seseSsssssssssssssssssssssssseSsssssfc&iyeMSsssieSssssssssssSlgi .., mJtimlfm-rwrmrrm ..-,,, . TMBBrPBWPBsleMfMBBMsleWsMMeMissMfessssMssM F Russia Is Adopting "Uncle Jerry Busk's System of Doing Business. CHOP BEPOKTS AEE GOOD And a Becurrence of the Suffering of 1S92 Is Kot Feared. WHAT THE GOYERHMENTHASDONE Our Donations out a Drop in the Bucket Compared With Its. CARPENTER'S SKETCHES OF THE PEOPLE fCOKBKSrOVBEKCX Or THB PISFATCK.1 St. Petebsbueg, July 15. HE peasant! have sown their crops and the pros pect is that Russia trill have a fine yield this Tear. Thereports,which are received daily here irom the famine dis tricts, are very encour aging, and, though the famine is still raging, the backbone of the demon of Russian starva tion will, it is believed, be broken by the 1st of September, when the a Policeman. harvest wil lhave been gathered. Great want and much suffering, however, will continue to exist for the next year or so in many of the states, and a drought this summer may precipitate a second iamine equally as terri ble as the present one. Notwithstanding all that has been pub lished concerning the famine, we in the United States have but little idea of its ter rible extent and of the wonderful manner in which the Russians have handled it. No countrr in the world, with perhaps the ex. ctption of the United States, could with stand such a strain as Russia is now under- coinc. and there is no nation in the world, except perhaps one, that would rise to the emergency and do so much for its people as Russia is doing. Russia lias Done Tier Duty. The contributions America has made have been oi great good, and they are most thank fully and, I might almost say, tearfully re ceived, but tbev are only a drop in the bucket to what Russia herself is doing. Our and other outside gifts amount, all told, to perhaps $750,000. Tne donations of the Government and the people represent in the neighborhood of 5350,000,000 and the Czar himself has given about $10,000,000 out of his pri vate fund. The Government loans to the iamine villages amount to more thaa $100,000,000 and these loans no one ever expects that the peasants will repay. It is a physical impossibility for them to do so, and, as one of the chief offi cials of the Government said to me latterly, the Czar does not expect repayment. He alwavs gives a present to the peopleupon certain occasions, such as the coronation of a grand duke, and at the nextsuch event one of his presents will probably be the forgiving of this debt. This $100,000,000 was given almost out right by the Government, but in addi tion to it numerous schemes have been favored and authorized by the Czar to get monev for the sufferers, and the bulk of tne gifts have come from the people. One of these sAemes was bx a lottery under the Treasury Department, the prizes of which were guaranteed by the Imperial Bank and the profits of which went to the famine. Russia has no lotteries as the rule, and such things are ordinarilr against the law. This lottery brought in about $75,000,000 and all classes patronized it, many of the wealthy buying thousands ot tickets. Lost Ten Thousand Dol'ars in a Lottery. I know one man here who bought $10,000 worth of tickets, choosing scattering lum bers, and he did not get a single prize. He was twitted on his bad luck and replied: "I don't care, I hare the satisfaction Of know ing that my 20,000 roubles have gone to help the famine." St. Petersburg is a city of many rich people, and many of the nobles here took Jrom $1,000 to $5,000 worth of these lottery tickets, but the great ma jority were sold to people of small means, and the buying ot them was, eo to speak, the fad. Consul General Crawfoid estimates that the gifts of private citizens in Russia to this iamine have been not less than 350,000,000 roubles or the enormous sum ot $175,000,000. The gifts almost surpass comprehension, 1 T A Peasant Woman. and are told, notwithstanding the vast pop ulation oi Russia, they amount, including those of the Government, to $3 for each man, woman and child in the whole Russian Empire, or to $13 per family. "When vou remember that of the twenty odd million families that make up the Russian people not many more than 1,000,000 ot them prob ably has ever had $15 at one time in its possession you get some idea ot the mighty strain this has been on those who could give and have given. The nobility have In all cases led the list, and hundreds of well educated girls and women of the best fam ilies of this and other Russian cities are now in the famine districts fighting the demons of starvation, typhus fever and the smallpox in behalf of the peasants. Sacrifices far the Famine Stricken. A number of these ladies have caught the diseases of the peasants, and a Russian Countess who went from St. Petersburg was among those who took the smallpox. Al most all of the great landed proprietors in the famine districts are doing what tbey can to help their people. I hear oi men who have been ieeding and caring for 5,000, 10,000 and in some cases even 20,000 and 25, 000 peasants, and Count Bobrlnsky, who is at the head of the transportation of famine relief here, is, in connection with his fami ly, supporting nearly 30,000 people out of his pwn means, and at the same time aiding in the distribution of the foreign and Gov ernment relief fund among the people out side of the estates. , The relief work is not done spasmodically nor without system. There is a thorough organization, and as good brains as you Will find anywhere in the world are managing PREVENTING AMINE M JjHl mm it. The peasants themselves are like chil dren, and they require the advice and the care of children. These people of Russia of the highest classes go and stay with them. They visit them In their huts, take care of the sick for there are but few doctors and nurse them. "With them is the Russian Red Cross, which has raised about $35,000, 000 for the sufferers, and which works, as do all outside institutions, directly under the Government Adoptlnn Jerry Rusk's System. The Government of Russia is planning great works to prevent the recurrence of such a condition as now exists. A fund of $10,000,000 has been set aside to build ele Tators and places for the storage of grain in all of the various districts, and through our Consul General, Dr. John M. Crawford, the Interior Department has investigated our system of crop reports, and has just now decided to adopt this system for Russia. Secretary Busk forwarded full information, and from now on the same organized system that we have constructed will be in force here. Heretofore Russia has had no agri cultural statistics and the peasants have lived from hand to mouth. They