III THE CMS UNO, Carpenter Eeaclies St. Peters burg on Ilis Way to tlie Famino Districts. EASY TB1YELING SO FAB, Passports Always Bequired, but That's the End of Trouble. RUSSIAN CUST0JI HOUSE METHODS. Magnificent Horses That Don't Know What It Is to Go in a IV alt FIEST MEAL IN THE GREAT ESiriKE rcoimrsFOXDEN-CE or ran dispatch.! 6t. Petersburg, July 3. AH a prisoner in in the land of the Czar. Xot in jail, but in prison, nev ertheless. I have one-seventh of the whole world as mr prison yard, and one-tenth of its in habitants as my companions. Every one ot the one hun dred odd millions of prisoners has to give an account ot himself. Every man in Kussia, whether born there or a stranger, must have a passport, and if he goes from one part of Kussia to the other he cannot stay in a town over night without showing his passport. He cannot leave the country without his passport has been vised by the authorities, and their permission must be gotten for his departure. All this looks very hard. It is really very easy, and I find it so far but little trouble. The hotel authorities attend to everything and a few cents of a fee is the only charge. I entered Bussia from Ger- US? -. "tuft. A Russian Feasant. many. The ride from Berlin to SL Peters burg takes 36 hours and the first-class fare is 53i I took a sleeper and found the roads good and the accommodations fair. How the Trains Compare Mltb. Oar. There was nothing of the fine woods, the silver-plated vestibules and the gorgeous fittings of our limited express trains, but the cars were box-like affairs divided up into pigeon-hole compartments, entered from a narrow passageway that Tan along the whole side of the car. Each compartment had two upper and two lower berths, and the lower opposite mine was occupied by a German colonel, ivho snored in four languages all night long. The berths are about 3 feet wide and the pillow I had was a little rubber baz filled with air from the garlic-tainted lungs of the con ductor. It baa a white pillow case on it, but its size made me think of the cowboy who upon going to bed for the first night in a "Western hotel took out his revolver and began to fire at the electric button. When the waiter appeared he pointed to the pil low and told him to take that darned little thing away, for he was afraid it would get into his ears. The single towel furnished me in the box shaped washroom next morning was no bigger than the pillow, and the looking glass was of about the size of Scribner'i Magazine. I luckily had some soap in my bag, or I would have had to wash without it, and the sleepers here provide no brushes or combs of any kind. The conductor acts as the porter and your boots are not blacked, though the man expects a fee, as our porters da The conductor spoke English, French, Russian and German and he was dressed in more style than one of our army generals. Still, he accepted the quarter 1 gave him with(more bows and thanks than I have ever gotten from a negro on a Pullman, and he carried my baggage into the Custom House at Wir ballin, on the Eussian frontier. At a I'.tustan Custom House. If you are not a suspicious character and if yo'ur passport is all right you will have no trouble in getting into Bussia. Thanks to a note Ironi the Ku6sian Minister at Ber lin my trunks were not opened at all, and my.passport was taken, carried away, regis tered and brought back in less than 15 min utes. I had to show it again before I A Russian Policeman. could get out of the Custom House, and when I arrived here the firt thing I was asked for at the Hotel de Europe was my passport. If I change my hotel in St Petersburg it will have to be regis tered again, and if I leave St Petersburg the hotel keeper will ask me where I am going and the fact will be announced to the authorities. By this means the Government knows just where every citizen and every traveler is at any time, and if you wish to gel tbe address of anyone in St Petersburg you can do it for a postage stamp. All that is necessary is to write out your inquiry on a blank which the police have tor the purpose and drop it in the post A few hours .will bring an answer giving full information concern ing the whereabouts of the man Tn thlq relpect the passport system has its ad- I Yiunwico. usu uijoierious disappearances i It- tfSPtl l I UP MM II iVrl tLB ffw "'Zi GSJrf" i if i as occur here are not untraceable by the police, and the Government is a great in telligence bureau, which the people patron ize quite extensively. I am told here that bnt few Americans have trouble at the Custom House in Bussia, and some are said to have even gotten through without passports. The officials, however, have a pretty good list of sus picious characters, and such a woman as Mrs. Creamer, the Polish nihilist, would not