irav2 fpT: s THE pfcTSBURG 'DIATCH, DNDAY. I'EBRUART 7!' 1892. '15 A?"l RKSlZIiPEI ORE DAY II JAPAN Lafcadio Hearn Finds It a Little World of Smiling, - ; Gracious Elves. EVERYTHING IS AETISTIC. Different From the Machine-Hade Civilization of the West THE EESTFDL BLUE EVERYWHERE. Delicate Art Perceptions Manifested in Street Lettering'. TIIE PLEASURES OF THE JlXEIKlSHA fWEITTSN- rOK TIIE DISrATCH. HE ecstasy cf the first sunny day in this Orien t s o long dreamed of, eq much read of, yet all un known! the delicious surprise of the first journey through Jap anese streets; unable to make one's Kuru-ma-runner compre hend anything but gestures, frantic ges tures to roll on, any where, everywhere, since all is novel and unspeakable pleasur able; desiring only to see and hear and ferl as much of this beauti ful new world as possible! Surely there is some charm in the very air, cool with the coolness -of Japanese spring, iu the month of cherry blossoms a charm due perhaps to softest lucidity rather than to any positive color an atmospheric limpidity indescribable, with only a sug gestion of bine in it, through which the most distant objects appear focused with amazing sharpness. The sun is pleasantly warm, as in Mexico; the Kuruma (or jinrikiiha) is the most cozy vehicle imagin able, and the street vistas as seen above the dancing, white mushroom-shaped hat of your sandaled runner have a fantastic allurement of which you are sure you can never weary. Itewlldrringly, Slnpifjingly Novel. It is at first a deliciously odd confusion onlv, as you look down one of them, through an interminable flutter of flags and swaying ot dark-blue drapery, all made l.rautiful and mysterious with Japanese or Chinese letterinc, For there are no im mediate diccrnablc laws of construction or decoration; each building seems to have a fantastic prettines of its own nothing is exactly like anything else, and nil is be wiliienngly, stupityir.gly novel. But grad ually, after some hours 'passed in the quarter, the eye begins to recognize in a vague war omc general plan in the con struction of these low, light, qucerly-gablcd s.oedcn hot-"!''s. mostly unnaintcd with their firt stone all open to the street, and thin ktrips ot rooting bleping above each tliop trout, like an awning, back to the pper-scrcened balconies of narrower min iature second stories. You begin to understand the common plan or the delightful tiny shops, with matted floor., raised Itighabotc the street leel nail the general perpendicular arrangement of sign lettering, undulating on silk or colored cotton, or gleaming motionless on gilded anil lacquered sign boards. And you will also observe that blue, the sar-e rich Lafcadio Hearn. dark blue which dominates in popular co-tunie, rules also in the color of shop draperies, though there is a thin sprinkling of black and white and brighter' blue and wine color also (no greens or yellows). You mua note that the frocks and robes of the passing people not only harmonize niarvel ously with the draperies but are likewise, to tome extent, lettered with the same letter ing. English Letters Tor Jap "Writing. o arabesques ever invented could pro duce so exquisite an effect; these ideographs so moaified for decoratne purposes, have a grace and speaking symmetry of lines, which no design without a positive in can ine could ever give. As they appear on the back of a workman's frock pure white on dark blue, and large enough to be read at a. very considerable distance (indicating some guild or company of which the wearer is a member or employe), they make the coarse material seem splendid as the attire of a prince. And, finally, there will come to you, sud denly as a revelation, the conviction that most of the amazing picturcsqueness of these Japanese streets is simply due to the profusion of Japanese characters in white, black, blue, crimson or gold, decorating everything even surfaces of door posts and lintels and paper screens. Then, perhaps, for one moment you will imagine the effect cf English lettering substituted for these magical characters; and the idea will give to all your sesthetic sense, a strangely brutal shock, and you will become, at once and forever, as I have, become, a sworn enemy of the Eomaji-Kai that Japanese society founded for the suprcmelr ugly purpose o'f introducing the use of English lettters in writing Japanese. An ideograph does not make upon the Japanese brain any impression similar to that created in the Occidental brain by a letter or combination of letters dull, in animated symbols of vocal sounds. To the Japanese brain an ideograph is a vivid pict ure; it lives; it speaks; it gesticulates. And the whole space of a Japanese street is full ot such living characters figures that cry out to the eyes words that smile or grim ace like physiognomies. Beauty of the Japanese Letters. "What such lettering is, compared with our own lifeless types, can be understood only by those who have lived in the further East. Tor even the printed characters of Japanese or Chinese imported texts give no ingestion of the possible beauty of the same characters as modified for decorative inscriptions, for sculptural use, or for the commonest advertising purposes. Ko rigid convention fetters the fancyof the caii crapher or designer; each strives to make his characters more beautiful than any others and generations upon generations of artists have been toiling from time imme morial with like emulation so that through centuries and centuries of tireless effort and wondrous patience of study, the primitive r "SaiR few?; 6MXf X7 JWWswaf.KllHW'jiiu.iltj -y. uMin.""'"" " ....... -r , n -J ' " w- hieroglyph or Ideograph has been evolved into a thing of beauty indescribable. It consists only of a certain number of brush strokes; but in each stroke there is an, undiscoverablc secret art of grace, propor tion, imperceptible curve, which actually makes it se'em alive, and bears witness that even during the lightning moment ot its creation, the artist telt with his brush for the ideal shape of the stroke equally along its entire length, from head to taiL But the art of the stroke is but a rudimentary skill the art of their combination is that which produces the enchantment oiten so as to astonish the Japanese themselves. It is sot surprising, indeed, considering the strongly personal, animate, esoteric aspect of Japanese lettering, that there should be divers wonderful legends of