are not economical or thrifty nor accumulative in our sense of the word, and it requires a study of their character and their condition to understand the situation. Thirty years ago they were in the condi tion to a great extent of our slaves at the South, and if to-dav the negro and the planter had been left to work out their sal- vation at the close of the war without the aid of the money and push of the North they would probably be of somewhat the same character as these people are here to day. This statement may, however, be mis leading. The two races are far different in character, and after my journey through the back districts and along regions oi the Volga I will give a letter describing the curious features of their life and character, which are like those of no other people in the world. My idea is not to write so much A EUSSIAJT of the Russian famine as of the Russian people, and the great Slavic race is one of the strangest and most peculiar on God's green earth. They are the baby race among the great races of the world. They are not out of their swaddling clothes and into even the knee pants of the boyhood of civiliza tion. But for all that their limbs are mus cular, their features are strong and thev have the lungs and the staying power of the bull ot JUasnan. Something About the People. Toil see the evidences of the happy-go-lucky character of the people everywhere you go. Their condition has been such that they have never come to understand the value of monev, and this has been the case with both rich and poor. The rich have been so rich that they had all they could want. The poor have been so poor that there was no chance for them to get more than enough for mere existence, and so with no ambition but for the day both classes have been rushing madly along until they are now at the end of their rope, and a turn will have to come very soon. Said a Russian bureau officer to me this afternoon: "The trouble with us is we never think of the morrow. If we have much to-day we spend it, and if we have little to-morrow we make the best of it. If I should give my drosohky driver 100 roubles to-day it would all be gone to-morrow, and our people have not yet the least idea of accumulation and thrift For this reason many of the best business establishments of the country are managed by the Germans and the English, and most of the factories here are owned by foreigners." "But how about the future?" I asked. "I think we are gradually learning," was the reply. "The famine has'taught us much, and there is a steady though very slow movement toward better business methods and better ideas of life. The Russian peasant is, however, hard to change, and the great trouble is that he Seems to have an entire lack of ambition. He is satisfied with his hut and his poverty. "When tou can get our people to want socks instead of rags about their feet, and when they think they need drawers under their calico pants, you will have made the first great step to ward the Russia of the future. The spark of ambition once kindled I believe we have the foundation elements of one of the great est peoples of the world." How tli Russians Look. No one who visits Russia can be unim pressed with the strength of character seen in the faces of the people. I first saw these Russian peasants at Jerusalem about four years ago. It was at Easter time, and they had come by the thousands on a pilgrimage to the holy sepulcher, and of the polyglot humanity which was gathered there "iiom the four quarters of the world there were none sb strong in feature and in frame as these Slavs. I see here every day walking the streets of St Petersburg with bundles on their backs, driving' cabs or droschkies and working on the streets, men whose nobility and strength of feature! would create remark in any American crowd, and at every corner you meet men whose faces are such that you would be proud to ac knowledge them if you found them among your ancestral portraits. Their foreheads are high and broad, their eyes straight, honest and kindly. Their noses are large and clean cut, and their cheekbones often rather prominent Nearly all are bearded and many are lonx-haired and part their hair in the middle. Their frames are as strong as their faces. They are a big-boned, well-jointed race, and they look as though they were made to stay. The women are oi the same character as the men. They are not handsome nor pretty, but they look kind and motherly and what we wonfd call fine-looking. They lack taste in dress, have no ideas of the harmony of colors, and wear I mean the peasants handkerchiefs of all brightest colors of the rainbow Upon their heads. Their dresses are of red, blue or other gay colors, and they are gathered in at the neck and waist, ana fall to the feet in ungraceful folds. They have no ideas of corsets and many of them wear long aprons tied over the bust, gath ered in at the waist and falling almost to the feet over their gowns. Men Tl ear the Flctnresqno Dresses. lhey are sturdy of frame and rather dnll and quiet in manner. They do as much work as the men and the men and women work in the fields side by side. The men of the lower classes, as 'I see them Here, are more pictureSaue in their dress than the women. Russia is the land of the" cap, the I long coat and top bdots, and the peasants J THE wear ooati of .homespun, with long frocks, and even such m dress in sheepskin, with the fur turned in, have their coats reaching to below the knees. Here Jn St Petersburg I see few without overcoats, but further south the peasant man's dress is of red calico, ihirt and pantaloons, the shirt com ing outside the pants and belted at the waist, and his feet are covered with a sort of coarsely woven straw shoe and his ankles are swaddled in rags. The better class of poor people or the ordinarily well-to-do men here wear long coats, with top boots, and the national cap is worn by nearly everyone. This is to a large extent the costume of the rich, though the wealthy all over the civilized world dress much the same as we do. The differ ence there is largely in the quality ot the goods worn, and St. Petersburg may be said to be a oity where the people wear ulsters, caps and high boots the year round, no mat ter whether it be as hot as Tophet or as cold as Alaska. These Russian boots are worth looking at. They are about the only cheap thing in Russia, and you can get a pair made to order for $5. The same leather and the same work in the United States would cost you $25, and the finish of the best leather is as fine as that of a portfolio or a pocket book. The Boots Characteristic of Russia, These boots reach to the knees, and the best of them shine like