THE SCRASTON TBIBTJNE---'WEDNESDAY; MORNING, APRIL 8, 1890. it TRANSPORTATION CHAKCES Approaching Half Ceateaaial of the ' Pennsylvania Railroad. .1 RAVEL IS THE DAYS OP YORE Aa Iatersstlag Ksvtewof th History of Transportation la Pennsylvania from th Earliest Times Dowa to tha Prcient. From tha Philadelphia Time. The 13th of April, 1896, will see the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the Pennsylvania railroad, that day being the day on which the act to in corporate the company was passed. In these flftv years the Krowth of the rail road lins been one of the marvel of the country. The history of transportation In Penn sylvania has yet to be written In an ex tended form. If It were given its widest cope it could be expanded to almost any extent, lor no state in tne union has had more Interesting beginnings has had a more dlfllcult problem to solve, or undergo more trials in reaching an ultimate and only solution. It was not until after the war of 1812 that the connections of Philadelphia with the interior and the West were taken up in earnest. The rivers and mountains that lay across the line of communication from East to West were not such formidable obstacles at llrst In the way of a thorough tralllc, for they could both be crossed by roads, and the rivers could be linked together by a canal system. So Boon as the rivers were improved natural navigation be gan ti open up the coal regions, and when the value of anthracite coal was discovered the canals sprang Into being. The Schuylkill canal was chartered In 1815, and the Lehigh Coal and Naviga tion company In 1822. The Union canal, connecting the Susquehanna with the Schuylkill, and the Chesapeake and Delaware followed, and the movement of trade. East and West had begun. In the ten years from 1820 to 1830 the Affections of the people catered them selves wholly on canals. True, John Stevens had proposed a railroad from Philadelphia to Columbia, ana naa memolrallzcd the legislature,, which by the ant of March 31, 182:1, granted his company incorporation, but the Penn sylvanlans disregarded the project and only debated a State system of canals to compete with the Erie canal, In New York, finished In 1825, and at once per uetved to threaten the commercial su premacy which Philadelphia then still enjoyed. Public agitation led the legis lature to action, and in 1828 the first step was taken in the system of public works, which afterwards proved such n stumbling block when the time came to recognise the inevitable superiority of the Pennsylvania railroad. A Board of Canal Commissioners was appointed, and ground was broken for the "Penn sylvania canal" to be constructed tU the expense of the state. The state system of canals was in affective operation by 1834 on the Susquehanna, and up the Juniata to the mountains, and west of them. Traffic, both passenger and freight, was lively, and the rates of freight were lower from Cincinnati to Philadelphia than from Cincinnati to New York. THE PACKET. But this result was only reached by employing the aid of the railroad. The project of the road between Columbia and Philadelphia was revived again in 1820, but all fell through as a private enterprise, and In 1828 the Canal com missioners were ordered by the legisla ture to take It in hand. The same act required them to examine a route for what was afterward known as the Por tage railroad, and which ran from Hun tingdon to Johnstown over the Al leghenles. The Columbia railroad was finished with a double track and the Portage with a single track; and in 1834 communication to Pittsburg, was open ed by this, now the shortest and easiest route. What a Journey It was! The passen . ger for Pittsburg left Broad and Vine 'streets In the morning was carried up Broad street by the inclined plane to the Columbia bridge, where the Penn sylvania railroad was reached, the first part of the way being the part con structed by the city. Thence he was rattled on to Columbia later, Harris burg where he arrived during the aft ernoon, about 3 or 4 o'clock, and took the canalboat, the packet, as It was styled, advertised to be equal to any on the Erie canal. The packet Pitts burg, first run In 1N36, was 72 feet long, 11 feet wide and 8 feet high. The inte rior was divided Into three compart ments, the cook room, the ladles' cabin find the gentlemen's cabin. Swinging berths shut off by curtains were fas tened along the sides. The crew con sisted of nine men, with a driver and three mules, and it could accommo date 150 passengers. But this packet ran on the other side of the mountains, from Pittsburg to Johnstown, making the trip of 104 miles In 28 hours. The passenger who left Harrtsburg on Mon day evening reached the Portage on Wednesday morning and Pittsburg on Thursday afternoon or evening. Charles Dickens' description of the trip is well remembered; he notes the abundant fare at the Bupper, the "tiers of hang ing book-shelves" for bunks, the ladle for dipping washing water out of the canal and the jack towel! It must be remembered that not at once was the passenger on the Col umbia railroad drawn by locomotive power. In 1835 there were only three locomotives on the road. In 1837 forty were in use. These forty all belonged . Jo the state; the cars which they hauled belonged to private firms which under took to run them for the benefit of the public over the public works. Until the locomotives were put on the cars were run by horses provided by the proprie tors of the limn. The toll charged by the state after the Introduction of the locomotives was two cents a mile for each passenger, and $4.93 a car, so that the individual car-owners cut things