caligraphy relating how words written by holy experts became incarnate, and descended from their tablets to hold converse with mankind. Charms or a. Jinrikisha Man. I have a jinrikisha man wearing a white hat, which looks like the top of an enor mous mushroom; a blue, wide-sleeved, loose, short jacket; blue drawers, close-fitting as theatrical "tights," which descend to his ankles, and light straw sandals bound upon his bare feet with cords of palm-fibre. I think he typifies all the docility, swiftness, tirelessness, patience, smiles, bobbings and insidious coaxing powers of his race: His name is "Cha." Cha has already mani fested his power to make me give him more than the law allows. Cha appeals with un failing success to the emotional nature of man. Cha has already discovered by some fine intuition that I do not bcioug to the foreign commercial class, who hold this higher quality in scorn, and never yield to appeals based on the superstitious'existence of it. AND CHA KUNS AT Cha has already succeeded in winning my affections. "Why? The first sensation of having a human fieing for a horse trotting between shafts like a horse, unwearingly bobbing up and downbefere you for hours is alone enough to fill the European heart with compassion. And when the human being, thus trotting between shafts with all his hopes, memories, sentiments, .suSer incs, happens to possess the kindliest im aginable face; the gentlest smile,, and the ability to return the smallest favor by a look of infinite gratitude, this compassion becomes transngured, becomes sympainy. In my own case the feeling is that pity which" is akin to love Drovoking unreason able impulses to self-sacrifice for Cha's sake. I think the perspiration must have something to do with it the perspiration of Cha. He is always mopping his face with a little sky-blue towel, having fig ures of flying sparrows upon it, which towel he carries wrapped above his wrist as he runs. Like a "World or Elves. Perhaps the supremely delightful im pression of the first day is that of the gen tleness of popular scrutiny. Everybody looks at you curiously; but there is nothing disagreeable or hostile in the gaze; most often it is accompanied by a smile or half smile; and the ultimate effect ot all thee kindly, curious looks and pleasant smiles is to make one think ot Fairyland. Note well this observation is almost hackneyed; many and many another writer describing, the sensations of the first day in Japan has spoken of the land as Fairyland, and of the people a fairy folk. But there is a psycho logical reason'for this singular unanimity in this choice of terras to describe the'im pression in this use of words signifying conditions and creatures supernatural and ideal. To find oneself suddenly in a world .where everything is upon a smaller and daintier plan than with us a world of lesser and kindlier beings, all smiling at you and seeming to wish you well a world where movement is slow, soft, gentle a world where sky, land, life, and all things are totally diflerent from aught elsewhere beheld must indeed realize, to any im agination nourished with English folklore, the old happy dream of a world of elves. "Wherever" else I have seen a period of change from a romantic past to a practical present as in Louisiana, as in the "West Indies I have been the decay of things beautiful and the ugliness of things new. "What of these I may yet see in Japan I know not; but here in thee streets the old and the new mingle so marvelously well that the one seems only to set off the other. An electric bell in some tea bouse, with a Japanese inscription beside the ivory but ton; a shop containing sewing machines next to the shop of a merchant of Buddhist images; the establishment of a photographer IlAiiS A PAINTER, FROM THE OBIGINAI. DEAWTNG BY HOKUSAI. beside the establishment of a manufacturer of sandals these display no discord of posi tion. Everything Japanese Is Tosty. Nothing, however odd, is repulsive or ugly, nothing. All that is Japanese is del icate, tasty even a pair of common wooden chopsticks in a band with a delightful lit tle drawing upon it; even a package of toothpicks of oherry wood, bound with a Saper wrapper elegantly lettered in three iffcrent colors; even the little sky-blue towel, with designs of flying sparrows upon it, which the jinrikisha man uses to mop his face. The bank bills, the commonest copper coins, are things of beauty. Even the piece of plaited colored string used by the shopkeeper in tying up your last pur chase" is a pretty curiosity. Curiosities and dainty objects bewilder you by their very multitnde; on either side of yon, wherever you turn your eyes, are countless wonder ful things as yet incomprehensible. But it is perilous to look at them. Every time yon dare to look something obliges you, to buy it unless, as. may often happen, the smiling vendor invites your inspection of so many varieties of one article, each specially and all unspeakably desirable, that you cannot choose, and depart out of mere terror at your own impulses. The shopkeeper never asks you to buy; but his wares are enchanted,.and if you once begin buying you are lost. Cheapness means nothing but a temptation to commit bank- ruptcy. Ton want the shop and the shop keeper, and streets of shops with their draperies and their habitants the whole city and the bay and the mountains begird ing it and Fusiyama's white witchery overhanging it in "the speckless sky all Japan, in very truth, with its magical trees and luminous atmosphere with all its cities and towns and temples, and 35,000,000 of the most lovable people in the universe. Art In the Poorest Homes. I once heard some one say on being told of a great fire in Japan: "Oh, those people can afford conflagrations; their homes are so cheaply built!" It is true that the pretty frail houses can be cheaply and quickly re placed; but that which was within them to make them beautiful cannot. Every object in the poorest Japanese dwelling ig an ob ject of art, even to the commonest article of wood or baked clay; and every great fire is an art tragedy. For this is the land of infinite hand-made variety; machinery has not yet been able to introduce sameness and utilitarian ugliness in cheap production (except in response to foreign demand for bl taste to suit vulgar markets), and each object made by the artist or artisan differs still from all others, even ot his own mak ine. And each time