patent leather. The pantaloons are always tucked inside of tbem and there is a fancy section about six inches wide above the ankle ot every boot, in which the leather lies In wrinkles with the regularity ot a washboard. It takes at least twice as much leather to make a pair of Russian boots as it does an American pair, and the same may be said of the Russian overcoat. The droschky drivers wear more cloth than any other cabmen the world over. It takes more of good cloth for the blue goods they wear seem to be of excellent material to make a drotchky driver's coat than to make a lady's trained ball dress, and this coat has to be padded and quilted. FABM SCENE. This coat has long skirts, and It is made very large so that' the cabby can stuff his body out, and especially his back, to give himself the appearance of prosperous fat ness. Nine-tenths of these drivers are padded in this way, and no well-to-do man would own a lean coachman. Lieutenant Allen, the military attache of our legation here, told me yesterday that his coachman appeared to be of dime-museum fatness when he engaged him and that he supposed his great lrame was that of nature, until one day he met him before he had put in his pads and he was as thin as a rail and looked so different that it was some time before he knew him. Speaking of Russian caps, the officers whom yon see here by the thousand all wear them, and the most of the soldiers have caps as a part of their uniform. Every servant or messenger wears a cap, and the boys from the age of four wear long-visored caps and little" overcoats just like their fathers. Even the little girls wear caps, and the favorite head covering of the little maidens of from two to six or seven years, whom J see running about with their nurses in the parks, is a jockey cap of the bright est red, blue, yellow or green silk. The colors of the caps of the men are usually dark, though they are trimmed with ail shades of borders and bands, and each color denotes something. The policemen, as a rule, have red bands about their caps. Some of the private soldiers wear caps of white. Others wear caps like Tarn O'Shan ters, and the cavalry have as many different kinds oi headgear as the infantry. Some officers have green bands about One of the Priest. their caps and others blue, and in short there is every possible cap combination from the shaggy fur of the peasant from the wilds of North Russia to the brimless astrakhan, which, with its red silk Crown, covers the head of the cartridge-breasted Uau,cassian soldiers. The overcoats of the people -from the different parts oi the country are also different, and the officers wear coats of different colors and different grades of length, ranging from the feet to the top of the boots in size. All told, the drers of the men is the most picturesque one of Europe, and the crowds which throng the streets of St Petersburg are like those of no other capital of the world. The men" are naturally large and fine looking. These long ulsters mace them look bigger, and the general effect produced is that of a nation of giants. The church is perhaps the richest of all Russian institutions, and the thousands upon thousands of priests who are supported by the people are, as a class, the finest look ing men in the world. They never shave nor cut their hair and their locks are as silky as those of a baby, and they stream down their backs, reaching often almost to the waist Their faces are rosy and plump, and showing out under the high black caps which they wear ou the streets ind over their long black gowns they look wonder fully handsome and noble. During their services in the churches they take off their caps and their hair flows back .from their high foreheads, making you think" of the patriarchs of old, and during aany of the services they appear in gowns of silver and gold and wear great tiara-like hits' which sparkle with gold and Jewels. tfHAK fc Q. OABfrJtKiJiS. PITTSBURG- . DISPATCH, CROESUS IN OFFICE, Not So Numerous as He Used to Be in the Balls of Congress. 20 MILLIONAIRES IN THE 400. Toe Letter S Standi for Shekels, in tne Legislative Roll CalL PAYING $1,800 A MOSTH FOE BOARD CCOBBESrONDI3fO OV TH1 DISrATOft.l "WASHINQTOH, July 23. "Millionaires!" exclaimed Mr. Kenna the other day in the Senate restaurant, "here in this paper is the old charge revamped that the Senate is com posed Of magnates and millionaires. I don't believe there is a national Legisla ture in the world whose members possess less moneyl" " 'House of Lords' they also delight to call us," added General Manderson from across the table, "when each of as repre sents the people of a definite geographic division and the House of Lords represents nothing but prescription the entail of a hereditary aristocracy." "Yet there are doubtless some attorneys of corporations, if not 'creatures of corpo rations,' here," suggested a correspondent sitting by. "So there are in every Parliament and every Legislature." answered Representa tive Breckenridge, "but I judge from what I have heard that almost all of the million aires in the Senate began without a dollar, as common workmen. And it is the same at our end of the CapitoL" "Two began with pick and shovel in Cal ifornia, without a cent," said one. "One began as a railroad brakeman," said another. raying 81,800 a Month Board. " "One began by sweeping out a store at $2 a week," said another, "and the boy that, having got to the top at last, has a perfect right to pay $1,800 a mouth board at the Arlington if he wants to; and they say that is what he actually does pay for himself and wife." "And I have no doubt," said another, "that a majority of the members of both Houses depend on their Congressional sala ries for a living." This conversation set me to thinking and inquiring, and herein are set down my findings: The Senate and House will not now foot up in the aggregate eo much as they did two years ago, within 50 or 100 million dollars. A lew'rich men have come in, but more have gone. Prom the Senate have departed Joe Brown, who began as the poorest and raggedest of Caroline crackers and became a five millionaire; Farwell, of Chicago, nlio has 5,000 miles of rail fences in Texas; Hearst, the many millionaire of the Golden Gate; Plumb, who had $2,000 a month rom the "Small Hopes" mine; Spooner, who earned a pile by hard knocks; Tom Scott, who began by hoeing corn at 10 cents a day and climbed upward till he counted his in ceme at $5,000 a day; Spinola, who began at the lowest round and climbed to the high est on which seven figures were written; Adams, with a $500,000 wife; and several other suoh. Money Bans to the Uetter 8. An odd thing about it this year is that