THE' PITTSBURG ' DISPATCH, ' STJNDAX "JANUARY IT. ' I89a IHECTJff CLUBS, Island Home of an Organiza tion Which Commands 3 Billion Dollars. STOCKED WH ALL GAME. -I Clubhouse of Oriental Luxury and Many Rich Cottages. JUST OFF THE VST OFGEOEGLA. JL Wilderness Under the Southern Enn' Changed to a Paradise. TUSH OF HISTORIC ASSOCIATIONS rWBITTEN rOR THE DISrATCH.1 ATELVthere was published in these col umns a sketch of the gam preserve of the Cheat M osnt a i n Bportmen's Association in "West Virgin ia, That is al most exclu sively a Pitts burg enter prise. The organization has the larg- fewS hapsthe best jspS'i i-w . tract of land w- sr devoted ex clusively io hunting and fishing in the United States. The richest club in the United States, probably, is the Jekyl Island Club, of which H. K. Porter, of Pittsburg, among others, is a stockholder. The coniol- VIEW OP THB idated wealth of its members aggregates 51,000,000,000. A few years ago the attention of two or three gentlemen of means and leisure was called to the advantages of Jekyl an island betweed St Simons and Cumberland on the Georgia coast An isolated position and fecial climate rendered it particularly suit able for the establishment of a country club and game preserve. This unknown spot was then covered with a dense forest of pine and a thick undergrowth of palmettoes. Birds of brilliant plumage mingled their liquid notes with the grant of the wild hog; while the swamps and low savannas were literally overrun with deer and wild cattle. Krplcle With Historic Reminiscences, r In historic interest thisfavored spot rivals even Frederica, a town across the bay, where General Oglethorpe built his first stronghold against the Spaniards. The island, which was named in honor of Sir Joseph Jekyl, a distinguished jurist in the time of George IIL, has been the scene of many stirring events during the early ttruggles between the Spaniards and En glish. In 173S General Oglethorpe induced his friend and junior in command, Major Borton to locate permanently there. Ilye. barley and other grains were then planted and an orange trove laid out This flour ished until the great freeze 100 years later. A brewery, said to be the first on this conti- -" " r-r-rv-r BTWOTB'miffiiiiiiiii r" ttv&issSP fM'mmmhu w;'Tn ,",iii! mm IN THE BRIDLE PATH. nent, was also erected, and a superior qual ity of beer and ale furnished to the troops jfcnd adjacent colonists. ) Toward the north end of the island the ins of an old tabby house erected by Ogle thorpe still remain, as well as those of an old family mansion of ante-bellum days. Under the early regime Jekyl became fa mous for the quality of its crops, and when in 1808 it came into the possession of the Du Bignons, a distinguished French family, it was the most envied spot on the coast Admiral Du Bignon had been an owner of vast estates on the Island of Martinique, but when .Napoleon was exiled to Elba he told out everything and moved his 1,200 Blaves to Jekyl. Held for a Time by Freed Slaves. "When the first gun was sounded in 1861 this retreat, though far from the noise and Co mult of war, was fortified and held by the Confederates. They were soon dislodged, however, by the Union forces, who held it until the close cf the war. During these davs the island became . once more a vast wildernes. For many years after the ces sation of hostilities the negro slaves occu pied Jekyl, believing it to be their property jby virtue of emancipation. It was then What fair Jekyl experienced a reign of 'terror. - - Fortunately, however, Mr. John Du Ble- non, a direct descendant of the old admiral, reclaimed his inheritance and awoke the negroes from their halcy onic dream of bliss. ,He immediately began the erection of com fortable dwellings and restocked the island with cattle. Innumerable droves of wild hogs, rivaling in size even those of the famous Black Forest, wandered over the island, and many horses were caught that had never known halter or bridle. Mr. Da Bignon's task was not an easy one, but to such a degree of perfection did he brine Jekyl that it soon became one of the most valuable properties on the coast The Purchase or the Island. It was at this juncture that Major N. a Finney, a brother-in-law of Mr. Du Bignon, and a prominent Union Clubman.lconceived the idea of establishing a Southern Tuxedo. A number of his friends became interested, and when they learned the natural advant ages of Jekyl as a winter resort and game preserve a visiting committee was dis patched to examine the site. Their report was unanimously a favorable one, and the necessary number of names was quickly subscribed, negotiations then began for the purchase of the island, which passed out of the hands of Mr. Du Bignon for 5125,000. A charter was obtained unJer the laws of the State of Georgia. Some of the objects and purposes of the club are clearly set forth in the following extracts from its charter: "To raise live stock, birds, game, fish and shell fish, and to hunt, fish and yacht on and in the vicinity of Jekyl Island, in the county of Glynn, State of Georgia, and in the waters adjacent thereto. To maintain a race course on said Jekyl Island, etc., eta" The first President of the club was General Lloyd Aspinwall, of New York. Upon his death Judge Henry E. Howland, of the New York Supreme Court, was elected. The Membership and Finances. The number of shares in the Jekyl Island Club is limited to 100 at a par value ot ?C00 each, and the number of members is also limited to 100, though one member may subscribe for, hold and acquire any number of shares. The annual dues are $100 on each share, and the entrance fee is also S100. A Jew davs azo one of these 5600 shares was sold for J4.V00. Any person 21 years and upward is eligi ble for membership upon the acquisition of one share of the capital stock, provided he has been duly elected under the rules. Fifty lots of ten acres each have been sur veyed and laid aside for the private use of members desiring to erect cottages, stables, kennels and other improvements. In order to be entitled to one of these lots the mem ber must own at least two shares ot the cap ital stock. Under this privilege many members have erected cottages worth from irttli. oftrtmiilK'iuJilpi CLUB HOUSE. 