something beautiful perishes by fire, it is a something represent ing' an individual mood; it is an ideograph of personality. Happily tne art impulse itself, In this country of conflagrations, has a ghostly vi tality which survives each generation of art ists, and defies the flame that changes their labor to ashes or melts it to shapeiessness. The idea whose symbol has perished will surely reappear again in other creations perhaps after the passing of a century modified, indeed, yet recognizably of kiu to the thought of the past. And every art- THE TOP OF HIS S1T.EP. ist is a ghostly worker. Not by years of groping and pain and sacrifice does he find his highest expression, the sacrificial past is within him; his art is an inherit ance, given with his soul; his fingers are guided by the dead in the delineation of a flying bird, of the vapors of mountains,- of the colors of the morning and evening, of the shape of branches and the spring-burst of flowers; generations of skilled workmen have given him their fancy, their cun ning, and revive in the wonder of his draw ing. "What was conscious effort in the be ginning became unconscious in later centu ries becomes almost automatic in the liv ing man; and thus alone the f'anltless in stinct of his art is comprehensible. And thus one water-color print by Hokusai or Hieroshige, sold for a cent, has more art in it than many a Western painting stored in historic galleries and valued at the price of a province. Feet Fashioned by Natnre. And how beautiful are the feet of the people? "Whether brown nude statuesque feet of laborers in straw sandals, or' blue feet 0 swift runners in digitated stockings, or feet of children so plnkly pretty that thev somehow suggest the' transformation of flowers into flesh, or feet of girls in snowy tnbi, having the cleft grace of the feet of beings mythological faunesses, satyresses. Never has the Japanese foot been subjected to that infamous style of foot-gear which has distorted and made hideous the feet of Occidentals; it has re mained natural, supple, expensive, its every pose is comely, it has the symmetry of a Japanese character. Of every pair of Japanese wooden clogs, one makes in walking a slightly different sound from the other, as kring to krang, so that the echo of the walker's steps has an alternate rhythm of tones. On a pavement the Eound obtains immense sonority; and a crowd will often intentionallyfall into step, with the drollest conceivable result of drawling wooden noise. Tcra e yukt! I have been obliged to return to the European hotel, not because ot the noon meal, as I really begrudge my self the time necessary to eat "it, but be cause I canuot make Cha understand that I want to visit a Buddhist temple. Now Cha understands; my landlord has uttered the magical words, Tcra e yvke! A Peak ol White in n Sen or Bine. I turn a moment to look back through the glorious light. Sea and sky mingle in the same beautiful pale clear blue. Below me the vast billowimr of bluish roofs reaches to the verge ot the deep green hills surround ing the city on two sides. And in the back ground, beyond the wooden green hills, rise high serrated cool-blue mountains; and enormously lofty above the range oi them towers an apparition indescribably lovely, one solitary snowy cone, so filmlly exquis- itef so spiritually white, that but for its im memoriallyfamiliar'outlineonewouldsurely deem it a shape of cloud. Invisible its base remains, being the same delicious tint as the sky; only above the eternal snow-line Its dreamy cone appears, seeming to hang, the ghost of a peak, between the luminous land and the luminous heaven the sacred and peerless mountain, Fuji-yama, And suddculv a singular sensation comes upon me as i stand before the weirdly sculptured portals a sensation of dream and doubt I know that less than a season ago the" faith of the Buddha existed for me in records only, in texts translated out of old dead tongues, as a something astronomi cally remote from my own existence. And now, with the sudden consciousness of hav ing thus swiftly traversed, as if by super natural power, the space of 20 centuries, there comes to me in a new, strange way the knowledge of my own ghostliness, and a thrill, exquisite, indescribable, as though some viewless, infinite, tender Presence were wrapping me about the Soul ot the East Lafcadio Hearn. Getting Even With Each Other. "You have so much address I can hardly be expected to compete with you," said the letter to the envelope. "Now, don't get excited," replied the, envelope,' "becauso you know you can't con tain yourself." CATCHING SUNBEAMS. The Science of Photography on the Verge of Great Development." SOON TO HAVE COLOR PICTURES. Conquests of the fky and Its Alliance With the Printing Press. THE UTILITY OP FUGITIVE DIES WJIITTTN POH TOE DISPATCH. "When an ordinary man finds a defect in the quality of a thine he works with he bud ply casts it aside and thinks no more about it. To an inventive mind the defect may suggest a new use for which the thing, faulty in its first application, may be ex actly fit; and the new use may be much more important than the old one. "When dyes from coal tar, oils, and Peruvian bark were first made they had a provoking way of fading out of their fabrics in a few days, or even in a few hours. Usually, too, the more brilliant the tints the more fugitive they were. That defect has, iu large meas ure, been overcome, but before it yielded to the resources of the laboratory a remarkable series of experiments took place. It was in 1873 that Dr. H. "W. Ypgel, of Berlin, observed that certain photographic plates of his bad much more than ordinary sensitiveness to rays of green light. Search ing for the reason' he noticed that the plates were of somewhat reddish color. Could it be possible that the mere accident ot color had conferred a new quality of sensitive ness upon the films? He determined to pnt the question to the test of experiment forthwith, aud at once procured some chlno Hne andpyrodine dyes red, violet and blue beautiful in tint, but fleeting and worth ies?. As he looked on these fiue colors his reflections did not take the direction of seek ing some method ot making them enduring. Bad In One Way Good In Another. Thought he, this evanscence is certainly very bad when we wish to give color to a cloth, but, after all, it only means extreme sensitiveness to light, and that may be a very valuable