A. i,v: THE PITTSBURG PAGES 17 TO 24. BiSPATGS: . THIRD PAflT. -- : - THE ICE, Dr. Kansen Details His Plan for Drifting Across the - Polar Regions. THE IMG WINTER NIGHT Tp'Be Lightened by Electric Lamps led bj a Wind Engine. PROVISION AGAINST ACCIDENT. Bathetic and Tragic Moryof Suffering: on Jan Kajen Island. A JOURNAL UNDER THE HAND OP DEATH nnUTTEir FOB THI DTSPATCB.1 Dr. Fridtjof Xansen, who propose to be drifted across the North Polar regionB, lately read a paper detailing his plant before the Royal Geographical So ciety of London. From Pali Matt Eudgtfi report I glean the interest ing passages fol lowing. The illus tration tells how he proposes to drift better than words can. He will start in the spring. There were two Dr lien en. methods of tryine to obtain the result he longed for, said Dr. KariBen. First, build a strong ship so constructed that it could withstand the pressure of the ice, and, living in this ship, to float across with the ice; or, second, to take only boats along, encamp on an ice floe, and live there while floatinc across. His plan was based on the use of both these methods. He had now built a wooden ship as small and as strong as possible; it was Senry Hiidson. Dlsco-erer of Jan Mayen. just big enough to carry provisions for "12 men for five or six years, besides the neces sary fuel; her size was about COD tons dis placement with light cargo. She had -an engine of 160 indicated horse-power, which would cive her a speed of six knots, with a consumption of 2J tons of coal in 24 houjs. She would consequently be no last vessel nor a good sailer; but this was of relatively little importance on such an expedition, where they would have to depend princi pally on the speed of the current and the ice movement, and not that of the ship. Would Be Raised on the Ice, In further description of his vessel, he explained that it was so built that it was of a plump and rounded form, so as to leave no place for the ice to catch hold of, and, owine to her sloping sides, she would, in placeor being crushed, be raised by the ice until she rested upon her keel on its sur lace. The vessel was launched at Laurvik on the 2Gth of October, and was named Pram, which meant "forward." Fram would'certainly be the strongest vessel ever used in the Arctic regions. She would be crushed only in a quite extraordinary com bination of circumstances. "With this vessel and a crew of 12 stronc and well picked men, besides an equipment for five or six years as good in all respects as mod ern appliances could afford, he thought the enterprise had a good prospect of success. He expected to reach the farthest possi ble point north in open water in August or September. When they could get no farther they would have nothing left but to run into-the ice at the most favorable spot, and from there trust entirely to the current running across the Polar region. The ice would, perhaps, soon begin to press, but it would only lift their strong ship. Proba bly they would, in this way. in the course of some years, be carried across the Pole, or near it and into the sea between Spits bergen and Greenland, where they would get into open water again, and be able to return home. There was, however, a possi bility that the ship, iu spite of all precau tions, might be crushed in the ice, but if this happened the expedition would have another resource. It would then be time to use the ice as quarters instead of the ship, and they would have to move all provisions, coal, boats, etc, to an icefloe and camp there. Two Warm Saloons on the Ice. For this purpose he had built two big boats, 29 feet long, 9 feet broad, with flat bottoms,. and so deep that they could sit and He comfortably Inside them." They had a deck, and were so big that the whole crew could live even in one of them. These boats would be pieced side by side on the ice, would be covered with thick warm tents and snow, and would give two good warm saloons. Thus they could continue their journey. When they emerged into open water On this side of the Pole there would not be any great difficulty in return ing nome in their boats; such a thing had been done before. Whether they succeeded or not, he felt that this was the way iu which the unknown regions would some day be crossed. it might be possible that the current would not carry them exactly across the Tnl- lint it could not easily be very far off. and the princ'pal thing was ,to explore the tmtnii-ii Tvnlar regions, not to reaeh that f mathematical point in which the axis of our globe had its northern termination. It could not be considered improbable that BRAVING North Eatf JAN 3IAYXN Or. BavrS' they should reao"h open water.on this side of the Pole within two years after the start from the Siberian side. "He could not, how ever, expect that the course would be one straight line forward during nil this time; but when they took provisions for five or six years they had an ample margih. This might, perhaps, seem to many to be a long time, but there was a great advantage in this route that when the expedition was once