516,000 to 540,000. H. E. Howland, ofNew York, is now President Vf holecale Game Slaughter Itnled Oat. That the directors of the Jekyl Island Club are determined to restrict the slaugh ter of game is shown by the following rules and regulations for .the government of the game department for this season: The open season for the killing of quail shall begin November 1 and close March IS; pheasants, trom November 1 to March 15: deer, fi om November 1 to February IB; wild turkeys, from November 1 to April 1: rab bits, from Novemtber 1 to April L Ducks and Cher migratory Towl may bo killed at nil times; also wild hops, minks, possum, coons and bears The killing of singing, plnmr.ee and cardinal birds, alo squirrels. is prohibited. Xo boys under 10 shall be al lowed to carry or shoot firearms, except at target practice at the bntts, or clny pigeon shooting, under the supervision of an officer or member of the club. During the season of 1S30-"91 a limit or 60 quail per week, also 13 cock pheasants for the scaon, shall be placed on each share. The penalty for shooting hen pheasants shall be $5 Tor each bird. Each share snail ba entitled once only during a season to delegate to one guoat for ono week at a time, without renewal to same person by himself or any other member, full power to s'loot in his stead; but if pertonall present each member shall be entitled to invite not j mora than two guests to shoot with him, pi uv lueu nut iu imai Ecurooi a ii.emuer and h-s cne-ts shall not exceed the score to I which his share or nharea may be entitled; out no memoer nau nave tne ngnt to trans fer his shoGtirg to another member. Deer sLall onlv bo still hunted with out dogs. Each share shall be allowed to kill three bucks (but no docs), and five wild turkeys during the season. At least one half or the came shot by guests and mem bers occupying quarters at the club house shall be turned over to the club, to be served for tne use or all. The gun bouse will re main closed on Sundays, and all shooting is strictly prohibited on that day. The duties of the head gamekeeper shall be to take charge of the breeding, nreserva tlon and care or game. He shall keep a diary, in which he shall enter dally all matters pertaining to his department; also a (tame book, in which ho shall -enter everything killed by each member or visitor. Phensants Successfully Bred. The experiment of breeding English pheasants and California quail has given most satisfactory results to tlio game com mittee of the Jekyl Island Club. When they first took possession of the island, B 000 native quail, ICO pheasants and a few Caliiornia quail were imported. The native birds were turned loose, while the English specimens were bred by the gamekeeper. At the end of the first season more than 1,000 young pheasants were hatched. And it lias s'lnce been found that theyaro breeding rapidly in the wild state, something which has always been deemed Impossible by the English gamekeepers. W. Nephew Eiitq, Je. A Methodist church has been closed in Vienna because one of the articles of its be lief denounces masses as "blasphemous fa bles and dangerous deceits." DUTY OF THE SELLER. Must He Tell the Purchaser Truth Which Would Spoil the Sale? TWO BUSINESS MEN'S OPINIONS. The Employe Who Is. Required to Do Wh&t fie Thinks Unchristian. LAST Of MB. HODGES' TRADE SESSIONS twain ja ros the dispatch, i Concluding Paper. One business man who savs that "no. one' will deny that there exist unprincipled men in all occupations," but who feels "sorry for anyone who claims it for a necessity," writes as follows; "The honest merchant marked his prices in plain figures, and all, purchasers fared alike. This plan was so fast destroying the trade of the unscrupu lous dealers that they had to adopt it, and to-day the majority of the retail dealers have this system; we may say from policy rather than from principle; but the result is that the innocent nurchaser does not pay the price of a good article for a poor one." My correspondent mentions only the retail trade. I understand that it is more and more getting to be the custom irf all trade. A fixed and honest figure for every class of goods, with exactly so much dis count for such-and-such an amount of pur chase, and such-and-such a length of time, with a possible variation according to the rating of the customer's credit at the com mercial agencies, the whole matter fairly understood and lived up to, would vastly increase the proportion of Christian dealing in the business world. The Growtb of Public Opinion. The passing of such a law as the inter State oommerce act, with Us brand of legal criminality upon unchristian practices heretofore countenanced by professing Christians, shows the need of business reformation, and indicates the growth of public opinion in a Christian direction. The formation of unions of employes, adopt ing such a code of ethics as the one from which I quoted last Sunday, proves a recognition on the part of business men of unchristian elements in business which even the inter-State commerce law has pot remedied, and evinces a determination with out recourse to law, to do away with theso evils in their own transaction of their own business. Several things ought, I think, to be re membered in estimating the general moral ity of business life. One is that there are dishonest men In business as there are in every debarment of human existence. And it is the dishonest men who get their names into the newspapers. The man who is struck by the cable car attracts the atten tion of the whole neighborhood. Thousands of other people go by unnoticed. There is the same proportion between the men who deliberately lie and steal and the vast company of .honest Christians who would sooner cut off their right hand. Many mistakes of Judgment. Another matter which has been brought to my observation is the great difficulty of al ways distinguishing the right from the wrong. Questions of casuistry come up in every business office every day. They have to be settled immediately. Some sort of rough and approximate judgment must at once be rendered. Sometimes that