tbe room. If she wonld not save herself, he might never theless disarm Kafka and prevent the deed. As his long-sleeping energy revived in him the thought of a struggle was not disagree able. "I loved you from the moment when I m i A ,1 1 4 i fl f-3? yt. .V. 'i