peculiarity. Indeed, it is just such a property which gives the com pounds of silver 'their importance in photo graphy. And a noteworthy point about these dyes is that they are impressible by the red and yellow rays which scarcely affect the silver salts at all. Perhaps ff they were applied to a photographic plate they would make it sensitive in a new and most useful way. Acting on tljose ideas, Dr. Vogel began a course ot experiments which issued in his giving photography a fidelity to nature which it had never before enjoyed. To his delight he found that many fugitive dves entered into chemical combinations with the salts of silver, conferring npon his films their own peculiar susceptibility to certain ravs of light Anybody who has ever de veloped an ordinary photographic negative knows that the only light safe to employ for the purpose is what little sifts its way through panes of red or canary glass, be cause red or yellow rays have no influence whatever on the plate's silver coating. Hence arises a serious want of truth in the picture; a red rose or a red gown comes ont as it black, and so does a yellow aster or a mass of yellow foliage. , Photos of Many Colored Flowers. "With the orthochromatic plates that we owe to Dr. "Vocel and the chemists who have followed his lead, that falsity in color values ceases. It is accomplished by their bringing visual intensity and photographic intensity to harmony. A plate tinned with cyanin, a beautiful blue substance, has sur passing sensitiveness to orange rays; stained with erythrosin, a preparation red in color, it takes on in addition a high impressibility to yellow light. Armed with such a plate a photographer, with close approach to truth ot effect, can take a picture of a varigated flower bed, of autumn woods, of a lady in richly colored costume. Despite the plate's improvement blue and violet rays may con tinue to impress it in an undue degree. To remedy that a screen of glass or film of gelatine, stained yellow, cut off the over active rays during part of theexposurejthen for a moment the screen or film is with drawn and the blue aud violet rays are per mitted to imprint themselves. To the dyes for which we are indebted to Dr. "Vogel many additions have been made year by year. The garden as well as the laboratory has been laid under contribu tion, chiefly for chlorophyll, the green col oring matter of leaves. Solutions of it de rived from the plantain, blue myrtle and many other plants have been added to the photographic film with results always inter esting! it only rarely of practical value. Taking Pictures by Gaslight. Orthochromy has shared in the impetus received by every brancn ot photography since the introduction of bromide-gelatine plates, and were orthochromatic plates as quickly impressed aud as easily developed as common plates their use would be much more general. Because they are acted upon oy tne ren ana yeiiow rays 01 gasiignt ana oillight they can be employed at night, and although the exposure must be longer than by daylight it is by no means tedious. Orthochromatic plates have especial value in the reproduction of oil paintings, whioh they render Into monochrome with a per fection unimaginable - in the days before silver of salts and dyes were brought together. Beyond every other achievement of the camera must rank the marvels it reveals when directed to the orbs of heaven, and in this noble field'of work the new plates en large the instrument's powers In a very won derful way. Every chemical element, when it reaches glowing heat, gives out light of characteristic color. "When we have once seen the yellow flame of sodium, or the red beams shot forth by strontium, we can al ways detect the presence of these substances in a pyrotechnic display. It is by an ex tension of this principle that the story of the spectroscope is spelled out. The pio neer in this remarkable field of research was Dr. Henry Draper, of New York, who first secured a well-defined star spectrum in the camera. Since his death in 1852, and through the liberal endowment of Mrs. Draper, his work has been continued by Prof. E. G Pickering of the Harvard Ob servatory. A New Uleans of Exploration. Photographs of stellar spectra are now taken in Peru as well as at Cambridge, and by staining the plates with erythrosin the impressions include thoseof the green and yellow rays which exert no action on an or dinary film. Varied as these experiments are, they are far from exhausting the pos sibilities of the camera. Beyond the violet rays'of the spectrum's rainbow extend vi brations which, though invisible to the eye, have since the very early days of photog raphy been caught and detained on its plates. At the other end of the spectrum, beyond the red, are other invisible radia tions, detected easily by a delicate ther mometer, which until 1887 eluded capture. In that year. Captain Abney secured an image from them on a bromide of silver plate. He maintains that here, and in the use of plates sensitive to ultra-violet rays, astron omers have a new means of exploration, with which they arc free to enter npon a fresh chain of discoveries. To the stars already known it is within their power to add a new class stars newly born or newly dead, whose temperatures rise above the range of visibility or fall below it Thus does the science of to-day probe the utter most recesses of space and compel into' our view one order of heavenly bodies yafter an other. If the task of bringing them out of their concealment cannot be accomplished directly, then the astronomer presses medi ation and artifice into bis service. Similarity of llght and Sound. "When we consider how ingeniously forms of motion which affect none of our senses are made visible and palpable in the cam era, the qnestion suggests itself, why may not the broad, blank interval between light and sound be spanned in the. same way? It would be hardly more surprising than the process by which a bar ot warmed Iron paints its portrait in a dark room, or a chemical rav registers itself beyond the verge of visible" color sent forth by incan descent metal. Just here it is worth re membering how mechanical pressure may directly produce visible chemical change. "Where a stylus has sharply indented a bit of silvered paper an image $an be developed exactly such as light itself might have im printed. The master problem of photography ii the seizure of color as well asof form in the camera. In