judgment is against equity and Christianity. But I be lieve that in more than nine cases out of ten the man who is in a respectable busi ness acts as he honestly thinks just and right Two of my correspondents, for example, Sropose almost the same case, and decide it iiferently. The case is the amount of in formation which the seller ought to give the bnyer in a bargain. One writer who is one of the wealthiest and best-known citi zens of Pittsburg, mentions that "we can withhold truth on proper occasions without falsifying. A reasonable construction of the principle," he says, "when applied to business transactions, requires us to regard those with whom we deal as our equals, as having equal ability and better opportunity of knotnn? what best suits themselves. We are tot therefore bound to become their guardians, or to advise them as to what we consider their best interest in the transac tion! The Seller's Doty to Himself; "Duty to ourselves dispenses with this where it would conflict with our own inter ests. The healthy application of the prin ciple requires no such transcendental morality even where, in our own opinion, it would be better for our customer not to make the deal. "We would often be mis taken; he might be shrewder or know more than we, and society prospers better to let each attend to his own business and judge what is to his own interests. At the same time," adds my correspondent, "we are not allowed to hold back the truth in a manner calculated to mislead or deceive. The nurchaser. under such circumstances. ' deals at arm's length with the seller, and cannot complain alterwara tnat ne was cheated in case the transaction- does not turn out as he expected." ' On the other hand, this is the way in which that bargain appears from the point of view by the man who lost in it "The object of business," says this correspondent, "is to gain, and if the profit and loss show balance on the wrong side, the business must be abandoned as a loss or sold to some one else. Now it may be doubtful morality to sell to another "what you won't any longer own, because you can't make it pay and perhaps the buyer can. Jt is not lov ing him as yourself. But in bnsiness that is none of your business. He looks out for himself the law presumes he does and the law provides a remedy through its courts only when the buyer happens to have been a lunatic or other such incapable person, or when the transaction was effected under clear misrepresentation. The shrewder man trains bv his weakness. The sensation is not pleasant when you realize this at your own cost, and you never feel quite the same towards that man afterwards." The Ethics or the Csse. How, there are the two sides to that bar gain. And there are the differing views of two honest men as to the Christianity of that transaction. I confess that my sym pathies in this matter are with the second .writer. . The first position lends an easy op portunity to the heresy of Cain. "Am I my brother's keeper?" is not a question to which, when put directly, anv ot us would like to answer J'no." I doubt the Chris tianity of treating the buyer as an equal I cannot imagine the Lord Jesus as a carpen ter at Nazareth treating his customers barely as equals, and throwing all the blame of a bad bargain on their shoulders. I am sure that he would treat men not as equals (that is the language of contention), but as brothers. And I know'of more instances than I like to think of where men treated as equals by Christian men, shrewder than they were, have come out of their losing bargains, having just the feeling of which the second wrfter speaks, and having it not only against the man who took their money in that perfectly legal way, but against the whole Christian religion which he repre sents. Hard bargains at arm's length have kept hundreds of men out of the Church of Christ I have spoken of the dishonest minority who have to be remembered in estimating the morality of business life. I have spoken, also, of the difficulty which even the honest man finds in his endeavor to give a right solution to his. daily problems in ethics. Trials of the Honest Employe. I desire now to express my sympathy with the man in the subordinate position who finds his conscience quicker than his employer's I mean the man who is sent out to lie, or the man who is instructed to attach the wrong labels, or to misrepresent values. I have been told by some men who are eminent in business life that in their experience such men do not exist It has been represented to me; and the argument is certainly a persuasive one, that if a man were to instruct his clerks to lie to his cus tomers, or to take money out of their pock ets, he would be simply giving them les sons in dishonesty, and would have no rea son to be disappointed If they applied these lessons to his own disadvantage. Evidently, if a man will lie to a customer, he will just as easily lie to his employer. The business man who told me that busi ness men are missionaries of absolute right eousness had in view the scrupulous honesty which a good business exacts from all who are concerned in it And I agree with him that association with some of tne upright, honorable, immaculately just and Christian business men or tnis city would be in itself an educa tion in ethics, and a training in all that is best in religion, that could not be eaualed in any parish church in Christendom, in the concerns with which these men are asso ciated there is no constraint put on any man's conscience. Bread Sometimes Depends on It, Nevertheless, I know it to be a fact that in reputable industries in this city men are set tasks that cannot be done with the hon est truth for a witness. And I say that I am sorry for the men who are given these tasks to do. Their daily bread depends upon their obedience. "When they think of pro testing they remember their families at home. And very often the matter is only one of these questions of casuistry, these fine distinctions between the transcendental and the practical in eth'cs, which the man at the head has simply happened to decide in a way which does not meet the under man's approval. His conscience is quicker than his chiefs. The