three-fourths of the wealth in both Houses belongs to men whose names begin with "S" Sawyer, Stewart, Stanford, Sanders, Sherman, Shoup, Spuire, Stockbridge, Stablnecker, Stevens and Sam Stephenson a formidable list of purse-bearers. And Spooner, Snider and Spinola have just with drawn irom the sibilant association. The richest Senators are of course from the Paclfio slope. Stanford is one of the four or five richest men in the country, and worries himself all the time about new schemes forspending his income on his pet university. I don't know whether he is worth $30,000,000 or $100,000,000. but as the larger amount costs more thought and at tention than the smaller without furnishing a particle more of comfort, it doesn't make any difference. Stewart of Nevada, has his ups and downs. The heathen Chinee id habits the cattle which he built during one of bis ups. He lost it all at that time, bnt is pegging away again. He has a striking physiognomy put a sardonic smile upon Michael Angelo's portrait of Jehovah, and you have Stewart He is ordinarily good natured and sometimes rich, but he has been brought to the verge of poverty by helping his friends. His colleague belongs to the wealthy wing of the Jones family, and Felton, of California, has been a bold and lucky speculator, and hit the bull's eye during the oil excitement A Car Lined Willi Solid Silver. Mitchell and Dolph could foot up per haps $100,000 apiece; Allen is a popular young lawyer and gets large fees, and Squire has no nightmare dreams of the poor house indeed, one of the organs of the jaw smiths recently announced that he came to Washington in "a car lined with solid silver!" Teller and Wolcott, of Colorado, are moderately rich, that is, they have out side incomes more than equal to their salaries. The same can be said of Mander son, who has made something in Omaha real estate. Almost all of the New England members in both Houses began with nothing and have held their own that is, they are de pendent on their salaries for a living. This is exactly or nearly true ot Prye, Dixon, Chandler and the Massachusetts and Con necticut Senators, but they are all hard working men of large Influence. Hale ac 2uired about $750,000 when he won Zach handler's daughter, and he has kept it Morrill and Aldrich began as grocery clerks, and they now count their wealth by six figures. It is understood that Walker, in the House from Worcester, is a million aire, making his money in boots and shoes. He started as a mechanic He could proba bly buy out all of the highly educated young Democrats thrown to the surface in last year's eruption, whom he alludes to col lectively as "very freSh" and "the Massa chusetts kindergarten." Cabot Lodge is said to be rich, as IS also Morse, of the Sun rise stove polish. Cleveland Has Hit the Bail's Eye. ' Neither of the New York Senators is rich indeed, E Tarts was worth a good deal more than Hill is. This may be the proper Elace to say that Cleveland has quadrupled is property since he became President, and is how probably worth $280,000. The House has two plumbers Felix Campbell, ot New York, and Belknap, of Michigan. Felix is happy in the consciousness that he could pipe oil $500,000 irom his bank. Bel knap is doubtless also in the proverbial condition. Belden, of Syracuse, has- amassed a million or so in railroads and things. Boufke Cockran must be well fixed, for he bought a $100,000 house here last year, wnicn ne win nave newiy ires oed when he IS elected Senator in His cock's place. John R. Fellows, who dl-i Vldes with Cockran the reputation of being the most eloquent man in the House, has scared the wolf way off. He dines on Ohardberlain's terrapin and lies down at night amid his varied sumptuosities, gets big fees ior trying to hammer sense into the skulls of a petit jury, and the other day de clined the offer of a $50,000 salary to man age a large property. Lockwdod, oi Buffalo, professional nom inator in chief to Cleveland, married rich. Tracy, of Albany, can foresee the probabil ity oi regular meals for a long time. This gave him the energy requisite to success fully lead the anti-silver hosts and to get $2,600,000 in the reciprocal titillation bill to improve the harbors along the tempest tossed shores oi Troy and Conoea. Colonel Greenleaf, who is cordially hated by all the burglars and bank robbers In the world, as the prbdocef of elaborate combination and time locks, is worth only $500,006 or 51,000,000. ' 'J he Pttnsylvaft1an Id Congress. The members frota Pennsylvania are gen erally in moderate olttuhntances neither SUNDAY, JULY 24, rich nor poor. Don Cameron is the only millionaire among them, and, by the way, he is the only member of the Senate who inherited wealth. His income is said to be about $90,000 a year about $12 an hour. He is quiet in manner and dress. Quay is worth comparatively little. In the Honse, John Datzell, of Pittsburg, is a thrifty law yer and worth perhaps $250,000. McAleer, flour merchant of Philadelphia,'is under stood to be rich, and Shouk has touched coal with profit The New Jersey Senators are well fixed. If Senator Higgins, of Delaware, is wealthy he doesn't take any pains to show it His colleague is said to be Worth $75,000. Ohio has two Senators calculated to excite the wrath of Socialists and Anarchists. Brice is worth many millions made in railroad ing, and Sherman is rich and would have been a millionaire long ago if he had given politics the cold shoulder. But he holds that some other things are worth more than money. The Eighteenth, Nineteenth and Twentieth districts of Ohio are, curiously enough, all represented by Taylors, and they possess two-thirds of the wealth of the Ohio delegation. The Rich Men Named Taylor. J. D. Taylor is quite wealthy; E. B. Tay lor is one of the first lawyers in the State, and V. A. Taylor is a successful manufact urer. Senators Toorhees and Turpie, of Indiana, are of moderate means, though they win large fees; and none of the mem bers in the lower House are rich. The most active aud able of them all, Judge Holman, is worth little more than his farm at home probably not $15,000 in all. In the Senate are three rich lumbermen, McMillan and Stockbridge, of Michigan, and Sawyer, of Wisconsin; they are trlll ionaires. McMillan was, originally, I be lieve, a railroad conductor, and he did his duty and crept upward till he got rich as a car manufacturer and lumber dealer. I asked Senator Palmer if the Illinois State delegation were wealthy. "Well," he said, "we're pretty comfortable. I'll wager that Collum and I can measure up $50,000 be tween usl" The richest and perhaps the ablest and certainly the best educated of the whole Illinois delegation in