hare been allowed to come into Bussia even if she had been sent by the order of the Bed Cross, as I believe she pretended, and George Herman would hardly be al lowed to visit the country. Papers With Paragraphs Blocked Oat. Speaking of Mr. Eennan, his books are not sold in Bussia, and at the Custom House all trunks are examined and only certain books are allowed to come in. The admis sion of books is harder to accomplish than the admission of men, and all newspapers are given up. Bussian pnblio opinion is carefully watched and the mails are exam ined as carefully as the trunks. All papers are looked over, and those on file at the hotel here are spotted with great black JL DKOSCHKY patchers where the censors have blocked out some paragraphs they do not think the peo ple ought to read. Anyone, however, who can show that he is all 'right can get any book or paper he wants by making an appli cation to the police for it, and at the big English book store here I was told they could get me Kennan's books, the Century Magazine or any other anti-Russian works I wanted if I cared to order them. At the Custom House I got my first Bus sian meal. The sonp was served in a bowl and there was a great lump of ice in it, while some sour cream was offered me in a gravy bowl to add to the soup to give it a flavor. I took,two spoonfuls and then tried the second course. This was a chicken of the size of a pigeon, and following this came a beefsteak and potatoes. All ot these were good, but I could not make out what to do with the little green cucumber which was laid beside my plate until I noticed my neighbors, and found that in Bussia every one cuts up and dresses his own cucumbers, and that they are always served with the skin on and green. From a Garden to a Waste. Leaving the frontier of Germany you see the moment you cross tbe line that you are in a new couutry. You have left a land of stone. You are now in a land of wood. Instead of stone cottages, whitewashed and roofed with red tile, you have wooden houses not unlike those of our western towns, and here and there you see log cabins that would not be out of place on our frontier. Thenorthern part ot Germany is a garden. North Bnssia is a swamp, a forest, a waste. You ride for miles through pine forests that look like those ot Min nesota or northern Wisconsin, and you have to look at the queer costumes of the people before you can realize you are in autocratic Bussia and in the wilds ot the Czar. Here, however, vou make no mistakes. That long-coated guard at the station, with bis pants in his boots, his sword at his side and his revolver in a leather case on his right hip, is one of the famous Bussian police, and those fiat-faced, high-cheek boned, rosy-cheeked peasants in caps and sheepskin coats are Bussian peasants. At every cross road yon see a Bussian girl standing holding up a flag as the train goes by, 'arid queer carts and wagons with great yokes rising high above the heads ot tho horses stand about the depots. Tbe pas sengers of the trains, are almost pure Bns- A D'oschly Driver. sians, and I take my kodak and photograph a few striking scenes. Tho Hebrew Exodus to America. Poland itself is about as big as the State of New York, and the part I passed through was ot about the same character as North ern New York about Chautauqua Lake, It is the land of the emigrating Bnssian Hebrew, and the most of those pauper He brews who are now coming to America from Bussia come from Poland. They are of a far lower class than any Hebrews we have ever had, and they are bv no means popular here. Of all Poland 13 per cent of the people are Hebrews, and you find Hebrew colonies in all the large cities of Bussia. Thev generally have a quarter and a market of their own, and they are sharper than the Bussian in their dealings and take ad vantage of his simplicity, his extravagance and his happy-go-lucky wav of life. The result is that soon after a Polish Hebrew settles in a Bussian town he has a mortgage on half the property belonging to it, and the simple peasant cannot understand that he got this, to a certain extent, legitimately. This is, I am told, in a great measure the cause of the unpopu larity of the Hebrews in Bussia and the rea son for their expulsion from the country. There is a law in Bussia that a Hebrew, uo lesshe be an artisan, may be returned to the place where he was born in case be has re moved from it and has become obnoxious to any of the people of his new home. Our Consul General at St Petersburg tefls me the Hebrews who have gone to America have not been expelled from Bussia, but have been ordered by the Government back to Poland or to the other Bussian places of their nativity. America they look.upon as the land of gold for all, and instead ot going back lrom whence