well begun there would not be much help in looking backwards; their hope would then lie on the other side of the Pole, and such a knowledge was a good hlp to get fram, or forward. light From a Windmill. Dealing with equipment. Dr. Nansen said thej would taKe dogs, sledges, "ski and snow-shoes, besides meant for sledge traveling, while their scientific equipment would be chosen with the greatest care. To live a healthy life in all respects was natur ally very important Two of the principal conditions to keep one's health were heat and light. In order to produce the neces sary heat they would live together in a small room during the coldest season, and they would have good warm clothes. The difficulty as to licht, where the darkness lasted six months, he believed they would be able to overcome by the help of the pow erful electrio light. They would have a dynamo for producing electricity worked by the wings or a windmill. But even when there was no wind at all they would be able to produce power. The expedition would number 12 men, strong and well picked, and when a walkmill was arranged on deck they would be able to do work similar to that which a horse did in its horsemillon land. In this walkmill four men would take their cum at a time, thus they would obtain good and regnlar exercise somewhat monotonous perhaps and would at the same time be useful by producing electricity, so that they could have an electric arc lamp burning eight to ten hours a day. Everybody would under stand what a blessing that must 'be when one was surrounded by a constant darkness. Tragic Story of Jan Mayen. The Frenoh expedition sent out last sum mer on the little steamer Manche to collect specimens of natural history in Jan Mayen and Spitzbergen has recalled a story not told in well-known books of Arctic travel, but now found in the record kept by the victims of the tragedy and preserved at The Hague. It has beei "translated into French by the latest visitors' to. the island, but, as far as, the writer knows, it has never been published in English. The bleak and' barren island, 35 miles long, is about 300 miles north of the Arctic Circle, and nearly midway between ice and and Spitzbergen. It was lilted above the sea in a past age by some tremendous vol canic eruption. It "is very mountainous, and Mount Beeren, itshighest summit, rises 8,000 feet above the seal Always covered with ice and snow, there are no shrubs or other vegetation, or any living thing to gladden the eye except in a few sheltered valleys; and it was in these valleys that the -Manche, in July last, made her slender harvest of Jan Mayen collections. A House Untouched for Ten Tears. ' Nearly ten years had elapsed since a human being ha"d landed on the little island. CAUSE The contractors who are putting up our new build ing 'adjoining our present one have notified us that they must have immediate possession of several floors on one side of our store so as to make connections between the two buildings, The floors which must be cleared are filled with furni-' ture. What to do with it we don't know, as much of our space is already oc cupied with Christmas Gifts. Even our vast Car pet Department is crowd ed with furniture. EASY CHAIRS. A complete line in Lea ther and Corduroy. Handsome Chairs in REAL ::: LEATHER UP. 3P 'Store open each even ing from now until Christ mas tmtil p o'clock. t The earlier you come the better you'll be pleased. Of course, the best are apt to go first GASH OR CREDIT. E I $18 K . ' - ... ...,.,.-.-.. ; I - ...-.- I . - J The voyagers on the Manche were greatly surprised when they landed in Marie Muss Bay and advanced into a valley somewhat sheltered fro the winds, where .they aaw the little wooden building that had housed the Austrian Circnm-Polar party for 13 months in 1882-83. The storms of a decade had bleached and worn the exterior, but within, everything was as the Austrian had left it. Not a drop of water had entered. In the kitchen was a dish full of frozen birds' eggs. One sailor had forgotten a little package he had wrapped in a handkerchief. A shirt was hanging- on a line where, ten years before, it had been placed to dry." Maximum and minimum thermometers hung on the walls. In an excavation under the house, which had served as a bathroom and a dark cham ber for the photographer, were some bottles of wine, and the visitors drank it, well as sured that this particular fruit of the vine was at least 10 year's old. A zinc box in a & -," ' v r i v A kA i'ilW vMT cyjlv p"" DR. KANSEN'S corner contained some well-preserved bis cuit. On the walls hung photographs of a dozen officers and sailori, and pictures and caricatures Irora illustrated journals. All these objects showed how well even perish able articles may be preserved for years In high Northern latitudes. Project ofa Whaling Company, It was in the neighborhood of this Aus trian' station that-seven Dutchmen perished on the island in the seventeenth century. In 1633 the Greenland Company of Amster- iWrJsrvr-7 BaU3l ""its'": wL-Tt;? X SCa K-"jJA " BRASS BEDS, FOLDING