PAYING THEPEMLTY Hoi7 life Goes on Inside the Great PorMdding Walls of Eiyerside. A HM BUT mDLY BIJEft Busy "Workshops Where kn Unnec essary Word Means Trouble. HAS T C05YICTS WHO USE EJITES. Pen Picture of the Little Squab Getting Their Koonday MeaL BELIGIOUS AND 8ECULAB TE1CHI5G linirrTrx Ton THE DISPATCH.! ENITENTIABYl cried the conduc tor as he (topped the car. A bright spring daylTheOhioriver sparkling in the sun, a robin carol ing in the enjoy ment of the sweet morning, green sward fresh after the sprinkling of the early dew, and a headland across m ' 'i A Guard House. the river divested of Its usual gray hue by the light of the glorious dayl Eising above us a massive SJTAP SHOT CT OITE pile of masonry. A building 1,026 feet in length, surmounted by 1Q towers, and re lieved along its front by numerous long grated windows, save in the center, where a handsome stone residence stands forth and relieves the monotony of the architecture. This is the Western Penitentiary, at .River side, as seen from the outside. Touch an electric button at the deep stone portal and walk up a short flight of steps. There is a clanking of a great lock and a swinging open of a heavy iron door. You find yourself in a large, lofty hall, tile floored, and furnished with a few chairs and benches and a table or two. These things are almost lost in the vastness of the place. Over a Thouoand Gloomy Tombs. On either side are immense iron lattices, through which you may see into the cell blocks, where altogether there are 1,200 ceils. In the north wing the cells are some 6 feet by 8, and in the south considerably larger. Each cell in the south wing has a grated u indow as well as the grated door. The latter is the only means of light in the north. Pacing the door by which you enter is another that leads into the yard, where the workshops are. "Come in, gentlemen," says Mr. Stewart, the steward, "and we will walk through the shops." Tie silence of the place, that oppresses ycu as soon as you have passed the lront door and are in the great reception hall, is hardly broken, even when you have crossed the cheertul yard, where grass grows as green as outside, and where wcll-kcDt gravel walks remind one of a lawn attached to a private residence. "The boys call this Boston Common," savs Mr. Stewart "There is no Bunker Hill Monument, certainly, but we have to do without that. We cannot have every thing in a prison. These different avennes about the yard are called Fourth and fifth avenues, Wylie avenue, and so forth. Over there is Gi etna Green, although we never have any marriages here. But it does no harm to give lanciful names to our quar ters." Malting the B-it of the Situation. These pleasantries of Mr. Stewart may be taken as the keynot- of the spirit that pre vails in the Western Penitentiary. While the discipline is strict, there is a disposition to make the prisoners feel that they are not entirely lost or shut out from human sym pathy, although they have lound their way iuto a nlace of punishment. Into a bricfc building, with many win dows, and a busy scene is lound. The men are making mats, rugs and matting lor aisles and large rooms generally. There is a whirl of machinery, and a long line of power looms is seen uoun each side of the long room, allowing room ior officers and workmen to pass iown the middle. Every one is at work. The men, save for their striped clothing, might be taken for work men in any ordinary shop outside Even the distinction of dress does not prevail in all cases. A system introduced by Warden Wright some time ago provides tor the men being divided into three grades, and those In the first two do not wear stripes, but clothes of gray cloth such as they could ap pear in anywhere without exciting remark. When a prisoner is admitted he is put into the regulation Mripes. He wears this dress for eix months. If at the end oi that time his prison record is clear he is moved to a higher grade, and dressed in the plain gray. Good Conduct II m Its Howard. He is also taken out of the narrow cell he occupied iu the north wing, and removed to a larger one in the south, besides being granted other little 'privileges not incon sistent with his position as a prisoner. It is pleasing to note what a large proportion wear the plain gray. Should he mil from grace in any way he is put back into the third grade, and once more compelled to trvnr thfi Ktrines. We walk through the shop and note the J ':llll?lr:" ftmz .ijf''1 " P deftness with which tho prisoners manage their machines. Not a word is spoken save an occasional remark connected with the work. Unnecessary conversation is strictly forbidden. Some of the men look at us curiously, while others bend over their woik as if they cannot bear to meet the eye of outsiders. They are there to expiate their offenses, whatever they may be, and they feel their position so keenly that even the casual glance of astrmger is painful. It is noticeable that there is very little of that bold, defiant expression peculiar to prisoners in institutions whero the terms are sbort Every man seems to feel that a penitentiary sentence is a serious thing, and that a pre tense of indifference would be unbecoming; It seems to be the etiquette of the Western Penitentiary to take life quietly and in a well-behaved manner that is all too rare outside prison walls. "We stop at one machine and examine the work closely. In tho 'World bat Not or It. "Busy, eb, Jim?" savs Mr. Stewart pleas antly, and the thoughtful looking man, with a heavy black mustache, who would'pass for a bright business man but for his gray suit, smiles, and, in obedience to a request, shows bow the material goes through the loom and how the shuttles fly back and forth in the manufacture of the matting. But he does not speak to the visitors or make any sign that he sees them. He stops the machine, illustrating whatever llr. Stewart may be explaining, and when we move on resumes his work in a matter-of-fact way, as it he were part of his machine. There is something inexpressibly sad in his tacit acknowledgment that, although in the world, he is not of it. Each man has so much work to do each day, and when it is finished he goes to his