thev rsm they trn An , through and sail for the United States. The Bussian Is still Barbarous. The Czar is a genuine Bussian, with a great love for his own people, and in this way he protects them. As to the cruelties ot the officials, there is probablv ranch that is true iu the stories to that effect, for the Bussian is still half barbarous and his ideas of punishment are more cruel than ours. I wish I could give you a stereopticon view of St Petersburg. It is one of the queerest, one of tbe fastest, one of the gayest, and by all odds one of the most unique capitals of the world. Lying as it does on the great Gulf of Finland, a river as wide as the Mississippi at St Louis runs through it, and great canals cut it up so that it looks like a second Venice. It is a city ot wide streets, of big three, four and five-story flats; of vast palaces, many of which cover acres; of a multitude of gor geous churches, of great schools, of art gal leries, of factories and the thousand and one other features which make un the capital of the greatest empire on the globe. iou nave neara tne story- ot it ouuaing. SEJKl'7 PfiE I stood yesterday in the log; hut that Peter the Great built on the swamp, here when fas deeided that he would make this point his capital AU this was a forest, a marsh and a wilderness. The Bussia of that day, a the Bussia of this, was in the interior, but Peter decided he wanted to have his capital where be could look out upon Europe, and he called St Petersburg bis window, and, like Aladdin, he made it rise upon the mud in almost a night He made every noble in the empire bnild a house here. Every boat on the Baltic and the Bussian rivers had to draw aload of stone to the city, and 40,000 men worked year in and year out till the great capital rose. Building like Those of the. Fair. Our public buildings at Washington are large, but those of Bussia Oover far greater areas. The only things that compare with them are the mammoth structures of the Chicago Exposition, and as to the churches here, one of them, St Isaac's Cathedral, has cost nearly (20, 000, 000, or as much as will be the total outlay of the Exposition. There are other churches nearly as expen sive, and the whole city has been built with out regard to cost It is almost a Sabbath AND DRIVER. dav's journey to go through some of these palaces. The winter palace, on the banks of the Neva, would.spoil the area of a ten acre field, and its corridors if stretched out would reach miles. The finest street of St Petersburg is the Nevski prospect, which runs from the river at the Navy Department or Admiralty buildings back through the city. This street is over three miles long in a straight line, and it is walled with magnificent stores. It is caved with cobblestones, flags and wooden blocks. The pavements or side walks are of flagstones. The center of tbe street, where the double deckers ot street cars go, is of cobblestones, and on either side of this there is a wide strip of wood for driving. The wooden pavement is made of octagonal blocks of pine about six inches thick and five inches in diameter set flat on a base of planks, which rest .on great logs sunken into the street These blocks are cemented together with pitch and they make a driveway equal almost to a dirt road. A Great Place for Driving. I have been in all the great capitals of the world from Paris to Pekin and I have nowhere seen such horses and such driving as in St Petersburg. Every other man owns a fast team and all drive as though the devil was after them. A great many of the horses are of the OrloS breed, big, tall, well made blacks, all of. whom are high steppers. They have a touch of Arabian blood in them and they are trained so that they step in time and go very fast I have been in St Petersburg over a week and I have not seen a horse walk yet, and one of the exciting incidents of life here is the narrow escapes which you seem to be constantly making whenever you go out to drive. The droschkies are among the must com fortable rigs I have ever ridden in. If you could put a Japanese jinriksha on four wheels, put a seat in front of it and harness a horse instead ot a man to it you would have something like a St Petersburg droschky. Or if you would cnt down a victoria to half size, make the wheels no bigger than those of a baby carriage and put the bed of the rig about a foot from the ground you would have the body ot the best sort of aroschky. If you wish the poorer class you must take off the back and too have a fair sample of the 25,000 cabs which fly day and night along these Bussian streets. The droschky horses are quite as curious as the vehicles they pull and their drivers are equally strange., .The horses seem to be harnessed with thongs, and you could cnt the whole outfit oat ot a pair