employer honestly thinks, perhaps, that this "questionable thing is ntrht. Now, what shall the man do? A good many times he puts aside his scruples, per suades himself that his employer must bear the blame, thinks, perhaps, that he has a foolish and misleading conscience and goes and writes a lie. But, according to the tes timony of the best men in Pittsburg, the great majority of business men want to do that which is unquestionably right They are all agreed that it is better to be honest than to be shrewd. They maintain with en tire unanimity that such a reputation is the best capital that a man can put into his busi ness. The Cure for a' Troubled Conscience. It seems, then, that the best advice that can be given to any clerk, or to any employe whatsoever, when he is told to do what is against his conscience, is frankljr to say so. He is to take it for granted that his employ era desire to do the very most Christian thing they can. To bring his conscientious scruples to their notice is to pay them the highest tribute of respect, and also to com mend himself in the surest way to their es teem. If, however, this does not prove in actual experience to work, the meaning is that the young man has the misfortune to serve dishonest men. And that means that he is engaged in a business that is bound, sooner or Fater,to come to a disgraceful fail ure. The law of certain retribution for dis honestyis just as sure as the law of gravita tion. The sooner he gets out of that falling building the better. But if he has to face starvation! If he has a choice to make between a lie and a loaf of bread, if he has a choice to make be tween pain of body and pain of soul, he must make it No one need expect to find it altogether easy to be a Christian In the past men have often found it necessary to choose between being Christians and being put to a painful death. And they have made their choice. Many a man has died rather than lie. All honor, now and for ever, to the noble army of martyrs. Still that army marches on. And day by day, good men and brave men, of whom the world is not worthy, are found willing to enlist in the great fight of the hosts of God against the armies of the devil, and to en list for the whole war, come what may. Unnesty and Success Go Toeether. And so the answer to the second question of my letter, must a man. in order to be successful, lie or steal? is "No," and "No" a thousand times repeated. The empbatio testimony of business men who have suc ceeded is that genuine honesty and genuine success are married together, and cannot be divorced either in this world or tne next. As for the third question of my letter, touching the duty of the preacher, I have tried to follow the good advice of my corre spondents ia the writing of this sermon; Our Lord, being asked to settle a disnute about a questionable transaction, declined. Into the addition ,nd subtraction of the dollars and cents of that matter, he refused to enter. He contented himself with laying down a deep and eternal principle, which, applied, would settle that and all other like questions. "Take heed," he said, "and be ware of cpvetousness, for a man's life con sisteth not in the abundance of the things which he possessetb." How that meets this whole difficulty, and settles it not by any outside influence, not by law, not by arbitration, but by a chance in the man's own heart I ' The surest way to get all business conducted on Christian principles is to get all the business men converted to Christianity. Be loyal to Christ with all yonr heart. Set His example before you as the unfailing pattern of your daily life. Meet the daily problems of your business as you honestly think He Himself would meet them, if He sat in your place at your office desk. Try to live in Pittsburg as He lived in Caper naum, true as He was, honest as He was, loving God as He did and loving all your brother men with that genuine love "that you would like to havev Christ find in yonr heart, and you will conduct your business yes, and succeed in it to the uttermost on Christian principles. Geoege Hodges, i QIXT DECOBATED GLABi A Bosa Bowl In a Style That Is Just Com ing In and Is Pretty. CTTBITTEIT rOB TITE DISFATCB.J The new glass that one finds in all the shops in such exquisitely artistio shapes has a gilt decoration, more or less elabo rate, according to the size and quality of the piece. This new ware is really a re vival of a decoration that has its periods of being fashionable just as laces do, and silk fabrics and bonnets and dozens of A Bote Bowl other things. And now the gilt pattern is seen everywhere on glass.. It is on wine sets and vases and scent bottles and finger bowls; it is more effective than the etched glass and less expensive than the cut glass. It forms therefore a convenient compro mise between the two. The illustration shows a Tose bowl in the new decoration, and in an unusually graceful pattern. In stead of being round the bowl is oblong, and the upper part, which has a band and pattern in arabesque of gilt. Is fluted. Electricity In Calico Printing. An opportunity, which It Is to be hoped will be seized by American electrical In ventors, Is afforded by the offer of La Soclete Indnstrielle deMulhousaof aprlzo for the application, In any form, of electricity to calico printing. All applications for the awards should bo sent in on, or before Feb ruary iB, 1899. - " " -"Triir ART GEMS OF JAPAN. Sir-Edwin Arnold's Bevels in a Won derland From the Orient INTENDED FOE THE CZAREWITOH. The Wood-Carving Has No Duplicate In the World's History. AIT raFOBTUIf ATE HEGLECT OP WOMEIT WBITTX2T ros THE DISPATCH. HOUGH Sir Edwin Arnold has come out of Japan to let the light of Asia shine through our American darkness, his interest in all things Japauese is keen and lively. A good part of his few spare minutes in New Tork have been spent in a room, looking out upon Fifth avenue, that is crammed and crowded with the choicest specimens of Japanese art ever yet brought away from the land of the chrysan themum. No reasonable human creature could well quarrel with his taste. Beyond question it is a mightily fascinating spot fairyland dashed with the Arabian Nights