cell, to stay there till he leaves it the next morning. The task is not a heavy one, and if a man works hard he can be finished by 2 or 3 o'clock in the afternoon. But while he is in the shop he is at work continuously. It is against the system to have men idling outside their cells." Occasionally, however, a man may have a few moments to stand still in the course of the day. But he does not move from the part of the shop where his work lies. How the Graded System Works. He may lean against tho wall, or seat himself on a bench or bundle of matting, OP THE MAT SHOPS. looking around him, or he may, perhaps, exchange a word or two with a neighbor. But he must not enter into a regular con versation. If he does he will find a mark charged against him, which means an un desirable effect upon bis chances of getting into the first grade, or, being already there, of being reduced. In some of the large shops the process of making mats requires that the workmen shall use large, Tcten knives. Each man has his knife and a whetstone, on which he keeps it as sharp almost as a razor. Yon look along the room and yon see that there are over 100 men, each with a dangerous knife. Then you observe that there are only two officers, one at each end. What is to prevent the prisoners rising against their keepers, murdering them, and then, knives in hand, fighting their way to freedom? Here we see the influence of that respect for the law that exists in the besom of every man living in a civilized community. If one or two men were to attempt anything of the kind the other prisoners would fly to the rescue of the guards. It is safe to'say that 75 per cent of the inmates of the West ern Penitentiary would be on the side of the authorities were there to be an outbreak. Human nature in a prison is very like that Selecting JTis Convict Suit outside. Convicts are not all murderers, and a goodly proportion of them are decent fellows, save for the one crime that has placed them behind prison walls. Itovolrir and Winchesters Handy. Bo the men with knives cut the fibers of the mats and think no more of using their tools as weapons than would any set of men in a workshop elsewhere. There have been instances ot prisoners quarreling and at tacking each other murderously, but these cases are very rare. 01 course, every officer has his six-shooter ready to his hand, and the guards that walk along the tops of the walls have Winchester repeating rifles, so that they can sweep the whole interior of the yard, and concentrate their fire on any spot where it might be necessary. But it is not the knowledge of these weapons that in fluences the prisoner. He is part of a well regulated system, and he does not contem plate desperate acts now more than he did when he was a free man in many cases not so much. One of the matshops, that was formerly used as a shoesnop when the contract system was in force, is said to be the finest work shop in the State. It is 258 feet long, two stories high and has 4,100 lights of glass in its windows. What workman could desire a more pleasant place in which to work? The men working all day must be fed, and Sir we will step into the cookhouse. The cooks are all prisoners, and in one stout, pleasant laced man, with silverr hair and a drooping blonde mustache, we recognize a well-known "sport," who, while intoxicated one night some years ago, managed to shoot and kill a colored man. He is serving a ten years' sentence. His name would be remembered at once by most Pittsburgers were it mentioned. He looks Trusted With Knives and Hammers. contented, and the regular hours ha is com pelled to keep have given him a healthier appearance than he wore when a free man. He is busy, with his fellow cooks, preparing the dinner, which consists of boiled beef, potatoes, etc, stewed all together, and is as savory as anyone conld wish for. It is nearly 12 o'clock and the prisoners are going to dinner. The cooks have been ladeling out the stew into inesspans, each of which holds as much as some families get among them, and these raessp ins are piled up ready to be handed to the hungry men who have put in nearly five hours of work. A gong sounds, and the men in one shop are lormed cookhouse. into line and started for the UWl f v111 "1Ck'iSiep''f each with his right hand on the shoulder of the man in front, so that his toe almost touches the other's heel, until they reach an opening in the. wall of the cookhouse. Here the messpans are passed out. Each man takes his pan, if he wants it, without a word, and follows in single file, but of course not in "lock-step" now, to the door that leads into the cell bloct. A officer walks at the head of the sniiad. enndnnts his men to their cells, locks them in, and leaves them there -for an hour. As one squad gets to the cookhouse another comes from another quarter, and another from an other, and so on, until the yard is alive with marching men, all bound for that one interesting building whence the steam of the beef stew comes and titillates the nos trils pleasingly. They do not all go to tho one opening. There is one on each side of the bnilding, so that two sets of men can be served at once. 4 The School In the Penitentiary. The education of those men who have not had advantages of that kind is attended to. School is conducted two hours a day in a regular schoolroom in the hospital building, under the direction of Mr. B. H. Graham. Mr. Graham is a very well-educated man a son of ex-Speaker Graham and he takes the greatest interest in his pupils. He has 116 enrolled at present, and they are of all ages. He has one man of 2 years in the primary class, one of 63 in the first reader, one of 52 in the third reader, and one ot 61 in the fourth. The men all seem to enjoy school, and the authorities allow them the time from their work to attend, being only too glad to see that they are desirous of making up for past neglect The hospital contains only about a dozen cases, none of them serious. We go into the hospital, shake hands with the resident sur geon and walk through rthe wards. In the first one we meet an intelligent-looking colored man, smoking a pipe as he gazes listlessly at the sky through the large