of Bussian top boots. There are no tugs and no -cruppers, and the droschky shafts are tied to a yoke which goes around the horse's neck and over which stands a great wooden bow two feet high, to which tbe bridle is fastened, reining the horse well up. Fbank G. Carpenter. A CUBI0US BAILWAY BELIC. Specimen of the First Passenger Ticket in Use on the Railroads. Chicago Times. Among various trophies secured by Chief Smith of the transportation depart ment during his recent visit to Europe is a small brass pocket piece resembling an ordi nary baggage check, which is worth a great deal more than its weight in gold. It is of octagon shape and on one side is stamped the inscription "L. & S. Bailway" "Bag wortb. No. 29." On the opposite side the number is repeated. This fortunately pre served relic represents the kind and form of tickets in use in ooj mr open-carnage pas sengers" on the Leicester and Swannington Bailway. The distance covered by the main line was a trifle over 16 miles, and the passenger fares charged were Vy pence per mile. There was one class only, and passengers stood up In an open carriage, generally known as a tub, which was nothing better than a high-sided goods wagon, having no top, no seats, no spring buffers. These brass tickets were issued to the various stations, the guard of the train carrying a leather bag something in tbe style of a collection box, having eight separatadi visions, one for each station. At the end of eacn passenger's journey his ticket was taken up and placed in the bag by the guard to be returned, re corded on the books, and again used. WOMEN IN THE BANES. Some Famous Females Occupying Positions in the Prussian Army. New York Tribune. Seven women now hold the place ortegi mental chief in the army ot Prussia. The present Emperor is responsible for the ap pointment of five women. The oldest woman-colonel is the Empress Frederic, who was placed at the head of a regiment of Hussars, October 18, 1861, the date ot the coronation ot Emperor William L Princess Frederio Charles, widow of the famous "Bed" Prince, ranks second "in point of time, having Deen made chief of a regiment of dragoons in 1871. Queen Victoria, the third female com mander by courtesy, has been chief of another Prussian regiment of dragoons since 1889. The Princess Albert of Prussia, wife of the Begent of Brunswick, has been chief ot a regiment or lusiliers since 1889, also. The Empress Augusta Victoria, wife of His Majesty, has been commander of a regiment of the same branch of the service since 1890. Tha Duchess ot Connaught, daughter of the Bed Prince, is a colonel of.infantry, receiv ing the honor two years ago. The Qneen Begent of the Netherlands became a colonel a lew weeks ago. The Duchess ot Edin burgh, although not head of a regiment, is attached in the recorfc to ont ot the regi ments ot the Guards. Kings In Industry. There has almost always in English his tory been some oqe industry that was sup posed to be king. In the middfe ages it was the growth and export ot raw wool; last century it was the woolen manufacture itself; early in this century and down to 'a very late date cotton was king; mora lately, since the beginning of the railway and steamship era, it has been coal and iron. PJTTSBT7BG DISPATCH, GOULD'S FLOWER FAD. He Has Issued .Orders for the Finest Conservatory in the World. AN ORANGE GROVE UNDER GLASS. Banana Plantations and Peach Orchards In Bloom in January. A BIG MOSQOE PACKED WITH PALMS rWBITTXV FOB TH DISPATCH.! All men of note have their bobbies. Jay Gould's hobby is flowers. He has already pent many thousands of dollars in the culti vation of rare plants and shrubbery at his magnificent conservatories on the Hudson, and Mr. F. Mangold, his chief gardener, says Mr. Gould has just given orders for the expenditure of many mr6 thousands of dol lars in adding to his hothouses. When his plaus have been fully carried out the "Wizard of Wall street" will have the most extensive private conservatory in the world. New buildings are to be erected and the rarest andmost costly trees, shrubs and flowers are to be collected from every quarter of the globe. For 20 years Mr. Gould has been adding to bis summer home, Lindhurst, at Irving ton on tha Hudson. His collection of plants and shrubs is said by experts to be the finest of any private collection in the world, but tbe money king keeps on making ex tensive additions each year. The present structure of glass has been so overcrowded with its costly tenants that Chief Gardener Mangold found it necessary to have more buildings or else cnt off importations. So Mr. Gould ordered a $100,000 addition to the greenhouses. A Rivalry of the Millionaires. Manv New York millionaires have bad the same desire that Jay Gould possesses. First John Hoey started la