tha House is Robert H. Hitt As a stenographer 34 years ago he reported the Lincoln-Douglass debate and afterward studied the modern languages and was found very useful in diplomatic relations. One of Michigan's xumber Kings. One of the wealthy members is known to his friends as "Sam Stephenson," of Meno minee, Mich. He made his money in lum ber. Chipman and Whiting, of the same State, are also raised far above any inclina tion to be Socialists, add to request a "divide." SenatorCasey is rich; so is Petti grew; Davis insists that the most valuable quality of money is its transferability, so he enlists actively in the transfer business, and though he commands large fees, has a moderate bank account. Senator Vilas, of Wisconsin, has as much as he will ever need. Mitchell, of Milwaukee, is a several times millionaire; and probably no other member from the State except, perhaps, Barwig, who has recently had a windfall, is worth $50,000. I asked Representative Breckenridge how many millionaires there were in the Arkansas delegation. "Not one!" he said. "There are, perhaps, two or three ten thousandaires, and I think there is one who may be designated a hundred and fiftyaire. We have hardly anything in Arkansas," he said, laughing as he vanished within the door of the House, "except wisdom and virtue." Tennessee Doesn't Grow Rich Men. There is not a man here from Tennessee worth $50,000, unless it is Senator Harris, whose boys are running a big ranch down in Texas that may sometime be worth some thing, or Joseph E. Washington, who is tne son of a wealthy man. ' Not more than three cr fonr men from the South are worth $100,000 Senator George, of Mississippi, being one; and I cannot name another at this moment perhaps Gorman and Ransom. Morgan cab make a great deal of money, for he has a high rep utation as a lawyer, and no man in the Sen ate possesses more all-around information of an exact sort;' but he probably has little more than his salary. Out of 400 members of both Houses there are less than 20 millionaires; about 50 more could be called wealthy; a hundred others are in comfortable circumstances, and more than 150 are poor and depend upon their salaries for their support. How is this for "a plutocracy?" W. A. Cboffut. A PETRIFIED HTJMAH BODY. It Was Found by Prospectors In the Bills of South Dakota. St. bonis Globe-Democrat. One of the most wonderful discoveries ever recorded in the Hills was made a f&v days ago by some parties about ten miles north of Hot Springs, S. D., near Wind Cave. They were prospecting in the Hills, and in coming down into a ravine saw what appeared to be a fossil of some kind, similar to those found down in the Bad Lands, east of here. They proceeded to un earth it, and to their great astonishment found it to be the petrifaction of a man. They have sold it to George Bronte, who now has it on exhibition at Wind Cave, where a large number ot people are going daily to see it. The specimen is that of a young man from 25 to 30 years of age, well formed and fully developed physically. In height it is 6 feet 1 inches, and belongs to the dolicephals or round-headed race of human beings. The foot, the left one, the right .foot being missing, must have worn a boot, as the big toe is very much compressed inward and the toe nails pressed flat on the top, the contrary to those wearing no boots. The left arm is brought down the side with the hand resting on the abdomen. The right arm has disappeared about three inches from the shoulder, and it certainly appears to have been lost prior to the interment, for while the left band is securely cemented to the body from the waist to the finger ends, there is not the slightest trace of the Tight hand in any way having touched the trunk. Now with the right foot it is the reverse, ior the heels have tonched each other, and with the disintegration of time the right heelias carried with it a portion of the left on the extreme end. The calves of the legs are securely cemented together. The lips and eyes are closed. On the. left arm, extending fonr Inches above and three below, is what appears to be a huge scar, probably caused by an ax or cutlass, and under the left ear Is a small in cision 1 inches long, which looks as if caused.by a knife or dagger. The skin is perfect in minute lines, and except a few pockmarks, probably caused by insects, is absolutely periect. it appears tnat tne specimen is one of the Ango-Saxon race, as all the characteristics oi an Iudian arc wanting, mere can be no doubt but it is one of the most periect petrifactions ever discovered. HE BECAME SUDDENLY BICE. An Enterprising- Swede Goes West and Acquires Valuable I'rbperty. Chicago Tribune,- , The Norwegian colony along Milwaukee avenue is now considerably excited over the good fortune of Edward Olsen, who has suddenly acquired wealth in a mining enter prise. Olsen, a Swede, formerly Jived on Erie street, between May and Curtis, and was then a salesman in a tea and coflee house. He left Chicago five years ago, went to Denver, worked in a laundry, accumulated a little money, and married. Then he went on the road traveling and began dabbling in gold and silver mining property a few miles irom the hew mining town ot Creede. He has refused a handsome sum for his claims. .He reached Chicago yesterday in com pany with his wife and lawyer to confer, as to olostng out a bid made him for his min ing property by Chicago-capitalists. The price be asks now is, variously stated by his iriends, all of whom say it runs away up among six figures. Volksbran. Made from pnra malt and hops by Eber hardt A Ober. Tne great hot weather dviuk. Bottled or In bulk. On tap at all nrst-olass restaurants and saloons. ttsu 1892. OUR CRACK MILITIA. A New York Exporter Writes Face tiously From a Safe Distance. LIABLE TO JERK THE TBIGGEK. A fair of Socks and lots of Whisky the Rations of One Soldier. LITTLE MEN WITH PULL S1ZSI" G0XS tCOItRISFONDINCE OF THE DISPATCH. New Yobk, July 22. I was never so de lighted in my life as I was when I got off the railroad ferry boat at the foot of Court landt street last evening and saw looming np before me the fine physique of a New Tork policeman. It was all I could do to restrain myself from running up to him pre-i. cipitately and grasping him warmly by the hand. The policeman represented civil law and order. Coming from the scene ot the Homestead riots, where I had been on duty for two weeks, and which I had left 13 hours before, the sight ot the policeman was a welcome one. We are accustomed to think lightly of the bluecoat There were times at Homestead when I devoutly wished I had with me a few members of the Gotham foice with their clubs, and this was not be