win dow. "Enjoying your smoke?" observes Mr. Stewart. The man smiles, but in rather a care-worn way, as we cannot help noticing. "Yes, sir. Thank you?" he says quietly. As we pass out, Sir. Stewart whispers: "He's in for life." We are trying to imagine the feelings of a man in a living tomb, light and airy as it is, as we pass into another ward, where three convalescents are eating a dinner that comprises toast and other delicacies at a table, and who speak cheerfully to Mr. Stewart in answer to his greeting, and thence into another, where tour men are playing dominoes, while a fifth is lying on his bed the only one in the hos pital who is using his bed, by the way. Bathrooms and other accommodations are in the hospital, and but for being prisoners, the inmates would have little to complain of. The building is very airy and light. Golnc Out and Coming In. Back into the main hall, and from thence into another hall above it, where the book keepers sit in a glass compartment busy as any in an ordinary business house, and ap parently as satisfied, although at least oue of them is a prisoner. A new prisoner has just been brought in, and one who has served his time is going out. The one who is departing is a United States prisoner. He has just put on the clothes he wore when brought in, and he is going into the othce to sign a boot and receive bis small valuables that have been kept in a sate for him. He shakes hands with the officials and walks out. In the meantime the new man a young fellow scarcely 21 is being turned over by the deputy sheriff who has brought him in. lie is weighed, searched and then given in charge of an officer, who takes him to the clothes room, in the same building as the cook house. Here he is stripped, examined by the doctor, and a careful record made of all physical peculiarities. He is measured by the Bertillon system. The length of his thumb, finger, nose, ear, etc, are carefully taken, and birthmarks of any kind recorded, together with any deformity he may have. Then he is made to take a bath. Donning the Stripes In Prison. In the clothes room are three sizes of shirts, pants and jackets of striped mate rial. With the assistance of an officer he picks out clothes to fit him, including can ton flannel underwear, shoes, socks and cap and puts them on. Then, as he looks down at himself, he realizes that he is indeed a convict, and a tear springs to his eye, as, in obedience to a sign from the officer, he marches across the yard into the north wing, where he is placed in one of the smaller cells until it is decided where he shall be put to work. He will be allowed to write a letter to his friends once a month, and every three mouths he may receive visitors, but with these exceptions he will have no communi cation with the outside world until his sen tence has expired, unless he be pardoned. The chaplain, Mr. Milligan, has entire charge ot the moral welfare of the prison ers, which covers their correspondence and visitors. He may allow them to write oftener than once a month if he considers the occasion urgent, and he can allow them to receive visitors between the regular periods if he sees fit. Among the life prisoners there are some with whom the officers have a great deal of sympathy. Henry Briceland is a lite pris oner. He has been confined ior 20 years. He is an excellent prisoner, a good carpen ter and an intelligent man. There is not an attache of the penitentiary, so far as could be learned, who would not rejoice to know that Henry Briceland had been pardoned. He has neither friends nor money, however, and hence has little hope ot leaving his prison until he finds the freedom of the grave His is one of hundreds of sad stories hid den under the subdued demeanor and sober garments of the vast colony pursuing its monotonous way in that gray stone enclo sure, while the robin sings and the waters of La Belle Biviere dance in the sun under its grated windows. G. O. J. NOBLES OF POLAND. Thongh They Occupy a Prond Place in History They Are Brutes. NO HUMAN FEELING SEEMS LEFT. Trot the Hebrews and Lower Class ai If They Were Slave. IWyUL HTDIGKITIES W1KEVAX B1W ECOBBXSrOITDZKCX 07 THE SIgrATCB.1 Cracow, Gaucia, April 11. If one could first approach Cracow from the north, filled with the sentimental romance of Polish heroio memories, and have in mind the Poland and Cracow of that time when Cracow was the residence of Polish sover eigns, a view of the ancient city would be one of great impress! veness. f At any distance, from this direction, the structural seeming is one ot unimpaired splendor. Its many church spires, quaint and huge-peaked roofs; spacious palaces and dark old towers are clustered in great pro fusion aronnd the Wavel Bock, on which stands the castle of Zamek, the former royal castle of Poland. At its base the dragon of the cave, which noisome hole may still be seen, was killed by Krak, the Cadmus of Poland. At the city's southern side can be seen the gleaming waters of the blue Vis tula, which almost encircles the olden town. The splendid Vistnla vale stretches fair and far beyond. And the southern horizon is a serrated edge of misty blue, where, oyer against sunny Hungary, rise the peaks of wild Tatra and the grand Carpathian range. Petroleum Has a Hand In Revival. But splendid as is this first seeming the ancient city of kings, cathedrals aud uni versities is now simply a gorgeons shell of stone, swarming with a population the most miserable and seemingly hopeless human eyes ever beheld. The city once held from I UU.VUV IU 1UU.UUV DVUia CkUM TT.IO VUG VUUUUbl' I cial as well as roval canital of Poland. Its ! desertion and degradation reached an appa rent lowest ebb a quarter of a century since. Subseauently Austrian reforms, and the general improvement of the condition of the Galician Polish peasantry, and especial ly the stimulating effect of excellent devel opment in agricultural and the mineral and petroleum fields of Galicia, reawakened some of its old-time commercial activity. But this fell away again as Lemberg grad ually became the commercial capital ot Ga licia. Then came another influx of popula tion, but ot so dolorous a sort that Cracow's present increased