and smelling to heaven of incense, of sandal wood and attar of roses. Things happen in this world in extremely odd sequence. America would never have seen these marvels had not a Japanese fanatic attacked the Czarewitch and turned him back before reaching Yokohama, where the flower and glory of Japanese, art, both ancient and modern, had been brought to gether to win his royal approval. If he had been left to keep the even tenor of his way there would certainly have been new splen dors in the palace of the White Czar. Nothing More Beautiful From Japan. For here are bronzes, brocades, temple tapestries, carven ivories, gold and silver lacquer, Cloisonne, Satsuma, miraculous crystals, more miraculous inlaying and en amels. "When Sir Edwin said warmly, "Nothing more beautiful ever came out of Japan," none with eyes to see could rea sonably gainsay him. Asked to say what in his opinion was the distinguishing characteristic of Japanese art. Sir Edwin replied, glancing all about him: "Only a land peopled by artists conld have sent out this. There everybody, high or low, has some trace ' of that instinctive comprehension1 of perfect work which makes its possessor feel at first sight su preme artistio excellence of any sort As far as the East is from the "West, so far are Japanese canons and schools of art from those which we follow. But nothing is ugly or commonplace in the humblest Japanese home. From rice tub to" hairpin all is beautiful and becoming. What else can you expect of a people whose national passion is finish in manipulation and nat ural besuty? Do you know that the Gov ernment maintains seats along the highways so placed as to command any especially fine prospect, and that in time of the 'cherry viewing' the great spring holiday, tho by roads are studded with official notices of where you may see the loveliest prospects or finest clumps of plum or cherry blos soms? In the same spirit, the peasant whose wife sets a flowering plant upon the Tansu nourishes his eye with its beauty even more than he would nourish his body with fish and rice. ' Patient Hands and Trained Eyes. "This artistio genius runs through all their craft Their commonest domestic joinery ha3 the same Jewelers' work com pleteness as this gold . lacquer cabinet modelled after the shrine of Iyemitsu, one of the most famous in Japan. To their patient hand, their trained eye, substance matters nothing. All the thousand parts of it were shaped first from wood, fitted one to another as nature fits petal to flower, every joint made smooth and fast, covered then with fine clay, coat on coat, each one rubbed down as smooth as paper, then lacquered many times with rubbings between, dusted thick with gold, lacquered ten times more with the finest transparent gum and again rubbed down to a surface of glass. Besides all that, see the ivory carvings, the different lacquers, dark and light, that give depth and dignity to frieze and base. A village might have been builded with less time and effort If it was a Japanese village, though, you would see all through it the same un utilltarian love of beauty for beauty's own sake, the same perfect finish to all and every part. "To me the most wonderful of all things about their art is its dual quality. In much of their work the microscope can find no flaw. Instead it brings to sight invisible beauties. Yet if they so will the impress ionist school is as nothing beside them. One sweep of the brush, one turn of the dex trous wrist and you see 20 leagues of blue distance or a bird's wing in the act of beating. Where the National Snpremacy I-Ie. "Therein, more particularly, lies the triumph of the Japanese designer. He reigns supreme and unapproachable in a realm of flowers, leaves, birds and general ized creatures, upon which his fancy may work its will. What surprises me is his manner of dealing with the human figure, especially the female one. He lacks neither power nor observation. Anybody must concede thus much after one look at the wrestlers over there in the corner. There is life; strength, hate in every line. In stinctively yon catch your breath at sight of them, listening for their grasps as they tng and strain, yet they are mere hollow figures carved out of wood and colored to the life. Indeed, carving, especially wood carving, seems to me the field of Japanese supremacy. Certainly nothing known to me in Europe from Grinling Gibbons' mas terpieces to the best things in our day comes anywhere near the ashievements of superior Japanese workmen. "Yet no Japanese artist, be he painter or carver, can make a female figure even half expressive of the grace and beauty that daily pass before him. Maybe it is because Japanese beauty is delicate and little varied, rather than striking. More proba bly, though, it is,- I think, because of woman's status, that of a traditional infe rior, albeit she is, if fairly judged, perhaps naturally the most modest, the most gentle, the best mannered and most self-respecting woman in the whole world. While nobody is ever brutal to her, she is systematically set aside, as a thing of no moment Can't Produce a Woman's Pace. "Possibly that is why, graceful and fairy like as she is in her swathings of soft crape, she has never inspired a Japanese artist to faithfully represent her charms. This group of ivory carvings sufficiently demonstrates the failure. You find in them poise and pose, a faithful, rendering of the least fold, the texture even, of kimono and obi, which, worn as a Japanese girl con wear them, are the most artistic garments in the world, but above them doll faces without character or expression. Contrast with their vacuous lines the life and spirit of the dog she holds in leash, the exquisite efflorescence of the flower ball she is bearing to the temple, and sav if the carver was not strangely in sensible to his glorious opportunities. "Contrast, too, these rats gnawing and rollicking through a vard-long radish. Each is as individual in character, position and action as though he had sat for his portrait. Wherever you find him It is the some. The emblem of plenty, he is the favorite motif alike for the carver and the worker in metal. So, too, is the