approaching this problem experimenters have availed themselves of the sensitiveness of various dyes to red, ereen,and violetrays. Although six orsevon leading distinctions of color can bo discrimi nated by the eye, It is held that red, green nnd violet underlie them all. In thisprocess ofhelioohromy, as It fs termed, three nlates are exposed, eaoh of which has been sensi tized for one of the elemental colon. Having obtained positives of corresponding tints, their Images are superposed on a screen, producing a picture with colors much re sembling those of nature. The Qnestion of Permanency. By an Ingenious application of methods similar to those of phromo-lithojrra- phy, an artist can produce permanent pos itives of great beauty. -That la certainly roundabout way of making the rainbow paint Itself, but rio other attempt is either so satisfactory or so promising. Thus It wonld seem that the germs of success In catching color, as well as form. In the cam era may lie in the same gift from Dr. Vogel, whioh was made the message of light from the heavens fuller and mere legible, and given new tmtn and bennty to every photographic transcript from nature. When certain German chemists souzbt a few years ago to dyo some yards of silk and woolen cloth with artificial colors, was 16 not a piece of rare good fortune that they failed. In its early days photosrapliio printing was restricted to stow and costly chemical methods. A negative, as now In ordinary portraiture, imprinted its positive, and had to take Its course through a serlos of toning, fixing and oleanlng baths. Was there not some feasible way by which lissht could give a picture in relief for use in a common print ing press, where it could Impress Itself as speedily as type and in ink: both cheap and permanent? Niepce's process, ono of tho very first In photographic art. Rave a hint as to bow the task might be accomplished. Its plates were eoated with bitumen, and that was rendered insoluble by the solar ray. A Property of Gelatine. Asnbstanoe much ensier to use and pos sessed of the snmo property was found to be the very gelatine to which In other appli cations photography is so much indebted. Combined with bichromate o't potash a luminous beam renders It Insoluble In water, upon which simple fact turns a wide variety of photo-mechanical processes. These fn their last refinements give us reproductions hardly Inferior to originals and compositions with all the mezzotint's delicacy of tone. In the simplest processes a sketch in pen and ink, or a line enitraving, i9 placed face downward upon a sheet of sensitized gela tine. After a few minutes' action of sun light tho gelatine can be washed out of every part of the film protected from the solar beam by the black lines. By stereotypy or electrotypy the gelatine used as a mold yields a relief plate in metal which can bo printed from In an ordinary press. In another process the unhardened gelatine Is not washed oat, but swollen with water, and from the resulting projections a metallic Impression Is taken. A third plan is to cover a plate of zlno or copper with a film of gelatine or other similar material. Alter exposure the film 15 washed away, except In the lines or Its picture. At all points unpror tected by the film the plate Is then etched or bitten in by an acid bath. A recent adaptation of the sand blast has produced, exceedingly good wort: on such a plate. The sand blase is preferable to the action of an acid, In that it does not burrow nt the sides of the thin -walls beueath the lines of a picture. The Half-Tone Processes. The simplest of these 'processes renders only euch lines as those of an architect's plan of a line engraving or of a pen-and-ink sketch. How can the difficulty of express ing half tone, of graduated shadow, be over come? Usually by interposing between the gelatino and the picture to be copied, a net work or fine lines ruieci cioseiy togetner, with the result that, If inspection be not too dote, a faithful transcript in dots is con veyed to the plate. The half-tone process devised by Jir. F. E. Ives, of Philadelphia, follows an entirely different principle in a very ingenious way. Prom a gelatine relief plate he takes a cast in plaster. An inked pad, or film, of olastlo T-shaped lines or dots Is pressed against the plaster until the lines or dots are completely flattened ont where they meet the highest parts of the cast. When the cast is removed there remains im presssed upon it an ink pioture having the appeaianee ofa photograph, but made up ot sharply defined lines and dots, graduated in size like those of u wood engraving. That can be photo-engraved as if it were a draw ing, or transferred to tine or copper and etched Into relief. The finest issue of the marriage of the camera with the printing press is tho photo gravure. Its delicate grain is derived from the carbon, blended with tho gelatine or Its plate. . To confer Jnk-holdlng power upon the copper it is dusted while hot with finely powdeied resin. It is probable that in the sear futuro we shall bavo one or two of the processes still further simplified, which will mean to the amateur almost as valuable a gift as that of the gelatlno-bromide plate. Gxoitos iLia. C0HB0LATI0K FOB '0FJOBS. The Chaplain Wasn't, at Hand, 80 the Orderly Took Tip Bis Bole. rWBITTXS FOB HI DI8M.TCH.1 Po' 'Opkins was sick in a hospital. In the morning the Orderly said to the Chap lain: "Sir, po' 'Opkins is dead." "Why did you not call me, I should like to have given him a few words of consola tion?" "I did not think it worth while, so I con soles 'im myself" ""What did you say to him?" " 'Opkins,' says I, 'you're mortal sick.' " TTes,' says 'e. ' 'Opkins,' says I, 'yon can't-'ope to get well.' " 1 don't suppose I can,' says 'e. " 'Opkins,' says I, you're got to die.' '"I suppose so,' says 'e. " ' 'Opkins,' says I, 'you can't ope to go to heaven.' '"I don't suppose I can,' says 'e. " ' 'Opkins,' says I, 'you'll go to the other place.' " "I suppose so,' says 'e. " ' 'Opkins,' says I, 'you ought to feel wery grateful that you're pnrwided for that you 'ave somever to go to,' and 'a turned his face to the wall, and went 'ome 'appy.'" A HOVEL CALL BELL. It Is Made ot Silver and Two Little Mon teys Make the Noise. Among the novelties in a New York resi dence is a combination call bell made of silver. There are really two bells, with ?? The Obliging MimXeyt. hinged monkeys above them. "When the bell is shaken these monkeys bob up and down, striking the bells. They are in har mony and the music is very pretty. Trrs AlUlts steeped free by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. Ho fits after first (Jay's use. Mar velous cures. Treatlje and 13 00 trial bottle free to Fit cases. Dr.' Kline, Set Arch it., Phua., Pa. Bu THE mm OF PARIS. t For Over Thirty Years M. Alphaud Knew Ko Law But His Own Will. HE MADE THE GITI BEAUTIFUL. ill Pn'Wic Works Above and Beloir Ground Under II is Control. 