with the idea of vanquishing Mr. Gould in the elegance and costliness of his coneervatories and after spending half a million dollars drew out A prominent Hew York florist says all of Mr. Hoey'scostlv imported plants were nl lowedtorun wild and that tbe finest or shrubs and trees were permitted to die for want of care. Jay Gonld kept on sinking; thousands of dollar on his hothouses and Mr. Hoey stepped out of the race. Next Cyrus w. Field, the wizard's old enemv, be trBn ttrntinir onnsarvatorifla at Ardnlsv Park, near lrvtngton on the Hudson, that were mtenaea to oversnaaow air. iouias, hut financial and family trouble came to that brainy man and the Field conservator ' ies are unfinished. "Since the death of Mrs. Gould, about three years ago, Mr. Gould has given more time than ever to his conservatories," said one of his Intimates in Wall street recently. "He has for years been a great student in botany, hut he left the selection of pur chases to his chler gardener, Mr. Mangold, who has been with him manyyeais. Mr. Gould's intentions now are to enter into the cultivation of raro flow e is, tropical plants and choice fruits on a grander scale than ever before attempted outside of the great botanical gardens of Europe It is a tact, though, that after Mr. Gould has built the new addition to his conservatory it will lank with the famous publio conservatories across the Atlantic. A Tract Devoted to JTres and Shrubs. "There are 750 acres in Mr. Gould's estate, and it is well adapted to a botanical garden. The entire collection of trees, the finest in the country that will exist in this climate, are growing in Mr. Gould's park. A glance at the completed conservatories at Lind hurst will better enable us to comprehend the grandeur of the proposed new garden, which will, indeed, be a rival of theKew Gardens at Richmond, England, or Jai din des Plantes in Pails. "The main conservatory, from which the other hothouses are built out at all ancles. Is in the form of a Turkish mosque and is 500 feet in length. The eastern and western wings, running north and south, are 1C0 feet long and 85 feet In depth. Beginning with the east end tbe main entrance of the con servatory leads to the rose house, with great terraces or the choicest buds, like the Bon Bllene, Catharine Mermet, the Bride, Nepho tls and Ferle des Jardins, with their myriad of buds. Passing along the red-tiled flooring the conservatory of begonias and atepha notls is reached. Adjoining is the pink house, 40 feet in length, with over 45 vai le tter in bloom half the year round. The fernry comes next, with its vast collection of the various species that are indigenous to tropical climes. Finest Iiot of Palms in the World, "In the main circle of the mosque-shaped conservatory is the palm, house, with its lofty dome, roomy rotunda and spacious niches, all artistically filled by what Is con ceded to be the finest private collection in the world. A tountaln In tbe center of the' palm house, in which aquatic plants lux uriate, adds tnuoh to tbe beauty of the fairy like place. There are 310 varieties of palms, that embraceihe rarest and choicest speci mens, while there is a great profusion of sugar, date, sago, India rubber and arrow root plants. At a cost of more than $2,000 Mr. Mangold recently bongbt the Cicatea Emperor William, a tree that all the scien tists had hunted after in Europe, but for which Mr. Gould's order was the fiist to reach Berlin by cable. Mr. Gonld values his palm collection at $200,000." On leaving the farm house in a westerly direction the grape" houses, in four sections, are disclosed. Mr. Gould la specially fond of fruits, and he can secure at any season a plentiful supply of every known variety, lor their culture is so controlled as to permit of the supply being spread over the 12 months ot the year. In tbe rear of tbe conservatory of roses, and skirting the easterly extension of the renr wall, is the orchid house filled with 10,000 plants and over ISO varieties. Rivals the Public Gardens ot Europe. The collection of crotans, or plants of variegated foliage, adjoins the orchids and is without question the finest private collec tion In tbe world, and is said by many ex perts to rival thoso of the public gardens of Europe. In tne adjoining house are kept tliA nnnitnthpR nr nltfthni nlnnti wlilla nnnn the lattice work of tbe tessellated glass roof ) are suspended baskets ot cold air orchids from the East Indies and China. The buildings to be built at once will ex tend the conservatory east and west so there will be a lange of 1,000 feat A solid glass squat e, 600 teet in each direction, will sepa rate these from the main buildings, and is to be filled with oranges fiom every clime. In tbe center of the square will be artistically arranged a miniature