very close when they made their own charge three cents a mile for each passenger. During the regime of horse power the time from Philadelphia to Columbia was about nine hours, the horses being changed every twelve miles. The horse cars were something on the plan of the old stage coach, but larger. A WONDER OP OLDEN TIME. The Portage road was, so long as It was in use, one of the wonders of Amer ica. It was a remarkable feat of engi neering, and the manner In which it BUrmountpd the natural HimmiiHad be overcome elicited universal praise. "It consisted," says Slpes in his History of the Pennsylvania railroad, "of eleven levels of grade lines and ten Inclined planes. The ascent from Johnstown to the summit was eleven hundred and seventy-one and a half feet In a dis tance of twentyrslx and a half miles, and the descent from the summit to Hollldaysburg was 1,399 feet in a dis tance of ten miles. The planes were numbered oastwardly. The cars .were passed over these planes by means of wire ropes attached to the stationary engines, and it is a notable fact that during the twenty years the road was used no serious accident ever occurred upon It. Boats used on the canal for carrying through freight were built In sections, which sections were placed on trucks and carried over the railroad." This system, though undoubtedly beneficial to the district through which it passed, was never remunerative to the state. It had cost over $140,000,000, It was very expensive to operate, and the practice of allowing private Individ uals to run cars while the state supplied Jn; motive power became ft source of irritation to, the public, TlV eompet , owners of cars quarreAtd among .tbtt&MlvM, tad accused saon other of being monopolies. As early as 1837 the agitation began for a through line. In that year the Sunbury and Erie and the Pittsburg and Susquehanna railroads were chartered, but they lay languishing many years. But in 1838 a general con vention to urge the construction of a continuous railroad met In Harrtsburg on the 6th of March; and that was the beginning of the final absorption of the old line of public works by the Trunk Line that now reaches half way across the continent The convention of 1S38 memorialised the legislature and stirred up public opinion; and the next year the Canal Commissioners appointed Charles L. Schlatter to survey lines from Harrisburg to Pittsburg. He reported three routes, of which the third was that by the Juniata and the Conemaugh, and was Incontestably the best; It was the route afterwards adopted, and the one over which the traveler to the West speeds today. There was, however, both opposition to and lack of Interest In the new road. The opposition came from the South western end of the state, where the Bal timore and Ohio had a strong following; and several years went by before any thing was done. In 1813, however, a public meeting was held in Philadelphia to urge the prosecution of the work, and In April of the following year the de sired act to Incorporate the Pennsylva nia railroad was at length passed. By this net the capital of the company waa fixed at $7,500,000, with the privilege of increasing the same to $10,000,000; and the law granting the right of way U tne Baltimore and Ohlo'rallroad from Cum berland, Md., to Pittsburg was abro gated In case the Pennsylvania railroad should have $3,000,0(10 subscribed and $1,000,000 paid In, and have 15 miles of Its road under construction at each ter minus before July 3, 1847. These condi tions being complied with Governor Shunk issued a proclamation declaring the Baltimore and Ohio's privilege ab rogated on August 2, 1847. He granted the company Us charter on February 25, 1847. THE ROAD'S ENGINEER. From Georgia, where he had been managing the Georgia railroad, rame to fill the Important position of chlet en gineer of the new railroad a man whose Influence was destined to be all power ful in developing not only the great trunk line but through it his native state.Thls was J. Edgar Thomson, born In Delaware county In 1S08, the son of John Thomson, one of the most ener getic and able civil engineers of the end of the eighteenth century. To the strong will and great power of organization of the chlet engineer as much as to any other cause was the success of the Penn sylvania railroad due. On September 1, 1849, the first division of the road, from Harrisburg to Lewis town, was opened, and on December 10, 1852, cars were run through from Phila delphia to Pittsburg, using the Portage Inclined planes to connect the two divis ions of the Pennsylvania. In February, 1854, trains were run for the first time without the use of the Inclined planes and In the same month Mr. Thomson was elected president of the company. "The Pennsylvania Railroad," says Slpes' History, ".was constructed In a superior maner, and with the Improve ments since made Is undoubtedly the most perfect road In America. Not withstanding It had to overcome the great Allegheny mountains a barrier which for a quarter of a century had been considered unsurmountable by a railroad without Inclined planes yet It was carried across by engineering skill with a faculty really astonishing. The road begins a gradual ascent at Harris burg, where It is 310 feet above j, and rises regularly. At Lewlston It Is 488 feet above tide; at Huntingdon 610; at Tyrone 886, and at Altoona, where It reaches the base of the mountain proper, It Is at an elevation of 1,168 feet. Up to this point the heaviest gradient per mile has not exceeded 21 feet. From a short distance west of Altoona this gradient is increased to 93 feet per mile on straight lines and 82 feet per mile on, curves. , Thus