housing of humanity is certainly the most painfully and pathetical ly abhorrent in all Europe. The city is not more than ten English miles from the Rus sian frontier. During all the uuspeakably cruel persecutions of Bussian Polish Jews which have indignantly thrilled the civil ized world during the past few years, Cra cow has received and succored a greater number of these helpless refugees than any other single European city. The Impetus oi Knout and Iduh. So near is the city to the Bussian frontier that every week, often nearly urery day, witnesses processions of these outcasts given speed across the border by the impetus of threatened knout and lash, and the even more goading fear of actual murder. In 1864 I saw with bursting and mutinous heart the God-forsaken folk of my own race as they were driven from Atlanta, while their homes were burned behind them. But revolting as was that brutal scene of so called "military necessity," it could not be compared with what is of such common occurrence here, that it attracts no further comment or attention. Two great objects of interest will be found before vou enter the city. To the north is one of the most gigantio embattled fortresses in Europe. Austria has always claimed that this was for use as a frontier fortress in the event of Bussian hostilities. As nearly 1,000 spies in citizen's clothing are said to be still in use in Cracow and the immediate vicinity, the Polish peasantry prefer to believe "it was built and is kept manned for the pur poses of awe and effectual subjugation. In any event it forms a threatening answer to a still greater monument to national feeling which may be found but three miles distant upon the eminence of Brownislawa. This is the collossal Kos ciusko Mound. Over in Ireland the humble peasantry, loyal in their memories for even legendary hero or saint, when passing the spot where the body fell or was interred, cast pebbles upon the grave and murmur prayers for the repose of the souk A similar Polish na tional adoration of the brave and the good has resulted in this most curious memorial mound in Christendom. A Sacred Heart-Bnllt Memorial. It is 150 feet high and is principally formed of earth, brought in sacks and bar row loads with infinite toil from all the battle fields famous in Polish history. Grim and tragic is the satire upon this sacred heart-built memorial, on the part of relent less power. When it was nicely completed the Austrians found it an excellent pedestal for one of the huge detached forts with which they proceeded to surround Cracow in a five-mile circle The outer walls of the city itself are very interesting and massive. They will remind you of the tremendous old walls of Neur emberg, down in Bavaria. They are quite as high and thick, but are varied at inter vals with surmounting tower?, both square and round, of immense thick ness and great height with most picturesque minaretted roofs. The gateways are auite as remarkable as those at Malta, and are given great additional quaint charm by their curious old shrines. These are very ancient; indeed so old that the carving ot the floritnre and images is almost wholly defaced. From this fact alone they seem to attrast the greatest number of worshipers; and on many occasions I have been scarcely able to pass beneath these huge arches owing to the crowds packed like panicky sheep upon their knees against the shrines. Bound about and within the old city at this season of the year, just as the foliage is beginning to show along the banks ot the Vistula and among the gigantic trees of the ancient promenades, a casual glance gives the impression of serenity and even bright ness. One feels as though quiet and satis fied content must reign within and without. But, once inside the massive gateways, the heart sickens at what the eyes continually behold. A Justification of Dynamite. Soldiers are everywhere. Gay in their rich trappings they spurn their fellow civil ians as though they were beasts. Were I one ot these human animals beneath them I would surely answer their insults with dyna mite or melanite; and one has only to move about these streets an hour to understand aud condone the awful revenges the goaded humans of some of these Old World hives are taking upon their oppressors. No Pol ish lowly woman can walk these streets without beastly insult. No Hebrew maiden is safe in her own doorway from these uni formed jackals. I have witnessed outrages by the Austrian military without number too unspeakably horrible to be put in print. They are so common, their victims are so helpless, the slavishness of their powerless ness is so .hopeless tor change, or attention, or justice, that their tormenters have even ceased to smile at their own devilish inge nuity of outrase. " Some of these things cannot be repeated. Here are a few instances of simple brutality out of scores I have myself witnessed' in Cracow. A landlord, otiended by the awk wardness of a Polish servant, struck him in the face with a carving steel, breaking all his front teeth. The guests laughed aloud, and the victim was directed to wash the blood from his mouth and continue serving the table. At one of the gateways a noble man was being driven into the city. The kneeling crowd praying before the shrine not moving rapidly enough to suit him, the driver was ordered to ride over them, which he did, bruising and injuring many youth and women. Slashing Off a Man's Fingers. A detachment of Austrian cavalry leaving the city for change of patrol at the Bussian .frontier, on arriving at the Clothhall on the Market Place, was somewhat annoyed by the irenzied movement or the peasant marketmen in their efforts to get out of the way. An officer, whose horse shied from contact with a rustic carrying some fowls slung over his shoulder in willow cages, drew his saber and, with a savage overhead cut, severed two fingers from the defense less man's hand. Apparently it would have been quite the same had the man's head followed his fingers. As though this were not sufficient infamy, a footsoldierstanding near, after an humble salute to the brave officer, picked the dis severed fingers from the street and tossed them, as though they