0KB HAIT POWER WITHOUT ABUSES rcoyRisroansci ot thi dispatch.i Pabis, Jan. 28. "The greatest funeral; since Victoi Hugo's," was what all Paris said when on December 11 it followed to the grave the remains of its late "king," Monsieur Alphaud, the man ' who in the last 37 years has transformed the city, until by general consent it is the mbst bcantiful in the world. Paris was his kingdom. He gave her his life. "For 37 years," declared one of his eulogists, "he worked without losing a day, to increase the beautifulness and beauty of the city." In return she became his obedient mis tress. She promoted him until he held in his hand all departments of public works. Streets, parks, squares and gardens were under his control. He decided where they should be made, how they should be dec orated, when they should be cleaned. He looked after the lighting of the city. Ho controlled tho sewers and water works. He was tho final authority on all matters of municipal architecture. He was the pro jector and executor of the numerous historic and arttstio undertakings, which add to" the interest and beauty of Paris. Nearly C,000men were in his service. His word was their Jaw, and, most remarkable, It was a law honoied and loved by all. One Secret or Bis.Powar. He was allowed to keep his position he cause all the rest of the Parisian world was embroiled by exciting politics or by war and was glad enough to find somobody who would take care of the city without mixing with the general turmoil. Born at Grenoble s--s An JJncrotcnei King. in Southeastern France In (1817. he was edu cated at the Ecole Polytecntqne and the Kcole des Fonts et Chaussees. When Napo leon II L and Baron Haussmaun decided that Paris should be transformed, tbey worked out an ambitious plan, and Baron Haussmaun called II. Alphaud to Paris as diiector of streets and parks. The task which SI. Alphaud was asked to undertake was tomakethemotmagnlflcene city in the world from a town with all the faults of the middle ages, with cramped streets, sans light, sans air. To accomplish it he must tear down the city, relay and re build it, and all without seriously inter rupting traffic. He put himself to the work with tremendous energy. From 1854 to 1S71, the end of the empire; be condncted the Bois de Boulogne and the Bois do Vlncennes, those beautiful parks to the west and east of the city, into either of which all Paris can pour itself in a half hour at a cost o'r 3 or i sous. Within the city limits he utilized waste lands to irmko the charmingparks ofMonceau, ilontsourtsand Buttes-Chaumont, and be constructed some of the finest of tho great boulevards and avenues. The works were not only splendid feats of engineering, they were works of art. Says one of M. Alphaud's admirers: "It required a poet to conceive them. Ho handled not rhymes but trees, not syllables but flowers. His epics were great parks, bis sonnets little squares." In this period 31. AlDhaud" established a fine system of nurseries and hot-houses, from which the city is supplied with trees and the parks and squares aie ornamented the year around with a profusion of flowers and shrubbery. All Paris tfnder His Control. Xn 1S71 the empire fell, but 21. Alphaud had become an indispensable man. Now he was made director of publio works. By 1S73 everything pertaining to above-ground Paris was In his hands. Three years later, on the death of the engineer of water works and sewers, under-ground Paris was addeu. All the ehanges made by 31. Alphaud have teen handled with a profound regard for historic associations. But It has not been the rebuilding of Paris alone which has made if. Alphaud the idol of the Parisian populace. SI. Alphaud was the prince of fete and exposition makers. The success of the expositions of 1E07 and 1878 was largely credited to him. His crowning piece of ex position making as well as the crowning work of his life, was the exposition of 18S9. M. Alphaud wos 70 years old In 1877. The French law requires that Its servants retiie at that age. The director went to the Min ister and announced his ago, at the same tlmebeggingthatbebe allowed to remain in office. "I know," he said to the Minister, "that if you conform to the rules you will compel me to retire; that is, you will kill. I am accustomed to work. Inactivity would be death to me. Besides I want to manage the Exposition." The Minister bioke the rule and JL Alphaud made the Exposition to tne ueiignt not omyoi trance, 4)ut of the world. "Why Be Succeeded So Well. The faculty for direotlng a great num ber of things at once characterized all his work. His tact in handling men was rare, but his appearance no doubt contrib uted to his power. He was tall and broad shouldered, with piercing eyes and a kindly face almost benignant Indeed of late years, because of his white beard. The knowledge of the disinterestedness of his service made all who came In contact with him more obe dient to bis wishes. No one believed that M. Alphaud encouraged "jobs'' or enriched himself from the publio purse. No one ever hinted that be made more money from his office than the $5,000 he received yearly as salary. Nor did he ever seek power other than that of his office. He had bis honors, Cow ever. ,After the Exposition of 18S9 he was given the grand cross or the Legion of Honor the only engineer to whom it was ever given. And after tne death of Baron Haussmann he was made a member of the Academy of Fine Arts. The greatest public recognition he ever received was the mag nificent funeral the city of Paris gavo him. And who will take M. Alphaud's place? Nobody probably. He was an absolute mon arch, and bo was jealous to a childish decree of any interference with his power- Those who worked under him were expected to obey implicitly. Ho would nordlvfdo power or even attempt to fit men to work inde pendently in the departments. His kingdom falls to pieces without him. He has estab lished no dynasty. It is as