cause I loved the whole cause of labor less, but because I loved my life and the Integ rity of my skull more. The capture of the town of Homestead by the Pennsylvania National Guard, or rather the mobilization or the troops that pre ceded it,shows that the organization is in ex cellent condition. Twenty hours after Gov ernor Pattison issued his proclamation nearly all the bluecoats needed were on their way to the scene of the trouble. They could have been thrown into the town 12 hours before, or a large part of them could. Teaching Strategy to the Eighteenth. The Eighteenth Beglment, which belongs in Pittsburg and whioh, by the request of its Colonel, was given the right of the line, was waltzing all around Homestead on a railroad train on Monday night in order to impress on the minds of its officers the great lesson of strategy. People said sneeringly that the Eighteenth was composed largely of mill workers and rioters by nature, as well as sympathizers with the Homestead people, and it was to refute this charge that the right of the line was asked by Colonel Smith. "We will show them whether wf abandon our loyalty to the State of Pennsylvania to oblige'our acquaintances," he said grimly. The boys in blue did all the work before them in a soldierly manner. They arrived on the scene with no tents and little food, altho&fth thev had been ordered to provide themselves with three days' rations, and when they marched into town they were hungry as bears betides beinz sleepy. Some critics found fault with the fact that they went into saloons and consumed liberal quantities oi beer. When it is remembered that tbey were cooped up all night in cars, many of which had in tnem neither ice nor water, it is hard to say that they were not entitled to a drink when they coulcTget it. Some of the strikers said sarcastically that the soldiers wore kept maneuvering around Homestead all night on the trains Instead of entering at once, so that they might sober up, the story being that most of them, thinking that tbey were perhaps going to the slaugbtei, had a final bout with in toxication before tbey reported for duty at the armories. That does not accord with my observation. The men were young and many of them were thirsty, but as a whole they were as earnest and sober a set of fel lows as ever went under arms when they entered the town. Some of the Bnji Were Soared. Each man was provided with 20 rouiids of ball cartridges. There was plenty more where that came from, as trouble had been foreseen. When they went on picket duty for the night they loaded their guns and took their posts, some of them quaking. They 'didn't know whether the crowds ot women and children who had swarmed through the cdmp during the day, peering with curiosity into the camps and examin ing the guns which might be used later to shoot their husbands, brothers and sons, would not be succeeded at night by desperate men crawling in on all lours to blow them up with dynamite bombs or seize their arms. One of the lieutenants attached to the Provost Marshal's guard made a frank ad mission to me during the dark watches of Tuesday night. A report came down from division headquarters that firing had been heard in the town, and I marched up to the Provost Marshal's camp, the nearest to the town, to ask for information. As I stumbled over the meadows I heard a yell of "Halt! Who goes there?" and a couple of little sentrymen pointed their bayonneted rifles at me from a point about ten feet away. The men were not more than four feet high four feet each and, I think, they had not been measured for their rifle, for these were many sizes too large, aud when later they shouldered them, there was a topheavy effect extreme ly ludicrous. The lieutenant happened on my approach to be talking to the boys, and I heard him whisper to tbem not to slay me. x men snowea mm my credentials, which he approved and gave me the infor mation which I sought, which was that the reported firing was the explosion of tor pedes under railroads trains. Then he thought he would give me a word of advice, too, and this is what he said: They Were 1,1 eh t on the Trigger. JIv friend, we have on duty a number of young men who never before held in their hands a loaded rifle. They have nil sorts of notions of What they came np here for, and tliey don't know what they ate to expect on picket duty. I would advise you not to go up to the picket lines at nlghr, although 1 have no objection to your doln so. Ihe doctrine of chance makes It certain, how ever, that if you go up to the lines a suffi cient number of times some enthuniastlo member of the guald will shoot yon first and then send for the corporal to ask: you who you are. Ton will understand that I do not want to be gnllty of an impertinent in terference in the matter of your-life ana death. It Is of no possible moment-to me. but I felt that it might be to you, and so 1 tola you tnese lacts. I thanked him and withdrew. Thimblerig men and hucksters began td arrive around the camp as soon as it was founded. The hucksters brought no arms with which to assault the militia, but they carried the deadly watermelon and the in digestible peanut. A soldier showed me a harversack containing a pair of socks and lour quarts of whisky, which wnS his idea of the prime necessities of Hie. When I asked him wbat he was doing with so many socks ne explained tnat tney were meant to stop the bottles fiom rubbing against each other and breaking. The Sewer Gni of flamettead. Though tbey camp in inhospitable hilts and though they may net net when it rains and too dry when it doen't the militiamen are much better off than thestranpra to the town time live in houses. Homestead peo ple breathe uu ulr of sewer castliatf trj in;; to the stranger, and do what ho can he is unable to biin htuuelf to like it. The in habitants do, tllonjju. When taken nway from Hbinestead they go and put their Iicnila into culverts and hold them tlicro Mr Hours when they feel lonesome and sick nt Heart. It reminds them or their beloved town. The Philadelphia City Troop, the crack command from a tailoring point of view, have a deep grudxe to settle with tha people of Western Pennsylvania. When they last went to that section of tne ct.Kntry the riot els so oventwed them that they went home in bonnetu and lrocka disguised as u young ladles' seminary, so the story (joes. The troopers called out by tho Governor, how ever, are a little too touh looking to be able to do thii again. It vim sitld that some or them described the conduct of the. workmen as ''disgustingly beastly" to raise a low just as they weie paiking up to go tb Newporr iir Europe. . New York Sereid correspondent. , Mr, Lander