ascending it reaches its culminating point at the west end of the great tunnel, where its aitltudo above th tide Is 2, 161 feet. At Johns town the elevation Is 1,184 feet and at Pittsburg 748 feet. BRANCHING OUT. Following close on the completion of the through line came the agitation for the sale of the old public works. It Is unnecessary to enter at large now Into the history of the somewhat protracted contention which ended In the purchase of the main line by the Pennsylvania railroad, which it in the end acquired free to the tonnage tax to the state. By this purchase and by the lease of the Harrisburg and Lancaster railroad the Pennsylvania railroad became own ers of the entire through line between Philadelphia and Pittsburg. The subsequent history of the road Is the history of its gradual extention both East and West as a trunk line and Its constant advance In improving and bettering Its road bed and rolling stockAs for Its growth some dates may be of service. The Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago railroad was open ed for business In 1858, and was lensea to the Pennsylvania In 1869. The Phil adelphia and Erie railroad had been leased In 1862; the Pittsburg and Steu ben vllle, or Pan. Handle, was bought in 1867; control of the Pittsburg, Cincinnati ana at. tiouis was next obtained, and the Columbus, Chicago and Indiana Central was leased by the Pittsburg, Cincinnati and St. Louis in 1869. The Cincinnati and Muskingum Valley was bought in 1869. and a joint control over the St. Louis, Vandalla and Tetre Haute and Indianapolis railroad, was secured by the Pittsburg, Cincinnati and St. Louis. Both these roads, however, are now controlled by the Pennsylvania railroad. Subsequent leases and purchases in 1871 gave the Pennsylvania control of the bridge over the Ohio at Cincinnati and in the same year the United rail roads of New Jersey were leased and In that year was Incorporated the Penn sylvania company, which now operates all the Interests of the Pennsylvania railroad west of Pittsburg, with one ex ception. STATISTICS THAT TALK. Other lines west of Pittsburg are the Pittsburg, Youngstown and Ashtabula, the Toledo, Walhondlng Valley and Ohio, which has only recently been built; the Little Miami, and the Ceve land and Pittsburgh. Michigan Is tanned hv tha rsmtiH nani,i. a t . - - - ,i, a uiiu In diana railroad and two smaller lines ana iiimuKn ininois runs tne Toledo, Peoria and Western to the Mississippi. Striking out toward the South the Pennsylvania railroad first acquired a route to Baltimore by the Northern Central and Baltimore and Potomac railroads, and later by the purchase of a controlling Interest In the Philadel phia, Wilmington and Baltimore rail road. About 1873 was completed the s'' minimi mrougn uauimore. Today the connections of the Penn sylvania take the traveler without change to Atlanta, along the northern end of the cotton-growing states, and t0 theJJry end of Florida, along the coast. The mere list of railroads owned, leased or r perated by the Pennsylvania la striking, although It be but a list; a still better Idea, however, can be gained of the accretions In fifty years' time from the comparison of figures, In the nine years from 1846 to December 31, 1853, the Pennsylvania had con structed 248 miles of road the old Pennsylvania Central. In 1857 by pur chasing the old public works It acquired 118 in I lee more of railway and 283 miles of canals. On December 81, 1895, the total mileage on January 1, 1896, by states, was as follows: New York, 106.11; New Jersey, 746.83; Pennsyl vania, 3,253.48; Delaware, 238.28; Mary land, S94.96; District of Columbia, 8.15: Virginia, 44.50; West Virginia, 77.06; Ohio, 1,483.38; Indiana, 1,409.60; Illinois, 645.S4; Michigan, 471.11; Kentucky. 2.91, the total being as given above. All of which is a sufficient testimony to the organisation of the' railroad under Its three presidents, J. Edgar Thomson, -Thomas A. Scott and George B. Rob irta . When next you pass through Harris burg on one of the Pennsylvania's ex press trains, take a brief retrospect over the past one hundred years. At the be ginning of the century the ferry was crowded by carriers with their pack horses, going westward laden with salt. Iron and merchandise. These pack horses traveled in divisions of twelve or fifteen, going single file, each horse carrying about two hundred weight; one man proceeded and one brought up the rear of the file. Later on the car riers in their bitter indignation, were supplanted by the Conestoga wagons, with their proud six horse teams, with huge belled collars, the wagen stored with groceries, linens, calico, rum, mo lasses, and hams, four or five tons of load; by law none of these wagons had less than four-Inch tires on their wheels. "In those early days," says Dr. Egle, In his History of Dauphin county, "turnpikes were not he miserable apol ogies for which grand jury after grand Jury report as nuisances, and all In vain, but there were well graded, rounded from the centre to gutters on each side, with all the necessary cros sings for water, and most thoroughly macadamized. All along the great highways at distances of ten and twelve miles from public houses large two Btory frame buildings and here the teamsters would stop to feed and water their horses. They carried a long feed box with them. This was placed longth wl?e of the tonnie, and the horses placed on either side. Later etlil came the Pennsylvania canal; and In 18S the Harrisburg and Lancaster railroad was completed as far us Mlddletown. A small open four-wheeled car was built nnd in September of that year a locomo tive was brought from the state