BEDS, LACE CURTAINS. THIS ROCKER $4.00. C & w v.ywA, r Sr'K y Igi Awr iiil E PITTSBURG. SUNDAY. dam, which had large whaling interests in the Northern seas, determined to send a small party to Jan Mayen to pass the win ter, very little was known then of the long Arctic night, and the company de tired to ascertain if it were feasible to win ter whaling parties on Jan Mayen, where, in the spring, they wonld be in the neigh borhood of their season's work. The com pany selected seven sailors who were to re main on the desolatedsland a year. Only one of the sailors could read and write anil the record was to be kept by him. On August 20, 1G33, the seven sailors were landed on the island. The company had provided them with everything that was thought necessary for their comfort and well being. They had , provisions in abundance, but unfortunately, the com missary supplies consisted la'rgely of salt meat. This shows how little was known at that time of the food required in Arctio regions. Such a diet was certain to breed scurvy, and the sad fate of men placed in PBOPOSED BOUTE. Jan Mayen to-day with a similar supply of winter food could be predicted with certainty. A few live fowls and a dog were also lauded with the sailors, besides a couple of small cannon "to defend them selves against Spanish pirates." Faithful Record of the Weather. At this time there were neither barome ters nor thermometers; and yet the Dutch called this expedition a meteorological mis sion. All the men could do was to record the state of the weather, the force and direc Sf3KW3s?6SSSJSffiaSSe Sana gntntntntntm SK fS3eSHJ5sBSC30 nfrrtflsntrBlrH? AT UNUSUALLY ATTRACTIVE PRICES DESKS, . MUSIC CABINETS, CARD TABLES, MIRRORS, BOOK CASES HALL TREES CHEVAL GLA3SES, .BEDROOH SETS, "WABDKOBES, DRESSING TABLES, TEA SETS. LAMPS. A fine assortment of all the , latest and best, makes and styles. BANQUET LAMPS. $2 TO $15 H DECEMBER 18, 189a tion of the wind and the condition of the tea. Theirjournaldoesnot mention auroral phenomena. They, however, most faith fully carried out all the observations they were told to make. Quite a large number of white bears visited them during the winter, and at the Austrian expedition of ten years ago saw only two or three, these animals seem to have" largely diminished in that region within the past two centuries and a halt. During the fall the- party were able to collect a few herbs to eat as a salad, and it was not until late in the winter that they began to suffer terribly from scurvy. On March 15 a bear was killed and the record says that ai they had long eaten nothing but salt meat, this provision of fresh tood greatly rejoiced them. At this time all were victims of scurvy. A week later they wrote'that the lack of fresh provisions had caused them at last to lose courage. They were so feeble that their legs could hardlv support them. The recorrW their sufferings from day to day invariably closes with a report of the weather observations they hid been instructed to make. The Keeper of the Record Dies. April was the fatal month. On April 3, only two of the seven sailors were able to gel'out of doors. The two last fowls were killed and given to the men who were suf fering most, in the hope to restore a little of their strength. This nourishment did them much good, and the party longed for a feu- dozen more fowls. The doc was kept as a last resource. On April 16 the writer of the record died. The next entry reads: Hay the Lord have mercy on his soul and upon us. for we are all very sick. The wind Is blowing fresh from the East. The only man in the party who, when it landed on the island, knew how to write, was the first to die, and the work of keep ing the record then devolved upon another who had learned to write during the winter. Thereafter the record was very badly written and spelled. On April 19 the sailor wrote: TVe have not a particle of fresh provi sions, and our condition grows worse from dav to day. Wo see' no hope of recovery now, for we lack the tilings we moat need to check the scurvy and to ward ofT the effects of the terrible cold. If we were In cood health wo could exercise and keep our selves warm, but now this Is impossible. We aro all so sick that we can scarcely stand, and there is little hope left. We de pend on the mercy of God. The wind and the weather are the same as yesterday. The Second Record Keeper Dies. On April 23 this record appears iu the journal: To-day no one Is able to help himself ex cepting me. All the work of assisting others tins now fallen upon me. lam doing my duty us well as I cin, and 1 shall doit as lonjr lis God elves me tho streuto to move. At this moment I went to hclu our Captain, who asKed me to lit him from his bed. lie seems to be dyimr, and ho thinks that this change will dunlnt-.li Ills sufferings. The night has been cloudy, and the wind as it was yesterday. Here is the record of the last few days: April 27. Tho day is damn. To-day we killed our dog to have a little frosh meat It cannot help us much. The night was cloudy but without wind. April 29. In the