group of three baboons to the Japanese mind the, concrete expression of that silence which is golden.; '.si- Whatever the figure, whether human or bird or beast, the craftsman goes over it with incredible patience, with instructive skill, with the nicest observation of nature, and by use of file and graver reproduces ex actly the texture of skin or hair or feather to be indicated. The Skill of the Carvers. "To see the students of the art school at Sractice carving is among the world's won ers. Sitting flat on earth with a bit of fir wood before them, their hard palm for mal- iei, using gouge and graver, tney Dring oui delicious pictures in low reliet Now it is feathery sprays of young bamboo, now flights of wild fowl over lakes and rice fields; now cherry or plum gardens, all wreathed in bloom; or Fuji San is seen afloat in a sea of cloud. The wood seems to grow plastio at their touch, yet all this if merely college exercise, repeated most days of the year. , "It is such training continued through centuries that makes possible most things nere on view. That tall bronze, for example, with its wealth of scaly, many spined dragons, or the golden bronze censerwith silver dove a-perch on the lidt Five and 30 years back it swung dally on the limb of a big, crooked pine that overhung the Sho gun's temple. The Shogun is a memory now. So, too, are many of the Baimios, who used to feast from sets such as this of six and thirty gold lacquered dishes. To the same old Daimios belonged those big, round incense pots, whence came day and nightly clouds ot sweet smoke to lap "their pious souls in Elysium. In those days, too, those precious temple tapestries hung high on the walls. The Former Japanese Gentleman. "Every Japanese gentleman rode a saddle very near as weighty as himself, and carried pipe, pouch; inkhorn and medicine case Bwung to his girdle by cord or chain with an ivory netsuke togglewise at its other end. He carried also a sword, a merciless keen blade, two handled, with no guard, and a Bcabbard of bronze or ivory, upon which a poem or legend was pictorially carved. His harikari knife was less than half the sword leneth. but as hichly orna mented and even more carefully guarded. ' T?n wn. ?f rrl !. lost Aoni-f nf r.ntl.TnnTl if fate or the Mikado frowned?" "All this the author of the "Japonica" doubtless knew betterthanany other Anglo Saxon. That he said nothing of it was due perhaps to his wrapt and wondering look at a tall jar in cloisonne work, where pink plum blossoms straggled in heavenly fash ion over a ground often derest gray. Step ping back a pace and shading his eyes with one hand he said slowly: " 'Never, I think, did human hands create such quiet but satisfying beauty. It is the finesse of toil which produces these broadly harmonious results. What a feast of color from surfaces polished like a lily leaf I OH things are not best in cloisonne. Sixty years ago its tints were dull and leaden. Now with the gold stone ground, jewels are not more splendid, the colors of the dewy dawn no more tenderly translucent' Marvels In Copper Beating. "Each of these magnificent pieces is a creation. To realize it fully you must see the artist at work. First the sheet copper is beaten to shape, next he traces in the pat tern, leaf flower, bird or landscape, then it goes to the cunning artificer, who spends weeks, may be months or years, in fixing over each line a thread of fine gold wire, bent exactly to its curve. Enamelling comes next, figure and ground are filled, fired and rubbed down five times before it reaches the polisher, from whom it passes on to the show room. "Cjoisonne, like most Japanese work. Is a thing of infinite pains and patience, though certainly 'the end crowns the work. Namikawa, of Tokio, is a name that should live. Of course to feel its value entirely one must know his Japan more than super ficially. It is much the same with pottery. Old Satsuma, rare and precious to any col lection, is trebly so to him who has slept, eaten, dreamed in the shadow of Fuji San. Much of the later Satsuma is superlatively excellent, though lacking somewhat of the sharp, clear outline and angles of the best old ware. In Awata and other marks the modern is preferable to all but the very choicest old, though a good piece of any age will not disgrace a cabinet Embroidery Is a High Art "Embroidery in Japan is not an accom-. plishment It rises to the ranic ot serious art, which, like all the rest, is in the hands of men. Sometimes a dozen work for vears upon a single screen. I saw one in Yoko hama in which there was used above JG,000 worth of silk, gold, silver and pearls. With us, very costly things are sometimes the merest rubbish, artistically considered. It is not the case with this needle painting, which had rise perhaps in religion and has come to be somewhat of a religion in itself." Then the "Light of Asia" wandered back for a last contemplation of his beloved wrestlers, and did homage to the seven gods of Japan in old crackle, and to the 16 forms of Buddha spread over a delicious ivory screen. Beyond it the eye lost itself in the rich hues shed by intricate traceries of gorgeous brocades, of more gorgeous kakemonos and caught the pellucid gleam of carven crystal among the bronze and gold lacquer. A little way off a bit of enamel showed white and gray doves, life size, against the sky of spring. Another had a gold fish and sea wrack afloat in a clear blue sea. Els Opinion of Japanese Art. Tall jars, taller bronzes, filled all the floor space left vacant by the glass cases fall of carvings, bits of old bine and older precious lacquers. There was a small ar mory of old inlaid matchlocks, pistols long as your arm, queer clocks, prayer mills, prayer gongs, bits of clouded Chinese porce lain ana real oiq ivory craccie, wiin Doxes of every sort ever shaped since Pandora was sent down from Olympus to plague hapless man. Saturated with Oriental magnificence, the interviewer tiptoed np to the Light to ask, "Sir Edwin, which do you feel most deeply, the art of Greece or that of Japan?" With a bow the Light answered, "There is one glory of the sun and another glory of the moon." Notwithstanding, the interviewer is still in the dark. S. L. T. TRIMMINGS WITHOUT HATS. A NewBrnnch of the Milliners' Trade That Women Should Welcome. rWBITTElf VOB THE DISPATCH. 