plantation of bananus. All the glass is to be movable, so when the weather permits the structure Is to be stripped, and a natural peaoli and orange grove is to be imitated and tbe entire floor ing through which the heat is to be admitted is to be sodded over so as to make every thing as true to nature as possible. This will Involve an elaborate system or under giound heating. A similar idea is to be car ried out in the cultivation of rhododendrons and azaleas and a space 300 feet long, run ning west rrom tne seed house, is to be utilized. Mr. Mangold says this is the grandest project of tbe nineteenth century in scientific botany and would outdo the splendor of tha wonderful exhibition at the Horticultural Gardens In London. r'. Caught at Last In the toils of dyspepsia after imposing on the stomaoh Tor years, how shall the sufferer restore bis much abused digestion? By a resort to Hostetter's Stomaoh Bitters, coupled with an abandonment of eatables and drinkables calculated to injure tbe dl- festive apparatus in a feeble state. Nothing lice the Bitters lor conquering malaria, bil ious and kidney trouble, rheumatism and liver disorder. First Come, First Served. There Is going to be a great crowd at Sai ler's on Monday who are going to take ad vantage or the great pants sale. Men's all wool pants going at 3 25 and SO styles to iok from. Join tbe crowd. The sale is for onday only at Sailer's, corner Smithfleld and Diamond. Take Good Care of tha Children. If vou have children you will be inter ested'ia the experience of Mr. John Cook, of Pilot, Vermilion county, III. He say: "Two yean ago two of my family, a young man and a girl, had very severe and danger ous attacks of bloody flux. The doctor here was unable, after a week's time, to check or relieve either case. I threw the doctor overboard and began using Chamberlain's Uoiio, unojera anu uiarrncBa itemedy. im- Srovement was seen very soon and my chil ren arose in a few days from what X feared wonld be their death-bed. It is a grand, good medicine." xuwihau (SUNDAY, TOLT 17, WRITTEN FOU THE DISPATCH BY DORA RUSSELL, Author of "Footprints in the Snow," "The Broken Seal." "The Track of the Storm," "A Fatal Past," Eta SYNOPSIS OF PREVIOUS CHAPTER. Two lovers, Sir James MacKennon. Bart, and Miss Miriam Clvdo, are standing hv the seashore, and the former Is urging her to name the wedding lav. She pleads for lelav. In the meantime an acotdent ocoura, a soldier being wounded bva firing partr. Miriam binds up his wound and saves his life. Glancing at each other' face a mutual ree n-rnitlnn takes place. On arriving home the doctor who was summoned to the wounded man g-ve her a note which the soldier had hastllv "cribblad. It contains the words "For God's sake keep mv eci et." Miriam, bv means of Dr. Reed, ends to her soldier-paMent a brief me age, "Do nor be afralfll" which he receives as he i lying in the hnsnltal. In the meantime Miriam's mother. Mrs. Clvde, makes np her mind that her daughter shall bo married to Sir James in a month, and tells her so. But Miriam, thinking of a life dearer than her own, hanging in tbe balance, pleads earnestly for more time. Mrs. Clyde writes to tipr other danghter, Joan, who is married to hard and stern General Conway, asking them to the wedding. Conway think it'a a good match, but pains Joan by Intimating that Miriam should not so soon forget another affair in which bi nenhew was the hero. HeandMrs. Clyde agree it Is best tn hurrv the wedding for fear Sir James should hear of that. Miriam is obstinate, and gets Sir James tn ask Mrs. Clydo for postponement. Colonel Clvde Is unable to change Miriam's mind. She worries herself sick, and Dr. Beed is pent for. By means of notes through him, Miriam and Private Dare arrange a clandestine meeting. Miriam tells her secret lover he must leave the country. He says he wonld have to buy his way out of the army. At her next meetin? with Sir James she asks him for the neces sary money, and he gives her double the amount. Then she arranges another clandestine meeting, and just as she is returning to her room In the night Mrs. Clyde catches her. Mrs. Clyde suspects the truth, bnt Miriam refuses to tell her. Dare meets Ford and gives her the money to give back to Miriam. Mrs. Clyde decides to have tbe wedding at London, and she and her daughter go there. COPYRIGHT, 1803, CHAPTER XV. THE SISTERS. Two days after her arrival in town Miriam herself posted tbe letter she had written ad dressed to the soldier Dare at Newborough-on-the-Sea. And she had some little diffi culty in doing this, for she was conscious that her mother watched her closely. Still she found her opportunity, and after' the letter was gone she felt with a sorrowful heart 'that she could do no more. In the meanwhile Mrs. Clyde was going on