road through th? canal to Mlddletown. and thereafter the good folk of Harrisburg went on excursions every Sunday In that one small o:en car drawn bv the small black English locomotive, called the John Bull, though not the original John Bull locomotive which went Into use In New Jersey In 1831 and was ex hibited In Chicago In 1893. The trip to Mlddletown occupied about two hours. Nowadays the shortest schedule time Is 16 minutes; the longest about 23." , The first stage In the Alleghetiles dat ed from 1S08. The stage "Experiment" began running to Alexandria that year, the route being afterward extended to Pittsburg, and connecting at Harris burg with the stage from Philadelphia. The fare was six cents a mile, and pas sengers were allowed fourteen pounds of baggage; the malls were carried three times a week. In 18.72 the stages were running faster thnn the railroads and canals did later on, for the mnll reached Pittsburg on the evening of the third day from Philadelphia. ANOTHER RETROSPECT. The traveler mny well look bock, too, to the record of travel on the Susque hanna, beginning with the primitive dugouts of colonial dnys, and ascend ing through the llatboats to the keel boats, which rnn down the river to Mlddletown carrying produce, and were laboriously poled up the stream again nt the rate of a tulle or two an hour, lightly laden with groceries. A sup posed Improvement on these was a boat whose pole3 were put In motion by horsc-pnwer, but these were aband oned after being given a trial. Very unfortunate was the history of the steamboat traltlc on the Susquehan na., however. Three steamboats had been built In 1825. The Codorous, the first to navigate the river, was laid aside on the repoi't of her commander that navi gation of the Susquehanna by steam was Impracticable; the second, the Sus quehanna, burst her boiler In 1823, kill ing and wounding several persons, and the "Pioneer," the third boat, was also abandoned after an adverse report from her officers. Another "Susquehanna" was abandoned In 1S33. after breaking her shaft, the "Wyoming" In 1851 and the "Enterprise" In the same year. In this connection may be noted the at tempt to establish a shipyard at Wllkes-Barre, which ended In disaster with the wrecking of the "Luzerne" on her way to tide-water In 1812. Great were the rejoicings over the early canals along tho Susquehanna; there were laying of corner stones, breaking of ground by gnliy decorated plows, beer nnd cider drinking and fisti cuffs. When the canal system was complete trade sprung up at once and the wagon ers began to sing: May the devil catch the fellow who first Invented tho plan To mpke a railroad or cnnnl, For they ruin our plantation wherever iWiey do cross, And th?y spoil our markets that we can't atli a hong. Chorus Can't sell a boss, i Where now were their majestic wagons, with the red wheels and the blue bodies, and the horses with chim ing bells? The mnrch of time was hur rying on and the hand of fate was upon them. But they live In memory. MY COMFORTER. Tho world had all pone wrong that day, And tired In despair. Discouraged with the ways of life, I sank Into my chair. A soft caress fell on my cheek. My hands were thrust apart, And two big sympathizing eyes Gazed down into my heart. I hail a friend, what eared I now v For fifty worlds 1 I knew One heart wns anxious when I grieved My dog's heart, loyal, true. "God hies him." breathed I soft and low, And hugged 'him close and tight. One lingering lick upon my ear And we were happy quite. Life. flalf Dozen JOHN WAN A MAKER, of Philadelphia. WILLIAM K.MOORJ& of Tennessee. WANTS TO BE PRESIDENT Short Sketch of the Career of Robert Emory l'attison. IS THE YOUNGEST CANDIDATE Something of the Fatalist About This One-time Favorite of Destiny Lead Many .Democrats to Think His Boom Promising. Philadelphia Letter, New York Herald. Probably the youngest man whose name will be presented to the Demo cratlo National convention as a candi date for the presidential nomination is Robert Emory Pattl30n. twice elected governor of a great state, whose Re publican majorities In the last twenty tlve yenrs have ranged from 40,000 to six times that figure. As a "man of destiny" there are re semblances in the career of Pnttison to that cf Urover Cleveland. Called from the-practice of law at the threshold of his professional career to an Important public oflice iu thi3 city, Pattlson gave such positive, practical and ofttimes stralling evidences of unswerving EX-GOVERNOR PATTISON. fealty to the people as against any In dividual or the joint scheme of public plunder that came to his notice that It became a certainty that he would be re tained In the oflice If he would accept another term. This he did. The posi tion was that of City comptroller, and he might easily have enriched himself If he had permitted rogues to do the same. GOVERNOR AT THIRTY-ONE. During his second term as city comp troller, though only thirty-one years of age, he was chosen governor over Gen eral James A. Beaver. He gave the state a clean administration. Though the legislature was controlled by Ms political opponents he sets his face against extravagant appropriations and held the great corporations to a strict obedience to the laws. In Pennsylvania the governor Is not permitted to Im mediately succed himself, but four years after his retirement he was. In 1890, again chosen Chief Executive of the Keystono state on the platform of a re form by a majority of 16,654, although the Republican candidates for Lleuten ane Governor and Secretary of Internal affairs were elected by majorities of upward Of 20,000. After his first term as Governor Mr. Pattlson