lteetiminendatlon. Mr. J. A. L&hder, a prominent citizen ot Clarksburg, Mo., and widely known in that State, says of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Dlarrhcea Bemedyt "I have seen its good results andean recommend it," jfor sale by druggists; ' znwxhsu WB1TTEN FOB BY DORA Author of "Footprints in the Snow," "The Broken Seal, Track of the Storm," SYNOPSIS OB FBETIOU3 CHAPTERS. Two lovers, Sir James MacKennon, Bart., and Miss Miriam Clyde, are standing by tha seashore, and the former is roving her to name the wedding day. She pleads for delar. In the meantime an accident occurs, a soldier being wounded by a firing party. Miriam binds up hie wound and saves his life. Glancinsr at each other's face a mutual recognition takes Eiace. On arriving home the doctor who was summoned to the wonnded man gave er a note whioh the soldier had hastily scribbled. It contains the words "For God's sake keep my secret." Miriam, by means or Dr. Beed, sends to her soldier-patient a brief mes sage, "Do not be afraid!" which he receives as he is lying in the hospital. In the meantime Miriam's mother. Mrs. Clyde, 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 lire dearer than her own, hanzlnjr in tbe balance, pleads earnestly for more time. Mrs. Clyde writes to her other daughter, Joan, who Is married to hard and stern General Conway, asking them to the wedding. Conway thinks it's a good match, but pains Joan by Intimating that Miriam should not so soon forjret another affair in which hit nephew was the hero. He and Mr. Clyde agree it is best to hurrr the wedding for fear Sir James should bear of that. Miriam is obstinate, and (rets Sir James to ask Mrs. Clyde for postponement. Colonel Clyde U unable to chanare Miriam's mind. She worries herself sick, and Dr. Beed Is sent for. By means of notes through him. Miriam and Private Dare arrange a clandestine meeting. Miriam tells her secret lover he most leave the country. He says he would have to tray his way out or the army. At her next rneetins 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 trnth, but Miriam refuses to tell her. Dare meets Ford and gives her the money to sive back to Miriam. Mrs. Clyde decides to have the weading at London, and she and her daughter go there. COPTEIGHT, 1S92, CHAPTER XVIL A HAtnniiro dread. General Conray slept little that night He lay still, revolving in his mind the cir cumstances of Kobert Conray's death. They haunted hint with grim distinctness; he saw again his dead nephew's ace; he heard the evidence at the inquest, and the doubts as to how he had died. It had never been satisfactorily cleared up. Captain Kobert Conway, a handsome, distinguished looking young man, who at this time held an appointment on General Conray's staff, had one morning been found dead in the grounds of Tyeford Hall, where the General lived, with a bullet wound in his throat. He had been dead for hours the doctors said when he was discovered, and whether he had died by his own hands or been murdered remained a mystery, as his wound, the doctors also stated, blight have been self-inflicted. But no weapon was found near him, ana one witness an orderly, who was passing through the grounds with the letter bag containing the letters by the last post ior the General stated that about 10 o'clock in tbe evening he had seen Captain Conray in the grounds with a lady whom he belieSed to be the General's wife. Bnt Miriam Clyde then cameforwardand stated that it was she, not her sister, that the or derly had seen with Captain Conray. She had met him in the grounds about 10 o'clock, and had parted with him an hour later, leaving him alive and well. She added that she was then engaged to be mar ried to him, though this fact was known only to her sister Joan. She was asked if she had had any quarrel with him, and she said no. And Joan had confirmed this statement But after awhile grave sus picion had fallen on a brother officer of the deceased, named Hugh Ferrari. This young man was known to be an admirer of Miriam Clyde, and was said to have been passionately in love with her. But General Conray had disapproved of his suit, and had forbidden him his house. And from the morning that Bobert Conray was found dead in the grounds of Tyeford Hall, Iiientenant Hugh Earrars had disap peared. At first this did not attract any at tention. He had been on leave at the time, ana only when his leave expired were in quiries made about him. But these were all in Vain. He had been staying in town when he was last heard of, and his luggage .was found at the hotel he had lived at, but the man himself had vanished, lib had never been seen or heard oi since the day that Bobert Conray had died. He had left the hotel that day, saying he would return on the following day, bnt he never came back. His people were communicated with, but they knew nothing. His father was the clergyman of a country parish in York shire, and during part of his leave he had been at home. Then he had gone up to town, and they had heard nothing of him since. Presently people began to talk of him in connection with Kobert Conray's mysterious death. Tbey had been intimate friends, but if both had been lovers of Miriam Clyde here was a motive at once ior Bobert Conray's murder. At all events, a warrant was finally issned for his appre hension, but the police were completely baffled. No trace of him could be found, and he had passed away from the knowledge ot his fellow men as completely as if he were dead. His patents believed him to be dead, and mourned for him, but General Conway had never been quite satisfied on this point. True, he might have been robbed and murdered, and thrown into the dark waters of the river, rolling noiselessly through the great city, and hiding some of its misery and sin. This was the theory of the hapless country parson, who came up to town to assist in, the search, and stood hope lessly on bridge after bridge, peering down into the Thames, believing that his son's body lay somewhere in its gloomy depths. All this had happened nearly two years ago, and had faded out of the recollection of most people, but General Conray had never forgotten his nephew's sndden death, and he lay thinking of it now, and the look of fear in Joan's eyes when he had asked her if she were dreaming of "poor Kobert," had driven an uneasy pang of strange doubt into his heart. And to Joan his words had brought abso lute dread. She had told Miriam she was always dreaming of Kobert Couroy, and now she had spoken of him in her sleepl A haunting fear oi this had possessed her ever since his death. What it tuts grim secret that the two sisters had hidden in their hearts so long, were to be betrayed by