actively with her preparations for the marriage. Then Sir James joined them in town, and be naturally was constantly with Miriam, and so the days gilded away until it wanted but three to the one on which Miriam bad promised to become Sir James' wife. On this day the third before the mar riageGeneral Conray and his wife arrived in town to be present at the ceremony. The sisters Joan and Miriam had not met for long, and they met now with deep though suppressed emotion. They clasped each other's hands, they kissed eaoh other, and in both their dark eyes there was a troubled look of secret meaning. There was an ex traordinary likeness between them, and this struck their mother more vividly than usual. "How like you two are!" she exclaimed, looking at her daughters as they stood to gether. "I declare you grow more like each other every year." "Yes, there Js great likeness between them, certainly," said General Conray, who was present at this meeting, bnt neither Joan nor Miriam spoke; they just glanced at each other a moment and that was all. Presently the General went out, and Mrs. Clyde was called away; and tbe sisters were' ft. OFFERS GREAT ADVANTAGES In Furniture, Carpets, Curtains, Refrigerators, Baby Carriages and hundreds of other articles needed for the complete furnishing of a home. OTJK; LOW PRICES WIIsT ZPJTR!sra-:E-r3 BABY BUGGIES. HOME COMFORTS. In the Furniture line aVe here in endless variety. LAWN and PORCH IROCKERS- All the new styles in these, and all sorts of swing and easy chairs for outdoors. We can furnish you a deal of comfort for a very small sum. 9 923.92M27 E. P 1893. BT DORA RUSSELL. alone. Then again thev looked at each other, and once more silently clasped each other's bands. Miriam was the first to speak. "Joan."she said at length, in a trembling voice. "I have so ranch to tell you." "About Sir James?" asked Joan, looking earnestly at her sister. "OhI no, no, Joan," and Miriam's voice sank to a whisper, "who do you think I have seen have talked to7" "Not " and Joan's, face suddenly pa'ed. "Not " "Hugh Ferrar," whispered Miriam, be low her breath, and her face, too, grew pale; "I saw him at Newborongh." "At Newborough!" echoed Joan; "what was he doing there? Did he go to see you? Oh, Miriam, surelv not!" "We met by chance. Oh, Joan, what I have gone through! One dav there was an accident on tbe sands a soldier was shot who was marking at a target and I was there. I ran forward to try to help to stop the bleeding, and when I looked at the man's face it was Hugh Ferrrs." "Oh, Miriam! Oh, Miriam!" and Joan clasped her hands despairingly together." "It was Hngh, Joan. He is a soldier; and and he knew me as I knew him. And he looked at me. Ob, I shall never forget that hour." Suddenly Joan Conrav's face changed and a strange light shone in her eyes. "I should have hated him!" she cried, passionately, and she clenched her little hands. "Did he die? I should have been glad to see him die!" "OKI Joan!" "Yes, Miriam, for did not that man kill my life all that made my life worth liv ing!" "Oh, hush! Oh, hush!" "And you kept silent?" went on Joan, still excitedly. "You screened him still?" Ain't you tired of car rying the baby around? If" you are not we guar antee the baby would appreciate the change from your arms to a carriage. It need not be a fancy or ex pensive one unless your pride won't allow your child to ride in a cheap and serviceable one. We've both kinds, and for the matter of that every kind that your eye can seek or heart wish. Our line is complete and perfect; we never fail to please all who look at it. You'll ap preciate our carriages and our prices all the more if you have looked about a bit before coming. CREDIT When obtained here does not expose you to high prices. We sell where we expect to get our bills paid; hence, losses being only nom inal, we have no excuse to make any but a reasonable difference between the credit cus tomer and the one who CASH. - "Yes; Joan, do not speak thua you forget, you forget!" ,,.-. . Joan Conray gava s kind of moan ana flung herself on a couch near, and covered her face with her hands. "OhI poor Robert," she moaned; "oh! Miriam, I cannot, cannot forget" Miriam went up to her, and stooped down and kissed her brow. "Hush, hush, Joan," she 4 said, "he, poor Robert Conray, is at rest; bnt, Hugh, think of his misery, his remorse, his wasted life." Joan did not speak. She rocked herself to and fro as if in bitter grief. "He's so changed; oh, so changed," con tinned Miriam; "but I knew him at once, and I was afraid, if General Conray came to Newborough, that he also might recognize him, and so I put off my marriage. I wanted to see him to tell him to go." "I thought he was abroad; I hoped we should never see or hear of him again," said Joan, now looking up. "And