had been links of sausage, to a bevy of half-famished dogs shrinking and snarling behind a Hungarian Gipsy cart standing near, and these ani mals'dcvoured them after nearly devouring each other in battle over these unusual and delicious morsels. v The treatment of the Polish Hebrews is indescribably dreadful. Truly a majority ot these here form a loathsome lot. But they are victims of misfortune. No one of the race is by nature slothful or vile. All are active, patient, vigorous and brave in all things tending to self-sustenance. Those ot Cracow are mainly helpless victims of Bussian persecution. "So many have made their way into all avenues ot business that by very force of numbers and desperation of situation they swarm like wolves around every opportunity of the slightest gain. But thousands upon thousands exist in a condition of such awful want, starvation and mysery, that it would seem in any place where a God was owned some touch of human consideration and pity might find expression. You cannot find it in Cracow. They are beaten from before soldiers and officials with staves. Police disperse beg ging crowds with swords, striking right and left and wounding promiscuously. With Its Broken Lee DaneUug Down. Those of gentle (1) blood seem to have acquired the right to avenge all Poland's national wrongs on these luckless humans. I have seen little girls not yet in their teens strike them apparently as a mere diversion. The aristocracy from highest to lowest con sider it no crime to chastise them openly and unresentedly on any pretext of offense. The very next morning after my arrival here I saw a half-naked Hebrew child being carried along with a broken leg dangling trom its body. It bad amused some lordiing or official in a carriage before which the little one had begged to ride oyer it. I had some respect for the Polish character, gained I will admit, from Polish history, before I came to Cracow. Whatever the polish aristocracy may have been in the past, they are brutes be yond the limits of human language to reveal in their treatment ot inferiors, and especial ly of these Hebrew wretches of misfortune and misery. And for my part I can see no altar or shrine or crucifix or vicar of God in this ancient city without loathing emblem, place and priest where such inhuman hearts can worse than murder and adore. My guide through the ghastly shell of a civilized city was secured through incident of iniquitous brutality, trifling indeed for Cracow, but still illustrative of its genial and kindly atmosphere. I had trnly been unbearably pestered by a horde of Hebrews from money changers down to the most re pulsive of beggars, and finally conceived the plan of arranging myself in the most Polish and least expensive of attire. Protection of a Polish Costume. It proved a successful device. In this raiment I had visited the Tatra mountains, and had returned to Cracow so torn by brush wood and bespattered by mud of tbe high ways that I was quite free to enjoy the city from the nether side of aspect It was a relief, too, from strain upon both temper and purse. In this habilament and attitude I was standing before a baker's window in terested in an odd form of 'bread which is fashioned and baked in an excellent imita tion of a crown of thorns, much used during the Lenten period in Galicia. Another still more dolorous object than myself stood be fore the window. It was a Polish Hebrew, ragged, wasten, wan and old. I have seen longing and hunger on as many faces as has any other one who lives; but I never before saw both so pathetic and terrible as in this one white face. Atthismomenta be vt of soldiers clanked by. Both myself and the ancient Hebrew stood at the edge of the pavement, quite out of their lordly way. Something in the old man's face attracted the soldiers' at tention as well as my own. Some turned, glanced and cursed. One said with an oath: "He will draw the loaves the window through with that nosei" "If the loaf (crown of thorns) was his belly therein, it should cut with blood his paunch through," sneered another. "Ach, Gott!" shouted the bravest of them all, as he sprang to the old man's side, in a seeming frenzy of rage I feared he would strike him down. But he did not. He only spat in his face and called him a "Jew dog!" "Earth rot!" and names beast lier still. Then they turned and went merrily away, Daro Not Resent the Awful Intuit. And it is true that this poor old man, for fear of his life as he afterward told me, dare not attempt to remove the froth foul ness from his face until these Christian soldiery had turned into the market place. But I had done it for him before that. I then led him into the baker's and then into a cafe, and then into a wineshop, and Christian money never did quicker or more direct missionary work than on that morn ing when, God knows, for the first and only time in my life I longed to be a Rothschild. This poor" stranded old human had been a Jewish teacher in a not remote Bussian village, and had been knouted out of his home by Cossacks, his feeble wife perishing in the flight from fright and fatigue. He had got as far as Cracow. That, as with thousands upon thousands more, was to he his living grave nnder conditions of misery and outrage more awful than those which once made infamous the name of religion in Madrid, Ncnremherg or Salem unless the little I spared him could get him to kinfolk in Berlin. The white face ot this one old man stands between me and Poland's ancient city of kings, shutting out all else but the un speakable miseries of his kind. And I leave Cracow with a sick and heavy heart. EDGAB L. WAKEMA2T. E0W A MUSICIAH IS XAOZ. Paderewski Began Study at Six and He Studies Even Tet Paderewski began to study at six his first teacher being a fiddler who helped out his living by giving lessons on the piano, which he could not play. After a year or two another teacher was engaged, but he bad as little notion of technique as his pre decessor. He thought it sufficient to bring with him a collection of four-hand and six hand pieces, which Paderewski and his sister played at sight. There the boy's early instruction ended. But the student did not then relax his