resumed the practice of law In Philadelphia. Three months later he was elected president of the Chestnut Stret National Bank. Previously he had declined tho auditorship of the Treasury tendered him by President Cleveland, but afterward accepted an' apjiolntment as Pacific Railroad commlMsloner. His report on tho relations of that corpora tion to the government is one of the most valuable papers In the financial history of the land aided roads. That sterling old Democrat, cx-Chlef Justice Jeremiah S. Black, once said of Pattl son: "That young man is dreaming of the presidency, and he is- taking good care never to do anything that wlil be quoted against him In federal politics." When Pattlson retired from the highest ollice In the state the leading Republi can organ of this city took occasion to sayt "The people admire a man of brains and they are quick to recognize an honest ofiiclal. Governor Pattlson fills the measure of these qualifications. He will be heard from In the future." The publications may soon be verified. THE MANTLE OF RANDALL. Robert E. Pattlson succeeded the la mented Samuel J. Randall as the idol of the Pennsylvania Democracy. The State convention which will be held In Allentown, April 211, In likely to unan imously declare Mr. Pattlson Pennsyl vania's choice for the Presidential nom ination. The Paulson boom la In very cnpable hands. William F. Harrlty, chairman of the Democratic National committee. Is In close communication with tho respective leaders, and Is kept well advised as to the situation In each county. That Governor Pattlson Is popular throughout the state, and that the organization In his behalf Is success ful In its efforts Is evidenced by the fact that county after county is adopt ing resolutions indorsing him for the presidency. In addition to being popular and Uice Presidential Possibilities. f-lf iff aJ) CARRETT A. HOBAftT, of New Jersey. CEOROE LLOYD. LOWNDES, of Maryland. From th Chics jo Tlmee - strong at home. Mr. Pattlson Is said to have assurances of support from New Jersey, especially I rem the lower por tion of that state, and from Delaware and Maryland, In the latter of which states he was born. Besides, there are many Indications that delegates from some of the Western states, notably California, will support his candidacy, It Is understood, too, that some of the in fluential Democrats of North Carolina are kindly disposed toward him. But what is more to the point, the suggestion has been made In Influential quarters connected with the Democratic national administration that Governor Pattlson, after all, may prove to be the strongest Democrat to nominate. In that he would be likely to have less pro nounced antagonism than any other of the leading candidates mentioned. It Is fully conceded that the fact that he lives in a strong icepumican state ougnt not and wilt not count against him In a year like this. Stale lines have been obliterated, and there can be no part leu lar claim In favor of a selection of t candidate from this or that state, as has frequently been the case In the post. when candidates were taken from what were known as the close and doubtful states. Some of the Democratic leaders here will not be surprised If former Gov ernor Pattlson will yet prove to be the candidate who Is regarded by President Cleveland's administration as the strongest and most available that can be selected. Mr. Paulson's friends are certainly very hopeful of his nomln atlon at Chicago, Mr. Harrlty himself Is at present con fining his efforts to the selection of a delegation from Pennsylvania that will be effective In Its support of formerGov- ernor Pattlson, but It In believed that after the Democratic State convention has been held In Pennsylvania the na tlonal chairman will use his influence to further strengthen Mr. Paulson's candidacy. HIS DAILY LIFE. Mr. Pattlson Is a strikingly handsome man. He Is 6 feet zVa inches In height. straight as an arrow, and weighs 200 pounds. His features are regular and his bright, expressive eyes light up his Intellectual face as he recognles and sa lutes a friend. In his habits he Is very domestic. He occupies a comfortable, unpretentious stone residence in the su burb of Overbrook, on the main line of the Pennsylvania railroad, within a stone's throw of the Montgomery coun ty line. Each morning of the week he leaves his home at half past eight o'clock, and by nine, Is seated at his desk in the oflloe of the banking and in surance company of which he Is presi dent. When he has finished his day's labors here late in the afternoon he walks up Chestnut street tohls law office meets his partner and attends to such matters in his profession as require his personal attention. At Ave o'clock he takes a train at the Broad street sta tlon for jOverbrook, and twenty minutes later, if the weather is favorable, en joy's an hour's horseback ride through the surrounding country. Then he dthes and almcst Invariably spends the evening at home with his family. And an Interesting group it forms. Married In the year of his admission to the- bar to Miss Anna B. Smith, daughter of a highly esteemed Phlladel p hi an, he securod a devoted wife and an accomplished companion. Their child ren are Lavlnla Russell Pattlson a tall. handsome, dark complcxioned young woman, who favors her distinguished father In sonv respects, and Robert Emory ' Pattlson Jr., a bright lad of eight, who 1st he prideo f tho house hold. When little Robert has retired for the night the Governor seeks an easy chair In his well equipped library and passes an hour or more among his books. Historical tomes and volumes of political biography are among his fa vorltes. In