vou saw him? Do you mean you spoke to him?" "I met him twice and spoke to him. I rnet him at night I pitied him so much; and and I also could not quite forget" "Bnt, Miriam oh, surely, Miriam I" and it was now Joan's turn to look at her sister entreatingly, "you surely won't let this come between you and right?" Miriam raised her eyes and looked at her sister, and Joan understood the silent re proacn. "I knowl I know!" she cried, and once THE INTERVIEW more she put her hand over her face. "I have no right to speak; I am the last one that shonld dare to speak; but, Miriam, let my shipwreck, my broken heart, my broken life, be a warning at least to you." Again the younger sister was silent for a few moments, and then she said slowly and painfully: "It is best not to speak of these things, Joan of the past, even between ourselves. I would not have told you that I had seen him (Hugh) except that you must persuade, must try to prevent, General Conray from going near Newborough until Hngh is gone. I got him the money to go at once, but he would not take it, but he said he should try to be transferred to some regiment in India. He is best away; best ont of my sight, and I pray and hope out of my mind; best for his own sake and for mine; for for I mean to try to be " "A good wife," said Joan, eagerly, as Miriam paused with sudden hesitation and a blush. "Oh, do! Oh, do, my dear," she continued, passionately; "God knows there is no real happiness, none, none, when even the fondest love is mixed with constant fear. -""Sik... REFRIGERATORS. Putting luxury aside, the cost of a Refrigerator is again and again saved. But buy one worth buying. UksSsfeas Tf753SsuJP prices. Every size and style is here, and we can suit you not only in the Refrigerator, but in the price and the terms. See our line before buying. t A buys for I was always afraid, and Robert was always afraid for me, and afraid and ashamed, too, when he remembered his uncle. But wa were blinded; we thought at times only of. each other, and you see tbt end! Death to1 Robert, and endless, unending misery to me." "You will get over it, dear Joan; you will forget it, I pray and trust" "Never! I shall never forget tha dving look on Robert's face his last words. They haunt me day and night, Miriam; they have burnt into my brain, and are killing me, slowly killing me. But I pray only my husband may never know; not in this world, at least, and in the next he will know if hs knows at all our temptations, our struggles! how, how we loved each other so long, so longl From the time I went to Tyford. tho yonng wife of an old man, I loved Robert, aud to think that I caused his death; that my very love killed him!" "General Conray must never know, will never know," said Miriam, who was deeply moved by her sister's grieC "But for you he would have known; had you not come forward as you did and said that it was you who were with poor Robert that night he would surely have suspected , me. Tbe soldier who swore at tha inquest that he had seen Captain Conray with a lady in the grounds at Tyford, as you re member, said he thought it was the Gener al's wife but then you, yon, my dear, came forward to save me; you said you were en- OF THE SISTERS. gaged to Eobert,, that you were with him shortly before the shot was fired that caused his death and and Riohard ba-. lieved thisl" S "He must always believe it, and I did it to save you, and would do it ajain. And, Joan, you should pity Hugh Ferrars, too. He was mad; he thought he had been so cruelly, so disgracefully deceived. Robert Conray was his friend, his most trusted friend, and he knew how we had loved each other Hngh and I; and when he thought I was false, doubly false, and Rob ert Conray falser still, he told me he grew mad. He fired the fatal shot, and then when he knew what he had done when ha recognized you, his bitter remorse was ter rible, is terrible now, and he would have given himself up if I had not prayed him lor your sake, lor all our sake, to go away," Joan Conray moaned aloud. "We must'all bear it as best we can," went on Miriam more bravely; "it has been very hard to bear since I saw Hugh again; since my engagement. I have felt false to Sir James; have felt that I am deceiving Economy is not exhibited by paying a small price for a poor article. Our line is composed ot Refrigerators built on scientific principles. The ice not wast ed, the food preserved. You can't get the kind we sell cheaper anywhere than our CAN'T NAME TENTH PART Bu Hii Of the things we carry in stock in the Furni ture and Housefurnishing lines. But it's safe to say that there is nothing needed to completely furnish a home but is here in great variety at attractive prices. ' . s&23? . S- A aS,. jl t &. saaaJHiaaiaaJKltF'iaaxIli SSSK235K5s Tiiiiiiiiiiiri