efforts. He played, listened, compared and thought, and he was rewarded with the success which always at tends continuous effort. His marvelous tone-quality has been wholly his own dis covery, guided by an exquisitely sensitive ear. , When 12 he went to the Conservatory at Warsaw, where he studied harmony and counterpoint with Boguski, and took piano lessons of Janotha, tbe father of Natalie. At 16 Paderewski made a tour throngh Bussia, and going back to the Conservatory at 18 became a professor there. At 23 we find him Professor of Music in the Con servatory at Strassbnrg. Besolving to be come a virtuoso, he sought Leschetitzky in 1886, and set to work with his accustomed energy. He was with him only seven months, making-his debut in Vienna in 1887. With Paderewski practice and study never cease. Before every concert he is ac customed to shut himself up and to practice all-night, 'going carefully oter his whole programme. " WHEELS LN COIGKESS. Brainy Statesmen Who Have Formed an Exclusive Bicycle Club. TOH SEED WILL BE IT3 EACEE. Booklets Simpson Bides With the Dignity of a Philosopher. HI5KT GEORGE STARTED TIB CBiZB cosxxsroiTDzxcx or the sisfatcs. Washctgtojt, April 23. HE newest fad among our na tional statesmen is 'IThe Congress men's Bicycle Club," of which Hon; Jerry Simp son is president and Hon. Thomas B. Beed its latest tender nursling. Only full-fledged Congressmen are eligible to mem bership. August Qm md reverend Sen ators and power ful Cabinet officers nave no show in it, and were even President Harrison to apply humbly for admission he w6uld be peremp torily rejected, so exclusive is this unique organization and so sharply does it draw the line against all but Congressmen. All the members are enthusiastie wheel men, and several of them are exceedingly skillful riders. Among the most expert, besides Jerry Simpson himself, the head chief, are Congressmen Tom L. Johnson, of the Twenty-first Ohio district; Joseph E. Washington, of the Sixth Tennessee a lateral descendant of the immortal George John A. T. Hull, of the Seventh Iowa; Lewis Sperry, of the First Connecticut; Warren. F. Dauiell, of the Second New Hampshire; and William M. Springer, of the Thirteenth, and Owen Scott, of the Fourteenth IUinois districts. Henry George Responsible for It. The idea of the club originated primarily with Henry George, of New York. When the genial sockless "Sage of Medicine Vft A Snap Shot at Tom Johnson. Lodge" left Kansas last spring and visited New York to teach the stock brokers and other moneyed men there certain unknown truths about sound finance, he unwittingly fell in with the single tax apostle, who in due time made him tamiliar with tbe pleas ures ot the wheel. Itepresentative John son likewise recently came under the spell of George's influence, and he, too, became a convert to the bicycle craze. Representa tive Johnson happens to sit next to Repre sentative Washington in the House, and through his rapturous praises of bicycle riding,' daily repeated, he soon induced the young Tennessean to tempt fate on the re volving wheel. Ex-Speaker Beed was also prevailed upon by Johnson's eloquence to forego his scruples and link his fortunes in sport with the budding organization. In this way the charmed .circle, first formed but little over a month ago, has been gradually but steadily enlarged until now it is gaining several new recruits every week and promises eventually to embrace Representatives from nearly every State in the Union. The expansive streets and ave nues of Washington, paved with the finest asphalt -and the smoothest of concrete blocks, afford ideal facilities for bicycling. It Bequlres No Little Nerve. More than an ordinary amount of nerve and courage is required of Congressmen in indulging such a frivolous diversion as bicycling in this capital city of the nation. Indeed, such a deep-seated prejudice exists in many agricultural communities in the West against bicycling, tennis playing and kindred mild forms of ornamental athletics, Jerrj) Simpson Rides to the Bouse. that the riding Congressmen from those sections, especially men like the Alliance advocate, Simpson, deserve to be congratu lated on the grit they have displayed in joining the club. The members, while not seeking to conceal their fondness for the ex hilirating exercise, have not courted pub licity on the subject or sought to be inter viewed as to their accomplishments on the wheel. Congressman Johnson isthe most versatile rider in the club, despite the fact that he is handicapped with fully 300 pounds of flesh. He is one of the most jovial men in tbe present House, with a ruddy, smooth-shaven lace, curly black bair and rotund figure. Unlike Henry George, who prefers a light running English machine, he uses a strong wheel of standard American make, ball bearings and cushion tire. Notwithstanding his ponderous avoirdupois, he has mastered the difficult feat known as "the pedal mount," and in addition is able to execute to perfection some of tbe most intricate figuresdn fancy riding. So enthusiastic a friend of bicycling is he that he has taught not only his wife but three of his little children to ride, and frequently takes his whole family out for an airing "on the road." A Veritable Philosopher on Wheels. Bepresentative Jerry Simpson, on the other hand, cares nothing for speed and fancy figures, but finds an infinite amount of delight in cantering straight ahead at a moderate gait. He ride3 at any hour of the morning, afternoon or evening, sometimes with his friend Hull, of Iowa, or Johnson, of Ohio, but ottenest alone, in solitary med itation, "lancy free." He turns the street corners warily, in the most leisurely man ner possible, and in general conducts him self literally like a philosopher on wheels. He lives on" "the Hill," near the Capitol, and when the debates in the House happen to grow unbearably dull, as they frequently do, be slips over homeyets out his 'cycle and takes a quiet little spin by way of mental and physical refreshment. Occasionally he meets other members of the club by prearrangement on the open . i jJamIk- 1 1 If 1 &. pJ "? "n" $ 1flTwTTTT ggggpRssg plaza at the cast front of the'fcapitol, when they