1 Women have a great many ways of "poss ing" the impossible, but one of the things that is de nied to most of them is to make a home - trim med hat that will look like the work of a milliner. They under stand just Zocpa or a Sat. ho w it ough t to look, but .when they come to work ont their understanding through their fingers the fingers show their lack of education and fail to give those deft airy touches that lend the proper air of distinction to a piece of headgear. A shrewd milliner in New York has put forward the first bit of renl helpfulness to women who must do their own hat trim ming, but who are, nevertheless, not desirous of having that fact proclaimed to the world. In his showcases he has for sale great knots of ribbons and velvets of all hues made up with the very newest twirl and twist, se curely stitched and ready to be fastened on the hat or bonnet Some of them are de signed -for the only decoration, and some need feathers or other ornaments to com plete them. The illustration gives one of the simplest It is a large bow of old rose ribbon designedto form the only decoration of a child's hat Any enterprising woman shonld be able to work up enough of a demand in her own town, and of her own milliner, for this co operative industry, to compel the milliner to make it quite as much a part of her busi g$Rf' sometimes ii to sell hats withonttrimmings.ironger than that. What an inspiration It ness io bcii trimming wihiuu uais as it sWr(ymm WBITTE2T roa 0 'BY MARK TWAIN, Author of "Innocents Abroad," "Tom Sawyer," "Huckleberry Finn,1 Etc., Etc BTNOP3I3 OP PREVIOUS CHAPTEBS. The story opens with a scene between Lord Berkeley, Earl of Eossm ore, and hla son Viscount Berkeley, in Chalmondeley Castle, England. The young man has studied the claims to the estate made by Simon Leathers, of America, and become convinced that he ia the rightful heir and his father and himseir usurpers. He announces his intention to change places with Leathers, whereupon the old lord pronounces him stark mad. A letter arrives from Colonel Mulberry Sellers, of Washington, announcing that, by the death of Simon Leathers and hi brother at a log-rolling in Cherokee Strip, he has become the Eart or Hossmore and rightful heir to Chalmondeley Castle and tho vast estate. Colonel Seller and his contented old wife livo in an old frame house before which hangs a sign announc ing that ho is an attorney at law, claim agent, hypnotist, mind cure specialist, etc., eta. HU old friend, Washington Hawkins, arrives. He has been elected delegate to Congress from Cheroke Strip. Tho Colonel has invented a puzzle which he caUs PIar-In-CIo er. Persuaded by Hawkins ho applies for a patent and accidentally runs across a Tankeo who agrees to give him 5 cents royalty on each ono sold. Then the news comes that Simon Leathers is dead and the Colonel lays his plans. First he establishes tho usages of nobility in his home, which he caUs Bossmoro Towers. CHAPTER V. O answer to that telegram; no arriving daughter. Yet nobody showed any uneasiness nor seemed surprised; that is, nobody but Washington. After three days of waiting, he asked Lady Boss more whet she sup posed the trouble was. She answered, tran quilly: "Oh, it's some no tion of hers, yon never can telL She's a Sellers all through at lea3t ia some of her ways; and a Sellers can't tell you before hand what he's going to do, because he doesn't know himself till he's done it She's all right; no occasion to worry about her. When she's ready she'll come or she'll write, and you can't tell which till it hap pens." It turned ont to be a letter. It was handed in at that moment, and was received by the mother without trembling hands or feverish eagerness, or any other of the man ifestations common in the case of long delayed answers to imperative telegrams. She polished her glasses with tranquility and thoroughness, pleasantly gossiping along awhile, then opened tho letter and began to read aloud: KianrwoRTn KEEr. Red Oxxnm.Tr Hall, Kowina, Ivakiioe COLLEGE, Tnursday, J Dear Precious Mamma Eossitobe Oh, the Joyof itl you can't think. They bad alwaj s turned up their noses at our pretentions, you know; and I had fought back as woll as I could by turning up at theirs. They al ways said it might be something great and fine to be rightful shadow of an earldom, but to merely be shadow of a shadow, and -wo or three times removed at that pooh- ooht And I always retorted that not to ba i 4S VWfftsfsBr m -J (fi fast n ui. tzj ir i-i rr m r s - r. I W-V -VTit tMllAt f5 "-U VV fatties, i am aorsa-io shake able to show four generations of Arneriean-Colonlal-Dutch-Pedler-and-Salt-Cod-JlcAllis-ter nobility might be endurable, but to hate to confess such an origin pfaw-fewl Well, the telegram. It was Just a cyclone! The messenger came right into the gTeat Itob Koy Hall of Andience, as excited as he could be, singing out; "Dispatch for Lady Gwen dolen Sellers!" and you ongbt to have seen that simpering chattering assemblage of pinchbeck aristocrats turned to stone! I was off in the corner, of course, by myself it's where Cinderella belongs. I took the telegram and read it, and tried to faint and I could have done it if I had had any prepar ation, but it was all so sudden, you know but no matter. I did the next best thing: I rmt mv handerchief to my eves and fled I ;nhb!ntomvroom.dronninirthe telegram ,' as I started. I released one corner of ray eye a moment jnscenoagn to Bee ine nera swarm for the telegram ana then continued by broken-hearted flight, Just as happy as a bird. Then the visit of condolence began, and I bad to accept the loan of Mis3Augusta-Tem-ploton-Asbmoro Hamilton's quarters be cause the press was so great and there isn't room for throe and a cat In mine. And I've been holding a lodge of sorrow ever since, and defending myself against people's at tempts to claim kin. And do yon know, the very first to fetch her tears and sympathy to my market was that foolish Sklmperton girl who has always snubbed me so shamefully atid claimed lordship and precedence