well that he did not. One-man power does not exist without abuses, They crept into M. Alphaud's ad ministration, and the municipality loved him too well to attempt reform white be lived. The press and most thoughtful peo ple bclieyed that such concentration of power as existed in his case was a mistake, but wero silent because it was M. Alphaud. But the King is dead. He will remain a solitary figure in the history of the Paris without predecessors, without successors. Ida. M. Tabseix. lie Could Ha of Some Use. Pearson's Weekly. Theatrical Manager Hie, therel What are you doing with that pistol? Disconsolate Lover Going to kill my self. ( Theatrical Manager Hold on a minute. If you're bound to do it won't you be good enough to leave a bote saying you'did it for love -of Hiss Starr, our leading lady? It'a a dull season and every. little helps.' ' f-czi WEITTEN FOR THE DISPATCH BY MARK TWAIN, Author of "Innocents Abroad," 'Tom Sawyer, ' Etc., Etc. SYNOPSIS OF PKKTIOCS CUAPTEIi The story opens with n scene between Lord Berkelev, Earl of Bossmore, and his son Viscount Berkeley, in Chalmondeley Castle, England. The young man bos studied the claims to the estate made by Simon Leathers, of America, and become convinced thathe Is the rlghttul beir and his "father nnd himself usurpers, no announces his intention to change places with Leathers, whereupon the old lord pronounces him stajb mad. A letter arrives trom 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 Earl of Bossmore and richtful heir to Chalmondeley Castle ana the vast estate. Colonel Seller and bis contented old wife Hvo In an ancient frame house before which hangs a sign announc ing that he is an attorney at law, claim agent, hypnotist, mtnd-cnre specialist, etc, eto. His old friend, Washington nawklns, arrives. He has been elected delegate to Congress from Cheroke Strip. The Colonel. has Invented a pnzzle which he calls Phrs-ln-Clover. Persuaded by Hawkins ho applies for a patent and accidentally runs across a Yankee who agrees to give him 5 cents royalty on each one 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, Thich he calls Uossniore Towers. Sally Sellers, now Lady Gwendolen, is noti fied nt her college, and proceeds to lord it over those shoddy aristocrats who hithertobavo considered her a plebeian. The Colonel and the Majorlay apian to cantnro One-Avmett Pete, for whom there is a big reward. Tboy locate him at the Gadiby HotoL Toung Lord Berkeley lias arrived meanwhile and stops at the Gadsby. Jnst as the Colonel's plans are about to be consummated the hotel burns. Lord Berkeley escapes, finding One-Armed Pete'j cowbov clothes In the hall. Ha pnts these on and proceeds to hide his identity-One-Armed Peto Is supposed to havo been burned alive. The newspapers also report Lord Berkeley burned. This Just suits tho yonng man's plans. The Colonel nnd the Ma)or go to the hotel and, being convinced that nono of the bodies found can be that of the young lord, reverently gather up threo baskotsful of ashes and take them home. They get a British flag and hang up ornato hatchments, for they must mourn in style. The Colonel proposes to send the three baskets one at a time to the father across the sea, but his wife dissuades him. Meanwhile, the young lord deposits the cowboy's money in bant and cables his father that he was not burned In tho hotel. He assnmes the name of How ard Traoey and proceeds to find employment. He tries for a clerkship and then lower place', all without success. His expenses are too high, so he goes to a typical cheap board ing house, which tries his will power more than anything else he has yet suffered. CHAPTEP. XIII. HE hat exchange accom plished, the two new friends started to walk back leisurely to the boarding house. Bar row's mind was fall of curiosity about this young fellow. He said: "You've never been to tlje Kocky Moun tains?" "Xo." "You've never been out on the plains?" "No." "How long have you been in this coun try?" "Only a few. days." "You've never been in America before?" "No." Then Barrow communed with himself. "Now what odd shapes tho notions of ro mantic people take. Here's a young fellow who's read in England about cowboys aud adventures on the plains. He comes here and buys a cowboy's suit. Thinks he can "play himseif on folk for a cowboy, all inex perienced as he is. Now the minute he's caught in this poor little game, he's ashamed of it and ready to retire from it. It is that exchange that he has put up as an explanation. It's rather thin, too thin al together. "Well, he's young never been anywhere, knows nothing about the world, sentimental, no doubt Perhaps it was the natural thing for him to do, but it was a most singular choice, curious freak, alto- 8Botn men were busy with their thoughts for a time; then Tracy heaved a sigh and "Mr. Barrow, the case of that young fel low troubles me." "You mean Nat Brady?" "Yes, Brady, or Baxter, or whatever it was. The old landlord called him several dlfferentnames." " "Oh, yes, he has been very liberal with names for Brady, since Brady fell into, arrears for his board. "Well, that's one of his sarcasms; the old man thinks he's great on sarcasm." "Well, what is Brady's difficulty? "What is Brady? "Who is he? "Brady is a tinner. He's ayonngjourney man tinner who was getting along all right till he fell sick and lost hisjob. He was very popular before he lost his job; every body in the house liked Brady. The old .v RuWA ' Sis Thoughts TTere -for Away. man was rather especially fond of him, but you know that when a man loses his job and loses his ability to support himself, and to pay his way as he goes, it makes a great difference in the way people look at him and feel about him." "Is that so? Is it so?" Barrow looked at Tracy in apuzzled way. "Why, of course it's so. "Wouldn't you know that naturally? Don't yon know that the wounded deer is always attacked and killed by its companions and friends?" Tracy said to himself, while a chilly and boding discomfort spread itself through his system, "in a republic of deer and men, where all are free and equal, misfortune is a crime, and the prosperous gore the un fortunate to death." Then he said aloud, "Here in tho boarding house, if one wonld have friends and be popular instead of hav ing the cold, shoulder turne'd upon him, he must be prosperous." "Yes," Barrow said, "that is so. It's their nature: They do turn against Brady, now that he is unfortunate, and