bab bling words she cbuld not control. Joan shuddered when she thought of it. She must not sleep she told herself; she must lie awake if it killed her. And she did lie awake; lay pinching the white flesh of her arms to keep the drowsy feelings oi weari ness away. OhI the long, miserable hoursl The General slept at last, but not Joan. The gloomy November dawn found her pate, haggard-eyed, but alert. And she noticed that during the day that followed the General looked at her more than once with an expression in his eyes she had never seen there before. Could any sus picions of the truth have entered his neort7 But no, no; Joan told herself this was Im possible. Still her nerves felt shattered, and her sleepless night had wearied her so that in the afternoon she declined to go out with either her mother or husband, but lay down add took the rest she so much needed. For she must not sleep during the night Joan had Set herself this task, and for two mere nights she kept to her resolution. They were the last two nights they had to spend in town, the Clydes returning to Newbrongb-On-the-Sea, and the General and his wile to Tyefbrd Hall. Joan was delicate, and this enforced sleep THE DISPATCH RUSSELL, i The "A Jatal Fast," -Etc. BT DORA BTJSSELL. lessness told greatly on her health. Both her mother and her husband felt anxious about her during these last few days in town; but Joan made no complaints. Then the wedding party broke up, and Joan and her husband started for Tyeford. She felt so weary on the journey it was all she could do to keep herself awake in the train. Her eyes closed involuntarily, and she could scarcely hold up her head. It was late in the day before they reached the station nearest the General's house. Then came a long drive in tbe dark, and by the time they reached Tyeford Joan felt com pletely exhausted. She sighed wearily as she entered her comfortable and well-furnished home. The General had taken Tyeford Hall when he had been appointed to the Southern district which he commanded, and he had brought his young wife there as a bride. It stood in extensive and well-kept grounds, and from the upper windows you had a 'glimpse of the sea. It was in these grounds that the tragic death of Kobert Conray had oc curred, and Miriam had never visited her sister since. Joan thought of Kobert Conway as they drove up to the house; thought of him as she entered the well-lighted hall, as she walked up the broad staircase. To her the whole place was haunted by his memory. Yet she had never suggested to the General any wish to leave it He had taken it for a term of years, and it was conveniently situ ated for his command, being only about half a mile distant from the barracks. A letter from Miriam, the bride, awaited Joan. The General brought this up to her after her had opened the letter-bag. Joan put out hef hand languidly to receive it, and as she did so herhusband noticed how extreme ly pale and tired she looked. "You are quite done up, Joan," he said: "all this business about the wedding had been too much for you; yon must have a good rest to-nighL" "Yes," answered Joan, all the while de termined that she'would take ''L,m "Well, what does theubMtfSrsay7Twent on the General. Then Joan opened her letter, which was from Paris. Miriam wrote cheerfully, and there was no allusion in it to the past, which both the sisters regarded with such shrink ing dread. She mentioned her husband's name once or twice, and told her sister what lovely furs James had bought her. "He is very good and kind to me," she added, "and very unselfish." "She seems all right," said?oan, after she had finished reading the letter, and then she handed it to the General, who also read it, and then laid it on the table beside his Wife. "Well, I hope she will be happy," he said. "She has got, I believe, a good hus band, and I trust she will make a good wife." Joan did not speak, and then the General laid his hand upon her shoulder. "And you, poor little woman," he said, "must go to bed directly after dinner. Yon are dead tired, and nothing but a sound sleep will refresh you." He left the room after this, and Joan then took some sal volatile to keep herself no. and dressed for dinner. And after din ner the General insisted she should retire for the night "I have a lot of papers to go through' he said, "and it will be 12 or later before I bave done. But vou must go to bed at once. Come, Joan, it is quite time you were there." And at this moment it passed through , Joan's mind she might indulge in tbe sleep she so much required before her husband came up stairs. She was utterly exhausted and her eyes heavy with drowsiness, and she felt she would give almost anything for an hour's sleep. "Very well," she said, "I will go;" and she rose and left the room, while her hus band went to the library to work. Joan was so tired that three minntef after she was in bed she was fast asleep. Asleep when 12 o'clock came, and the Gen eral quietly entered the room. She was sleeping tbe deep sleep of utter exhaustion, and she never beard her husband's foot steps. She looked worn and white, he thought, and he made as little noise as pos sible, and very soon afterwards he also was asleep. When he awoke it was the morning. He awoke with a start, and glancing quickly round he beard Joan's voice speaking in loud and unnatural tones. He looked at her attentively, arid saw by the dim light she was still asleep. She was dreaming, but her features wore an expression oi great suffering, even anguish. "Don't look like that Robert! Robert!" she cried. "Speak, speak to me say one word!" She stretched out her arms as she spoke, as If entreatingly; her voice was lull of in tense pain, and the General drew back In sudden 'dread aud listened with bated breath. "Kobert!" she wailed out once more; "Robert!" and then her expression changed. "Why did von do it?" she asked, with startling suddenness, as it addressing some invisible presence. "He did you no wrong; he was mine, not Miriam's only mine!" There was silence in the room after this; a silence that the sleeping woman broke no more. But the gray-haired man by her side rose ind crept away; the iron had en tered into his soul. CHAPTER XVIII. A FEVEBED liHAlir. Joan went down to breakfast at the usual -hour, for her dream-haunted sleep had re freshed her in spite of all its horrors. But her husband was not in the room, nor did he return during the day until dinner time. This fritrhtened Joan, for the General was always thoughtful of her, and she began to fear that something was amiss. And at,, dinner time she was sure of this. The Gea- . eral was so cold and stern in his maaar,4 Xr -5 ja&m t.r A . in wrwwsffiW3 f,..-.