of the whole college because some ancestor of hers, some time or other, was a McAllister. Why it was like the bottom bird in the menagerie pnttinc on airs because it's head ancestor was a pterodactyl. But the ger reatest triumph of all was guess. But you'll never. This is It That little fool and two others have always been fusiing and fretting over which was enti tled to precedence by rank, you know. They've nearly starved themselves at It; for each claimed the right to take prece dence of all the college in leaving the table, and so neither of tbem over fin ished her dinner, but broko off in the middle and tried to get out ahead of tho others. Well, aftor my first day's grief and seclusion I was fixing up a mourning dress, yon see I appeared at the public table again, and then what do you tblnkT Those three fluffy goslings sat there con tentedly and squared up tne long famine lapped and lapped, munched and munched, ate and ate, till the gravy appeared in their eyes humble, waiting for the Lady Gwendolen to take precedence and move out flrst, you eeei Ob, yes, I've been having a darling good time. And, do you know, not one of the.e collegians has had the cruelty to ask me how I came by my new name. With some, this is dne to charity, but with others it isn't. They refrain, not from native kindness, but from educated discretion. I educated them. Well, ai soon a I shall have settled up what's left of the old scores and snuffed up a few more of those pleasantly Intoxicating clouds of incense, I shall pack and depart homeward. Tell nana I am as fond of him as I am of my new name. I couldn't put it THE DISPATCH was! But Inspirations come easy to him. These from your loving daughter. GlVJ!lX)LE2r. Hawkins reached for the letter and glanced over it "Good hand," he said, and full of confi dence and animation, and goes racing right along. She's bright that's plain." "Oh, they're all bright the Sellerses. Anyway, they would be if there were any. Even those poor Latherses would have been bright if they had been Sellerses; I mean full blood. Of course they had a Sellers strain in them a big strain of it, too, buV being a Bland dollar don't moke it a dollar, just the same." The seventh day after the date of the tele gram Washington came dreaming down to breakfast, aud was set wide awake by an electrical spasm of pleasure. Here was the most bcautilul young creature he'had ever seen in his life. It was Sally Sellers, Lady Gwendolen; she had come in the night. ' And it seemed to him that her clothes wers the prettiest and the daintiest be had ever looked upon, and lhe most exquisitely con trived and fashioned and combinedas to decorative trimmings and fixings, and melting harmonies of color. It was only s morning dress, and inexpensive, but he con fessed to himself, in the English common to Cherokee Strip, that it was a "corker." And now, as he perceived, the reason whv the Sellers household poverties and sterili ties had been made to blossom like the rose, and charm the eye and satisfy the spirit, stood explained; here was the magician; here, in the midst of her works, aud famish ing in her own person the proper accent and climaxing finish of the whole. "My daughter, Major Hawkins coma home to mourn; flown home at the call of affliction to help the authors of her being to bear the burden of bereavement She was very fond of the late Earl idolized him, sir, idolized him " "Why, father, I've never seen him." "True she's right, I was thinking of an other er of her mother " "I idolized that smoked haddock; that 'il 1"W WvflwjUV bauds wixu aiAJOB hawkihs. sentimental, spiritless " '1 was thinking of mvselfl Poor noble fellow, we were inseparable com " "Hear the manl Mulberry Sel Mnl Bossmorel Hang the troublesome name, I can never if I've heard you say once, I've heard you say a thousand times that if that poor sheep " "I was thinking of of Idon'tknow who I was thinking of, and it doesn't make any difference anyway; somebody idolized him, I recollect it as if it were yesterday; and" "Father. I am going to shake hands with Major Hawkins, and let the introduction work alone and catch np at its leisure. X ub .n : T.ri m"w u.u ":'Z ""."'.","..-'?," Hawkins, although I was a little child when I saw you last, and I am yery, very glad in deed to see you again and have you in our house as one of us;" and beaming in his face she finished her cordial shake with the hope that he had not forgotten her. He was prodigiously pleased by her out spoken hearticesss and wanted to repay her by assuring her that he remembered her, and not only that, but better even than ha remembered his own children, but the facts would not quite warrant this; stjll, ha stumbled through a tangled sentence which answered just as well, since the purport of it was an awkward and unintentional con fession that her extraordinary beauty had so stupefied him that he hadn't got back to his bearings yet and therefore couldn't ba certain as to whether he remembered her at oil or not The speech made him her friend; it couldn't well help it In truth, the beauty of this fair creature wa3 of a rare type, and may well excuse a moment of our time spent in its considera tion. It did not consist in the fact that she had eyes, nose, mouth, chin, hair, ears; it consisted in their arrangement. In trna beauty, more depends upon right location and judicious distribution of features than upon multiplicity of them. So also as re gards color. The very combination of col ors which in a volcanic irrnption would add beauty to a landscape might detach it from a girL Such was Gwendolen Sellers. The family circle being completed by Gwendolen's arrival, it was decreed that the official mourning shonld now begin; that'it should begin at 6 o'clock everjr even- ing (the dinner hour), and end with the ' dinner. "ItVagrand old line, Major, a sublime old line, and deserves to be mourned, for, almost royally, almost imperially, I may say. Er Lady Gwendolen but she's gone; never mind; I wanted my peerage; I'll fetch it myself, presently, and show yon a thing t or two that will give yon a realizing idea of ' what our house 'is. I've been .glancing 1 v. c ? - --. .jjr i i i 3 A H J I i t