all have a happy-go-lucky race over the smooth asphalt Then after they have. sufficiently enjoyed tne Keen air wnisuing about their, ears, they return to the House in time to vote, depositing their wheels in convenient nooks' and crypts on the base ment floor. They eouldri't have done this in 'the 'last" Congress, for Speaker Beed, who hadn't at that time experienced a change of heart in the matter of public bicycling', made an 'inflexible rule against the storage 'of bicycles inside the House end ot the building; to the discomfiture of the page-boys and clerks' who had made a prac tice of tiding to and from their daily work. Sprincer Lite's the Eierclsr. Chairman Srringer. of Ways and Means, is an old hand" at the wheel, and is one of the pioneers among Congressmen in the use of toe rapid 'vehicle! He early initiated his youngest son in the mysteries of its management Tfnluckily his late illnca has prevented him from joining his col leagues in -their regular practice, but his heart has been with them just the same, and when he miiy recovers rns neaitn ne wiu make up for lost time. Bepresentative Washington from the out set exhibited a marked degree of pluck and energy in addressing himself to the diffi culties that always beset beginners on the wheel. With the assiduous coaching and encouragement of Representative Johnson, however, he has become one of the best riders in the club. He uses a very light machine and discards all the unnecessary appliances. Ex-Speaker Beed, who has the reputation of riding the biggest upright wheel in the State of Maine when at home in Portland, is content here in Washington with a low seated "safety." It is related authorita tively that when he first essayed to ride the Ex-Speaker Reed Dismounts. monster in Maine he "dished" his wheel twice and broke the delicate attachments with the same easy grace and. inimitable' sang frold that characterized him in his fracture, when Speaker, of the parliamentary traditions and precedents of a hundred, years. Coaching Beed for a Bacer. He still has an aversion to riding in the fierce gaze of publicity which obtains in Washington, and it is only rarely tuas ne consents to a little.ruu, and then only in the least frequented rendezvous of the club. The other members of the club are anxious that he shall excel, for they have it in mind to deputize.him to represent them should they be called upon to annihilate some out side competitor for wheelmen's honors. They know lys would be able to do the job effectually. Representatives Daniell, of New Hamp shire, Sperry, ot Connecticut, and Scott, of Illinois, can be seen on their wheels almost any bright dav now, bowling swiftly over the delightful boulevards of the fashionable Northwest Mr. Sperry affects a wheel of Yankee home manufacture, while Mr. Scott is pleased with an imported one. Several of the "extremely young" Congressmen from New England and elsewhere have an equal liking lor both uprights and "safe tie," and are regarded as connoisseurs as to best styles and makes. While the asphalt streets leave nothing to be desired for ease and comfort in riding, the club's favorite trysting place is the magnificent driveway called the "White Lot," inclosing 50 odd acres of beautiful level park, between the Executive Mansion and Washington Monument John T. Cbemeb. AFBICA CAHHOT KILL HIM. A. Man Who Has IIved Longer In Central Africa Than Any Other White. This is a picture of a man of iron phy sique who has lived longer in Central Af rica than any other white man. It is 11 years since Amedee Legat entered tbe service of the Congo Free State. Of the Amedee LegaL hundreds of white servants of the States employed in the far interior, Legat alone has never asked for a vacation. For ten years he has not seen the sea. He is now almost in the geographical center of Af rica, the sole representative of the State in King Msiri's country, northwest of Lake Bangweola No agent of the State has seen him for a year, but it is supposed that Delcommune's expedition, carrying sujv plies to the lone Belgian, will soon reach him. Legat is now 32 years old. He is so com pletely isolated from his fellow officers that if he were to start for the nearest post it would take bim three aud a half months to reach it; and he could not reach a steamer for Europe in less than 200 days. For two vears he lived without a singleEuropean assistant at Luebo, on the Upper Kassai liver, nearly 500 miles above Stanley Pooh Twice a year a steamer visited him to replenish his supplies, and learn how he was flourishing in the wilder ness. These were red letter days for Legat, ior then he received letters from his mother. and news from the outside world. Fatigues, Erivations and isolation apparently nave ad no effect upon Legat's iron frame. He was born to pioneer the way and he intends to spend years yet in Africa. The Congo Free State has twelve agents in its service who have spent nine years in the Dark Continent, but every three years they have returned to Europe to recruit their health. The case of Legat is so excep tional that King Leopold II. has houored him with a special medal to commemorate his services. His rank is that of a lieuten ant in the public force, and he is the most striking example yet known of the possi bility of men of certain temperaments'and rugged health living" uninterruptedly in Africa without suffering from the trying climate. Bheumatlam Cured In Three Days. Miss Grace Littlejohn is a little girl, aged eleven years, residing in Baltimore, Ohio. Bead what she says: "I was troubled with rheumatism for two years, but could get nothing to do me any good. I was so help less that I had to be carried like a babe when I was advised to get a bottle of Chamber lain's Pain Balm. I got it from our drug gist, Mr. J. A. Humbler, and in three days I was up and walking around. I have not 1 elt'any return of it since aud my limbs are as limber as they ever were." Fifty cent bottles for sale by druggists. tisu nktKflr?. LORE 'ABOUT COFEEE. The Eule Is to Age Green Berries out Use the Boast Promptly HOW TO BUT A GOOD AETICLR Tho Connoisseur Begins With Coli Water and Heats Gradually. . BOLL EEQUIEED FOR THE BEBTTHfQ WmriJtN TOR THZ DISPATCH. 