religion Mr. Pattlson Is a devoted adherent of the faith of- his father, the late Rev. Robert Henry l'attison, one of the most widely known ministers of the Methodist Episcopal church. While the elder Pattlson was stationed at Quantlco. Md., on December 8, 1850, Robert was born. The Hew Mr. Pattl son was pastor of tho congregation which now worships In the church of the Covenant, Eighteenth street, below Spruce,( when he died. In 1875, and his son has since been a memher and regu lar attendant at this church. A fea.turo of the Sunday school Is the BIblo Union In which the former Governor teaches every Sunday afternoon the Interna tional leson to nearly four hundred men and women. He wns a lay delegate to the General conference of the Methodist Episcopal church, South, and In 1891 a delegate to the Ecumenical Council, held In Washington, D. C Dickinson College, his father's alma mater, In 1884 con ferred on him tho degre of Doctor of Laws. Many of his admirers were disap pointed that the Pennsylvania delega tion did not present his name to the Chi cago Convention In 181)2. The New York delegates there expressed a willingness to support .him or any other available man to defeat Cleveland. Other states offered their uid, but Mr. Harrlty, who controlled the delegation, would not lis ten to the overtures. Governor Pattl son would not have accepted the nomin ation at that time. He had met Grover Cleveland at tho funeral of Representa tive William L. Scott, In Erie a few months before, told him the best Inter ests of tho country demanded the re election of the former president," and without any solicitation promised to use his Influence with the Pennsylvania delegation to secure the nomination for his friond. And Pattlson kept his word. Cleveland was nominated and elected. SENATOR GEORGE C. PERKINS, of California. QEOnOE BRADLEY, of Kentucky. Hersl.i. By tha Courtesy of H. U. Kohlsatt. JERUSALEM AS IT ROW IS Interesting Description of the Holy City by fierre Loti. THE CITY IS STILL SARACEN Batth Air U Filled Nevertheless with a Sentiment of Kellfious Ravorsaes Which Effects I'nbolUvtrs as Well as Kcllavsrs. From the Figaro. On foot, and accompanied by an Arab for my guide, I left my hotel to go at last to the Holy Sepulchre. It Is almost In the heart of Jerusalem. I passed through little, narrow, and tor tuous streets, between walls of houses old as the Crusaders, without windows and without roofs. On the damp pave ments and under a sky still obscure appeared the costumes of the East, worn by Turks, Bedouins, and Jews. The women looked like phantoms with their long veils. The town still remains Saracen. On the way I noticed that we were pass ing through an Oriental baxaar, where the stands were occupied by venders wearing turbans; and in the shadow of the covered little streets there moved along slowly a file of enormous camels, which compelled us to take shelter In the doorways. A little further on we were again obliged to stand aside to make room for a long and strange pro cession of Russian women, all about 60 years old at least. They walked rapidly, leaning upon sticks or um brellas, and wearing faded dresses and fur cloaks. Their faces, with an ex pression of fatigue and suffering, were framed, as It were, by black handker chiefs, presenting a dark and gloomy picture In the midst of the high colors of the Orient. They moved along with an excited and at the same time an ex hausted air, Jostling everything and everybody without noHelng anything, like somnambulists, with fixed eyes, as if In a celestial dream: and old moujlks by hundreds succeeded them, with the same expression of ecstacy on their faces. Upon their breasts were many medals, indicating that they were old soldiers. They had entered the Holy City the day before, and were coming back from their first visit to their place of adoration, where I was going. Poor pilgrims! they come here by thousands, traveling on foot, sleeping out doors under the rain or snow, suffering from hunger, and leaving many of their dead upon the roads. ' THE BASILICA. Aa they approach, the Eastern objects upon the stand disappear to give place to objects of obscure Christian piety beads by the thousand, crosses, relig ious lamps, images, and Icons. And here the crowd becomes greater. The pilgrims stop to purchase the little beads made of wood, and little two-cent crucifixes, which they carry away as relics to be held sacred forever. At last, in an old wall, rough as a rock, there appears a shapeless open ing, narrow and low, and by a series of descending steps we come out upon a place overhung by high, sombre walls In front of the BnslUca of tho Holy Se pulchre. Here it is customary to un cover, as soon as the Holy Sepulchre comes into view. People pass there bareheaded, even when simply cross ing It to continue the route through Jerusalem. It Is crowded with poor men and women, praying pilgrims, and venders of crosses and chasilets who Bpread out their wares upon tho vener able and worn flags. Among tho pave ments and among the steps appear here and there the socles, still embedded, of columns which formerly supported bas ilicas that were raited long ago at peri ods hard, If not Impossible to fix. All Is a heap of ruins in this city which has Undergone twenty sieges, which every fanaticism has sacked. The high walla, whose atones of a reddish brown form the sides of the place, are convents or chapels. One might fancy that they were fortresses. In tho background, higher and more sombre than nil, stands the broken and worn mass which forms the facade of the Holy Sepulchre, and has all the appearances of Irregularities of a great rock. It has