night the wind changed to tho northeast. KH!a&3tf&aB3a8S3 $ r Hid i ,1 1 igai(Dip, o .jB$25!l!lM The Marts Reclining Chair An Elegant Present. VMS ' 923, 925, 927 PENN AVENUE. April SO. The day ii clear and sunshiny, with a strong wind from tho northeast. I think I am dying. So ends the record. The last day's entry is scarcely legible. It was not until June 4 that the first of the whalers reached the island. If they had come a month earlier it is barely possible that they might have . saved some of the wretched" sailors. In front of one of the bodies was some bread and cheese of which the man had made bis last repatt: aUd before the body of the man who had written the last words in the journal was an open prayer book. Hudson First Fonnd the Island. It is worth while to correct a blunder which is to be ionnd in many encyclope dias and books. The Dutch sailor, Jan Mayen, whoso name was given to the is land, was not its discoverer, as nearly every work of reference asserts. In 1607 the great English traveler, Henry Hudson, while ex ploring in Arctic waters, discovered the bleak island and gave to it the name of Hudson's Touches. It was not nntil four years after .that the Dutchman, -Jan Mayen, in the ship Esk .visited the island. It is another .case ot Colnmbns and Amerigo -Vespucci The original dis coverer was not honored in the name of the thing discovered. The name of the Dutch man was given to the island, and one ol its extinct craters is known as the Eifc, from the name of his vessel; and, strangely enough, we have a more satisfactory ac count of Hudson's discovery of the island than of the subsequent visit of Jan Mayen. sj Ctbus C Adams. EMPLOYERS HARSHLY JUDGED. A Clergyman Views Labor Questions From an Unusual Standpoint. At least one man has arisen who thinks that the grievances involved in the discus sion ot labor questions are mostly a;ainst the employers. -Be v. E. H. Hall, of Boston, has a remarkable sermon in the last issue of the Christian Hefitter in which he takes the following ground: "For one, I mnst confess that the abuses which have stirred me most profoundly of late have not been the sufferings and priva tions of the poor, but the false ideas of their rights aroused among them bv the mistaken zeal of their friends not the indifference of society toward the outcast and oppressed, but the encouragement which society has given them to feel that in every struggle iu which they are engaged they are always in the right and others, always in the urcng. What has made my blood boil oftenest of late has been the insolent as sumption on the part ot the laborer, prompted by ill-advised friends, that all the social troubles that arise are the fault of the moneyed classes, intent always upon gain, and readv always to grind the poor to the earth. I have noticed that any degree of violence on the laborer's part is condoned or apologized for; while, if the employer uses the slightest force in the defense of his property or his rights) the vials of the whole community's wrath are poured upon his head. I have noticed that, if the man. CLOCKS, BRONZES, ONYX TABLES, SIDEBOARDS, . CHIFFONIERS, PARLOR TABLES, COUCHES,' "&&"& FANCY EOCKERS. EASY CHAIRS, LOUNGES, DIVANS, CENTER TABLES. :?: $S gat isl 81 I8I - ' S38 L-n .J pJu5uJ 11 1 LJ r RUGS. Goat in all colors; also WolfJ Fox and Bear Skins, lined; plain and fancy combinations: PRICES: $2.50 TO $7.50. K i ' m x. agers of important concerns or superintend ents of large industries surrender to every demand of labor and pocket every affront, they are loudly applauded; while, if they stand firmly for their simple rights, they are savagely denounced. The only thing which is praised in dealing with social troubles is weakness and cowardice, the only thing which is blamed is spirit and courage. The militia, the police, the law, are considered excellent institutions so long as they keep wholly in the background or wink at disturbances of the peace; they are an intolerable despotism the moment they are called in to enforce order and obedience. There are organized bodies of laborers at this very moment claiming for themselves the right to drive all other workmen from their occupation, and declaiming against the State militia and the police as their natural foes, simply because public senti ment has abetted them in this belief, and made it impossible for them to discriminate "between out and out tyranny on the part of government and the necessary mainten ance of safety and peace. "Now, with all possible allowance for the advantages which the well-to-do have over the poor, and which capital has over labor, and all possible respect for organized labor and the good it has already accomplished and is still capable of accomplishing, it is plain that this condition of things is intol erable. It is as great a wrong to one side as to the other. Say what we will of the need ot mutual understanding and mutual forbearance, cowardice and subserviency can never be heroic traits. The state of so ciety which makes the cultivation of these traits necessary and' requires