1 To mske sure of good coffee you need to comprehend these two facts green coffee, like wine, is the better for keeping; roasted, coffee, contrawise, cannot be used too soon after coming from the fire. The Grand Turk to whom coffee drinking is in some sort a religion, requires that his beans shall be ponnded while smoking hot, put into the water without cooling, boiled very quickly and durnk at a blistering heat Though his method would not commend itself to the American housewife, she will do well to embody the seed-thought of it in' her own. Unless, thongh, she is much bet ter off for service than the average of her sisters, she must content herself with fresh-, roasted coffee once a week in place of twice a day. That need not be a calamity if she will' put the beans piping hot into a close canis ter and let them cool slowly with a heavy, cloth well wrapped over it Do not put on' the lid until the coffee is cold, but be sure the cloth covers the mouth. Afterward see that the top is kept screwed down tight so as to preserve the fine subtle aroma which gives to the beverage its refreshing frar ' grance. It Is Well to Bay try the Sack. If you can possibly find space for it la your storeroom buy your coffee by the sack. If you are ten years in using it up the last roasting will be better and more flavoroua than the first, provided, of course, that your room is dry and well aired. Dampness is ruinous to coffee. On that account look '" Tne SAaf, Blossom and Berry. close at the berry whether you buy it by bag or pound. Very often it is shipped beforo it is thoroughly cured, or it gets damp and hot in the vessel's hold. It comes out all over blue mold. But a coflee broker does not mind a trifle like that He has a sort of winnowing machine that rub? ofl and blows away snch blemis!ie, leaving the berry clean and sound looking as ever. But if you know enough to bite a grain or so in two, and look close at the severed halves, you will easily find the difference. Beally sound coffee is grayish ereen'inside, of hard, solid, rather oily sub stance, laintly bitter and decidedly un pleasant to the taste. Moldy coffee is more brown and lesi green, somewhat spongy in texture, with a hard, earthy taste, "and the faintest scent of nCild Sometimes damaged coflee beans are mixed , with sonnd ones but if your dealer is a thoroughly reputable one you may depend on getting a good quality if you pay a decent price. If fate decrees that you must buy ground coffee or none, go to some dealer who has both a reputation and a conscience, ask for half a pound of his freshest roasted beans, see them ground with your own eyes, reso lutely standing out against the beguilement of chicory or any other admixture, have the bag doubly, trebly wrapped, and use as soon as possible. now to Itoast Coflee. If you. have your own range and kitchen by all means do your own roasting. Pick' over a pound of "green coffee, throwing out stones, sticks and faulty grains. Wash i4' quickly through warm water and dip out1 with a skimmer and drain in a seeve for half, an hour. Then put it into yonr biggest' square stone pan, shake it evenly over the bottom, and set it inside the oven which should be warm, but not scorching hot In ten minutes pull out the pan, stir the coffee well and return it to the oven. Eepeat until the coffeeis dry through and faintlv brown. Then bring the oven to quick; baking beat and let it remain so ior an hour, stirring the coffee at five-minute in tervals, so that no grain shall burn. At the end of that time it ought to be a rich black-brown, nearly uniform in color, cooked through and through, but with no hint or flavor of scorching. When perfectly roasted, a grain of coffee should crack crisply betwixt the teeth. If it does not,) the roasting is not thorough, and the beans nust be stirred continually lor 15 minutesj longer with tbe pan set. on top of the range just back from the fire. It is a nice job until you learn all about it, but patience and practice will very soon make! you perfect ( Where coffee is used only at long Inter-' vals it is best to keep the green berry onj hand, and roast barely enough for use "when needed. A small quantity can be done In half an hour with .very little trouble by putting it in a hot skillet and stirring until it browns. now to ilaks the Coffee. Given ' proper coffee, properly roasted, 1 two other things onlv are essential a clean ! pot and freshly boiled water. It does not , at all matter what you make it in, if onlyj the vessel be clean "and well kept Empty) grounds as soon as possible and wash out the inside well with soap and very hot water, mopping the sides welL Then scald' twice, letting the water run out through tho spout, and turn upside down to drain and1 dry. Have your water kettle clean, and fill it freshly. While the water is boiling tak a scant tablespoonful of berries for each cup of coflee, grind them moderately fine, scald the coffee pot again, and drop them in, thenl add a cup of cold water and stir well. It time presses, fill up to your requirementi with briskly boiling water, set it over the fire, let it strike a boil, then pull back; where it will barely bubble for a minute. Next, draw away to where it will keep very hot But not boil, and let it stand for 15 mln- -' ; utes'before serving. , It should be clear, fragrant, delicious, re- ' J freshing beyond words, with neither dregsV nor grounds to yex your palate and distem- . ' per your eye. '. If von are a connoisseur, tbouch, yon will use "cold water in place of boiling, and let" the temperature be very gradually raised.r. It ought to take all of three-quarters of anr 4 hour to Teach the boilingpoinu Let it stand1'"" and settle as beiore, and pour into warm, r freshlv-finsedcups. , Another small secret: If sugar is used,; ' pour the coffee upon it instead of dropping," the lumps in afterward. If, further, yoolfe use cream, that too should be put iu tbe-'l empty cup. Unless, indeed, it is whippecVjp WCaU, WHJCil 13 UiBbillltJ a.. M.l..UUUgUI a frivolous refinement quite unwort. good coffee. r JIes. McCxrtLOcg WrT.iYTA'ani , "WE I I mmm,- mmtunmmmm y-M'j!ik'i4u$&k . i ilWiilifi .muijittft ,.. y- , 'smH1sisisisisV