two enormous porticos of the twelfth century, bor dered by ornaments strange and ar chaic. One Is walled up, and the other, wide open, leaves In view In the ob scurity of tho Interior thousands of little flames. Chants, cries, and dis cordant lamentations, lugubrious to the ear, escape from this opening, mingled with the odor of Incense. On entering wo find ourselves In a sort of vestibule-, revealing the magnifi cent depths where innumerable lamps are burning. Turkish guards armed as If for massacre, occupy the entrance. Seated like soverelrns on a large divan, they look with feorn upon the parsing adorers of thU place, whieh, from th"ir point of view. Is tho disgrace of Mo hammedan Jerusnlem, and which the ferocious among t'lein never hesitate to call el Komamah (fiUh). IN A LABYRINTH. Oh, that unexpected and never-to-be-forgotten Impression, which one re ceives on entering there for the first time! Here Is a labyrinth of dark sanctuaries of all periods and of all as lectp, communicating by bays and por ticos, Buperb colonnades, little doors, and openings like the entrances to cav erns. Some are elevated like high trib unes, where wo notice in obscure cor-, ners groups of women wearing long veils; others, underground, where we brush against spectres along the sides of the black and damn rocks; nnd all this In a sort of half night, exeent here and there great rays of light, which In tensify the neighboring obscurity, tho whole Infinitely starred by the little flames of golden and silver lamps which descend In thousands from the vault. And everywhere we find crowds mov ing alonrr, or standing grouped accord ing to their nationalities around the tabernacle. Psalmodies, l.amentntlons, and joyous rhants fill tho hlnh vaults and vibrate In tho sepulchral sonorities below the nasal melnpoela of the Greek, broken by the shouts of the Kcpts and In all these voices there Is an Intermingling of grief nnd prayers, blending tho dis cords In a mnnnerlndercrlbaMy strange and sounding like the great wall of hu manity, the last cry of Its distress in the presence of death. The rotunda with a high cupola. Into which we first enter and from which we can Imagine the obscure chaos of the other sanctuaries. Is occupied In the centre by a grand kiosk of mnrble of semi-barbarous beauty and loaded with silver lamns. It encloses the stone of the sepulchre. AH around this holy kiosk the crowd gathers or remains stationary. On one side there are hun dreds of moujlks and matouchkns kneeling upon the flags. On the other are the women of Jerusalem standing upright and wearing lonif veils. One would take them to bo antique virgins In this dreamy penumbra. Further on we find Abyselnlans and Arabs pros trated, wltn their roreheaiis on th? flags; TnrkB with drawn sabres, and people cf all communions and of all languages. MEETING OF ALL FAITHS. One does not remain long In this al most suffocating portion of the Holy Sepulchre, which Is the very heart of this mass of haMUcas and chapels. Processions pass on In single file, each Individual bowing his head. The en trance Is through a little marble door carved and ornamented. The sepul chre Is within, encased In marble, upon which there are Innumerable Icons and lamps of gold. At the Biimo time with mo there passed a Russian soldier and a poor old woman In lags ami an Ori ental woman dressed In garments of brocade. All kissed tho covering of the tomb and wept. Others followed thoin; Indeed, there Is an eternal procession of pilgrims, touchlnr and moistening with their tears those very same stones. There is no fixed plan in this cluster of churches and chapels around th holy kiosk. Some are large and mar vellously sumptusus; others little, bumble, snd primitive, crumbling with old age. In obscure corners cut into the rock. And here and there the rock of Calvary appears In the midst of rich and erehale ornaments. The coutrast is strange between so many heapt d-up treasures Icons of gold, crosses of gold, and lamps of gold and the rags of the pilgrims, the dilapidation of the walls and pillars, worn, deformed, and greasy from the constant contact with so much human flesh. - The altars of all the different faiths are so thoroughly mixed here that priests and processions go astray. They force their way through the crowd, car rying censers, and preceded by soldiers In arms, who strike the sonorous -flags with the ends of their halbreds. "Room there!" Here come the Latins, that pass like a goldon chasuble. "One side!" Leading his flock, here comes the Bishop of the Syrians with a long white beard. Then come the Greeks, still wearing Byzantine ornaments, or Abysslnlans with their dark faces. They march on In thelrsumptuous vest ments, preceded by children carrying censers, and the crowd makes way for them. Accompanying this human tide there Is a kind of continuous rumbling, the incessant sound of psalmodies and little bells. Almost everywhere it Is bo dark that, in-order to get along, it is necessary to carry a little candle; and under the high columns and In the dark galleries a thousand little flames movs In streams and eddies, constantly go ing and coming. Men pray aloud and sob, passing from one chapel to another, here to kiss the rock where the cross was planted, there to kneel down where Saints Mary and Magdalen wept. Priests call you by signs, and lead yott through little doors. Old women with wild eyes and cheeks wet with tears come up from th darkness, where th had kissed the stone of th sepulchre. CHAPEL OF ST. HELENA, In profound obscurity we go down to the chapel of Saint Helena through a wide staircase of shout thirty steps, worn, broken, and dangerous, looking