one class to fawn upon auother is a bad state of society. It makes no difference whether the poor lawn upon the rich or the rich npon the poor; it is equally' an evil In the true order of society there will be no fawning anywhere; no terrified laborers toiling on starvation wages lest they lose their places, no frightened employers on their knees before their workmen. lest they block the wheels of trade and make costly machinery useless. A community which breeds these ignoble traits in any of its ranks is hope lessly ; otten, and does not deserve to pros per, even it prosperity were possible on such Humiliating terms. The hope of every community, whether in ancient or in modern times, lies in the resoluteness and courage ot its citizens. The State is no stronger than the members of whom it is composed. If they are weak and time-serving, and ready'to sacrifice everything for the sake of peace and safety, or in order to escape pecuniary loss, the State is itself weak. If they are brave and strong and contemptu ous of any loss, so their honor and self-respect are preserved, the State is vigorous and able to insure blessings in the end to all its citizens. In the modern State no class has interests apart, from the rest or in antagonism to them. The good of one class is the good ot all, nor can any one really flourish at the expense of another." Weaver Gets All of Kansas' Vote. Topeka, Kas., Dec. 17. The State Board of Canvassers to-day issued a certifi cate of election to Cabali, the Populist elector, whose election was contested on the round of a clerical error. This makes all f he Kansas electors Populists. Sf3? r EXTENSION TABLES, CHINA CLOSETS, HAT RACKS. THIS DESK $5.75. & $czia IS- iS 1 j! R H H I E If ll ppS?' in B 'u V I IS fl 3 E E C H THE SMOKE MDST 60. England Thinks She Has Fonnd the Troper Way to Banish It. RESULT 0P A SCIENTIFIC TEST. A Plan tj Which the Weary Man Caa tupplj Himself With Czone. BETTEB TIMES IS THE BIG CITIES jrOBRXSrOSDXSCI OT TO2 DISPATCH.1 LOifDOjr, Dec 9. The new English in vention for the consumption of smoke has been received with so much favorable criti cism in England as to apparently have es tablished its claim to be the most practical method yet devised for grappling with tha smoke nuisance in cities burning bituminous coaL Some time ago an ingenious inventor showed how smoke could be robbed of half its banefulness by a refining process. His plan was to wash the smoke before it es caped through the chimneys. 'The new in vention adopts an entirely different prin ciple, burning the smoke by driving it through the fire itselC So adaptable ia this principle to all kinds of fires that various cities in England are now propos ing to utilize it for municipal works, in cluding gas, electric lighting and destruo tors. The London Zanut, which appointed a special commission to test the cliims and merits cf the system, says: "The result it eminently satisfactory, and demonstrate! clearly,not only the fuel-economizing effect of the system, but also that the production of soot is practically nil." The results of tho tests made by the Lancet are interesting. The report of the commission gives a com parison of the deposit made by burning a specific quantity of coal uoder the new sys tem and in an ordinary range, over a period of several days. Under the new system the) percentage in dry deposit was: Carbon, 7.20; hydrogen. 0.23; mineral matter, 89.15; nitrogen (partly as ammonia) and oxygen, 3.42, as against a percentage in tho ordinary ninue o : Carbon. 7B.76: mineral matter. 16 C8. and nltrosen (ammonia), 0 33. the mois ture bcin respectively O.70 and 6.63 ner cent. Coming from such an 'authoritative source, these figures carry great Weight. It Is a sig nificant (act that in no single instance wero incomplete products of combustion lite car bon monoxido or sulphuretted hydrogen ob tained. But tho inhabitants of cltle3 are now promised, not only an atmosphere prac tically smokeless, but a ready means ot chargln; the nlr over a largo area with ozone. 3Ir. Leggott, the Inventor of tho new method of smoke consumption spoeoa of above, at a recent meeting in London stated that he boped shortly to be able to demonstrate tnat by a twist of the hand tha wearied Londoner wonld presently turn on his supply oriife-renewlng ozone just In tha same way as he now switches on electricity or turns on gas or water. EFFECT To make the needed room and quickly we have determined on a big sac rifice on all' HOLIDAY GOODS, of which we are making a really mam moth display. Never in this city had you such a chance to buy really first-class furniture suitable for gifts at such prices as we are now nam ing. We are almost giv ing things away and will positively refuse no reason able offer on any gpods of this class. We must have room at any cost 41 HIS DESK $ Our line of Desks for every purpose is most complete. STORE OPEN EACH NIGHT FROM NOW UNTIL CHRISTMAS UNTIL 9 O'CLOCK. Come in day or evening, just as suits, and see and take advantage of our special' prices. CASH OH CREDIT. xSrW c m j. .mib-