they don't like him as well as they did before;'but it isn't because of any lack in Brady he's just as he was before, has the same nature and the same impulses, but they well. Brady is a thorn in their consciences, you see. They know they ought to help him and they're too stingy to do it, and they're ashamed of themselves for that, and they ought also to hate themselves on that ac count, bnt instead of that they bate Brady because be makes them ashamed of them selves. X y thaf s human natnre; that occurs everywhere; this boarding house is merely the world in little; it's the case all over they're .all alike.. In prosperity we - 'Huckleberry Finn," are popular; popularity comes easy in t.tst case, bnt, when the other thing comes, our friends are pretty likely to turn against us." Tracy's noble theories and high purposes were beginning to feel pretty damp and clammy. He wondered if by anv possi bility he had made a mistake in throwing his own prosperity to the winds and taking up the cross of other people's nnprosperity. But he wouldn't listen to that sort of thing; he cast it out of his mind, and resolved to go ahead resolutely along the course he had mapped out for himself. Extracts from his diary: I have now spent several days in this sin gular hive. I don't know quite what to make out of these people. They bavo merits nnd virtues, but they have some other qual ities, and some ways that are hard to get along with. I can't enjoy them. The mo ment I appeared in a hat of the period I no ticed a change. Tbe respeot which bad been paid me before passed suddenly away, and the people became friendly: more than that, they became familiar, and I'm not used to familiarity, and can't take to it right off. I find that out. These people's familiarity amounts to impudence, sometimes. I sup-, pose it's all right; no doubt I can get used to it, but it's not a sattsfactory'process at all. I have accomplished my dearest wish. I am a man among men. on an equal footing with Tom, Diclc and Harry, and yet it isn't juss exactly what I thought it was going to be. I I miss home. Am obliged to say I am homesick. Another thing, and this 1 a confession, a reluctant one, but I will make it, the thing I miss moss and most severely. Is the respect, tho deference, with which I was treated all my life in England, and which seems to be somehow necessary tome. I get along very well without the luxury and the wealth ana the sort of society I've been accustomed to, but I do miss the respect, and can't seem to get reconciled to tbe absence of it. Tnere is deference here, but it doesn't fall to mv share. It is lavished on two men. One of them is a portly mau of middle age, who is a retired plumber. Everybody is pleased to havo that man's notice. He 3 full ot porno and circumstance and self-complacency and bad grammar, and at the table he Is Sir Oracle, aud when he opens his mouth not any dog In the ken nel bants. Tho other person is a policeman at the Capitol building. He represents the Government. Tbe deference paid to these two men is not so very far short of that which Is paid to an carl in England, thongh the method of it differs. Not so mnch court liness, but the deference is all there. Yes, and there Is obsequiousness, too. It does -rather look as if in the republic, where all are free and equal, prosperity and position, constitute rank. The days drifted bv, and they grew ever more dreary. Por Barrow's efforts to find work for Tracy were unavailing. Always the first question asked was: ""What union do you belong to?" Tracy was obliged to reply that he didn't belong to any trade union. "Very wetl, then, it is impossible to em ploy you. Mv men wouldn't stay wdth me if I "should employ a "scab" or' 'rat" or whatever the phrase was. "Finally, Tracy had a happy thought. He said: "Why, the thing for me to do, of course, is to" join a trade union." "Yes," Barrow said, "that is the thing for you to do if you can." "If I can? Is it difficult?" "Well, yes," Barrow said, "It's some times difficult in fact, very difficult. But you can try, and of course it will be best to try." Therefore Tracy tried, but he did not suc ceed. He was refused admission with a good deal of promptness, and was advised to go back home, where he belonged, not coma here taking honest men's bread out of their mouths. Tracy began to realize that the situation was desperate, and the thought made him cold to the marrow. He said to himself: "So there is an aristocracy of position here, and an aristocraey of pros perity, and apparently there is also an aristocracy of the ins as opposed to the outs, and I am with the outs. So the ranks grow daily here. Plainly there are all kinds of castes her, and only one that I belong to, the out casts." But he couldn't even smile at his small joke, although he was obliged to confess that he bad a rather good opinion of it. Ha was feeling so defeated and miserable by this time that he could no longer look with philosophical complacency on the horseplay of the young fellows in tne upper rooms at night. At first it had been pleasant to see them unbend and have a good time after haying so well earned it by the labors of the dav, but now it all rasped npon his feelings and his dignity. He lost patience with the spectacle. When they were feeling jyod they shouted, they scuffled, they sang songs, they romped about the place like cattle, and tbey generally wound up with a pillow fight, in which they banged each other over the bead and threw the pillows in all direc tions, and every now and then he got a buf fet himself; and they were always inviting . him to join in. They called him "Johnny Bull," and invited him with excessive familiarity to take a hand. At first he had endured all this with good natnre, but latterly he had shown by his manner that it was distinctly distasteful ta him, and very soon he saw a change in the manner of these young people toward him. They were souring on nim, as they would "l have expressed it in their language. Ha had never been what might be called popu lar. That was hardly the phrase for it; he had merely been liked, but sow dislike for him was growing. His case was not helped bv the fact that he was out of luck, conldn'l- ' get wefrk, didn't belong to a union, and couldn't gain admission to one. He got a", good many slights'cf that small, ill-defined sort that you can't quite put your finger(oa, and it was manifest that there was only one m M M "