like a tumble-down ruin, and lined with crouching spectres. Our candles, as we go by, light up those vague creatures, Immovable and of the color tit the aid of the rock. They are maimed beggars, demented creatures, devoured with ul cers, all sinister looking, with their hands under their chins, and their long hair falling down about their faces. Among thege frightened objects Is a blind young man enveloped In his mag nificent blond curls which cover him like a cloak. Ha is marvellously hand some, and might pose for Christ. In the background tho chapel of St. Helena appears in the pure rays of the day, which como In pale bluish tints through the openings of the vault It' Is certainly one of the strangest pieces of this wl ole place which Is called the Holy Sepulchre. Here wo experlenae In the most striking fashion the senU ment of the terrible past. It was silent when I came there and It was emnty under tho gaiso of tho phantoms that oocpuled the staircase of the entrance. There was an Indistinct sound from ths bells and the chants above. Behind the altar snother staircase, occupied by the same kind of personages with long hair, reaches further down Into the dark ness. Four pillars, short and strong, of a primitive Byzantine style, heavy and powerful, sustain tho cupola, from which hang ottrlchs' eggs and a thou sand pendants. Fragments of paint ings on tho walls still Indicate saints with golden nimbus, and In attitudes stiff nnd naive, the defacing caused by humidity and dust. Everything here Is In a state of dilapidation. From the depths below there comes a procession of Abyssinian priests, looking like an cient Magi coming from the bowels of the earth. In the distance, near the kiosk of tho Sepulchre, the rock of Cal vary appears. It supports two chapels. Into which one enters by Rbout twenty stone steps, which for the crowd form the chief places for prostration and sobs. From the peristyle of these chapels, as from an elevated balcony, the view commands a confused mass of taber nacles, a laybrlnth of churches. The most splendid of all Is that of the Greeks. Upon a nimbus of silver, which shines out In the background like a rainbow, there appear In llfo size the pale Images of tho three crucified ones Christ and the two thieves. The walls disappear under the Icons of sil ver, gold, and precious stones. The altar is erected at the precise plnce where the cross win planted, and It Is the altar rail a treillage of silver leaves in view in the dark rocks the hole where theo ross wns planted, and It Is there that the pilgrims crawl on their knees, moistening those sombre stones with their tears and I heir kisses, while a soothing sound of chants and prayers Incessantly comes from the churches below. And here for now nearly 2,000 years the. same scenes havo bei.n enacted In this place, although under different forms and In different bnslllcs, with in terruptions of slejjei, battles, a'ul mr.s tacr.E, only to be reproduced again more passionately than ever. Here is the same concert of prayer, the same ensemble of sunplicationa and of tri umphant acts of grace. THE CRY OF UNBELIEF. Certainly these adorations seem Idolatrous for him who said, "God Is spirit, and those who adore Him must adore Him In spirit and in truth." But they are human! How well they respond to our Instincts and to our mis cry! Surely the first Christians, In the purely spiritual spring of their faith, when the teaching of the Master was still fresh In their souls, did not en cumber themselves with the magnifi cences of Bymbols and Images. Cer tainly It was not earthly recollections the place of a martyrdom or an empty sepulchre that preoccupied them. They did not seek their Redeemer there, because they saw II Im forever freed from transitory things and standing above In serene light. But we, the peo ple of the West and of the North, have escaped more recently from nulve bar barities than the antique societies from which the first Christian sprung. In the middle, nges, when the faith pene trated our forests, It was obscured by a thousand primitive religions; and It Is the smallest number among us that have been sufficiently enfranchised from nccumulated traditions to be able to embrace the evnngellcnl worship in spirit and In truth. And, moreover, when faith Is extinguished In our mod ern souls It Is still toward this vener ation of sacred spots nnd cherished recollections that unbelievers like me are brought by tho sad regret of the lost saviour. Oh, that Christ, for whom all these crowds have come nnd for whom they weep; that Christ for whom the poor old woman near me kneels down, kisses the pavement, nnd throws upon the flags her broken heart, while shedding tears of delicious hope; that Christ who holds mo here also in the snme place, Just as ITo holds her. In a vague medi tation still most sweet oh. If He were only one of our brothers In suffering, vanished forever now In death! Let His tretnory bo adored ell the same, for Ills subllni' teachings of brotherly lo'o, of hope, and of eternity! And let this place also be blessed, this unlqim nnd strino-e plnce which Is called the Holy Sepulchre even contestable or fictitious. If yotl will but where for now nearly fifteen centuries there have come countless grief-stricken multi tudes, where hard hearts have melted lll-e the snow, nnd where now my eyea are becoming dim In one last out burst of prayer Illogical, perhaps, but Ineffable and Infinite! Its Orlalll. Oumne I wonder how the "money to burn" phrase originated. 'awlter It Is n. re:le of the day when tobacco wua tho circulating medium of the American colonics, don't you tliluk? Eschouuo. A -t i 444A44i4 4